Harle v. Harle

204 S.W. 317, 109 Tex. 214, 15 A.L.R. 1261, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 72
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1918
DocketNo. 2700.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 317 (Harle v. Harle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harle v. Harle, 204 S.W. 317, 109 Tex. 214, 15 A.L.R. 1261, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 72 (Tex. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material facts showed that in 1879 Nathan Harle, who. was then the husband of Gracie Ann Harle, and Freeman Slaughter, who was then the husband of Amanda Slaughter, acquired by purchase the 160 acres of land in controversy. By a marriage prior-to that with Gracie Ann Harle, Nathan Harle had three children named Bruff Harle, John Harle and Amanda Slaughter. Under a partition between Nathan Harle and Freeman .Slaughter, 40 acres of the land was set apart to Freeman Slaughter, and the remaining. 120 acres was set apart to Nathan Harle. Out of the 120 acres, Nathan Harle and Gracie Ann Harle conveyed 60 acres to John Harle. Gracie Ann Harle had no *217 children, but she adopted, in compliance with the Texas statute, Mary Aim Bichardson, who married Wash McGriff, and Wash McGriff and his three children by Mary Ann McGriff are termed herein the McGriff heirs. Mary Arm McGriff died intestate and at a later date Gracie Ann Harle also died intestate.

This suit was brought in the District Court of ¡Navarro County by ¡Nathan Harle against Bruff Harle, John Harle and Freeman Slaughter, to try the title to the entire 160 acres of land. The McGriff heirs and the children of Amanda Slaughter, deceased, intervened in the suit. On a verdict directed by the court, Freqman Slaughter recovered the 40 acres, which had been partitioned to him, subject to the rights of the children of Amanda Slaughter; John Harle recovered the .60 acres, which had been conveyed to him; and ¡Nathan Harle recovered the remainder of the land sued for. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court, save as to the McGriff heirs, and, with respect to them, that court reversed the judgment of the trial court and rendered judgment in their favor for an undivided half of the land adjudged below to Nathan Harle. 166 S. W., 674. Writs of error were granted the several applicants because this court was of the opinion that there was probable error-in the. judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in favor of the McGriff heirs.

The land in controversy, being a part of the community estate of Nathan Harle and Gracie Ann Harle, passed under article 3469 of the Eevised Statutes, on the dissolution of the marriage relation between Nathan Harle and Gracie Ann Harle by the latter’s death, to Nathan Harle as survivor, unless descendants of a child or children of Gracie Ann Harle survived her. The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that the mother of the McGriff heirs, as the adopted heir of Gracie Ann Harle, acquired the legal status of a child and that hence the McGriff heirs were descendants of a child, within the meaning of article 3469.

It seems clear to us that the words “child or children of the deceased or their descendants,” as used in article 3469, can not be interpreted to-include adopted heirs and their issue. For, as was said in Burgess v. Hargrove, 64 Texas, 117: “The Revised Statutes require that The ordinary signification shall be applied to words, except words of art or words connected with a particular trade or subject matter, when they shall have the signification attached to them by experts in such art or trade, or with reference to such subject matter.’ The words '’child or children’ are not technical terms to require the evidence of an expert to define them, and the subject matter in reference to which they are used does not demand that they shall receive other than their ordinary signification, That hardship may result from such construction is not for the courts, but the Legislature, to take into consideration.” The ordinary- signification of child is a inale or female descendant in the first degree. As the mother of the McGriff heirs was not descended from Gracie Ann Harle but from some other mother, she was not in fact a child of Gracie Ann Harle, under the ordinary signification of *218 the word child, and, therefore, the McGriff heirs were not in fact descendants of a child of Grade Ann Harle. Cochren v. Cochren, 43 Texas Civ. App., 259, 95 S. W., 752.

In Morse v. Osborne, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.), 914 (75 N. H., 417, 77 Atl., 403), an adopted person was held not to be “issue” of his adopter, within the meaning of a statute of descent of Hew Hampshire, though the Supreme Court of that State gave to the word “issue” the meaning-of “child, grandchild, or other lineal descendant.”

The Supreme Court of Illinois reached a similar conclusion when it said in Keegan v. Geraghty, 101 Ill., 40: “An adopted child .is not a child in fact, nor is an adopted child, having the rights of a child, a child in fact.”

The Supreme Court of Vermont was called upon to determine the status of one Amanda M. Pennock, who had been constituted by an Act of the Legislature “heir at law of John B. and Sally Dunbar . . . in as full and perfect a manner as if she had been a daughter of the said John B. and Sally Dunbar born in lawful wedlock,” and it was held that “she is merely made heir at law of Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar to share as their child. It is not enacted that she is their child; or that she is to be considered, and taken in law, to be their child. . . . We can not go farther than the statute, which merely authorizes her to take directly as heir from Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar.. Moore v. Estate of Moore, 35 Vt., 101.” The same court, in construing another legislative enactment constituting John Chancey Chandler “heir at law” of John Bullock, declared: “It can not he said that the Act under and by virtue of which he (John Chancey Chandler) was adopted made him the child, or issue of John Bullock. The words ‘child’ or ‘issue’ are defined to mean progeny or offspring. Stanley v. Chandler, 53 Vt., 624.”

As announced in Eckford v. Knox, 67 Texas, 200, 2 S. W., 372, adoption under our statutes does not constitute the adopted person a member of the family of the adopter, and does not confer the privileges nor impose the duties which arise from the relation of parent and child, .as was the case under the civil law, but, on the contrary, the complete effect of compliance with article 1 is, as declared in article 2, to put the adopted person in the same position with respect to succession to the estate of the adopter,'on his death, as a child would occupy, except that as against a child horn in lawful wedlock, the adopted person can not take more than one-fourth of the estate. It necessarily follows that adoption in Texas does not give the adopted person the legal status of a child.

The opinion of Chief Justice Willie in Eckford v. Knox has been followed in the case of Walton, Tax Collector, v. Yturria (post), this day decided by this court, wherein it was determined that an adopted person was not a direct lineal descendant of his adopter, and that such person did not acquire the status of a child of his adopter. The doctrine announced in Eckford v. Knox had previously been reaffirmed in Taylor v. Deseve, 81 Texas, 249, 16 S. W., 1008.

*219 Under our construction of the statutes we do not deny the adopted person any of “the rights and privileges, both in law and equity of a legal heir of the party so adopting him,” to which he is entitled under article 2, Revised Statutes, but we do not extend the statute so as to confer rights and privileges in the estate of the adopter on others than the person adopted. The right to inherit from Gracie Ann Harle was given to the person she adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 317, 109 Tex. 214, 15 A.L.R. 1261, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harle-v-harle-tex-1918.