In Re Egley's Estate

134 P.2d 943, 16 Wash. 2d 681
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1943
DocketNo. 28719.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 134 P.2d 943 (In Re Egley's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Egley's Estate, 134 P.2d 943, 16 Wash. 2d 681 (Wash. 1943).

Opinions

Simpson, C. J.

— This case involves the right of an adopted child to inherit from her first adoptive parents after being adopted a second time.

In 1923, when the appellant was nineteen months of age, she was adopted by J. W. Egley and Maud Egley, husband and wife. When she was four and a half years old, appellant was adopted by Wayne H. and Laverna Carstensen. Mr. Egley died intestate in 1936. Mrs. Egley died in 1941, leaving a will by the terms of which she left appellant the sum of one dollar. Appellant claimed that she was entitled to inherit from her adoptive father and mother, J. W. Egley and Maud Egley.

The trial court held that the first order of adoption was void for the reason that the permission to adopt was signed by the mother alone and did not set forth the fact that the parents were living separate and apart. The order of adoption reads:

“In the Matter of the Adoption of Elwanda Egley, a minor. No. 32670. Order.
“The above entitled matter coming on regularly for hearing before the Court on the petition of J. W. Egley and Maude L. Egley, his wife, asking that they be permitted to adopt as their legal child and heir one Elwanda Egley, a minor; it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court from an examination of the records and files herein that Elwanda Egley is a minor of the age of approximately nineteen months and that she is in need of someone to maintain and support her. That her mother has given consent to her adoption and is unable to properly care for her.
*683 “It further appearing to the Court that J. W. Egley and Maude L. Egley, his wife, are able and willing to care for, maintain and support said minor child; Now Therefore,
“It Is Hereby Ordered that from this date the minor child hereinbefore named, to-wit: Elwanda Egley, be and she is hereby declared to be the adopted child of J. W. Egley and Maude L. Egley, his wife, entitled to all the rights and privileges and subject to all the obligations of a child of petitioners begotten in lawful wedlock.
“Done in Open Court this 28th day of February, 1923. Otis W. Brinker, Judge."

We shall assume, without deciding, that the question of the validity of the judgment of adoption in the first case could be litigated in the present proceeding. The statute in force at the time of the adoption by Mr. and Mrs. Egley stated:

“Any inhabitant of this State, not married, or any husband and wife jointly, may petition the superior court of their proper county for leave to adopt and change the name if desired, of any child under the age of twenty-one years, but a written consent must be given to such adoption by the child, if of the age of fourteen years, and by each of his or her living parents who is not hopelessly insane or a confirmed drunkard. If there be no such parents, or if the parents be unknown, or shall have abandoned such child, or if such parents, or either of them, are hopelessly insane, or a confirmed drunkard, then by the legal guardian; if there be no such guardian, then by a discreet and suitable person appointed by said court to act in the proceedings as the next friend of such child: Provided, however, That if the parents are living separate and apart, the consent of both is not required, but such consent may be given by the parent having the care, custody and control of such child: And provided further, That either spouse may adopt a child of the other.” Chapter 155, Laws of 1905, p. 296. (Italics ours.)

*684 Did the order of adoption have to show the marital status of the natural parents of appellant at the time she was first adopted? We are of the opinion that the order was valid on its face. In In re Dingman, 110 Wash. 513, 188 Pac. 755, an order of adoption, in so far as it related to the consent required by the statute, stated, “consent. having been made to such adoption by the surviving parent.” The order in that case was attacked upon the ground that it did not show that the surviving parent was an inhabitant of the state of Washington. The case is so decisive of the question under consideration that we feel justified in quoting from it at length:

“It is first contended in behalf of appellant upon this branch of the case that the order of adoption is void for want of setting forth the fact that the petitioners Gokey and wife, at the time of the entering of the adoption order, were inhabitants of this state. The argument is, in substance, that because of the special nature of the proceeding, it not being one in the course of the common law, the failure to set forth such fact in the order of adoption is such a failure to show a jurisdictional fact as to render the order void on its face, notwithstanding it was made and entered in the superior court, a court of record and general jurisdiction. It is elementary that a failure to recite jurisdictional facts in a judgment rendered by a court of general jurisdiction in an ordinary action at law does not render the judgment void. This because of the jurisdictional presumptions attending the judgments of courts of that dignity. Counsel invoke in behalf of appellant the rule as announced by some of the courts, that when jurisdiction is vested by statute or other written law, in a special proceeding not in the course of the common law, in a court of general jurisdiction, as to such proceeding the court becomes in effect one of special or limited jurisdiction; that jurisdictional facts must affirmatively appear of record in the proceeding, either in the recitals of the judgment or otherwise, and that without such recital of jurisdictional facts the judg *685 ment rendered in such proceeding, ¿Ven by such a court, is void. It may be conceded that there is respectable authority sustaining such view of the law, but we think this court has committed itself to the opposite view.”

The opinion goes on and refers to Taylor v. Hunting ton, 34 Wash. 455, 75 Pac. 1104, and Freeman on Judgments, § 123, and then says:

“While the territorial probate court was a court of limited jurisdiction, and acquired its jurisdiction over the matter of the adoption of children solely by virtue of these provisions of the adoption statute found in the probate code, the jurisdiction of the superior court does not now rest alone upon these statutory provisions, for we read in § 6, article 4, of the constitution, that,
‘The Superior Court shall have original jurisdiction ... of all matters of probate. . . .3
“It seems to us apparent, in view of the fact that this adoption statute was, at the time of the adoption of our state constitution, a part of the then ‘probate practice act,’ which was a single act of the territorial legislature, that the makers of the constitution used the words ‘all matters of probate’ as inclusive of the adoption of children.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 943, 16 Wash. 2d 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-egleys-estate-wash-1943.