Schultz v. First Nat. Bk. of Portland

348 P.2d 22, 220 Or. 350, 81 A.L.R. 2d 1121, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 486
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 348 P.2d 22 (Schultz v. First Nat. Bk. of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schultz v. First Nat. Bk. of Portland, 348 P.2d 22, 220 Or. 350, 81 A.L.R. 2d 1121, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 486 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

This is one of the two proceedings wherein the same parties, Lester Henry Schultz is plaintiff and The First National Bank of Portland (Oregon), as executor of the last will and testament of Dorothea M. Schultz, deceased, and the heirs and devisees of Mrs. Schultz are defendants. Both cases were consolidated for purpose of argument here.

This first proceeding was initiated in the Probate Department of the circuit court for Multnomah county, in the matter of the estate of Dorothea M. Schultz, *353 deceased, upon the petition of Schultz, seeking a determination of heirship pursuant to ORS 117.510 et seq.

Mrs. Schultz died without issue. The question presented here is whether the plaintiff is entitled to take the estate of Dorothea M. Schultz, as her sole, but pretermitted, heir. His claim to the status of an heir rests upon an alleged agreement to adopt him made by the decedent and her former husband in the state of Nebraska.

The pertinent, and only, allegations of the petition bearing on the adoption agreement read:

“IV.
“# # * That the said Dorothea M. Melcher and Edward T. Schultz were duly married at Wisner, Nebraska, on March 15th, 1911, and thereafter resided at Bonesteel, South Dakota until the parties were duly divorced on or about October the 15th, 1938, a period of over 27 years. That subsequent to the said divorce, the deceased, Dorothea M. Schultz, resided in Newport, Nebraska for about a year and a half and then moved to Portland, Oregon, in 1939, where she resided until the time of her death on or about November 29th, 1954.
“V.
“That on or about November, 1923, the deceased, Dorothea M. Schultz and her husband, Edward T. Schultz, made application to the Evangelical Lutheran Orphan’s Home in Freemont, Nebraska, for a child to be adopted by them, and said Dorothea M. Schultz and her husband, Edward T. Schultz, were given your petitioner, who was born Lester Stoffer in Norfork, Nebraska, on April 7, 1919, as a child for adoption.
“VI.
“That the deceased, Dorothea M. Schultz, and her husband, Edward T. Schultz, did from the time that they took your petitioner from the said home *354 on the agreement to adopt the said child, they retained yonr petitioner in their home, gave him their name ‘Schnltz’, and to all intents and purposes considered your petitioner their natural child, and all of the relationship of parents and child were carried out and continued by the deceased, Dorothea M.' Schultz, and her husband, Edward T. Schultz, toward your petitioner, the said child, your petitioner, considering, himself to be the natural child of the said Dorothea M. Schultz and Edward T. Schultz and gave to his adoptive parents all of the love and affection and - privileges that would be accorded to the natural parents, and your petitioner considered himself for all intents and purposes to be the ehild of said parents since having been taken ...from the orphan’s home.”

This is not a suit for breach of contract, nor is it, strictly speaking, one for specific performance. It is a' proceeding for the judicial determination whether status as an heir can be said to flow from the alleged agreement. In short, it stands as a petition to the court to apply to the agreement the equitable, maxim treating as done that which parties intended should be done, namely, a consummation of the adoption of plaintiff as a son and heir of the Schultzes. 19 Am Jur 315, 316, Equity 455, 457; Syverson v. Serry, 101 Or 514, 529, 200 P 921; Ruth v. Cox, 134 Or 200, 207, 291P 371. See, also, Wooley v. Shell Petroleum Corp., 39 NM 256, 45 P2d 927, 931; Tuttle v. Winchell, 104 Neb-750, 178 NW 755, 757; and Wiseman v. Guernsey, 107 Neb 647, 187 NW 55, where the maxim is applied to like agreements of adoption made in a foreign .state..

Plaintiff appeals from the order of the court dismissing his petition.

The motion of the defendant bank, denominated a “Motion to :Strike Petitioner’s Second Amended Peti *355 tion,” indicates that it was both a motion and a demurrer and recited:

“1. That it fails to allege facts sufficient to entitle the petitioner to the standing of an heir or next-of-kin of the testatrix, Dorothea M. Schultz; and
“2. That the said second amended petition alleges no new or additional facts not set forth in petitioner’s amended petition, which petition was stricken out upon motion and after hearing thereon.”

Although captioned a motion, when its content also tests the petition’s legal sufficiency, and the trial court treats it as a general demurrer, we will do likewise. Bliss v. Southern Pacific Co., 212 Or 634, 637, 321 P2d 324.

The order of dismissal does not reveal upon what ground the court premised its action in sustaining the demurrer.

The briefs of the parties are meager in argument and citations, offering little aid in this respect. Because of what is there said concerning the nature of the contract; that is, as an agreement for adoption having its origin in a foreign jurisdiction, we are led to the conclusion that this was probably the question giving the court its real concern and the sole matter argued in the probate court. The bank’s position is that foreign agreements of this character will not be enforced by Oregon courts. The plaintiff argues to the contrary. If the bank found any other alleged elements of insufficiency in the pleading it failed to suggest them.

The statute (OBS 117.510 to' 117.560, inclusive) upon which the plaintiff relies for a determination of his status as an heir of Dorothea M. Schultz is a special *356 statute, providing an adequate, though, not the exclusive, remedy for a simple and expeditious determination of questions of heirship within the ambit of every probate proceeding and ás a matter collateral to the ultimate settlement and distribution of any given es-state. It confers jurisdiction on the probate court for such a determination and lays out with great particularity the precise procedure to be followed.

Up to this time only three cases have come to this court which had their origin under these sections of the code: In re Norton’s Estate, 175 Or 115, 151 P2d 719; Kelley v. Kelley, 210 Or 226, 310 P2d 328. More significant to this appeal is a third and relatively recent case, In re Estate of Myers, 197 Or 520, 254 P2d 227 (1953). This last case was a proceeding under the special statute wherein plaintiff claimed to be the sole heir of an intestate decedent by reason of decedent’s adoption of plaintiff and wherein the defendants contended that plaintiff had later been adopted by other parties. The issue was the validity of the second adoption decree.

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Bluebook (online)
348 P.2d 22, 220 Or. 350, 81 A.L.R. 2d 1121, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultz-v-first-nat-bk-of-portland-or-1959.