In Re Crutcher

215 P. 101, 61 Cal. App. 481, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 498
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 3784.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 215 P. 101 (In Re Crutcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Crutcher, 215 P. 101, 61 Cal. App. 481, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 498 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the juvenile department of the superior court of Los Angeles County denying the petition of appellant for an order declaring Lewis Pinkerton Crutcher, Jr., a ward of the juvenile court. Petitioner is the uncle of the minor and the respondents, James D. and Kate L. Campbell, are the párente of the child by adoption under a decree of the superior *482 court entered on the twenty-six day of June, 1914, upon which date the natural father and mother were both deceased. The mother died when Lewis Pinkerton Crutcher, Jr., was an infant, and the father’s death occurred on the third day of June, 1914, up to which date the child had been cared for by the respondents. In enumerating those who are subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, subdivision 2 of section 1 of the juvenile court law (Stats. 1915, p. 1225) includes “those who have no parent or guardian; or who have no parent or guardian willing to exercise or capable of exercising proper parental control; or who have no parent or guardian actually exercising such proper parental control and who is in need of such control. ’ ’ Therefore, this infant is one who may be regarded as a proper subject for juvenile court guardianship unless the existence of some other fact or condition prevents it.

The petitioner contends that the decree of adoption is void. If so, this proceeding falls within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, as the child would then have no parent or guardian. But respondent invokes the doctrine of res adjudicada, based upon the entry of the decree of adoption and the following additional facts: On the 2d of July, 1914, Lewis Pinkerton Crutcher, Sr., the child’s uncle and petitioner here, made a motion to vacate and annul the decree of adoption. This motion was later amended. Thereafter, on the fifth day of August, 1914, it was denied. A second motion to vacate the adoption was filed by Lewis Pinkerton Crutcher, Sr., which was also on August 20, 1920, denied. No appeal was ever taken from either of these orders.

On the first day of December, 1914, Lewis Pinkerton Crutcher, Sr., filed a petition in the juvenile court, which, after alleging, among other matters, the fact that James D. Campbell and Kate L. Campbell claimed the right to the care and custody of the infant under the adoption proceeding above mentioned and that the natural parents were deceased, prayed that the child be adjudged a ward of the juvenile court. This petition was, on January 6, 1915, denied and the proceeding dismissed, and no appeal was taken from said judgment and order.

However, the question of res adjudícala is of little importance in determining this appeal, for we do not under *483 stand respondent to seriously contend that it is applicable if the decree of adoption is held void upon its face, and appellant insists that it is utterly void in that he asserts that there is no provision in the law of this state for the adoption of a minor orphan child except one who has been maintained in an orphan asylum or charitable institution. This question is therefore squarely presented for our decision.

It is true that the proceeding to adopt a child was unknown to the common law. To give the court jurisdiction in such a matter compliance with all conditions required by the statute is necessary. This is decided in the Matter of Cozza, 163 Cal. 514 [Ann. Cas. 1914A, 214, 126 Pac. 161]. But section 221 of our Civil Code states that “Any minor child may be adopted by any adult person, in the cases and subject to the rules prescribed in this chapter. ’ ’ By section 224 of the Civil Code the consent of the parents is required as a condition essential to a valid adoption in certain cases, and expressly made unnecessary in others, by the following provisions: “A legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of its parents, if living; nor an illegitimate child without the consent of its mother, if living; except that consent is not necessary from a father or mother (1) deprived of civil rights or (2) adjudged guilty of (a) adultery or cruelty, and (b) for either cause divorce, or (3) adjudged to be habitually intemperate in the use of intoxicants, or who, (4) has been judicially deprived of the custody of the child on account of (a) cruelty or (b) neglect; (Abandoned Child) neither is the consent of anyone necessary in the case of an abandoned child; provided, however, that any such child, being a half orphan, and kept and maintained in any orphan asylum in this state for more than two years, may be adopted with the consent of the managers of such orphans’ home without the consent of the parent unless such parent has paid toward the expenses of maintenance of such half orphan at least a reasonable sum during the said time, if able to do so. (Deserted child.) Any child (1) deserted by both parents, or (2) left in the care and custody of another by its parent or parents (a) without any agreement or provision for its support, (b) for a period of one year, is deemed to be an abandoned child "within the meaning of this section, and where the parent is a *484 nonresident of this state such child may . without the consent of either parent be adopted with the consent of the managers of such home whenever it has been left in such home for more than one year.” Surely, to hold that consent is necessary to the adoption of a legitimate child whose parents are not living, except in the instances specified in the code section, would- be adding a requirement not contained in it.

Except by inference section 2-24 of the Civil Code co-n- - cems itself with the regulation of the adoption of the child who, being legitimate, has one or both of its parents in esse, or being illegitimate has its mother living. In such cases consent is made necessary in some instances and dispensed with in others. As far as its express provisions are concerned, one parent must be living in -order that the section shall have any application. But by necessary implication section 224 of the Civil Code includes and provides for legitimate children whose parents are deceased. Can it be doubted that by the phraseology of the first clause, “a legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of the parent, if living,” it was the legislative intent to -provide that no parental consent is necessary in the adoption of a legitimate child whose parents are not living? It was probably regarded as superfluous to expressly and solemnly decree that when the parents are dead their consent to the adoption of their offspring may -be dispensed with. If we give due regard to the subject matter of this legislation it is apparent that by the provision last quoted the legislature has said in effect “a legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of the parents, except that where the parents are not living such consent is unnecessary.” Logie compels the conclusion that by adding the words “if living” to the inhibition contained in the preceding part of the sentence, it was not intended to exclude legitimate orphans from adoption, but rather to indicate that the bar to adoption without consent should have no application in cases where the parents are not living.

It is said that because the institution of adoption was not found in the common law, nothing can be supplied by inference. To apply this rule strictly would eliminate the entire provision in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 P. 101, 61 Cal. App. 481, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crutcher-calctapp-1923.