In Re Estate of Fitzgerald

272 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 141
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1937
DocketNo. 43798.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 117 (In Re Estate of Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Fitzgerald, 272 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 141 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

As the preliminary statement indicates, this is a controversy over the estate of an adopted son. The estate is claimed by the collateral heirs of the adopting parents and also by the natural mother of the adopted son. The facts involved are gathered.wholly from the pleadings as the case was disposed of below on the pleadings and rulings on demurrers. The conceded facts briefly are as follows:

*142 The natural mother, now known as Norah Shaw, intervener, was married to one Tripp in Polk County, Iowa, in July, 1908, and to them was born a son in 1911. The marriage of the natural parents was dissolved and the mother remarried. In June, 1913, the child, known at that time as John R. Tripp, was legally adopted by his grandparents and but a few days later in the same month in a proceeding in the juvenile court in Polk County the child was declared a dependent and delinquent child and was placed in the juvenile home. In August, 1915, the child 'was legally adopted by Lawrence and Ellen Fitzgerald, husband and wife, of Nevada, Story County, Iowa, with whom he made his home until the death of his adopted parents. The adopting parents both died intestate leaving as their sole and only direct heir at law the adopted son known in this record as John T. Fitzgerald. The adopted son died in May, 1935, intestate, unmarried and without issue. Norah Shaw, intervener, being his only living and surviving parent. He left an estate of considerable proportion and petitions of intervention were filed by the collateral heirs' of the predeceased mother by adoption, and also by the collateral heirs of the predeceased father by adoption. These petitions of intervention claiming that each set of collateral heirs were entitled to one-half of the estate of the adopted son. Later the natural mother also filed a petition of intervention claiming that she was the sole surviving natural parent of the adopted son and asked that she be adjudged to be the sole and only heir at law of the decedent, John T. Fitzgerald. Answers were filed to the petition of intervention by each group of collateral heirs denying the right of the natural mother as an heir to her son’s estate and claiming that the heirs of the deceased adopting parents were the only heirs of the deceased adopted son and were entitled to the entire estate. To these answers the natural mother, Norah Shaw, filed demurrers directly raising the question as to the right of the collateral heirs of the predeceased adopting parents to inherit. The demurrers were submitted to the court and overruled. Norah Shaw, intervener, electing to stand on the order overruling her demurrers, an order was entered by the trial court ordering a distribution of the net proceeds of the estate to the various collateral heirs of the parents by adoption and denying to the natural mother the right to participate in any way in the property of the estate. From such order this appeal is prosecuted.

*143 As has been indicated, the determination of the question involved in the appeal has to do with the construction of certain statutory provisions, and that the question may be the better understood, we will recite the history and quote the various pertinent legislative enactments.

In the Code of 1873 in the chapter relative to adoption we find the following section :

Section 2310, Code of 1873. “Upon the execution, acknowledgment, and filing for record of such instrument [articles of adoption], the rights, duties, a,nd relations between the parent and child by adoption, shall, thereafter, in all respects, including the right of inheritance, be the same that exist by law between parent and child by lawful birth. ’ ’

Section 3253 of the Code of 1897 contained the same provisions as the first quoted section except that the words “including the right of inheritance ’ ’ were omitted .from the latter section. However, the 29th General Assembly, chapter 132, supplied this omission by amending the section and adding thereto the following : ‘ ‘ and the right of inheritance from each other shall be the same as between parent and children born in lawful wedlock.”

Section 3253 as amended, as above indicated, was incorporated in the Code of 1924, and appears therein as section 10500. The last named section was repealed however by the 42d General Assembly and what is now known as section 10501 of the present Code was enacted.

Section 10501-b6 provides: “Status of the adopted child. Upon the entering of such decree, the rights, duties and relationships between the child and parent by adoption shall be the same that exist between parents and child by lawful birth and the right of inheritance from each other shall be the same as between parent and children born in lawful wedlock.”

Sections 1408 to 1411, inclusive, of the Code of 1851, provided for the descent and distribution of the property of an intestate and these provisions were incorporated in the revision of 1860.

Section 2497 of the Revision provided: “If both parents be dead, the portion which would have fallen to their share or to either of them by the above rules, shall be disposed of in the *144 same manner as if they or either of them had outlived the intestate and died in the possession and ownership of the portion thus falling to their share or to either of them, and so on, through ascending ancestors and their issue.”

The last-quoted section was incorporated in the Code of 1873 as section 2457 in exactly the same language, and was also carried forward and formed a part of the Code of 1897 and is there designated as section 3381.

Sections 12016, 12017, 12024 and 12025 of the 1924 and subsequent Codes incorporate the substance of the preceding quoted sections.

Section 12016 provides for the descent of the estate in equal shares to the children of an intestate.

Section 12017 provides for the distribution of intestate’s property where there is no issue, and also provides that if the decedent, without issue, leave no spouse, the whole of the estate shall go to the parents with the further provision: “In case of an adopted child, the parents by adoption shall inherit as if they were the natural parents.”

Section 12025 provides: “If both parents are dead, the portion which would have fallen to their share by the above rules shall be disposed of in the same manner as if they had outlived the intestate and died in the possession and ownership of the portion thus falling to their share, and so on, through ascending ancestors and their issue.”

Section 12027 provides: “Heirs of parents by adoption. If the adopted’parent or parents, if more than one, be dead, the portion which would have gone to such parent or parents had they or either of them survived the intestate, shall be disposed of in the same manner as if such parent or parents had outlived the intestate and died in possession of such share, and so on through their ascending ancestors. ’ ’

Section 12028 provides: “Natural parents. If heirs are not thus found, the portions thus uninherited shall go to the natural parents of the intestate, and in case of their death then to their heirs under the ordinary rules of descent.”

It is under the provisions of sections 12027 and 12028 that the intervener, Norah Shaw, claims the right to inherit this estate.

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Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-fitzgerald-iowa-1937.