Grantham v. Gossett

81 S.W. 895, 182 Mo. 651, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 895 (Grantham v. Gossett) 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
Grantham v. Gossett, 81 S.W. 895, 182 Mo. 651, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 195 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is a suit against the personal representatives and heirs of R. T. Wilson, deceased. The petition is in two counts. The first count states that when the plaintiff was a very young child, an agreement was made between her father and Mr. Wilson that the latter would adopt the “plaintiff as his lawful heir under the statutes of the State of Missouri;” whereupon her father delivered her to Mr. Wilson who received her in his family, where she was reared as his own child, dropping her own name, which was. Mary Elizabeth Triplett, and taking that of Minnie Wilson; that she continued to live in the family for a period of ^fifteen years, until she was married, and went to live with her husband in West Virginia; during her life in the family she demeaned herself as a dutiful daughter and received from Mr. Wilson and his wife the care that dutiful parents bestow on their children and the same that they bestowed on their own children; that she was everywhere in their social circle recognized and known as their adopted daughter; she married with the consent and approval of her. adopted parents, always supposing that she had been regularly adopted according to law and did not discover until after Wilson’s death that no deed of adoption had in fact been executed as the statute requires; that the contract was' fully performed on the part of her father and herself, and she prays a decree that it be specifically performed by the defendants.

The second count is in all respects like the first except that the contract alleged is not one to adopt the plaintiff, but it was that Mr. Wilson would take the plaintiff into his family as a member thereof, would maintain and educate her, treat her in all respects as one of his own children, and that she should share in his estate the same as though she, was his own child; the prayer is for a specific performance of that agreement.

The statements as to the contracts were denied by the defendants in their answers.

[659]*659The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to show as follows: ' .

The plaintiff’s father moved from Illinois to Kansas City in the spring of 1865. He came in a covered wagon, bringing his family, which, besides himself, consisted of his three children, the oldest a boy then abont eight years old, the two others girls; the plaintiff was the elder of the two girls, she was probably then about six years old. The mother of the children was dead. The father was very poor. He remained in Kansas City during the summer and fall of that year, and in the early winter moved to Kansas, taking the boy with him but leaving the two girls, with whom or on what terms he left the little girls the plaintiff’s evidence does not very clearly indicate. It appears that they drifted or in some way came under the roof of a butcher named Haag through whose instrumentality one of them, the plaintiff, was taken into the home of Mr. Wilson, and the other into that of a Mr. Miller.

The father, Triplett, went to Kansas and there married. His condition, however, showed no improvement, his surroundings were poor. In the course of time he had a child of his second wife, and shortly after that he came to Kansas City and to the residence of Mr. Wilson and demanded his child, the plaintiff. At that time Mr. Wilson was absent from home, had gone east, but Mrs. Wilson saw Triplett and talked with him about the child. She stated to him that they had become attached to her and she to them and that they were reluctant to give her up. B.ut he insisted and Mrs. Wilson told him that she would get the child ready and send her to the railroad junction to meet him and this she did, sending her in charge of her son. After the plaintiff was left at the station, before her father arrived, she ran away and went to the home of Mrs. Swaney who lived near and besought her to hide her from her father, which was done and he returned to Kansas without her. After that she got back into the Wilson family again and re[660]*660mained there fifteen years until she married and went with her husband to live in West Virginia.

The testimony shows that during all the years of her residence in the Wilson family she was treated with kindness and affection, in all respects as if she was Mr. and Mrs. Wilson’s own child, no distinction in her treatment was shown that of their own children, she was called Minnie Wilson, many of the acquaintances of the family supposed she was their child. Under this care she grew up to be a refined, educated, good woman and was married from the home of her foster parents, and.in turn she behaved as a good daughter to them.

The testimony offered to prove the alleged contract was as follows:

W. W. Jones, who was a brother of Triplett’s second wife, stated that he was in the habit of going with Triplett to Kansas City occasionally with a load of grain or hay, that on one of these trips he and Triplett were together on the street and they met Wilson, it was on the sidewalk near Wilson’s place of business, it was a casual meeting, Triplett expressed a wish to take the girl home with him, Wilson seemed rather loath or unwilling to give her up, said he would rather not give her up, that she had been in the family until they had become attached to her and she was as one of the family and he “proposed to Triplett that if he would let the girl remain there as their child, that he would take care of her and raise her as their child and that she should be one of his heirs, with his other children — that she should fare and share with his children — his own children. . . . When' he made that proposition Triplett said that under the circumstances, he had about as much family as he could well care for, and she had a good home there and if he would raise her with his children, as one of the children, make her one of his heirs with his children, why he would agree to leave her there — he would accede to Wilson’s proposition.” That conversation occurred in 1865-6 or 7, the witness thought [661]*661in 1867. On cross-examination lie was not sure for what purpose he and Triplett came to town on that occasion or that they came together, it was thirty-five years ago and he could not remember, was not sure where it was they met Wilson, but from best recollection it was on the sidewalk near his place of business, never saw Wilson before and not sure that he ever saw him after-wards, could not describe him. “Q. Were you and Mr. Triplett hunting Mr. Wilson or did you accidentally fall in with him. A. No, sir, I don’t recollect how we came to be with him. Q. You didn’t go there with Mr. Triplett for the purpose of having a conversation with Wilson then? A. No, sir. Q. You just met him then on the sidewalk? A. Yes, sir. That is my recollection. . . . Q. Now Mr. Jones, in view of these other things that you can not recollect would you undertake to state or give the exact language that occurred between Mr. Wilson and Mr, Triplett? A. No, sir; oh no. Q. How? A. No, sir. Q. You wouldn’t undertake to do that? A. No, sir. Q. Did you and Mr. Triplett go out to Mr. Wilson’s house at that time? A. No, sir, I don’t recollect of being at Mr. Wilson’s house. Q. Now, Mr. Jones, can you recollect whether you did or did not go to Mr. Wilson’s house at that time? A. No, sir, I can’t recollect that, but I don’t have any recollection of being at Mr. Wilson’s house. . . . Q. Your recollection is then that you did not go there? A. Well, I am undecided about that, I may have went there, I heard a great deal said about this girl and about her being there and I may have been there. I might have been there.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 895, 182 Mo. 651, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grantham-v-gossett-mo-1904.