Estate of Kuhn v. Kuhn

267 N.E.2d 876, 148 Ind. App. 528, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 478
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 26, 1971
DocketNo. 869A152
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 N.E.2d 876 (Estate of Kuhn v. Kuhn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Kuhn v. Kuhn, 267 N.E.2d 876, 148 Ind. App. 528, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 478 (Ind. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

[530]*530STATEMENT OF CASE AND FACTS

Buchanan, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Starke Circuit Court wherein the Administrator’s proposed distribution of the estate of Sherry Lynn Kuhn, an unmarried minor dying intestate, was set aside and a new distribution substituted which added to the plan of distribution the decedent’s half-sisters and adopted sisters.

Robert H. Kuhn married Nancy Miller Kuhn in 1944, and their marriage was blessed with two children, Susan Letta Kuhn and Sherry Lynn Kuhn, the decedent.

His first marriage ending in divorce, Mr. Kuhn then married again and produced from this union Tracy Kuhn and Cecily Kuhn, half-sisters of the decedent, Sherry Lynn Kuhn.

After the death of his second wife, Mr. Kuhn married for the third time and this time he duly adopted the two minor female children of his third wife, i.e., Nancy Lee Lincoln Kuhn and Melissa Sue Lincoln Kuhn, who thus became sisters of the decedent by virtue of being adopted by her natural father, Robert H. Kuhn (herein referred to as “adopted sisters”).

Thus, when the decedent, Sherry Lynn Kuhn, died intestate on April 18, 1965, in Lake County, Indiana, she left surviving, her natural father, Robert H. Kuhn, her natural mother, Nancy M. Kuhn, and her natural minor sister, Susan L. Kuhn. She also left surviving, her two minor half-sisters, Tracy and Cecily Kuhn, and lastly her minor adopted sisters, Nancy Lee Lincoln Kuhn and Melissa Sue Lincoln Kuhn.

The Administrator objected to including decedent’s half-sisters and adopted sisters in the plan of distribution.

At the hearing on the Petition To Determine Heirship, Robert H. Kuhn, the half sisters, and the adopted sisters were before the court by reason of an affidavit executed by Robert H. Kuhn authorizing an attorney, Joel Levy, to file on their behalf a Petition Objecting To Final Account and Petition To Determine Heirship During Administration.

Following final Determination of Heirship by the Court, [531]*531Appellant-Administrator filed a motion for a new trial alleging, in essence, that the judgment of the trial court was contrary to law and not sustained by sufficient evidence in that the court erred in its determination of heirship.

ISSUES — Pruning the legal shrubbery bares three questions for decision:

I. Are the decedent’s sisters by reason of adoption of a common parent entitled to inherit from her under Indiana law?
II. Are decedent’s sisters of the half blood entitled to inherit from her under Indiana law ?
III. Were the decedent’s sisters of the half blood properly before the court for adjudication of their rights?

Appellant-Administrator contends in effect that Burns § 6-201 setting forth the general rules of descent should be strictly construed and that “it is the law of the land that adopted children are not heirs at law of natural children, lineally or collaterally, absent any express statutory direction to the contrary.” Appellant, still adhering to the doctrine of descent of property by blood lines, takes the same view as to property descending to brothers and sisters of the half blood.

Appellees’ position is that on April 18, 1965, the date of decedent’s death, there were two specific Indiana statutes clearly providing that adopted children of a parent of a decedent inherit from the decedent the same as natural brothers and sisters and that children of the half blood have the same status and rights of inheritance as children of the whole blood.

DECISION

I. It is our opinion that the trial court did not commit error by including the adopted children of the father of the decedent in the plan of distribution.

Appellant’s argument concerning the rights of adopted children to inherit from the natural child of a common parent cites certain early Indiana cases and cases from foreign juris[532]*532dictions, none of which are relevant to an Indiana resident’s death on April 18, 1965.

Prior to the adoption of the Probate Code of 1953, the Indiana courts did hold that adopted children could not inherit from the collateral kin of the adopting parents. Jacobs v. Schulmeyer, et al. (1947), 117 Ind. App. 275, 70 N. E. 2d 435. In 1953, however, the legislature altered and revised the standing of adopted children and in so doing implemented I.C. 1971 29-1-2-8, Ind. Stat. Anno. § 6-208, Burns 1953 Repl., which reads as follows:

“Adopted children, (a) For the purpose of inheritance to, through and from a child legally adopted during his minority, such child shall be treated the same as if he was the natural child of his adopting parents, and he shall cease to be treated as a child of his natural parents and of any previous adopting parents for the purposes of intestate succession * * (Emphasis supplied.)

Appellant manages to ignore the statute, which was in effect at the time of decedent’s death on April 18, 1965. This statute is controlling insofar as her estate is concerned. Scott v. Scott (1958), 238 Ind. 478, 150 N. E. 2d 740, Brown v. Critchell (1886), 110 Ind. 31, 7 N. E. 888.

Appellant founds his argument solely on the belief that property should descend by blood. His quarrel is with the legislature and not the courts, as the descent of property by blood, at least as to adopted children, has not been the law in Indiana for many years. It is a doctrine of yesteryear.

The Appellate Court commented upon the statute affecting adopted children in the case of In Re Kenny’s Estate (1958), 129 Ind. App. 199, 153 N. E. 2d 607 (transfer denied) :

“The statute, as drawn and worded leaves no discernible opening for conditional interpretation. In effect, it provides that when a minor child is adopted it is no longer the child of or in the blood line of its natural parents for the purpose of any possibility of intestate inheritance. The natural ties of affection and interest between the adopted minor child and its blood relatives are not and, of course, cannot be [533]*533affected by the statute. But for the purpose of intestate succession the child is freed from its former blood relationship status and is established in a new status as a member of a new family with full standing as one of its blood.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Two years later this court held that under the statute the children of an adopted child of the decedent’s brother were entitled to take as heirs from the decedent. In so doing, Judge Cooper, speaking for the court in Pointer v. Lucas (1960), 131 Ind. App. 10, 169 N. E. 2d 196, stated that:

“The phrase ‘to, through and from’ means that property will be transmitted to such child, through such child and from such child as if he were the natural born child of such adopting parent. For the purpose of inheritance such child is born again.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Thus, it seems clear in our opinion that adopted children were intended to fall into the category of brothers and sisters, as"set out in I.C. 1971, 29-2-1, Ind. Stat. Anno. § 6-201 (C) (3),1 Burns 1953 Repl.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
267 N.E.2d 876, 148 Ind. App. 528, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-kuhn-v-kuhn-indctapp-1971.