Eckford v. Knox

2 S.W. 372, 67 Tex. 200, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 638
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1886
DocketNo. 5613
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 372 (Eckford v. Knox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eckford v. Knox, 2 S.W. 372, 67 Tex. 200, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 638 (Tex. 1886).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

Article 1 of our Revised Statutes provides the means by which one person may adopt another as his legal heir. Article 2 provides that the party so adopted shall [202]*202be entitled to all rights and privileges of a legal heir to the party so adopting him; provided, however, that if the party adopting such heir have at the time of such adoption, or shall thereafter have, a child, begotten in lawful wedlock, such adopted heir shall in no case inherit more than one-fourth of the estate of the party adopting him. To ascertain the right of an adopted heir, we must read the foregoing provisions in connection with our statute of descent and distribution. In case of the death of a person leaving no husband or wife surviving, the children of the deceased inherit the entire separate estate. In case a husband or wife survives, he or she takes one-third of the personalty by absolute title, and one-third of the real estate for- life, and the remainder passes to the children or their descendants. The interest of a decedent in the community property passes to his or her child or children, and, in default of such, to the surviving spouse.

It will thus be seen that the only class of persons who primarily inherit from a deceased person every species of property of which he may die seized, whether it be separate or community, are his children. If he leave children, the wife can not inherit his interest in the community estate; and if he leave either children or their descendants, no collateral or relative in the ascending line can take any part of his separate property. To let in any other class of persons to the inheritance of the whole estate, common and separate, there must be no children of the decedent surviving him.

Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as the heir of a living person. When the statute says that one person may adopt another as his heir, and that the latter thereupon becomes entitled to all the rights and privileges of a legal heir of the party so adopting him, it means that, upon the death of the adopting party, the other shall, if living, become entitled to an interest in all his property of which he shall die intestate, and shall not be wholly excluded by any class of persons whatsoever. His heir-ship is not confined to the separate or the community estate. It includes them both. Otherwise he is not a full heir to the property of the party adopting him. He has not all the rights and privileges of such an heir, and to these the statute says he sba.n be entitled. If he was to take only in the event the adopting party have no children born in lawful wedlock, it would doubtless have been so said in the statute. He would not then have been an heir certain, but one whose right to inherit an interest in the [203]*203entire estate depended upon the contingency that some person or class of persons having precedence in the inheritance were not in being when the intestate died.

If we take the liberty of postponing the adopted heir so as to give the children preference over him, in what class is he to be ranked? Will he partake of the inheritance with the wife or the father or mother, or the grandfather and grandmother, or with collaterals, and if so, in what degree? To such questions as these we can receive no answer that is justified by the statute or by any process of reasoning that can be adopted. The result is that unless we place the adopted heir upon the same plane with the children of the intestate the statute is of no force whatever, and the adoption of an heir is a vain and useless ceremony.

But the statute does not leave us in doubt upon this question. The proviso is to the effect that if the party adopting the heir had at the time or thereafter a child begotten in lawful wedlock, the adopted heir shall not inherit more than one-fourth of the estate of the party adopting him. Why tne necessity of this proviso, if the heir could not inherit‘at all in case the deceased left a child or children?

But there was a necessity for it, if, without it, the adopted heir would share equally with the children of the deceased, begotten in lawful wedlock. This, as the legislature saw, would be the natural effect of his heirship; and, to confine the amount of his inheritance within such limits as would give a large proportion of the decedent’s estate to his children, they attached the proviso. They make it clear that he was to inherit, though the deceased might leave children surviving him; and that, so far as the inheritance was concerned, he occupied the position of a child with no other restrictions upon his rights except such as were contained in the proviso.

Whoever succeeds to the property of a deceased person who dies intestate, succeeds to it as an heir. To create one person the heir of another, is to give him the right to succeed to a portion, and if there be no other heirs, the whole of the latter’s estate, if he died intestate. Without w;ords of limitation in the statute, he can not be postponed to any other class of persons, or his heirship does not exist. The father and mother are not the heirs of their child, who himself leaves children or their descendants. The wife is not the heir to her husband’s interest in the community property, if he leaves a child surviving him.

If the adopted party must succeed to the whole or a portion of [204]*204che intestate decedent who has adopted him, and must take an interest in it, though there be children of the latter surviving, he occupies the position of a child so far as the inheritance is concerned. He can not be postponed to any class of persons who are not themselves heirs except in default of children, and will take in all respects as a child if the statute itself does not limit his rights in this respect. Aware that the effect of the law was to give him a child’s share of the property, the legislature confined his inheritance under certain circumstances to one-fourth of the estate, thereby saying that in all other respects he should be entitled to all the rights and privileges of a child so far as the inheritance is concerned.

These views derive strength from the general rules governing adoption wherever it prevails. Adoption was unknown to the common law, but was in practice and recognized under civil law jurisprudence from its earliest days. Its effect was to-[make a stranger the son and heir of the person adopting him. The person adopted entered the family and came under the power of the head of the family. He stood in the relation of child to his adopter, and his children became the grandchildren of such person. (Vidal v. Commagere, 13 La. Ann., 517.)

By the Spanish law the person adopted succeeded as heir to the one adopting him (4 Partides Lit., 16), but according to the law as it existed in Mexico whilst Texas was under the dominion of that government, no person having a legitimate child living could adopt a stranger as co-heir with his child. (Teal v. Sevier, 26 Texas, 520.)

Our statute imports the civil law as to adoption into our jurisprudence, but modifies it in some important respects. It gives to the adopted party the position of a child, only so far as to make him the heir of his adopter, but does not constitute him a member of the latter’s family with suúh duties and privileges as that relation would imply. It allows him to inherit to a certain extent, though there be legitimate children born to the adopting party. But as to the inheritance in all other respects it gives all the rights and privileges of a legitimate child.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W. 372, 67 Tex. 200, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckford-v-knox-tex-1886.