Estate of McKeag

74 P. 1039, 141 Cal. 403, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 529
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
DocketSac. No. 1136.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 74 P. 1039 (Estate of McKeag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of McKeag, 74 P. 1039, 141 Cal. 403, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 529 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.—

This is an appeal from an order of the superior court of Shasta County, refusing to revoke letters of administration in the above estate, and the real point involved is as to the validity of certain adoption proceedings.

The respondent Charles J. Teass is the husband of Helen McKeag-Teass, and was appointed administrator of said estate upon the request of his wife, who claimed to be the adopted daughter, and, as such, sole heir of deceased. At the time of the alleged adoption, Mrs. Teass, then Helen Skeels, was a minor, over the age of twelve years, and the daughter of Spencer L. and Anna E. Skeels.

On December 2, 1895, William McKeag and the deceased, Cora V. McKeag, his wife, jointly applied to the judge of the superior court of Shasta County for an order of adoption by them of said child, and filed therewith their written agreement of adoption required by law. The written consent of said minor was likewise filed, together with that of her father and mother consenting to and authorizing the making of such order of adoption.

Thereafter the judge of said superior court made and filed an order for the adoption by said William and Cora Y. Mc-Keag of said minor, which order recited, among other things: “That the petitioners and said minor child, and all persons whose consent is necessary, have appeared herein as provided by law, and ... it is hereby ordered that said petitioners William McKeag and Cora Y. McKeag, his wife, adopt said minor child . . . and said minor child shall be treated by them in all respects as their own lawful child should be treated, including the right of inheritance, . . . and shall bear to each other and toward each other the relation and relations of parents . . . and child.”

Prior to said adoption, said minor had, for some six or seven years, been living with said William and Cora McKeag, and after said adoption continued to live with them until their death—William McKeag dying a couple of years before his wife. William and Cora Y. McKeag had no other ehil *406 dren, and a strong feeling of parental love and affection existed at all times between the adoptive parents and said child, and so continued to the death of the former.

Said Cora V. McKeag died intestate in Shasta County in July, 1901, and after the issuance of letters of administration to said respondent, the appellant, a sister of said deceased, claiming to be one of the heirs at- law, petitioned to have the letters issued to respondent revoked, and letters issued to herself, which petition was denied.

Upon the hearing in the lower court, the validity of the adoption proceedings was the sole point in issue, as it is the sole question for determination here.

The appellant claims,—1. That the judge before whom the adoption proceedings were had, acquired no jurisdiction to make the order of adoption, because the father of the minor, child did not appear personally before him during any part of the proceedings; and 2. That neither the adopting parents nor the father of the minor, nor the minor herself, were examined by the judge on the hearing, either separately, or at all.

Upon the first point it is insisted that it is not enough for the adoption proceedings to show that the father consented in writing to the adoption of his child, but that the order of adoption should affirmatively show that he was actually present at the hearing upon the petition. We think, however, on this collateral attack, that the fact does sufficiently appear upon the face of the order from the recital therein “that the petitioner and said minor child, and all persons whose consent is necessary, have appeared herein as provided by law.”

In the Estate of Camp, 131 Cal. 470, 1 it is said: “While the proceedings for the adoption of a minor child do not constitute judicial- proceedings, and the order of the judge therein is not the judgment of a court, yet under section 227 of the Civil Code, the judge of the superior court has been designated as a tribunal for that purpose, and in the performance of his duties thereunder exercises judicial functions. It is a well-settled rule that when the jurisdiction of an inferior or special tribunal, or its power to act in any particular *407 case, depends upon the existence of a fact which is to he established before it by extrinsic evidence, the determination of that fact by the tribunal cannot be questioned in a collateral attack upon its order. . . . Whether the children had been abandoned by their parents was a jurisdictional fact to be determined by the judge upon the evidence presented to him before he was authorized to entertain the petition for their adoption, and the recital in his order that it appeared to his satisfaction that they had been abandoned by their parents was a determination of this fact which cannot be questioned in a collateral attack upon the order. Otherwise, the existence of this- fact and the status of the children would be always uncertain, since the evidence might not be the same at all investigations, and might be regarded with different effect by different tribunals, and the adoption be held by one court to have been valid, while another court would hold it to have been of no avail. Whether the parents of the child, 'in a direct proceeding against the adopting person for the recovery of the persons of the children, would be bound by the determination of the judge, is not involved herein.”

So, in the case at bar, it was a jurisdictional fact, to be determined by the judge from extrinsic evidence, whether the consent of the father was necessary to the adoption, and, if so, to require his presence before him at the hearing. While the general rule is, that a child cannot be adopted without the consent of its parents, there are several exceptions to the rule; as, for instance, if either parent has been deprived of civil rights, or adjudged guilty of cruelty or adultery, and for that reason divorced, or adjudged an habitual drunkard, or has abandoned the child. In any of these eases the consent or presence of such parent is unnecessary. Otherwise it is. Upon the appearance before the judge of the persons seeking to adopt the child and the child, he acquires jurisdiction to entertain the petition for adoption, but at this point it is only jurisdiction to preliminarily investigate and determine whether the presence at the hearing of the parents of the minor child is necessary or not.

One parent being present and consenting, it is still incumbent upon the judge to ascertain whether the consent and presence of that parent alone is necessary to the re *408 linquishment of the child, and to confer full jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing and make the order of adoption.

If it should be ascertained upon such inquiry that the child has another parent living who possesses a right to its care, custody, or control, it is the duty of the judge to decline to proceed with the hearing on the petition until the consent and presence of such parent are had; on the other hand, should the inquiry disclose that such parent, if living, comes within any of the exceptions of the statute, the consent or presence of such parent is unnecessary. In all eases it becomes necessary to determine this jurisdictional fact.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 1039, 141 Cal. 403, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mckeag-cal-1903.