Woods v. Crump

142 S.W.2d 680, 283 Ky. 675, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 388
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 17, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 680 (Woods v. Crump) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Crump, 142 S.W.2d 680, 283 Ky. 675, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 388 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

On November 21, 1893, John J. Todd and wife conveyed to their daughter, Lenah Linville, formerly Lenah Murray, nee Lenah Todd, a farm situated in Madison County, Kentucky, containing about 65 acres, she being-vested with the title “during- her natural life, then to her heirs.” The consideration expressed in the deed was “natural love and affection and the further consideration of a mutual division of certain lands and monies among the heirs and children of the parties of the first part (grantors) and deeds made in accordance with said division have given, granted, bargained and sold and by these presents do hereby convey,” &c. (Our emphasis.) *677 At the time of the conveyance the daughter was living with her second husband, James T. Linville. Neither at the time of this conveyance, nor at any time preceding her death, did the life tenant in the deed have issue or descendants, and she died in July, 1938, leaving only collateral heirs who were related by blood.

On February 13, 1933 — nearly forty years after the execution of the deed and more than five years before the death of the life tenant, the Madison circuit court— pursuant to proceedings inaugurated therein by the life tenant and her husband as authorized by Section 2071 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes — entered a judgment whereby she and her husband adopted the appellant and a defendant below, Joseph D. Woods (then 32 years of age), as their heir, with the right of inheriting from them “the same as if he had been the issue of their marriage.” Following the death of the life tenant, and on February 17, 1939, some of her blood collateral heirs filed this action in the Madison circuit court against her other similar heirs by blood, and against her adopted heir (Woods), and in their petition plaintiffs averred that they and the other defendants, except Woods, were the only surviving blood relatives, next of kin and collateral or other heirs of the life tenant, and that they became the owners of the land under the deed of John J. Todd and wife upon the death of the life tenant. Plaintiffs prayed that the land be .sold for the purposes of division among such heirs of the life tenant according to their interest, dependent upon their degree of relationship to her. Plaintiffs also averred that Woods claimed some interest in the land and he was called upon to assert it, which he did by his answer, it being his adoption by the life tenant as set out supra, and which' he claimed entitled him to inherit the land after the death of his foster mother. He made his answer a cross petition against plaintiffs and his co-defendants, and asked that he be adjudged to be the sole owner of the land and that his title be quieted against the claims of any of them.

Plaintiffs demurred to that answer, which the court sustained and defendant, Woods, declined to plead further,' followed by a judgment dismissing his answer and counterclaim and adjudging plaintiffs and the other defendants, except Woods, the owners of the farm, which the court directed to be sold for the purpose of division *678 of the proceeds among them. Prom that judgment Woods prosecutes this appeal. There is, therefore, squarely presented to us for determination the question as to whether Woods in the circumstances, is an “heir” of the life tenant within the meaning of that term as contained in the John J. Todd deed so as to entitle him (Woods) to the involved land upon the death of the life tenant, his foster mother? An answer to that question will now be attempted.

To begin with, it is acknowledged by all that it is competent for the legislative branch of the sovereignty to prescribe who may inherit the property of a deceased individual dying intestate by appropriately enacted statutes of Descent and Distribution. Embraced therein is authority of such legislative body to prescribe conditions under which others besides natural blood relatives may participate in such estates as an heir of the deceased. Pursuant to that authority most, if not all, of the states have enacted statutes whereby adult individuals may adopt another — even a stranger in blood — as an heir of their own whereby such adopted heir may inherit from them pursuant to the status created in proceedings had thereunder. Such statutes vary in phraseology, some of them permitting the adopted child or heir to inherit from the collateral kindred or natural heirs of his foster parent. However, it is well settled that unless such, a consequence is authorized by the adopting statute the adopted heir may inherit only from his foster parent, and not through him or her so as to inherit from the latter’s natural heirs.

Our statute (which has existed in its present form since 1860) has been construed in a number of eases. The first one to which our attention has been called is Atchinson v. Atchinson’s Ex’rs, 89 Ky. 488, 12 S. W. 942, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 705, and extending down to Sanders v. Adams, 278 Ky. 24, 128 S. W. (2d) 223. Intervening cases will be found cited in the opinion in the latter case, and others may be found in the intervening cited cases therein. One of the intervening cases referred to in the Sanders opinion is Merritt v. Morton, 143 Ky. 133, 136 S. W. 133, 134, 33 L. R. A., N. S., 139. In that case the conclusion reached was the same as that made in the other domestic cases, and which was, that an adopted child under our statute might inherit from his foster parent, but could, not inherit from the kindred *679 of such parent — the opinion saying: “The act of the foster parents in adopting the child is a contract into which they entered with those having the lawful custody of the child, an agreement personal to themselves, and, while they have a perfect right to bind or obligate themselves to make the child their heir, they are powerless to extend this right on his part to inherit from'* others. All inheritance laws are based or built upon natural ties of blood relationship, whereas an adopted child’s right to inherit rests upon a contract, and hence only those parties to the contract are bound by it.” To the same effect is the case of Lanferman v. Vanzile, 150 Ky. 751, 150 S. W. 1008, Ann. Cas. 1914D, 563, and the Sanders case followed those opinions, citing the cases referred to, together with text authorities to the same effect, the latest of which is 2 C. J. S., Adoption of Children, p. 455, Section 63, subsection “d”.

It will be observed that in the John J. Todd deed the word “heirs,” as therein employed, is descriptive of a group of remaindermen who succeed to the land upon the death of the life tenant, appellant’s foster mother, and who obtain their title not through her, but under the John J. Todd deed. The precise question, therefore, is, whether or not he as the maker thereof can be said to have intended to embrace by the use of that word a stranger in blood — both to him and to his daughter as life tenant — who might thereafter be adopted by the latter under our statute supra ? All the books and treatises dealing with the question, to which we have access or to which we have been directed, hold that a determinative fact in such circumstances is the intention of the creator of the title when he executed the instrument creating it — whether it be a will or a deed. In some, if not all of the domestic cases cited supra that factor is emphasized.

In 70 A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 680, 283 Ky. 675, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-crump-kyctapphigh-1940.