In Re Martin's Estate

1934 OK 447, 35 P.2d 968, 169 Okla. 55, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1934
DocketNo. 25277
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1934 OK 447 (In Re Martin's Estate) 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 Martin's Estate, 1934 OK 447, 35 P.2d 968, 169 Okla. 55, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 234 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

In a probate cause pending in the county court of Osage county, in the matter of the administration of the estate of Cecil R. Martin, deceased, the administrator made application for the fixing of a family allowance for maintenance of the family. That court made an allowance for the widow, for a natural son by a former marriage, and for two adopted daughters, all three children being minors.

In behalf of the minor son an appeal was taken to the district court as an attack on the allowance made to the widow and the two adopted daughters. The district court likewise made allowances to the son, the widow, and the two adopted daughters. In behalf of the son this appeal is prosecuted, and the plaintiff asserts the allowances other than his own are unauthorized.

The allowance to the widow is attacked on the ground of a separation from her husband before his death. The facts are that shortly before the decedent died there was a separation, and the wife filed suit for divorce and alimony and custody of children. There was a written agreement in settlement of property rights. By the terms thereof certain personal property was to go to the wife and certain real estate was to be conveyed to, her, or to be decreed to her in the divorce decree when it should be rendered, and certain money payment was to be made. The divorce action had not come on for trial before the husband's death, nor had the property settlement agreement been complied with, nor had the property been conveyed to the wife, nor the money payment made to her as agreed. It is not specifically shown that the husband and wife were not in fact living together when the husband died, nor, except for the facts above stated, was any effort made to show that the widow had waived her right to ask for a family allowance. We hold that she was still his wife, and was his surviving spouse within the meaning of section 1226, O. S. 1931, authorizing the fixing of a family allowance. See In re Hale's Estate (Cal.)4 P.2d 263; In re Ehler's Estate (Cal.) *Page 56 1 P.2d 546; Linares v. De Linares (Tex.) 53 S.W. 579.

The allowance for the two minor daughters is attacked on the ground that the adoptions and each of them were void. It is necessary here to note certain facts in reference to these adopted daughters. They were both adopted pursuant to judicial hearing, followed by decree of adoption in the county court of Osage county, said court acting under authority of sections 1701-1714, O. S. 1931. The two adopted daughters were Patricia Harlene Martin and Helen Virginia Martin.

Patricia Harlene Martin was born Rosa Lee Goans. She was adopted by the decedent and his wife at the age of eight months. At that time her father was dead, and she and her mother, Ruby Goans, had for sometime resided at the county poor farm. The child theretofore, pursuant to proper hearing, had been adjudged to a dependent and neglected child. The child's mother was present at that hearing. The county court, upon adjudging the child to be dependent and neglected, did not commit the child to any home or institution, but did place the child under the care of the county, and then the county judge entered his official consent to the adoption of the child by the decedent and his wife. The record does not disclose that the mother of the child entered any specific or written consent that the child be adopted. Consent was entered by the county judge, and both of the adopting parents and the child were present, and in fact the whole adoption was in rather strict compliance with the statute, except for the lack of written consent by the mother. However, the mother undoubtedly knew of the adoption, and of the child's residence with decedent as his adopted child, and over a period of years has never questioned it, and might well be said to have completely acquiesced in the adoption. The petition for adoption was properly docketed and filed, as were all of the papers in the case, and the decree of adoption was written, signed, and formally entered. The decree authorized the change of the minor's name from Rosa Lee Goans to Patricia Harlene Martin, and from that day forward the child has borne that name, and has been cared for as a member of the decedent's family and as his child.

In the case of In re Estate of Howard, 125 Okla. 86,256 P. 54, this court held in the syllabus, paragraph one, as follows:

"Our statute providing for the mode of adoption should be construed with a reasonable degree of liberality, where the adoption has been fully consummated, to the end that the assumed relationship, and the intention of the contracting parties, be upheld, as against strangers to the proceedings collaterally attacking same."

In that case the court further held, in substance, that where an adoption proceeding is collaterally attacked upon the ground that the mother of the adopted child did not give her written consent, it is permissible to show by extrinsic evidence that the mother acquiesced in, and by continuous acquiescence, ratified the adoption, in the Howard Case supra, the provisions of the statute were not fully complied with, in that the mother was not present and had given written consent to the adoption. In that case it was held, in substance, that this state should join those states holding that the adoption statutes should be construed and applied liberally in favor of the child adopted, and further held, in substance, that it is the duty of the court to place a fair and reasonable construction upon proceedings under the adoption statute, 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 relationship which the adopted parents recognize and never question, so that they themselves might benefit financially and directly by depriving the adopted child of any rights as a member of the family of the adopting parents, when it was clearly apparent that the adopting parents specifically and continuously intended that the adopted child should be their child, and should receive all of the benefits coming to her as a child.

In the Howard Case, supra, this court further held, in substance, that we should approve the rule stated in 1 R. C. L. paragraph 4, pages 595, 596, to the effect that adoption statutes tend to conserve the best interest of society and the state, and that, recognizing these good results, courts are more and more inclined to place a fair and reasonable construction upon proceedings under an adoption statute with a view of sustaining the assumed relationship.

In the instant case there is every indication that the adoption of this child was in entire good faith, and resulted only from an earnest and wholesome desire on the part of the adopting parents, who had no children born of their marriage, to adopt this child and give it their name and rear and care for it as their own child, and we conclude *Page 57 that there was a substantial compliance with the adoption statutes, wholly sufficient as against the present attack of the decedent's natural son by a former marriage, and that the action of the trial court in making family allowance to this adopted minor child was correct.

The child, Helen Virginia Martin, was born Helen Virginia Cravens, and was the daughter of decedent's wife by a former marriage.

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Related

In Re the Estate of Stackman
1963 OK 264 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)
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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 447, 35 P.2d 968, 169 Okla. 55, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-martins-estate-okla-1934.