Gamache v. Doering

189 S.W.2d 999, 354 Mo. 544, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39380.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 999 (Gamache v. Doering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gamache v. Doering, 189 S.W.2d 999, 354 Mo. 544, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 541 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

By this suit in equity Clara Kropp Gamache seeks to establish that she is the adopted [1000] daughter of Laura J. Kalb, deceased. Mrs. Kalb left a will which does not mention Clara Kropp Gamache and if Clara is successful in this action she is Mrs. Kalb's sole and pretermitted heir and entitled to approximately $800,000.00.

The theory of her suit is that Mrs. Kalb, in the presence of witnesses on Christmas Eve 1921, orally adopted her and promised that she would be her (Mrs. Kalb's) heir, that she assented and agreed to the adoption and that they mutually promised thenceforward to treat one another as mother and daughter. Ahern v. Matthews, 337 Mo. 362, 85 S.W.2d 377. She claims that for the next thirteen years and thereafter she faithfully performed all the duties of a daughter, fully complied with the oral adoption and all its implications and, therefore, to prevent an injustice to her, a court of equity should exercise its power and decree her status as an adopted child. — Mrs. Kalb having died without recognizing the obligations imposed by the adopted relationship, 2 Mo. L.R. 300, 303; annotations 27 A.L.R. 1325; 142 A.L.R. 84.

The Kalb household consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Kalb and Mrs. Kalb's sister, Mrs. Johnston, known as Miss Mattie. They were all wealthy people. A yardman, who also acted as Mrs. Johnson's chauffeur, lived with his family over the garage. The Kalbs always employed a chauffeur (for many years it was Richard Gasta), a colored cook and two colored maids. Most of these people remained in their employ for many years. Mrs. Kalb was a large woman, six feet tall and normally weighed about two hundred pounds. Most of the time, from 1921 until her death in 1941, she was an invalid and spent her time in her bedroom and sitting room on the second floor of their home. She was badly crippled with arthritis, particularly in her hands and arms and required almost constant personal attention.

According to the evidence offered in support of Clara's claim she "went to work" for the Kalbs in June 1921, after responding to a newspaper advertisement, as a "companion" to Mrs. Kalb. Her salary was $40.00 a month, later raised to $45.00 and then $65.00, — after her adoption there was no regular salary. By December 1921 Mrs. Kalb and Clara had become so attached to one another that Mrs. Kalb was considering adopting Clara. Consequently, she consulted a lawyer and was advised that she could legally adopt Clara, without a judicial proceeding, if there were witnesses. So, on Christmas Eve 1921 (as a Christmas present) in the presence of Mr. Kalb, Mrs. Johnston and Fred Gamache, Clara's husband after 1933. Mrs. Kalb said: "Well, now here is Mr. Kalb, Mattie and Freddie and *Page 549 . . . I now adopt Clara as my daughter and only heir. And she said, `I don't want my sister, Mrs. Doering, to know about this, because she is troublesome.' So then they each hugged one another, and they both started crying, Mrs. Kalb and Clara." Or, another version of the occurrence was that Mrs. Kalb, after expressing her desire for a daughter, her great love for Clara and stating that she had consulted a lawyer, said: "So, with my husband's approval, and in the presence of sister Mattie, my husband and Freddie, I am now adopting Clara as my daughter and heir.' And she then said . . . `Do you agree, Clara?'" And Clara said, "I certainly do, Mother Kalb, I will do everything I can to be a worthy daughter to you.'" Then they embraced and cried and Mrs. Kalb warned them to not let her sister, Mrs. Doering, know about it because she would cause trouble.

In corroboration of the adoption Clara's brother, William F. Kropp, a policeman in Webster Groves, and his wife testified that they stopped by the Kalb home in the summer of 1922 and Mr. and Mrs. Kalb and Clara were sitting on the porch. "After a few minutes, Mrs. Kalb started telling us about the adoption of my sister. She says, `I suppose you know that we have adopted your sister for my daughter?' And I said `Yes.' And she said, `Well, ever since that time, I am the happiest woman in the world.'" Her sister-in-law, Frances Sharpe Gamache, said that when she was visiting Clara, after they became acquainted in 1933, Mrs. Kalb told her she had adopted Clara in 1921, around Christmas. She said she hoped she would be as good a mother to Clara as Clara was a daughter to her.

[1] Assuming, for the purposes of this opinion, that the evidence adduced in support of Clara's claim is sufficient, prima facie, to establish the fact of her adoption by Mrs. Kalb — within the theory of her case — it does not follow, as she now argues, that she was entitled to a decree. The case is certainly not comparable to Kerr v. Smiley (Mo.), 239 S.W. 501, in which there had been an attempt to comply with the then [1001] existing law and adopt a child by deed, the only defect being that the deed was recorded in the wrong county. Neither is the case comparable to McIntyre v. Hardesty, 347 Mo. 805, 149 S.W.2d 334, in which there was a deed of adoption, signed and acknowledged, but not recorded as the statutes then required. Neither is the case similar to Ahern v. Matthews, supra, in which there was a written contract and a lost deed of adoption. In each of these cases the solemn, formal, written instruments clearly show that the deceased once had the purpose and intent to adopt the named child. In this case there is no such instrument and while that fact is not determinative there are other circumstances which weigh overwhelmingly against this claim.

[2] Clara was born January 22, 1899, consequently, when she went to work for Mrs. Kalb in June and claims to have been adopted in *Page 550 December 1921, she was then twenty-two years of age. One may, by complying with the statutory adoption law, adopt an adult. State ex rel. Buerk v. Calhoun, 330 Mo. 1172, 52 S.W.2d 742; St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Hill, 336 Mo. 17, 76 S.W.2d 685. In this case we need not say whether there may be a valid oral equitable adoption of an adult, although our interpretation of Thompson v. Moseley, 344 Mo. 240, 125 S.W.2d 860, is that it plainly holds that there may not be. In any event, the fact of Clara's majority is a circumstance contrary to the theory of equitable adoption, — the protection of a child who had no choice or will with respect to the establishment of so vital a relationship, and the circumstance weighs heavily against her claim, if it is not destructive of it. Thompson v. Moseley, supra.

[3] Clara says that she was employed as Mrs. Kalb's "companion." Some of the witnesses called her a "maid," Mrs. Kalb's "personal maid" or "personal attendant." But whatever she was known as, there is no dispute as to what she in fact did. When she went to work for Mrs. Kalb and for more than twelve years after she claims to have been adopted she was in constant personal attendance upon her. She washed Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 999, 354 Mo. 544, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamache-v-doering-mo-1945.