Estate of Smith

195 P.2d 842, 86 Cal. App. 2d 456
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1948
DocketCiv. No. 13459
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 842 (Estate of Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Smith, 195 P.2d 842, 86 Cal. App. 2d 456 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

86 Cal.App.2d 456 (1948)

Estate of HAROLD W. SMITH, Deceased. RACHEL ELIZABETH SMITH, Appellant,
v.
THE SAN FRANCISCO BANK (a Corporation) et al., Defendants; MARION SMITH PASSARELLA, Respondent.

Civ. No. 13459.

California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. One.

June 30, 1948.

Samuel D. Hamburg for Appellant.

Robert E. Hatch for Respondent.

PETERS, P. J.

Harold W. Smith died testate in California on October 7, 1944. By his will, executed in North Carolina in July of 1941 while he was a resident of that state, he devised his entire estate, appraised at a little over $17,000, to his then newly-acquired wife whom he had married in June, 1941, in North Carolina. The couple came to California in November, 1941. The will of decedent was admitted to probate, and, upon the hearing of the petition for final distribution, it developed that Marion Smith Passarella, the respondent, claimed an interest in the estate as a pretermitted heir, claiming to be the adopted daughter of the deceased. She *459 therefore claimed a one-half interest in that portion of decedent's estate that was his separate property. After a hearing, the probate court decreed that respondent was a legally adopted and pretermitted daughter of deceased, that the entire estate was the separate property of decedent, and that appellant and respondent should share equally therein. The wife appeals from the decree of final distribution, challenging both the determination that respondent was legally adopted, and the finding that the entire estate was the separate property of the deceased. [1] In addition, appellant contends that, if it be assumed that respondent was legally adopted, nevertheless she may not take as a pretermitted heir under section 90 of the Probate Code because, so it is asserted, the will shows, on its face, that the testator intended to exclude respondent from his will. This contention is based upon the fact that the will left all of decedent's property to appellant and specifically left to her the proceeds of all insurance policies, and provided that this property was to be "the sole and absolute property" of appellant. It is too clear to require extended discussion that such provisions leaving all the property to the widow, or disposing of the entire estate, do not express an intent to exclude a child. To exclude a child the words of the will must show that the testator had the child in mind, but, nevertheless, excluded such child. (See many cases collected 26 Cal.Jur. 238, p. 925.) There is no such language in the present will.

This case was argued together with Estate of Morgan, 1 Civ. 13686, and Estate of Martin, 1 Civ. 13687, post, p. 474 [195 P.2d 839], inasmuch as all three cases involve common questions relating to the validity of adoption decrees and the right collaterally to attack such decrees. The appellants in the Estate of Morgan, subsequent to the oral argument, requested that their appeal be dismissed, and it has been so ordered.

In the instant case, the factual background of the adoption issue is not in dispute. Respondent is the child of Edith and George Norton. She was born in 1913. Shortly after her birth George Norton abandoned his wife and child. In 1920, in Buffalo, New York, Edith Norton secured a final decree of divorce from George Norton. In 1923, Edith married decedent, Harold W. Smith, and lived with him until her death. In August, 1923, the decedent adopted or attempted to adopt the respondent in New York. It is the validity of that adoption decree that presents one of the main questions on this appeal. A complete photostatic copy of the adoption proceeding *460 was introduced into evidence. The petition for adoption was prepared, sworn to and filed in Erie County, New York, on August 27, 1923. It alleged that the petitioner, Harold W. Smith, had married the mother of the child, the child then being 10 years of age, and desired to adopt the child; that the father of the child, George Norton, in September, 1913, had "abandoned his said wife and child"; that since that date the father had contributed nothing to the child's support, and had never returned to or communicated with his wife or child; that "George E. Norton abandoned said Marion Crocker Norton in September, 1913, and has abandoned her ever since said date." Attached to this petition was a verified statement of the mother of the child sworn to and filed on August 27, 1923, reciting that she had read the verified petition of her then husband; that the "statements concerning the abandonment of said Marion Crocker Norton are true to the knowledge of deponent"; that deponent has no knowledge or information as to the present whereabouts of the father of the child, and has had no such information since May of 1920. The mother also filed a consent to the adoption, also dated August 27, 1923. The order of adoption was dated, signed by the judge and filed on August 27, 1923. It recites the facts concerning the filing of the petition, the agreement to adopt, and the consent to the adoption by the mother, and then the order states: "... and it appearing that George E. Norton, the father of said Marion Crocker Norton, abandoned said Marion Crocker Norton in September, 1913, and has never communicated with her or contributed to her support in any manner since said date." The order of adoption is then made.

It will be noted that there is nothing in the record of the adoption proceeding to indicate that any type of notice, actual or constructive, was given to the father of the child of the pendency of that proceeding. Indeed, the recitals in the various documents referred to above, and the fact that the petition for, and the order of, adoption bear the same date, indicates that no notice of the adoption proceeding was ever given the natural father of the child. The recitals in the adoption proceeding, however, do not indicate affirmatively or negatively whether there had been a prior adjudication of abandonment and whether, if there had been, the father had notice thereof.

Appellant urges that since the natural parent had no notice of the adoption proceeding, the order of adoption was void for lack of jurisdiction in the Erie County, New York, court, *461 and for that reason it is contended that respondent never became the legally adopted child of decedent and cannot take any portion of his estate as a pretermitted heir. In this connection the appellant relies upon the Estate of Hampton, 55 Cal.App.2d 543 [131 P.2d 565], and urges that the holding of that case conclusively establishes that the adoption decree in the instant case is completely void.

For the purposes of clarity, the exact relationships of the litigants in the instant case should be again set forth. The adopted child is the respondent. She does not challenge the adoption decree, but, in fact, is relying upon it to establish her relationship to the deceased, her adopted father. No party to the adoption proceeding is challenging the adoption order. No relative of the adopted child is attacking the decree. The mother of the child consented to the adoption, and is now dead. Harold W. Smith, who adopted the child, is now deceased, and at no time since the order was made 25 years ago has he challenged or questioned the decree. The real father of the child is not a party to this proceeding and has, so far as the record shows, at no time ever challenged or questioned the decree. The appellant is a subsequent wife of Harold W. Smith. She was not a party to the adoption proceeding, and has no legal relationship with respondent. She claims through the adopting parent.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 842, 86 Cal. App. 2d 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-smith-calctapp-1948.