Evans's Estate

47 Pa. Super. 196, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 134
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 47 Pa. Super. 196 (Evans's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans's Estate, 47 Pa. Super. 196, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 134 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

The appellant claimed the entire personal estate of the decedent as an adopted child. This claim was based exclusively upon a writing, under seal, executed by her mother and her grandmother and the decedent, and his wife, in 1884. The instrument was not acknowledged. It begins with the words, “Whereas I, Alice Lewis,’.’ and after reciting the circumstances' and date of the birth of her child, proceeds as follows, “not feeling able to care for and maintain said female child as it should be, therefore she hereby agrees by and with the advice and consent of her widow mother, the grandmother of said infant, has given ..and by these presents doth give, and release all [198]*198claim to said female infant child now and forever, to Thomas W. Evans and Elizabeth, his wife, who, by signing this agreement, agrees to adopt, receive, care for in sickness and in health, and to pay all doctors’ bills, and to provide said child with food, and clothing, and education, books and the privilege of schools, and a good moral training at their and each of their expense without expecting to receive any help from me, or my mother, for so doing, or in no case are they to throw said child upon the Poor Board or claim anything from charity for to assist them to maintain the said child while they or either of them shall live, while they have anything for themselves, until the said child shall arrive at the age of 18 years, is to have a home with the said Thomas Evans or his wife, or either of them, and they further agree not to abuse or to overtax her with work while under said age; to love, cherish and respect her, and teach her to respect them, and all others to whom respect is due. Hoping and believing that they will do all these things, I, Alice Lewis, and Elizabeth Lewis, grandmother of said child, do release and consign to the care and keeping the said child to be theirs, and to be called after their name, without any objection from me forever or while they both shall live under the penalties of the law.”-

While the adoption of children is a practice which was recognized by the civil law from its earliest date, it was unknown to the common law of England and exists in the states of the Union solely by virtue of statute: 1 Cyc. of Law and Procedure, 917. Numerous decisions from many states support this statement, and, amongst them, Ballard v. Ward, 89 Pa. 358, where Chief Justice Sharswood said: “It never was in the power of an individual, by the common law of England or this state, to adopt the child of another as his own until the Act of Assembly of May 4, 1855, P. L. 430, by the seventh section of which it was authorized by degree of the court of common pleas of the county where the person desirous of adopting such child may be resident.” That case was decided in 1879, [199]*199and as it involved the validity and effect of a sealed agreement, executed in 1863, by an uncle to adopt his niece, which was consented to by the father by contemporaneous writing under seal, the case must be regarded as authoritatively deciding that prior to, and independently of, the Act of April 2, 1872, P. L. 31, there could be no legal adoption of children in Pennsylvania by deed merely. But that act declared “that in all cases heretofore, as well as hereafter, where the common-law form of adopting a child by deed has been practiced or done, it shall be lawful, on proof of due execution of the deed, to have the same recorded in the proper office for the recording of deeds, in the county where the adopting parent resides at the date of its execution; and a duly certified copy thereof shall be received in evidence, with the same force and effect as the record of adoption would have in the mode provided in the act to which this is a supplement.” Whilst the legislature would seem to have been mistaken in assuming that there was a common-law form of adopting a child by deed, this fact does not destroy the force of the other words of the statute, which tend to show a legislative intent to give to adoption by deed duly executed and recorded, the same force and effect as the record of an adoption in the mode provided in the act of May 4, 1855. This construction has some support in the fact that, although the question was legitimately before the court in Ballard v. Ward, and in Wallace’s Est., 218 Pa. 39, the court did not declare that the act was wholly inoperative by reason of the mistaken assumption of the legislature, the decision in the former case being put upon the ground that the retroactive provision of the act was inoperative, and in the latter case upon a construction of the deed.. Moreover, in Peterson’s Est., 212 Pa. 453, the court said: “No action by any court appears to be absolutely essential to a valid and lawful adoption. The Act of April 2, 1872, P. L. 31, recognizes adoption, by deed; and provides for the recording of the deed and a certified copy as evidence.” See also Phillips’s Est., 17 Pa. Superior Ct. 103.

[200]*200Granting, then, that there may be a legal adoption by deed, is the adoption complete without recording of the deed? There is no authoritative Pennsylvania decision directly on the point. But in other jurisdictions where the statutes require that the instrument of adoption be recorded, it is held that the act is not complete until such condition is complied with: Tyler v. Reynolds, 53 Iowa, 146. This was held, also, in a case where the instrument was almost entirely destroyed by accident soon after it was executed, by reason of which it became impossible to record it: Gill v. Sullivan, 55 Iowa, 341. It was held in the- same state that the instrument should be recorded while the child is a minor: McCollister v. Yard, 90 Iowa, 621; and iii the lifetime of the adopting party: Shearer v. Weaver, 56 Iowa, 578. In Tyler v. Reynolds, the court said: “In the case at bar. the instrument was incomplete until filed for record.- Between the parties no rights were acquired until this was done, and neither was bound until then. Before this was done Philo Reynolds died, and no one had the power and authority to do what he failed to do, or to do what was required to be done to render the instrument valid or obligatory. -Upon his death his natural heirs inherited. Their rights became vested, and could not be prejudiced by filing the instrument for record after that time. It is true the statute does not declare by whom it shall be so filed, but by whoever done it is in the nature of a delivery of the instrument, and from that time binding on both. But there could be no such delivery as to Reynolds after his death.” It will be noticed that, in the present case, the appellant was born on September 6, 1884; that the instrument was .executed on November 22 of the same year; that the decedent died September 23, 1906, his wife having died before him; and that the instrument was proved by a subscribing witness and recorded on September 27, 1906. It would seem, from the words of the act of 1872, that recording of the deed was deemed necessary in order to make the adoption complete. Moreover, the legislature [201]*201was dealing with a mode of adoption which should be the equivalent of an adoption by proceedings in court, of which a public record is made, and where the recording of the deed is postponed for twenty-two years, and until after the alleged adopting party is dead, it is difficult to conclude that the act of adoption became complete so as to prevent his estate vesting, at his death, in his natural-born heirs.

But without positively deciding the point, and granting that recording is not absolutely essential, we come to a consideration of the construction and effect of the instrument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Pa. Super. 196, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evanss-estate-pasuperct-1911.