Treadwell v. Woods

124 P.2d 94, 51 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 572
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 11950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 94 (Treadwell v. Woods) 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
Treadwell v. Woods, 124 P.2d 94, 51 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 572 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Calvin F. Summers died intestate on March 7, 1939, at the age of about 85 years, leaving an estate of considerable value, consisting chiefly of a bank deposit and mining property. He was a widower, and was not survived by any children, brothers or sisters. Four separate petitions for letters of administration were filed; one by Charlie Y. Woods, claiming to be the decedent’s grandson, and another by James L. Treadwell, who was admittedly a grand-nephew. The probate court granted Woods’ petition and denied the others; and Treadwell alone has appealed. It is conceded that by [40]*40virtue of section 422 of the Prohate Code a grandson’s right to administer an estate is prior to that of a grand-nephew; but whether or not Woods was a grandson depended upon the determination of the question of whether, as claimed by him, his mother, Bertha Lois Summers, was the legally adopted daughter of the decedent. In this regard respondent claimed that the adoption proceeding took place in the Superior Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco about the year 1881; and at the hearing of the present proceeding it was stipulated that if any records of such adoption proceeding ever existed they were destroyed in the San Francisco fire of 1906. The probate court found in favor of the respondent on the adoption issue, and appellant attacks the finding upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient as a matter of law to sustain said finding.

In order to pass upon the correctness of the probate court’s finding it becomes necessary to consider the evidence adduced at the hearing relating to the family history and the background of the parties. It appears therefrom that Isabel Mather Henderson and John Wilson Henderson, husband and wife, had two children, Bertha Lois (respondent’s mother) and Isabel (known generally as “Belle”). In 1875 Mrs. Henderson obtained a divorce from her husband on the ground of extreme cruelty, and was awarded the custody of the children, who were then 4 and 8 years of age respectively. The children, However, remained living with their father, and Mrs. Henderson, who was then in her early thirties, took a position as governess for the children of Mrs. Mabel Summers Tread-well, wife of James Parker Treadwell Sr. and sister of Calvin F. Summers. Calvin at that time was about 19 years old, and lived with his sister at 16 Shephard Place, San Francisco. In 1877 he and Mrs. Isabel Henderson were married, and continued to live with Calvin’s sister at 16 Shephard Place. In 1881 Bertha Lois and Belle, the Henderson children, went to live with their mother and Calvin Summers, and it was during that year that it is claimed the court proceedings took place whereby Calvin F. Summers legally adopted Bertha Lois.

Belle did not get along well with Summers, and a short time after the adoption of Bertha Lois, Belle went back to live with her father. Bertha Lois continued to live with Summers and her mother until about 1888, part of the time on Haight Street. She attended the College of Holy Names in Oakland during 1887, using the name “Lois Somers.” (The name Sum[41]*41mers was sometimes spelled Burners and also Somers.) In 1893 Bertha Lois bore an illegitimate daughter, who died in 1934, leaving surviving her two daughters who were named as heirs of Calvin F. Summers in respondent’s petition. Also in 1893 Bertha Lois married Albert S. Woods. They had two children, the respondent Charlie Y. Woods and his brother Eugene (Gene) B. Woods. Bertha Lois divorced Woods in 1911 and subsequently married Charles Howard, but had no children by him; and she died in 1927.

The main evidence relating to the adoption proceeding and the circumstances attending it consisted of the testimony given by Belle Henderson, the surviving sister of respondent’s mother, Bertha Lois. At the time of the hearing of the present proceeding Belle (or Isabel) Henderson was married, and upon being sworn as a witness gave the name “Isabel Bryan.” She testified that she was present in court at the time the adoption took place. In this regard she stated, in part, that about 1881 she and her sister Bertha Lois went to live with Summers and their mother at 16 Shephard Place in San Francisco—they had been living with their father up to that time; that in the presence of her sister, her mother and herself Summers said he wished to adopt her sister, that she was a very bright girl and he would be able to give her advantages that her father could not; that at that time the witness was between 12 and 13 years old, and her sister between 8 and 9. Continuing, she testified that about a month after the above discussion Summers, his wife and the two girls “went to the court out in the City Hall” and went into the courtroom and sat down, and her mother was introduced to the judge, Judge Halsey; that her mother and Summers were sworn to tell the truth, and Summers handed the judge some papers and said this was the little girl he wished to adopt; that the judge read the papers, and then asked her mother if she was willing for Summers to adopt the child and she said yes; that her mother and Summers then signed the paper, after which the judge wrote something on the paper himself; that then the judge said to Bertha, “Bertha, now you have a new father” and he hoped she would be very happy in her new surroundings. Continuing her narrative, Mrs. Bryan testified that she remained with her mother and Summers for about a year; but that Summers was not kind to her, so she told him she was going back to her father, and he replied, “Go ahead, but your sister can’t go, she belongs to me. I [42]*42have adopted her”; that after she went back to live with her father, Bertha’s adoption was discussed many times, and that her father was quite hurt that Bertha had chosen to live with Summers. She also testified that after the court proceedings her sister used the name Lois Summers and never again used the name Henderson, and that she continued to live with Summers “till she was grown.” She also testified that she had a copy of the divorce decree between her mother and her father up to 1939; that she knew from that document that they were divorced in San Francisco; that the grounds were extreme cruelty, and that the custody of the two children was given to the mother.

Considerable corroborative testimony was introduced. In part it consisted of the following: Albert S. Woods, husband of Bertha Lois and father of respondent, testified that Henderson, his wife’s natural father, told him Bertha Lois had been adopted by Summers; and he testified that sometime prior to their marriage he and Bertha met Summers on Kearney Street and Bertha said, “There comes my father,” and introduced Summers as her father; that about a week or two prior to their marriage he had a conversation with Summers ; that Bertha told Summers they were going to get married and Summers inquired if Woods was working and what his salary was; that Summers said, “Well, now, she is my daughter, I adopted this girl, I am interested in her and I want you to take good care of her ...” Furthermore, various other witnesses testified to admissions made in their presence, by Summers and Bertha Lois’ mother, that Summers had adopted Bertha Lois as his child; and the registration books of the convent she attended in 1887-8 were introduced in evidence, showing she was registered there under the name “Lois Somers.” There was no contradictory testimony introduced in behalf of appellant, nor on this appeal does he challenge the truth of any of the statements made by any of respondent’s witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 94, 51 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treadwell-v-woods-calctapp-1942.