Lubeck v. Dotson

15 S.E.2d 205, 192 Ga. 258, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 19, 1941
Docket13650.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 S.E.2d 205 (Lubeck v. Dotson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lubeck v. Dotson, 15 S.E.2d 205, 192 Ga. 258, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 448 (Ga. 1941).

Opinion

Bell, Justice.

The plaintiff sought a decree based on virtual adoption. A general demurrer to the petition was overruled, and no exception to this ruling was taken. After introduction of evidence on both sides and instructions by the court, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendants. A motion for new trial was overruled, and the plaintiff excepted.

The plaintiff is William M. Lubeck, sometimes referred to as "Willie,” who is claiming the entire estate of his aunt, Mrs. Yalilia Dotson, who died intestate in the year 1937. The defendants are John T. Dotson, a brother of the intestate, two other named brothers, a sister, and Luther H. Ziegler, whom the other defendants had selected and were seeking to have appointed administrator. The plaintiff’s natural mother was a sister of John T. Dotson and of the other defendants, except Ziegler. She died many years ago, leaving still other children. The defendants conceded that the plaintiff was entitled to share in the estate, per stirpes, with the other children, but denied his allegations as to virtual adoption, and con- ■ tended that he had so neglected his foster mother that in no view of the case was he equitably entitled to recover. In the motion for a new trial the plaintiff complained of several excerpts from the judge’s charge to the jury, and of his refusal to give a requested charge.

The court gave the following charge: "I charge you, gen *260 tlemen of the jury, that the law of Georgia provides for the statutory adoption of children by a proceeding in the superior court that is set out in divers and numerous sections of the Code of Georgia. I charge you though that, besides the statutory adoption laid down by the Code, there may be a virtual or an equitable adoption by a person adopting the child of another, accompanied by virtual adoption and acted upon by all parties concerned through a long period of years, and that it may be enforced in equity upon the death of the obligor with respect to any claim which such child may have against the estate of the obligor, undisposed of by will. There is no will here, gentlemen; so that provision does not apply.” This charge was assigned as error on several grounds, but in the brief for the plaintiff the only substantial question argued is whether there was error in the reference to a will. It appears without dispute that the alleged foster mother died intestate; and this being true, the part of the charge referring to a will was inapplicable, as contended. The judge, however, almost in the same breath clearly informed the jury that it was inapplicable; and so this ground of the motion is without merit.

The ground of the motion nest considered relates to instructions given by the judge in reference to certain habeas-corpus proceedings. Before dealing with this ground some additional facts should be stated. In February, 1909, several years after custody of Willie had been surrendered to the intestate, his father and mother with their other children moved into the home of John T. Dotson, a brother of Mrs. Lubeck, and continued to live there until the death of Mrs. Lubeck in August of the same year. John Lubeek, the plaintiff’s father, testified: “August 15, 1909, my wife died, when we were living” at the home'of John T. Dotson. After that, “Mrs. Yalilia Dotson and John Dotson asked me what I intended to do with the five children. I said I did not know. They said, 'Well, if you will stay away,’ Mrs. Yalilia Dotson said, ‘I will take care of the five children.’ She came down there to John Dotson’s home and stayed with John, and they took care of the five children. Time-went on, and John Dotson and myself did not seem to agree, and I just decided to move my children away.” The five children included Willie. It appears from the record that in January, 1910, John Lubeck brought habeas corpus against John T. Dotson to regain custody of all the children. The defendant *261 answered, among other things, that as to the child Willie custody-had been surrendered by the child’s parents to Mrs. Yalilia Dotson. The judgment in that case was that the custody of Willie be awarded to Mrs. Yalilia Dotson, but that custody of all of the other children be awarded .to their father, John Lubeck. In the petition in the instant case the plaintiff alleged that his foster mother litigated with his father the question of his custody in such habeas-corpus proceedings, that the custody was awarded to her, and from then on until her death “their relations of mother and child were never disturbed or interrupted in any manner whatsoever.” Also, on the trial of the present case, the plaintiff introduced such proceedings in evidence. The judge charged the jury as follows: “Now, . . ao that there may be no confusion in your mind in regard to the habeas-corpus proceedings that have been introduced in this case by the plaintiff: I charge you that is in no sense an adoption, nor can it be construed as in any sense confirming or ratifying an adoption, a contract of adoption, or virtual adoption; that, in a habeas corpus in this State, the question for determination as a rule in such cases is where a party is detained illegally; the fundamental thing in habeas corpus; then, as to a minor child, what is for the best welfare of the infant, and when I say infant I mean any minor; and the court, under a wide discretion, will take a child and give it to a perfect stranger, or an institution, or some next of kin, either close or far, but in no sense does it indicate any adoption.” In the motion for new trial it is contended that this charge was erroneous, for several reasons, especially that it prevented the jury from considering the habeas-corpus proceedings, the conduct of the parties, and the judgment therein, as circumstances tending to show virtual adoption; and therefore that the charge invaded the province of the jury, to the prejudice of the defendant.

In the state of the record, the charge was not erroneous for any reason urged. The habeas-corpus proceedings were instituted solely against John T. Dotson; and although it appears that the judge awarded the custody of Willie to Mrs. Yalilia Dotson, she was not named as a party defendant and filed no pleading therein. So far as appears, the intestate had nothing whatever to do with the case, except that one of the defendants did testify: “Why Judge Freeman gave her this boy ? Yalilia said that the child was hers.” The plaintiff, however, had the full benefit of this statement as evidence, *262 since nothing, said in the charge either eliminated or depreciated it. The proceedings themselves did not in any sense constitute a virtual adoption, and the judge properly so instructed the jury. While one of the defendants in the present ease, John T. Dotson, was the defendant in the habeas-corpus case, it does not appear that he alleged or testified to any fact therein which would tend to show a virtual adoption as now claimed by the plaintiff. As evidence, the proceedings in the habeas-corpus case had no probative value in the plaintiff’s favor, although the petition therein tended strongly to impeach the plaintiff’s father as a witness in the instant case, and thus constituted evidence in favor of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E.2d 205, 192 Ga. 258, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lubeck-v-dotson-ga-1941.