Kinnear v. Langley

192 S.W.2d 978, 209 Ark. 878, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 498
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1946
Docket4-7840
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 978 (Kinnear v. Langley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinnear v. Langley, 192 S.W.2d 978, 209 Ark. 878, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 498 (Ark. 1946).

Opinion

MoFaddin, J.

Section 14525 of Pope’s Digest is sometimes referred to as the ‘‘pretermitted child” statute. Appellant claimed to he the pretermitted child of Mrs. Helen Burdick, deceased, and, relying on that claim, filed suit in the Garland chancery court. From a decision adverse to her claim, she brings this appeal. We will interchangeably refer to the appellant as Hazel Wade, Hazel Burdick, and Hazel Burdick Kinnear: the identity is the same.

Hazel Wade was born in April, 1892, in Labette county, Kansas, being a daughter of William Wade and Ida Wade. Mr. Wade worked for Mr. Burdick, and the families were friends. Mrs. Wade died in 1895, and the next day William Wade gave the three-year-old girl, Hazel Wade, to the Burdicks, who had no children of their own. They gave her the name of Hazel Burdick, and she was thereafter known by that name. The Bur-dicks delayed the adoption of Hazel Burdick until May, 1907, so that she would be old enough to comprehend it. Thus, when Hazel Burdick was 15 years of age, in May, 1907, George H. Burdick and his wife, Mrs. Helen Bur-dick, secured a court order in the county court of Labette county, Kansas, whereby each and both adopted Hazel Burdick as their child. The legality of that adoption was in dispute in the chancery court in the trial from which comes this appeal; but that issue will not be considered in the view we take of the case. We assume that Hazel Burdick was duly and legally adopted, and that the identity of Hazel Burdick and the appellant in this court is thoroughly established. There is no claim in this case that an adopted child is not entitled to the benefits of § 14525, Pope’s Digest; so that question is not before us.

After the adoption, Hazel Burdick continued to live with her adoptive parents until she married Roy Whitsett in July, 1911. Even thereafter George Burdick continued to give her a monthly allowance for a few years. .The Whitsett marriage proved an unhappy one and resulted, in divorce; and in June, 1920, Hazel Burdick left Kansas and went to Oregon, where she has continued to reside, except for a few years’ residence in California. In Oregon, she married Mr. Kinnear and has a family, and has been very happy. After leaving Kansas in 1920, Hazel Burdick lost all contact with the Burdicks. She- is not positive that she ever wrote them from Oregon; and if slie did, she only wrote one letter and received no answer. She said that her marriage in Kansas had failed, and her experiences around Parsons and Oswego had been very unhappy, and: “. . . when I went west I decided to put everything in the past behind me and start out again and forget it.” Shortly after Hazel Burdick went to Oregon her adoptive parents, George and Helen Burdick, moved from Kansas to Hot Springs, Arkansas, where they had visited when Hazel was still in Kansas. George and Helen Burdick continued to reside in Hot Springs for the entire remaining life of each. George Burdick died in 1937 at about 76 years of age; Helen Burdick died in May, 1941, being over 70 years of age. That the Bur-dicks thought Hazel was dead is shown by a letter written in 1928 by Mrs. Burdick to a cousin, which letter reads in part: “I have not heard from Hazel for years. She must be surely dead or we would hear of her some time. ’ ’ In 1943, Hazel Burdick Kinnear contacted some people in Oswego, Kansas, to see if anyone could help her secure a needed birth certificate. In this way, she learned of the death of George and Helen Burdick; and then on June 23, 1943, filed this suit to obtain the entire estate of Mrs. Helen Burdick on the claim that Hazel Burdick was a pretermitted heir. Appellant’s claim as a beneficiary in the George Burdick estate is not before us. This appeal involves the claim of Hazel Burdick Kinnear to the entire estate of Mrs. Helen Burdick, but for reasons that presently appear, it is necessary that we mention a portion of the will of George H. Burdick. As previously stated, he died in 1937. His last will and testament dated December 28,1931, was duly probated in Garland county, Arkansas. Hazel Burdick was mentioned in two places in his will. Item 3 said: “I give and bequeath unto my adopted daughter, Hazel Burdick, . . . the sum of $1.00.” Item 5 of the will set up a trust estate, naming J. O. Langley as trustee and Mrs. Helen Burdick as the sole life beneficiary of the trust; and provided, so far as Hazel Burdick was concerned, that after the death of Mrs. Helen Burdick: “(d) The trustee shall pay unto my adopted daughter, Hazel Burdick, the sum of $1,000, provided my said adopted daughter he living, and if she be deceased, then said payment shall be made unto her issue, if any, and if none, said legacy shall lapse.” J. 0. Langley was sole executor of the will and sole trustee of the estate of George Burdick. The administration of the estate was closed; and Langley continued to act as trustee. This legacy for Hazel Burdick Kinnear appears to have been paid into court in other proceedings.

So much for the will of George Burdick. Mrs. Helen Burdick made her will on November 18, 1938; and in it she did not mention Hazel Burdick by name. The only possible reference to Hazel Burdick is in section 9 of the will, which section reads: “9. All other property of which I may die seized, eithér real or personal, shall revert back to the estate of my deceased husband, George H. Burdick, and shall be distributed as provided in his last will and testament. ’ ’ Mrs. Helen Burdick executed two codicils to her will: the first being dated January 30, 1939; and the second, October 21, 1940. The first codicil is immaterial to a disposition of this case. The second codicil recited: “I hereby revoke section 9 of my last will and testament and substitute the following: . .■ . the balance of my estate I bequeath unto J. 0. Langley . . .” As previously stated, Mrs. Helen Bur-dick died in May, 1941, at Hot Springs. Her will and the two codicils were duly probated, and the estate administered and closed. Then the appellant, Hazel Burdick Kinnear, filed this suit on June 23, 1943, claiming to be the pretermitted child of Mrs. Helen Burdick, and therefore entitled to her estate.

Many interesting questions aro presented in the excellent briefs filed by learned counsel on each side; but we find it necessary to discuss only three questions, to-wit: I. Did Mrs. Burdick’s will incorporate her husband’s will into her own will by such, reference? TT. Did the reference in section 9 of Mrs. Burdick’s will to the will of her husband sufficiently mention Hazel Burdick so as to prevent her from claiming the rights of a pretermitted child under § 14525, Pope’s Digest? III. Did the revocation of section 9 of Mrs. Burdick’s will by the second codicil constitute an omission to name Hazel Bur-dick, so as to give her the status of a pretermitted child1?

We proceed to decide these questions.

I. Incorporation by Reference. In section 9 of her will, Mrs. Burdick made reference to the will of Mr. Bur-dick, in that she said: “9. All other property of which I may die seized, either real or personal, shall revert back to the estate of my deceased husband, George H. Burdick, and shall be distributed as provided in his last will and testament.” The question is whether that reference by Mrs. Burdick was sufficient to incorporate (i. e., include) Mr. Burdick’s will in her will.

The general rule, as stated in 28 R. C. L. 112, is as follows: “Incorporation of other papers by reference thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 978, 209 Ark. 878, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinnear-v-langley-ark-1946.