Hogane v. Ottersbach

269 S.W.2d 9
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 1954
Docket44132
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 9 (Hogane v. Ottersbach) 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
Hogane v. Ottersbach, 269 S.W.2d 9 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

CONKLING, Judge.

Gladys M. Hogane, plaintiff below and appellant here, has appealed from the judgment of the circuit court which sustained the motion to dismiss filed by defendants at the close of the evidence offered by plaintiff. In her petition seeking a decree of equitable adoption plaintiff prayed “that this plaintiff be decreed to be an adopted daughter of the said Erich W. Ottersbach, deceased,” etc. This case presents the single question of whether the evidence adduced was sufficient to entitle plaintiff to a *10 decree of equitable adoption as the adopted daughter of Erich W. Ottersbach.' Plaintiff’s petition conceded that she was never formally adopted. The title to real estate being involved we have jurisdiction of the appeal. Missouri Constitution, Article V, § 3, V.A.M-.S.

Defendant-respondent M.ary Ottersbach is the widow of the above mentioned Erich Ottersbach, (who, died March 19, 1951) and is also administratrix of the estate of Erich Ottersbach. Mary Ottersbach married Erich Ottersbach ,on May 28, 1949. Erich Ottersbach had theretofore married plaintiff’s mother, Bertha Hogane, on June 8, 1916, when plaintiff was about ten years of. age. Plaintiff’s mother, Bertha Hogane Ottersbach died August 21, 1947. Defendant-respondent Dorothy Sandweg (who was born Dorothy Ottersbach) is the half-sister of plaintiff, having’ been born in March, 1920, of the marriage of Erich Ot-tersbach and Bertha Hogane Ottersbach. Erich Ottersbach died intestate. Defendants Mary" Ottersbach and' Dorothy Sand-weg how claim the entire estate of Erich Ottersbach, deceased.

Other pertinent facts appearing from the evidence before the chancellor tended to establish: that -plaintiff’s mother had formerly been married to and divorced from one Lee" Hogane; that when plaintiff’s mother, then Bertha .Hogane, was married to Erich Ottersbach on June 8, 1916,. she had two little girls by her former marriage to' Lee Hogane; that plaintiff had been born August 8, 1906; and plaintiff’s sister, Bernice, had been born in 1908; and that plaintiff’s sister, Bernice, died in 1945;

Plaintiff’s aunt, Mamie Becke, testified that just prior to the marriage of Erich Ottersbach and 'plaintiff’s mother, Erich had stated to the father of plaintiff’s- mother that there was no" need tó be worried about the two little girls (plaintiff and her sister Bernice) ;• that he, Erich Ottersbach, had said of plaintiff and Bernice, “I will raise them as my own”; that “my father was a little worried because he (Erich Ot-tersbach) was going to take a widow with two children”;

That prior to her marriage in 1916 to Erich Ottersbach, plaintiff’s mother, plaintiff and plaintiff’s sister Bernice had been living with the father of plaintiff’s mother in St. Louis; that Erich Otters-bach and plaintiff’s mother were married in St. Charles, Missouri, on June 8, 1916, and then, with plaintiff and Bernice, immediately moved into third floor rooms, previously prepared by them for a home, at 8214 North Broadway, St. Louis, and plaintiff and plaintiff’s sister Bernice thereafter lived there with them;

That at the time of her mother’s marriage to Erich Ottersbach, plaintiff had" been attending the Baden School since she became" of school age, and in that school was registered under her own name of Gladys Hogane; that plaintiff continued going to the Baden School and was graduated from that grammar school when thirteen years of age; that plaintiff always went by the name of Gladys Hogane and was never known as Gladys Ottersbach; that after plaintiff’s graduation from grammar school she went to work for the Busy Bee Candy Company, and thereafter worked for Famous-Barr¡ and-later was employed by the A & P Grocery; that plaintiff lived for thirteen years with her mother and Erich Ottersbach, and, until she was twenty-one years of age gave her mother her wages from her employment; that Erich Ottersbach treated his wife’s children as his own children, “he treated them good, and brought them up as his own children, treated them just as if they were his own”; that there was “a wonderful companionship between Erich (Ottersbach) and the two little girls”; that he mentioned plaintiff and Bernice as “my girls * * * it was always my girls or the girls, my girls, that was the way he addressed them”; that plaintiff and her sister Bernice usually referred to Erich Ottersbach as “Pop or Dad, either one”; that most of the children who knew Erich called him “Pop”; that Erich Ottersbach “was kind to everybody and he treated them all (including Dorothy) as his daughters and all alike * * * they always seemed to be one happy family”; that even *11 after plaintiff was employed outside of the home she did the usual things that a daughter would do around the home to help out the family; that plaintiff was treated as a-member of the family and there was never any apparent animosity among any of them; that during the ensuing years plaintiff’s mother and the three girls attended church together; that Erich never made any observable distinction between Dorothy and plaintiff; that after plaintiff was older she took her half-sister, Dorothy on trips to other states and paid all the expenses of such trips;

That since early childhood plaintiff had been a very close friend of the Kuhs family in St. Louis, and particularly with Ethel Kuhs, a daughter in that family who was about plaintiff’s age; that when the Kuhs family moved to a house on Vernoica Street in St. Louis, in 1929, plaintiff went to live with the Kuhs family; that plaintiff and Ethel Kuhs thereafter became closer friends and, in 1940, plaintiff and Ethel Kuhs purchased and moved onto a small farm located on Route 1 near Wentz-ville, Missouri; that Ethel Kuhs’ parents gave $1,000 to Ethel Kuhs and Erich Ot-tersbach gave to plajntiff a total of $1,000,. with which $2,000 Ethel Kuhs and plaintiff built a house on the farm, where they continued to live;

That when plaintiff was baptized on March 19, 1918, the baptismal record showed that her father was Lee Hogane; that when Erich Ottersbach died on March 19, 1951, the newspaper notice of his death prepared by his family stated that he was survived by “his daughters Miss Gladys Hogane and M,rs. Earl Sandweg.”

As noted above, the sole question here presented for decision is whether under the evidence the circuit court should have entered a decree of equitable adoption. We must rule that such a decree of equitable adoption would not have been warranted by the evidence before the chancellor in this case.

This Court has long held That where a decree of equitable adoption is sought we must examine the evidence- with' “especial strictness,” and that one whoseeks to -establish an oral "contract of .adoption or seeks a decree of equitable adoption by estoppel is under “ ‘the burden of producing evidence so clear, cogent and convincing as to leave no reasonable doubt in the chancellor’s mind.’ ” Rich v. Baer, 361 Mo. 1048, 238 S.W.2d 408, 411; Westlake v. Westlake, Mo.Sup., 201 S.W.2d 964; Capps v. Adamson, 362 Mo. 539, 242 S.W.2d 556; Benjamin v. Cronan, 338 Mo. 1177, 93 S.W.2d 975, 979. Notwithstanding that our statutes provide adoption procedure, Sections 453.010 to 453.170 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., a court of equity in a-proper case

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogane-v-ottersbach-mo-1954.