Chamberlin v. Thorne

66 P.2d 571, 145 Kan. 663, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1937
DocketNo. 33,319
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 571 (Chamberlin v. Thorne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlin v. Thorne, 66 P.2d 571, 145 Kan. 663, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 202 (kan 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This action was brought by collateral heirs against Robert L. Thorne, an adopted son, H. M. Beckett, administrator of the estate of Ada C. Thorne, deceased, and EL M. Beckett, trustee. Four causes of action were pleaded for the respective purposes of establishing title to property of the deceased, for an accounting, to cancel certain deeds held by the trustee and for the ejectment of defendants from property owned by the deceased. Against the petition defendants lodged a demurrer. The demurrer was on four grounds. The third ground was the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. On that ground the demurrer was sustained and that ruling is the sole basis of this appeal.

The real question is the sufficiency of the adoption proceedings as against this collateral attack. We shall first narrate the substance of a few general facts disclosed by the petition:

Plaintiffs below, appellants here, are a brother, a sister and a nephew of the deceased, Ada C. Thorne, who died intestate. Deceased had no direct heirs unless it be defendant, Robert L. Thome, the validity of whose adoption is challenged in this action. Robert L. Thome was the child of Blanche Parson, a single woman. The adoptive parents, John R. Thome and Ada C. Thorne, residents of Johnson county, Kansas, acquired custody of the child when it was two weeks old, and about a quarter of a century before this action was commenced. The adoptive father died in the year 1931. The adoptive mother died in August of 1935. This action challenging the validity of the adoption was filed in December of 1935.

Parts of the petition are not quoted in the abstract before us, but appear in abstracted form. We are therefore obliged to set forth those abstracted portions as presented to us. The portions of the petition challenging the adoption proceedings are as follows:

“Par. 14. That the defendants unlawfully claim that the defendant, Robert L. Thorne, is the sole heir of said Ada C. Thome, deceased, under and by virtue of certain proceedings undertaken and acts done by said Ada C. Thorne in her lifetime, and one John R. Thorne, in the year of 1911, in the state of Missouri, and in the year of 1913, in the probate court of Johnson county, Kansas.
“Par. 15. That a full, true and complete copy of the record of said proceedings as the same appears of record in Journal 22, pages 247, 248 and 249, [665]*665in the office of said probate court, and as the two pages thereof which comprise the so-called deed of adoption appears of record in the office of the register of deeds for Johnson county, Kansas, in book 5 of Miscellaneous Records, at page 287, there being no other record thereof at or in any other public office, court or place of record in the states of Missouri and Kansas, is hereto attached as ‘exhibits C, 1, 2, 3 and 4’ and is made a part of the allegations of this cause of action as though written therein.
“Par. 16. The laws of Missouri relative to adoption at times hereinbefore mentioned appear in volume 1, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, at pages 691, 592 and 593, being chapter 20, children, article 1, sections 1671 to 1678, both inclusive, quoted and set out in full. Paragraph 17 alleges interpretation of laws of Missouri by the supreme court thereof by quotations and abstracted statements from the following cases: Sarazin v. Union Railroad Co., 153 Mo. 479; Hockaday v. Lynn, 200 Mo. 456; Gipson v. Orvens, 226 (Mo.) S. W. 856.”
“Par. 18. That said John R. Thorne and Ada C. Thorne did not at any time record said purported deed of adoption in any county in the state of Missouri, and because of their being residents of the state of Kansas, as aforesaid and nonresidents of the state of Missouri, could not and did not comply with the provision of the law requiring such record.
“Par. 19. That having ineffectually attempted to adopt the defendant, Robert L. Thorne, in the state of Missouri as aforesaid, said John R. Thome and said Ada C. Thome, then afterwards and on or about June 17, 1913, appeared in the probate court of Johnson county, Kansas, and carried on the proceedings set out in said ‘exhibit C, pages 1, 2, 3 and 4,’ which proceedings are wholly void as to the adoption of said Robert L. Thorne because of reasons appearing on the face thereof.”
“Par. 23. That at and on all the times and dates mentioned in said record said John R. Thorne and said Ada C. Thome were husband and wife, residing in Johnson county, Kansas, and at no time or times did said John R. Thorne and Ada C. Thorne or either of them ever reside within the state of Missouri.”

The deed of adoption attached to the petition reads:

“This deed of adoption, made and entered into this seventeenth day of February, 1911, by and between John R. Thome and Ada C. Thome, his wife, of the county of Johnson, state of Kansas, parties of the first part, and Blanche Parson, party of the second part.
“Witnesseth: That in accordance with and by virtue of the statutes of the state of Missouri relating to the adoption of children, said John R. Thorne and Ada C. Thome, and each of them, for good and valuable consideration to them moving, do hereby adopt the certain male child of said second party, named Park Parson, aged fifteen days, to be known from this time henceforth as Robert Lane Thorne, and as said first parties’ legal child and heir, with all the reciprocal relations of parent and child and all the rights and privileges which he might or could enjoy were he their own natural child, and agree to govern, educate, maintain, provide for and in all respects treat said child as though he were their own natural offspring and in keeping with their own station in life,
“In consideration of the premises said Blanche Parson, the parent of said child so adopted, gives consent for the adoption of said child by signing this [666]*666deed and in consideration of the foregoing covenants and agreements, hereby agrees that she shall not hereafter have any right or claim for the services, wages, control, custody or company of said child.
“In witness whereof, the said parties of the first part have hereunto set their hands this twenty-third day of August, 1911, and said party of the second part, now a single woman, has hereunto set her hand this seventeenth day of February, 1911. John R. Thorne.
Ada C. Thorne.
Blanche Parson.”

On the reverse side of the deed appears the acknowledgment of John R. Thorne and Ada C. Thorne, executed in Johnson county, Kansas, and the acknowledgment of Blanche Parson, executed in Jackson county, Missouri. The pertinent portion of the Blanche Parson acknowledgment reads:

"On this seventeenth day of February, 1911, before me, Jno. W. Kefner, a notary public in and for said county and state, appeared Blanche Parson to me known to be the party described in and who executed the foregoing instrument and acknowledged that she executed the same as her free act and deed and the said Blanche Parson further declared to me that she is single and that no person other than herself has any right or claim to said child.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 571, 145 Kan. 663, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlin-v-thorne-kan-1937.