Cribbs v. Floyd

199 S.E. 677, 188 S.C. 443, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1938
Docket14769
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 677 (Cribbs v. Floyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cribbs v. Floyd, 199 S.E. 677, 188 S.C. 443, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 177 (S.C. 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.

On or about June 5, 1933, Sam G. Floyd, a resident of Marion County, died intestate, seized in fee and possessed of a tract of land containing 160 acres. The issues presented by this appeal grow out of an action for the partition of this land among his heirs at law. Sam G. Floyd left no issue, and the case turns upon whether or not proceedings instituted by him on December 24, 1921, before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Robeson County, North Carolina, for the adoption of his niece, the defendant Mattie Lou F. Ashley, are valid.

The appellants are sisters and brothers of Sam G. Floyd, and the children of a sister, who predeceased him. The defendants are the widow of Sam G. Floyd (Donnie S. Floyd), and the children of W. Pink Floyd, a deceased brother of Sam G. Floyd.

The appellants challenge the regularity of the adoption proceedings- had before the Superior Court upon several grounds, and contend that although the Superior Court of Robeson County, North Carolina, is a Court of general *447 jurisdiction, in its exercise of this power, it is a Court of special and limited jurisdiction where no presumptions are indulged, its power in adoption proceedings being derived solely from the Statute.

The defendant, Mattie Lou F. Ashley, is the daughter of W. Pink Floyd. If the adoption proceedings are declared void she will inherit an interest in the land equal to an undivided 1/70 part, as an heir at law of her father, W. Pink Floyd. If the adoption proceedings are sustained, the widow, Donnie S. Floyd, will inherit an undivided one-third thereof, and the adopted daughter, Mattie Lou F. Ashley, will inherit an undivided two-thirds thereof.

The issues were referred to the Probate Judge for Marion County, and he found against the validity of the decree of adoption, upon the ground that the Superior Court did not have jurisdiction of Mattie Lou F. Ashley, who was actually in Marion County, South Carolina, at the time the letters of adoption were issued, and that she was neither personally present at the hearing before the Court not within its territorial limits. Upon exceptions to the Circuit Court, his Honor, Judge Dennis, in a well considered decree, reversed the Probate Judge, and upheld the validity of the adoption proceedings.

W. Pink Floyd lived near Marietta, in Robeson County, North Carolina, with his wife and children, and had been living there about twenty years prior to the institution of the adoption proceedings. His wife died when their infant child, Mattie Lou, was about five months old. About two weeks after her death, Sam G. Floyd and his wife, Donnie S. Floyd, with the consent of W. Pink Floyd, assumed the temporary custody of the child, and took her to Marion County, South Carolina, to live with them. She continued to live with them for seventeen years, after which time she married, and moved to Fairmont, North Carolina.

The adoption proceedings were commenced when Mattie Lou F. Ashley was six years of age, and while she still lived with her foster parents.

*448 The adoption statute of North Carolina (Section 174, North Carolina Revisal of 1905) provides: “Any person desiring to adopt any minor child may file a petition in the superior court of the county wherein such child resides, setting forth the name and age of such child and the name of its parents, whether the parents or either of them be living, and if there be no living parent, the name of the guardian, if any, and if there be no guardian, the name of the person having charge of the child or with whom such child resides, the amount and nature of the child’s estate, if any, and especially if the adoption is for the minority or for the life of the child.”

On December 31, 1921, the Clerk of the Superior Court of Robeson County, upon the verified petition of Sam G. Floyd, issued letters of adoption to Sam G. Floyd and his wife, Donnie S. Floyd, which authorized and empowered them to “take charge of said child, Mattie Lou Floyd, and enter upon their duties as parents of said child for life, to the end that the relationship of parent and child may be fully established between the said S. G. Floyd and wife, Donnie Floyd, and Mattie Lou Floyd, minor child, aggreeably to an order made by the Court.”

It is not suggested that the petition, which purported to be that of S. G. Floyd and his wife, but which was signed and verified by S. G. Floyd alone, does not fully comply with the requirements of the North Carolina law, except that the point is made that the petition should also have been signed by the wife, Donnie S. Floyd. The further objection is made, however, that the proceeding was not brought in the county of the child’s residence. The proceeding was commenced in Robeson County, and named W. Pink Floyd, the father of the child, as respondent.

In the record introduced before the lower Court, there is included a written request addressed to the Clerk of the Superior Court and signed and sworn to by W. Pink Floyd, requesting that Court to issue the letters of adoption to S. G. *449 Floyd and Donnie S. Floyd, and this request included the statement that the adopting parents were fully able to provide for and educate the child. W. Pink Floyd also signed his consent at the foot of the decree of adoption. The record before the Court showed that Mrs. W. Pink Floyd, the mother of the child, died when the child was five months old.

The Supreme Court of North Carolina, in the case of Truelove v. Parker, 191 N. C., 430, 132 S. E., 295, had occasion to construe the adoption statute which we have herein set out. In that case the order of adoption was held void because the record did not show the consent of the mother of the child, who had apparently abandoned it, and was living in another state.

The Court, in construing the statute, held that the petition must set forth the names of the parents of the child to be adopted, and, if both are living, their consent is, as a rule, prerequisite to an order granting the letters; or, if one is dead, the consent of the survivor must be shown.

There is no merit in the contention that the Court did not have jurisdiction of W. Pink Floyd, the father of the child. He was a party to the proceeding, and not only appeared in person before the Court, but signed his full consent to all that was done.

It will be noted that the North Carolina statute does not contain any provision that the child be made a party to the proceeding, nor that it be present at the hearing, nor that its consent be obtained. There being no such statutory requirement, there is no necessity to meet these conditions, 2 C. J. S., Adoption of Children, page 383, § 20; 1 Am. Jur, page 640.

But it is said that the requirements of the statute were not complied with, in that the petition was not filed in the Superior Court of the county wherein such child resides, it being admitted that at the time of the filing of the petition and for about six years prior thereto *450 Mattie Lou F. Ashley resided in Marion County, South Carolina, with Sam G. Floyd arid Donnie S. Floyd.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Interest of: G.G.B., Appeal of: J.B.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2026
In Re Lynn M.
540 A.2d 799 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Abercrombie v. Laboon
314 S.E.2d 847 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1984)
Davis by Lane v. Schweiker
553 F. Supp. 158 (D. Maryland, 1982)
Montgomery v. Schweiker
523 F. Supp. 1128 (D. Maryland, 1981)
Jackson v. Jackson
126 S.E.2d 855 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1962)
Fox v. Lasley
318 P.2d 933 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1957)
DRIGGERS ET UX. v. Jolley
64 S.E.2d 19 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1951)
Hunter v. Nunnamaker
53 S.E.2d 292 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1949)
In Re: Adoption McLaughlin
30 So. 2d 632 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1947)
McLaughlin v. Barco
30 So. 2d 632 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1947)
Perkins v. Webb
177 P.2d 222 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1947)
In Re Webb's Adoption
177 P.2d 222 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1947)
Barrett v. Delmore
54 N.E.2d 789 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 677, 188 S.C. 443, 1938 S.C. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cribbs-v-floyd-sc-1938.