Bower v. Landa

371 P.2d 657, 78 Nev. 246, 94 A.L.R. 2d 1232, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 126
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1962
Docket4449
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 371 P.2d 657 (Bower v. Landa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bower v. Landa, 371 P.2d 657, 78 Nev. 246, 94 A.L.R. 2d 1232, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 126 (Neb. 1962).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

McNamee, J.:

Clifford W. Bower and his wife, Virginia B. Bower, were killed in an automobile-truck collision near Winnemucca, Nevada, on July 23, 1959. The action below is one *248 for the wrongful death of Clifford W. Bower, wherein David M. Bower, George H. Bower, and Mary B. Upson, the surviving brothers and sister of Clifford W. Bower (also known as Clifford W. Bowers) are plaintiffs. The defendants are Landa, the driver of the truck, and his alleged employer, The Union Ice Company of Nevada, a corporation. David Neal Morse, also known as David Bowers, was permitted to intervene upon his allegation that he is the adopted son and sole heir of Clifford Wilson Bower, and therefore the only proper plaintiff in an action for the wrongful death of Clifford. He also filed a separate action for the wrongful death of Clifford with which we are not concerned at this time.

The defendants below and the intervener moved for and were granted a summary judgment against the plaintiffs, appellants herein. This judgment has the legal effect of determining that David Neal Morse is the proper surviving heir to bring the wrongful death action.

The facts upon which the lower court based its conclusions are as follows: David Neal Morse was the illegitimate child of Phyllis Ball, who died in childbirth, and who was the niece of Virginia B. Bower. The child lived with his maternal grandparents from 1944 until 1947 when they gave him into the custody and control of Clifford and Virginia, under an oral agreement that Clifford and Virginia would adopt the child. Although Clifford and Virginia thereafter and until the time of their death cared for said child and treated him in all respects as their own, they never proceeded formally to adopt the child. After the death of Clifford and Virginia, Walker Bank & Trust Co. of Salt Lake City, with whom Clifford had been employed, notified Occidental Life Insurance Company of California, who was the insurer under a group policy covering Clifford, of Clifford’s death, that he left no surviving wife or children, and that the parties entitled to the $10,000 death benefit were the said surviving brothers and sister. Occidental thereupon paid the $10,000 to the appellants. 1

*249 In August 1959, Walker Bank petitioned the probate court in Salt Lake City for letters of administration with the will annexed in the matter of the estates of Clifford and Virginia, and in said proceedings a determination of heirship was adjudicated under the following circumstances :

During the administration of said estates the case of In re Williams, 10 Utah 2d 83, 348 P.2d 683, was decided. In that case the Supreme Court of Utah stated:

“It is generally recognized that where a child’s parents agree with the adoptive parents to relinquish all their rights to the child in consideration of the adoptive parents’ agreement to adopt such child, and to care and provide for it the same as though it were their own child, and such agreement is fully performed by all parties connected with such contract except that there is no actual adoption, the courts will decree specific performance of such contract and thereby award to the child the same distributive share of the adoptive parents’ estate as it would have been entitled to had the child actually been adopted as agreed.”

Thereupon the Walker Bank filed in said estate proceedings a “PETITION FOR DETERMINATION OF THE PERSONS WHO ARE HEIRS OF DECEDENT ENTITLED TO DISTRIBUTION.” The petition alleges that at the time of the filing of the petition for letters of administration with the will annexed 2 the petitioner, Walker Bank & Trust Co., believed that the heirs were those named in the petition; that the decision in the Williams case requires a determination of heirship prior to distribution; that there was an agreement between Clifford and Virginia to adopt David Bowers; and that because of said agreement David Bowers is in fact the *250 adopted child of decedent and his wife and the sole heir of Clifford entitled to distribution as such. The prayer of the petition prays that the court enter its decree determining the “status” of David Bowers and the heir or heirs of decedent.

Upon the hearing of the petition, David Bowers, the brothers and sister of decedent, Union Ice Company, and Landa all appeared through counsel.

The Utah probate court in that proceeding found that there had been an agreement (between Clifford and Virginia on the one hand and the maternal grandparents of said minor on the other) under the terms of which the maternal grandparents released their custody and control of the minor to Clifford and Virginia in consideration of their agreement to adopt said child. From said findings it concluded that the agreement to adopt “shall be considered as having been fully performed, thereby making David Bowers, a minor, the sole heir at law of the estates of Clifford W. Bowers and Virginia B. Bowers, and as such entitled to the distribution of their estates.” The court thereupon decreed “That David Bowers, a minor, be and he is hereby declared the adopted child of Clifford W. Bowers and Virginia B. Bowers, the decedents above named, and their sole heir entitled to distribution of their estate.”

Intervener contends that the probate decree aforesaid, being in rem, establishes his status as the adopted child of Clifford and Virginia, and his further status as their sole heir.

In answer thereto appellants maintain that the probate court, in decreeing that David Bowers “be and he is hereby declared the adopted child of Clifford W. Bowers and Virginia B. Bowers * * * and their sole heir,” clearly went beyond the holding in the Williams case; that it had no jurisdiction to declare the status of the minor child; that an “adopted” status could be decreed only through the statutory adoption procedures; and that the probate court’s jurisdiction was limited to a determination of the party or parties entitled to the distribution of the particular estate in question. To this, the intervener replies that even if the probate court went *251 beyond the holding in the Williams case its decree is final, no appeal having been taken therefrom, and therefore it must be accorded full faith and credit by the courts of Nevada.

The Williams case does not hold that proof of a contract of adoption which has been fully performed with the exception of obtaining the decree of adoption ipso facto results in the adoption of the subject child.

“The decisions of the courts have not been unanimous in respect to the enforcement of such contracts. Those courts which will decree specific performance of a contract to make the child an heir, or to adopt with the incidental right of inheritance, do not undertake to alter the status of the parties or to hold that the child takes as an heir, since they generally agree that equity does not have power to decree an adoption.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 P.2d 657, 78 Nev. 246, 94 A.L.R. 2d 1232, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bower-v-landa-nev-1962.