Bland v. Buoy

74 S.W.2d 612, 335 Mo. 967, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 18, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 612 (Bland v. Buoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bland v. Buoy, 74 S.W.2d 612, 335 Mo. 967, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 291 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term, 1934, July 17, 1934; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, September 18, 1934. Halleck Bland died, intestate, in Audrain County June 15, 1929, leaving no widow or lineal descendants surviving. His sister Mrs. Virginia Buoy applied for and letters of administration were issued to her as administratrix of the estate on June 18, 1929. The plaintiffs herein, Russell Bland and his sister (Mrs. Mable Bland Sexton) commenced this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Audrain County, September 27, 1929. Plaintiffs claim to be the adopted children of the deceased Halleck Bland and as such his only heirs at law. The defendants are the administratrix and all the collateral heirs; defendant Walter Bland being a brother, defendants, Julia Bland Blaich and Virginia Buoy being sisters and defendant Claude Vance (a son and the only heir at law of Mrs. Alice Vance, a sister) being a nephew, of the deceased Halleck Bland. The cause went on a change of venue to the Circuit Court of Randolph County. The judgment and decree of the trial chancellor was for plaintiffs and defendants have appealed.

At the time (1912) that the plaintiffs, brother and sister, were taken into the home of Halleck Bland and wife, under an alleged oral promise or agreement on the part of Bland to adopt them the statutory method of adoption in this State was by a deed of adoption. No deed of adoption was ever executed by Bland nor was any written agreement or contract to adopt entered into by him. Russell Hubbard, age six years, and Irene Hubbard, age four years, brother and sister (these plaintiffs), were admitted to the Methodist Orphans' Home at St. Louis, April 23, 1910. They remained as inmates and in the care of that institution for two years and until April 25, 1912, when they were taken by Halleck Bland and wife into their home. The record entry upon the official records of the Methodist Orphans' Home "on April 25, 1912" is that said children were "taken by Mr. Halleck Bland, Centralia, Mo., for adoption." The petition alleges that in April, 1912, when plaintiffs were of the ages of eight and six years "Halleck Bland and his wife took both of the plaintiffs, whose names were then respectively Russell Hubbard and Irene Hubbard, from the Methodist Orphans' Home in the city of St. Louis and took them from the care and control of that home and under the order of the juvenile court of that city and placed the plaintiffs in the household of said Halleck Bland and wife promising said Methodist Orphans' Home that they would provide and care well for the plaintiffs and adopt them as their children . . .; that from that time on until the plaintiff, Russell Bland, moved away to engage in business for himself and the plaintiff, Mable Bland, married and moved away with her husband, the plaintiffs continued to reside in the household of Halleck Bland;" that "plaintiffs yielded a willing obedience to the said Halleck Bland and wife under the impression and belief they were the legally adopted children of said Halleck Bland and wife . . . lived with them in their home as *Page 972 members of their family and were recognized by both Halleck Bland and wife as members of their family and were held out to the world by them as their adopted son and adopted daughter until the death of the wife of said Halleck Bland; that after the death of his wife, said Halleck Bland held plaintiffs out to the world as his adopted son and adopted daughter;" that plaintiffs "discharged all of the duties usually discharged by children to their parents and that during all of said years of said relationship yielded all of the affection and obedience due from a child to a parent . . . and at all times believed and supposed . . . that all legal requirements had been complied with and that they were the legally adopted children and heirs of Halleck Bland and wife." The petition at some length sets out and enumerates specific acts and conduct on the part of Halleck Bland which allegedly show that the relationship of parent and child existed between Halleck Bland and plaintiffs and that he recognized and treated them as his adopted children and concludes that "in equity and good conscience the plaintiffs are entitled to be treated in the distribution of" the estate of Halleck Bland, deceased, "as though a formal deed of adoption had been signed and recorded" and prays that a decree be entered "establishing" plaintiffs' "right of adoption and declaring them the heirs at law and only heirs of Halleck Bland by virtue of said adoption." Defendants' joint answer was a general denial. The trial chancellor entered a decree finding that, "the decedent, Halleck Bland, in the year 1912, agreed with the Methodist Orphans' Home Association, a corporation, of St. Louis, to adopt" plaintiffs; that "pursuant to such agreement said association surrendered full custody and control of said children to Halleck Bland and he took and reared said children as his own and under his own name;" that "said Orphans' Home Association fully performed its part of said agreement and that plaintiffs accepted the terms of said agreement and fully performed their duties as adopted children of said Halleck Bland and are entitled to have said contract for adoption fully performed." It is then decreed that plaintiffs "are the adopted children of Halleck Bland, the decedent, with all the rights and privileges inuring to adopted children."

[1] A farm of eighty acres in Audrain County (appraised at $3200) constituted all the real estate owned by Bland at his death. His estate otherwise was in the form of personalty, money, notes, live stock, farm machinery and other personal property of an appraised value of $6656.92. Title to the entire property and estate of which Bland died seized is involved and in controversy hence our jurisdiction of this appeal.

It will be seen that plaintiffs rely upon what is generally denominated an equitable adoption, i.e., that Bland took them from the Orphans' Home into his home and under his care and control *Page 973 pursuant to an oral promise or undertaking on his part to adopt them as his children; that said agreement has been fully performed on the part of all parties concerned except that Bland failed to execute a statutory deed of adoption but that to all intents and purposes such undertaking was effectuated and carried out and that now equity requires that they be adjudged, and declared to be, the children by adoption of Halleck Bland.

The sufficiency of the evidence to establish the alleged parol agreement or undertaking is challenged. The admissions, statements, course of conduct and acts of Bland, in reference to these plaintiffs, from the time he took them into his home until his death; the attitude and manner of life of plaintiffs in the Bland home and the surrounding and accompanying circumstances and subsequent events as shown by numerous, and for the most part wholly unrelated and disinterested, witnesses together with the record of the Methodist Orphans' Home which was made at the time Bland took plaintiffs from the home, constitute the evidence upon which plaintiffs rely to establish such agreement or undertaking on the part of Bland and its consummation in equity. Halleck Bland and his wife resided on a farm, which he owned, in Audrain County, a few miles northwest of Centralia. They were childless; no child was ever born to them. The plaintiffs were the only children they ever took into their home. They were members of a nearby Methodist Church known as Appleman's Chapel. Bland seems to have been very devoted and active in the work of this little Methodist Church. He was an officer of the church, superintendent of the Sunday School and a teacher in the Sunday School.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W.2d 612, 335 Mo. 967, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bland-v-buoy-mo-1934.