Reynolds v. City of Los Angeles

176 Cal. App. 3d 1044, 222 Cal. Rptr. 517, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2503
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1986
DocketB010071
StatusPublished

This text of 176 Cal. App. 3d 1044 (Reynolds v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. City of Los Angeles, 176 Cal. App. 3d 1044, 222 Cal. Rptr. 517, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2503 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion

SUTTON, J. *

This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit in a wrongful death action. The record on appeal is an agreed statement of the parties per California Rules of Court, rule 6. The litigants urge that it is a case of first impression. The issue presented is very narrowly drawn: Is a surviving “parent” of an “informally” adopted deceased minor child within the class of survivors in Code of Civil Procedure section 377 for purposes of prosecuting a wrongful death action resulting from the accidental death of the minor? The “formality” or “informality” of the adoption procedures in this case determines our answer. We detect no error on the part of the trial court, and affirm.

Procedural Background and Contentions of the Parties

Samuel O. Reynolds (Reynolds) appeals a judgment of nonsuit rendered September 13, 1984, in a wrongful death action commenced by him following the death of Samuel F. Reynolds (Samuel) who died at age 17 in an *1047 automobile accident in August of 1979 on a Los Angeles public thoroughfare.

The respondent is the City of Los Angeles (the City). Reynolds’ action was filed as WEC 63996 which was consolidated for trial with WEC 64268, another wrongful death case prosecuted by Gerald and Rose McManus, as a result of the death of their daughter who died with Samuel in the same automobile accident.

At the trial the City successfully moved for a nonsuit in Reynolds’ case but the McManus case proceeded to trial and a verdict in favor of the City was returned. The jury found that the thoroughfare where the accident occurred was not negligently maintained by the City at the time of the accident. Obviously the nonsuit in Reynolds’ case precluded any such verdict in that case.

The basis for the nonsuit was that Reynolds was not the surviving parent of Samuel and was therefore not a person or party empowered to prosecute a wrongful death case within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure section 377, (hereinafter, section 377).

Reynolds contends he “equitably adopted” Samuel or otherwise entered into an enforceable contract with an English “adoption” court of which Samuel was a third party beneficiary, or that he otherwise enjoyed certifiable status as a lawful parent of decedent within the meaning of section 377, admitting, however, that he did not conclude formal adoption proceedings.

We note initially the potential res judicata or collateral estoppel effect of the judgment in favor of the City in the McManus case, WEC 64268. We also observe the sketchy nature of the agreed statement on appeal and lack of a clerk’s record with copies of the pleadings. We only know the date of the fatal accident was August 11, 1979 and that Samuel was a minor age 17, at the time. Who drove the car in the fatal crash is not clear.

Facts

Samuel O. Reynolds and his wife, Daisy, were a childless “Air Force couple” stationed in England in 1962. Another man in Reynolds’ unit fathered Samuel out of wedlock with a local English girl, and during the mother’s pregnancy, the Reynoldses arranged to adopt Samuel after his birth. Indeed, they had custody of him from the second or third day of his life. The Reynoldses hired a solicitor in England to initiate local adoption proceedings. Exhibit “C” to the agreed statement on appeal is a copy of what purports to be a dated but unsigned English legal form which, from a *1048 fair reading of it, simply seems to have placed Samuel in the Reynoldses legal custody “pending adoption.”

Exhibit “C,” in the last typed entry thereon, makes reference to a “20th December 1962 Witney County Court [Provisional Adoption Order]” next to the printed block on that form which states: “Date of adoption order and description of court by which made.” If there was a provisional adoption order made, whatever that may have been, no copy of such a provisional adoption order appears in the record.

The dispositive language of exhibit “C” is set forth with an attempt to “line through” the inapplicable portions of it, as it was originally prepared, and as it appears in the record, as follows: “It is ordered that the applicant(s-)-be-authofised [sz'c] to adopt-the infant [or that the applicant(s) be authorised [sz'c] to remove the infant from Great Britain for the purpose of adopting him/her under the law of or within the country in which the applicant is/applicants are domiciled and that the applicant(s) do have the custody of the infant pending his/her adoption as aforesaid]. ”

The effect of exhibit “C” to the agreed statement seems clearly interlocutory in nature, and just as clearly implies that the British court was conferring custody of the child on the Reynoldses only for the purpose of their formal adoption of the child at a later date.

However, exhibit “D” of the agreed statement, (p. 1) appears to be a birth certificate replete with “officialese” numbers and seal, for “Samuel Frederick Reynolds; Boy; (Born) 20th January, 1962; (at) Cheltenham . . . .” And page 2 of the exhibit “D” appears to be a copy of the certified copy of an entry in the records of the general register office, which again notes the (missing) provisional adoption order of the 20th of December 1962—Witney County Court, and this entry on “the adopted children register” was “sealed” and dated January 14, 1963, in accordance with the Adoption Act of 1958 (7 Eliz. 2, ch. 5) section 20.

No further or additional legal action whatsoever seems to have been taken in Great Britain or the United States by the Reynoldses to formalize Samuel’s adoption thereafter. The Reynolds family eventually returned to the United States with Samuel; resided a while in Oklahoma; and, apparently after completion of 20 years active duty in the Air Force, Mr. Reynolds retired and the family moved to Los Angeles. Mrs. Daisy Reynolds died in 1976, and Mr. Reynolds was the sole surviving “parent” of Samuel at the time of his accidental death. Upon reentry to the United States Mr. Reynolds did apply for and received a “permanent resident” visa from the Department of Immigration and Naturalization for Samuel.

*1049 In two legal proceedings prior to the case at bar, Reynolds held himself out to be the natural parent of Samuel. Reynolds v. Carle (SOC 39031) was a dog bite case in which Reynolds, for ostensible appointment as guardian ad litem, asserted that he was the natural parent of Samuel. In re Estate of Samuel F. Reynolds (WEP 13583) was ostensibly Samuel’s probate proceeding in which Reynolds, likewise, asserted he was the natural parent of Samuel in the attempt to obtain certain pension rights of the deceased Mrs. Reynolds. In this case, the trial court judicially noted both previous legal proceedings but refused to be bound by any res judicata effect therefrom since the verified assertions of Reynolds being a natural parent were essentially either ex parte or uncontested.

Issues

Reynolds contends on appeal: (1) That Reynolds and his wife, Daisy, entered into a third party beneficiary contract with the English “adoption” court for the benefit of Samuel; (2) that the Reynoldses “equitably adopted” Samuel; and (3) under section 377, Reynolds is an heir at law of Samuel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 Cal. App. 3d 1044, 222 Cal. Rptr. 517, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1986.