Von Beck v. Thomsen

44 A.D. 373, 60 N.Y.S. 1094
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 44 A.D. 373 (Von Beck v. Thomsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Beck v. Thomsen, 44 A.D. 373, 60 N.Y.S. 1094 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The 'facts out of which this controversy arose. are as follows: Baron Christian Thomsen, a resident of the city of New York, was insured in "three insurance companies by four policies of life insurance aggregatiiag $22,500. These policies were.dated in .the years 1858, 1865 and 1866. By the policies of the Manhattan Life Insurance Company the insurance was for the sole use of Mrs. Florentine Thomsen, wife of the insured, and the amount was to be paid “ to the said assured, her executors, administrators or assigns, for her sole.use * * - *. And in.case of the death of the said Florentine Thomsen before the decease of said Christian Thomsen the amount of the said insurance shall be payable to her children, for their use.” The third policy, issued by the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company, was for the sole benefit of Florentine . Thomsen, wife of the insured, if she should survive 'him. Other.wise, for the benefit of his then surviving children and the surviving descendants of any then deceased child or children. A policy of. the Germania Insurance Company was for the sole benófit of Florentine Thomsen, to be payable to her, “and in case of the death of the said Florentine Thomsen before the decease of the said Christian ■ Thomsen, the amount of the said insurance shall be payable after her death to her childi’en for their use.” At the time that these policies were executed the insured was married to Florentine.Thomsen, and there were two children of such marriage living, who are the defendants in this action, one child, Hugo A. Thomsen, born on October .17, 1850; another, Pepita, born November 23, 1854.

Florentine Thomsen, wife of the insured, died in the city of New York on November 29, 1895, leaving these two- children surviving, and the insured died in the city of New York on May 28, [375]*3751898. There was no issue of any deceased child. In December, 1875, the insured and his wife, by proceedings taken in the Court of Common Pleas.for the city of New York, adopted the plaintiff, and .an order of adoption was, on December 23,1875, signed by ChakleS P. Daly, chief judge of said court, and the question submitted is whether or not this plaintiff, as an adopted child of the said Baron ■Christian Thomsen and his wife, Florentine Thomsen, was entitled do any portion of the moneys paid under these insurance policies before mentioned.

This adoption was under chapter 830 of the Laws of 1873. Section 10 of that act, as amended by chapter 703, Laws of 1887, after prescribing the proceedings for an adoption, provides that “A child, when adopted, shall take the name of the person adopting, and the two thenceforth shall sustain toward each other the legal relation" of parent and child, and have all the rights and be subject to all the •duties of that relation (including) the right of inheritance, * * * •except that as respects the passing and limitation over of real and personal property, under and by deeds, conveyances, wills, devises :and trusts, dependent upon the person adopting dying without heirs, .said child adopted shall not be deemed to sustain the legal relatioü ■of child • to the person so adopting so as to defeat the rights of remaindermen.”

We have thus at the time of the death of the wife of the insured, when the interests of the children of the marriage accrued, the provision that the child when adopted should sustain towards the adopting parents the legal relation of parent and child and have all the rights of that relation, including the right of inheritance.

■ The defendants take several objections to the proceedings which resulted in the order for the adoption of the plaintiff, but we think that none of them affect the validity of the adoption. First, it is stated that the consent required by the statute does not appear to have been given. The petition of the insured and his wife, upon which the proceeding was instituted, stated that the child was then about four and one-half years old and had been in the family and undei* "the care of the petitioners since the month of March, 1874, someiliing over eighteen months; that the parents of the child were not known, but that a society called “the ‘Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New York,’ ” had received and [376]*376maintained said infant child until the month of March, 1874, when said child was delivered and assigned by the said society to the petitioners to adopt, maintain and educate the same, and that the petitioners were desirous of adopting the child under the act of the Legislature before referred to. Upon this petition an order was granted requiring the parties interested and. the said society, The Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New York, to appear before the chief judge of the Court of Common Pleas on a day named; and upon that day the parties did appear before the said chief judge and executed an instrument whereby Christian Thomsen and Florentine, his wife, agreed to adopt .the said minor female child abandoned by its parents, and about the month of July, 1871, received and cared for by the society called the Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New York, and which child .was delivered to the said petitioners by the said society to be adopted and maintained and educated by the said petitioners about the month of March, 1874. They further agreed jointly and severally that the said child should l^e adopted and treated by the petitioners, and each of them, in all respects as their own child should be treated, and should be brought up in the Roman Catholic religion. There was also executed on said day a consent to adopt the said child, to bring up the said child in the Roman Catholic religion and to treat the same in all respects “ as our own lawful child should be treated.” Upon these papers an order was signed by the chief judge of the Court of Common Pleas which recited the petition of the said Christian Thomsen and Florentine, his wife, praying to have the adoption by them of a certain minor- fe,male child abandoned by its parents legalized by an act of the Legislature referred to, and further recited that it having appeared to the satisfaction of the said chief judge' that the said child was a minor child of the age of about five years and was abandoned by its parents, and that the parents were not known, and that said infant child was. received and taken under the care, charge and custody of the society called The Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New York; and.that the said society acting by its proper officer having given its consent to the adoption of the said child by the said Christain Thomsen and Florentine, Thomsen, his wife, and the said persons adopting the said child now [377]*377called Sylvia and the child adopted and the said Society The Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New' York by their proper officer having appeared before him and the necessary consent having been signed, and an agreement having been duly executed by the said Christian and Florentine Thomsen, the persons adopting said child, to the effect that the child shall be adopted and treated, in all respects, as their own lawful child should bé treated; and all the said persons appearing before the said chief judge having been examined by him personally, he did thereby order, decree and direct that “ the said minor female child called

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.D. 373, 60 N.Y.S. 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-beck-v-thomsen-nyappdiv-1899.