In Re Estate of Howard

1926 OK 280, 256 P. 54, 125 Okla. 86, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 23, 1926
Docket16164
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1926 OK 280 (In Re Estate of Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma 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 Howard, 1926 OK 280, 256 P. 54, 125 Okla. 86, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 3 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This suit originated in the county court of Osage county. Okla., in an administration proceeding pending in said court by the filing of a petition on the part of Bertha Myers against Nancy Húrd et al., wherein she, the said Bertha Myers, claims to be the sole and only heir of -Sam Howard, deceased, by reason of the fact that she was the adopted daughter of the said Sam Howard, and asks that the entire estate be set apart and delivered to her as such heir.

■Upon the trial of the case to the county court, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant Nancy Hurd and against the plaintiff, Bertha Myers, upon the theory that the adoption proceedings were null and void. From this judgment of the county court an appeal was taken to the district court of Osagé county, and upon the hearing of the case in the district court, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Bertha - Myers, and against the defendant Nancy Hurd, upholding the adoption proceedings, and decreeing the said Bertha Myers to be the sole and only heir of Sam Howard, deceased, and from this, judgment of the district court the, appellant prosecutes' this appeal, and assigns as error the refusal of the court to sustain the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence of plaintiff, the insufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment, that the judgment is contrary to law, and the refusal of the court to sustain motion for new trial. All of these contentions, however, are to' be determined by the one proposition of whether or not the adoption proceedings were valid or invalid.

The record discloses that Bertha Myers, nee Howard, was born and reared in the state of Kentucky, and that when she was about nine years of age her mother and father separated, and she was brought by her mother to Osage county, Okla., and there left, temporarily in charge of her grandmother, Nancy Hurd, and her uncle, Sam Howard. Birdie Howard, mother of Bertha Howard, subsequently moved to Lincoln county, Okla., and there married a man by the name of Robinson, and soon thereafter went to Osage county and procured her daughter, Bertha Howard, and took her to live with her, the said Birdie Robinson, nee Howard, in her home in Lincoln county. Subsequent to the marriage of Birdie Howard, the mother, to Robinson, the former husband, William Howard, father of Bertha Howard, removed to Osagd county, Okla., where his mother, Nancy Hurd, and his brother, Sam Howard, resided. Soon after his removal to Osage county, William Howard, in company with Sam Howard, deceased, visited his former wife, Birdie Robinson, nee Howard, in Lincoln county, and arranged with the said Birdie Robinson for their daughter, Bertha Howard, now Bertha Myers, to be adopted) by her uncle, Sam Howard, and this arrangement was agreed to by the mother, Birdie Robinson. Pursuant thereto the said Birdie' Myers, nee Howard, accompanied her father, William Howard, and her uncle, Sam Howard, to Osage county, and a short'time thereafter the said Sam Howard filed an application or petition in the coimty court of Osage county, asking that he be permitted to adopt the said Bertha Myers, nee Howard, as his daughter, and thereafter the county court made an order wherein the- said Bertha Myers, nee Howard, was duly adopted as the daughter of Sam Howard, now deceased. The adoption > roceedings are now attacked by Nancy Hurd, the mother of Sam Howard, and al *87 /eged ■') be invalid for the reason that the consen of the mother was not given as required by section 8046, O. S. 1921, which is in par as follows:

“A legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of its parents, if living. * 11 *”

And the only question here involved is whether or not this particular provision of the statute was substantially complied with. The evidence introduced on the .trial of the case substantially shows the facts concerning the child’s life and condition as heretofore portrayed, and the mother, Birdie Robinson, was called as a witness and testified to the agreement made with the father, William Howard, concerning the adoption of the daughter, Bertha Myers, nee Howard, by her uncle, Sam Howard, and testified that s e consented to the adoption and has at all times since acquiesced and ratified the same. Section 8050, C. S. 1921, contains the fo'’owing provision;

“Tt - person adopting a child and the child adopted and the other persons, whose consei • is necessary, ;inust appear before the count? judge, ' of the -county where the person a-i opted resides, ‘ and the necessary consent ) ast thereupon be signed.”

Thi • provision of the law was not literally complied with. The mother, Mrs. Robinson, was not present at the time the adoption proceedings were had. The father, William Howard, and the foster father, Sam Howard, were present, and we are inclined to the opinion that the proceedings had were substantially in compliance with the statute and sufficient as against the attack here made. The principal purpose of the statute is that the consent’ be given, and not the manner in which it may be given.

In volume 1, R. O. L. par. 4, pages 595-6, the rule is stated, as follows:

“4. Rule of Construction of Statutes. Inasmuch as statutes providing for a procedure or method by which one person may be adopted as the child of another are in derogation of the common law, many courts have asserted that such enactments should be construed strictly. But even in these jurisdictions a distinction has been drawn between the construction of the statute and of the act of adoption itself, and it has been held that the act of adoption must be liberally construed in favor of the child adopted. And it has also been decided that while there must be substantial compliance with the provisions of the statute, yet its construction should not be so narrow and technical as to invalidate proceedings where every material provision has been complied with, and it can certainly be said that 'the construction must be reasonable and must fairly give effect to the intent of the Legislature. The courts of other , jurisdictions'have, however, ruled that such statutes should be given a liberal intendment and operation, it has been said that adoption statutes tend to conserve, the best, interests of’ society and the state, and that, recognizing these good results, courts are more and more inclined to abandon the old rule of strict construction and to place a fair and reasonable construction upon proceedings under a statute relating to adoption, with a view of sustaining the assumed relationship, particularly against a collateral attack by strangers to the proceedings, whose only interest, is to defeat the relations which the adoptive -parents always recognized and never questioned, so that they may succeed to an estafe from which! by the very fact of adoption, the adoptive parents intended they should be excluded in favor- of the adopted child. A provision of a state, code -that the statutes of the state are to be liberally construed must be given due effect, in construing an adoption statute. * * *
“* *■* It is mot the duty of the courts to bring the judicial microscope to bear upon the .case in order that every slight defect may.be enlarged and magnified so that a reason may be found for declaring invalid an act consummated years before, but rather to approach the ease, with the inclination to uphold such acts, if it is found that there was a substantial compliance with the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 280, 256 P. 54, 125 Okla. 86, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-howard-okla-1926.