In Re Buell's Estate

117 P.2d 832, 167 Or. 295, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 20
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 117 P.2d 832 (In Re Buell's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Buell's Estate, 117 P.2d 832, 167 Or. 295, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 20 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

BRAND, J.

At early common law, since the beneficiary in a will predeceased the testatrix, the bequest would have lapsed and the property would have been distributed as if upon intestacy. 1 Underhill on the Law of Wills, 436, § 324; Scott v. Ford, 52 Or. 288, at 294, 97 P. 99 (1908). Under the Oregon anti-lapse statute, however, it is clear that if the plaintiff had been in fact the heir of the body of Emma A. Wilkinson the bequest would not have lapsed and the plaintiff would have taken the estate. The only question at issue therefore, is whether the bequest lapsed by reason of the fact that the plaintiff is the child of Emma A. Willdnson by adoption rather than by consanguinity.

As to the power of the legislature to endow an adopted child with rights in this particular, identical •to those of an heir of the body begotten, there can be no serious question. We inquire only whether or not it has done so. The anti-lapse statute, enacted in 1853, provides:

“When any estate shall be devised to any child, grandchild, or other relative of the testator, and such devisee shall die before the testator, leaving lineal descendants, such descendants shall take the estate, real and personal, as such devisee would have done in case he had survived the testator.” 2 O. C. L. A. § 18-604.

It must be conceded, notwithstanding a tentative argument to the contrary, that a sister is a relative, so the first requirement of the anti-lapse statute is met. An estate was devised to a relative and the relative died before the testator. If, therefore, the adopted child *299 of the relative comes within the classification of “lineal descendants” it follows that she should take the estate as the devisee would have done had the devisee survived the testator.

The rights of an adopted child are defined by statute. It is provided that from the date of the decree of adoption “the child shall, to all legal intents and purposes, be the child of the petitioner.” 5 O. C. L. A. § 63-406 (1864).

“A child so adopted shall be deemed, for the purposes of inheritance of such child, and all other legal consequences and incidents of the natural relation of parents and children, the child of the parents by adoption, the same as if he had been born to them by lawful wedlock; except that he shall not be capable of taking property expressly limited to the heirs of the body or bodies of the parent by adoption, nor property from the lineal or collateral kindred of such parents by right of representation.” 5 O. C. L. A. §63-407 (1864).

Appellant argues, in substance, that when the antilapse statute was enacted adoption was unknown in, Oregon and that therefore the term “lineal descendants” could not include adopted children unless the statute were expressly amended. This contention is refuted by the authorities. The New Jersey court discussed in another connection the adoption statute of that state, and said:

“ * * * It changes the statutory rules regulating the devolution of property, not by amending, or repealing pro tanto, the provisions of pertinent legislative enactments, but by enlarging the class for whose benefit they were originally passed (that is, the children born to the decedent, and their issue), by making the adopted child a lawful child of the decedent for the purpose of sharing in the distribution of his estate. ’ ’ In Be Book’s Will, 90 N. J. Eq. 549, 107 A. 435 (1919).

*300 The New York court, in discussing a case which we shall later notice, said concerning its adoption statute:

“What then is the escape from this statute? The plea is, that because section 29 of the Decedent Estate Law (formerly R. S. part 2, ch. 6, tit. 1, art. 3, § 52) was the law before the present adoption statute was enacted (Laws of 1887, ch. 703), the words ‘child’ and ‘descendant’ must be limited to blood relationship as they were when the Revised Statutes became the law. The answer to this suggestion is that the Legislature passed both the Decedent Estate Law and the Domestic Relations Law and had full power over the disposition of property by will or descent. By the latter law it made an adopted child the same as a natural child for the purposes of inheritance from its foster parent. Such a ‘child’ thus created by the Legislature -fitted in exactly to the existing Decedent Estate Law, section 29, which said that a legacy to a brother would not lapse by his death but pass to his child ‘as if such legatee (brother) * * * had survived.’The‘child’ created by the Legislature would take on survivorship under the adoption statutes (Dom. Rel. Law). The Legislature could not make it plainer and there was no need for amending section 29.” (Italics ours.) Matter of Walter’s Estate, 270 N. Y. 201, 200 N. E. 786 (1936).
“* * In determining the right of an adopted child to inherit under the statutory provisions of a jurisdiction, the courts must look to the laws of succession and the statutes on adoption must be read into the succession laws.” 2 C. J. S. 452, § 63.

If the adoption statute enlarged the class of beneficiaries described in the anti-lapse statute, by including adopted children therein, then the plaintiff would be entitled to prevail and no amendment to the anti-lapse statute would be necessary.

Unlike the provisions in many states, the Oregon statute extends to adoptees the rights of natural chil *301 dren in the most comprehensive and unambiguous terms. The right of inheritance from an adoptive parent who dies intestate is clearly granted.

“A child so adopted shall be deemed, for the purposes of inheritance of such child, * * * the child of the parents by adoption, * * *.”

No further words were necessary to accomplish that end. No statute whatever was necessary to entitle' an adopted child to take property specifically devised to him by will. Yet the legislature provided further, that the adoptee shall be deemed, for the purposes of inheritance,

“cmd all other legal consequences and incidents of the natural relation of parents and children, the child * * * the same as if he had been born to them by lawful wedlock; * * *” 5 O. C. L. A. §63-407.

The legislative purpose must be to invest adopted children with rights additional to the right of inheritance in the event of intestacy or the right to take as a named devisee. Again, the language is not that they shall have rights similar to those of natural children ; on the contrary, it is provided that an adoptee shall be deemed the child as if born by lawful wedlock. He shall “to all legal intents and purposes, be the child of the petitioner.”

Two exceptions are made by the statute: First, if property is expressly limited to the heirs of the body of the adoptive parent, the adoptee shall not take. The words “heirs of the body” embrace two distinct concepts: One a legal condition of heirship; the other a nonlegal condition of fact, indicating that one is in reality the issue of the body of the parent.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P.2d 832, 167 Or. 295, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-buells-estate-or-1941.