In re MINER ESTATE.
Docket No. 60, Calendar No. 48,129.Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided June 6, 1960.Maxwell F. Badgley, for proponent City Bank & Trust Company.
George Brett Shaeffer and Rosenburg, Painter & Stanton (Lawrence L. Bullen, of counsel), for contestant.
EDWARDS, J.
Louise H. Miner died October 5, 1957, leaving a will which bequeathed the bulk of her estate to a surviving adopted daughter, Kathleen Miner Crary. The will also contained a bequest of $15,000 to the City Bank & Trust Company of Jackson, Michigan, as trustee, and directed payment of the income on this sum to John Miner Caruthers, referred to in the will as testatrix' grandson.
*581 John Miner Caruthers appeared and filed objections to the will, charging fraud and undue influence and that testatrix lacked mental competence to make a valid will. City Bank & Trust Company, as one of the executors and proponents of the will, thereupon filed a motion to dismiss the contest on the ground that the contestant was not a person who had any interest in the estate of Louise H. Miner. The circuit judge, after a hearing and the taking of testimony on the motion to dismiss, granted it, and contestant Caruthers appeals.
From the record before the circuit judge concerning the motion to dismiss, the following relevant and undisputed facts appear: John Miner Caruthers is the natural son of Maxine Miner Caruthers and her husband, Eugene Caruthers. His mother had been the subject of an adoption petition and order filed in Jackson county probate court. The adoption order was dated July 2, 1919, and was based upon a consent signed by the Michigan's Children's Home Society.
The adoption file, which was introduced in the hearing on the motion to dismiss, contained a release from the natural and legal mother, but did not contain a release from the father although the release referred to the child as legitimate.
Maxine Miner Caruthers died in 1944. It appears from this record that her adoption was never attacked or disputed in any way during the lifetime of the parties immediately concerned with the adoption.
This case presents 2 interesting questions pertaining to the Michigan adoption statutes:
First, is the natural and legal son of a (now deceased) mother who was herself an adopted child, an "interested party" for purpose of contesting the will of the person who adopted his mother?
*582 Second, on this record, is the adoption order of 1919 subject to collateral attack and void because the adoption file does not contain or refer to a release from the father?
The circuit judge held that contestant was not an interested party because he was neither "issue" nor "a lineal descendant" within the meaning of the Michigan statutes of descent and distribution. Having thus decided the first question, he had no need to pass on the second.
As to the first question, the controlling statutory language pertaining to will contests is "any interested party." CL 1948, § 701.36 (Stat Ann 1943 Rev § 27.3178[36]). Contestant claims to be an interested party in the will because he claims that if it is disallowed, he thereupon becomes an heir-at-law of deceased under the Michigan statutes of descent and distribution.
The applicable statute providing for the descent of real property is as follows:
"When any person shall die seized of any lands, tenements or hereditaments, or of any right thereto, or entitled to any interest therein in fee simple, or for the life of another, not having lawfully devised the same, they shall descend, subject to the payment of all prior charges as provided in this act, in the following manner:
"First, 1/3 to his widow, and the remaining 2/3 to his issue; and, if he leaves no widow, then the whole thereof to his issue, and, if the intestate shall be a married woman, 1/3 thereof to her husband and the remaining 2/3 to her issue; and, if she leaves no husband, then the whole thereof to her issue." CL 1948, § 702.80 (Stat Ann 1943 Rev § 27.3178[150]).
The word "issue" is statutorily defined as including "all the lawful lineal descendants." CLS 1956, § 8.3, subd 8 (Stat Ann 1957 Cum Supp § 2.212, subd 8).
*583 Hence, the question becomes, is Caruthers, on this record, a "lawful lineal descendant" of the deceased, Louise H. Miner?
Just 2 weeks prior to the death of Louise H. Miner in 1957, an amendment to the adoption statutes of Michigan became effective. The section with the new language italicized now reads as follows:
"Upon the entry of the order of adoption, such child shall, in case of a change of name, thereafter be known and called by said new name, and the person or persons so adopting said child shall thereupon stand in the place of a parent or parents to such child in law, in all respects as though the adopted child had been the natural child of the adopting parents, and be liable to all the duties and entitled to all the rights of parents thereto. Thereupon there shall be no distinction in any way between the rights and duties of natural children and adopted children, and such child shall thereupon become the heir-at-law of such adopting person or persons, as well as the heir-at-law of the lineal and collateral kindred of the adopting person or persons, and entitled to inherit property from such person or persons in accordance with the law of descent and distribution of this State: Provided, That nothing herein shall affect his right to inherit from or through his natural parents. On the death of the adopting parents, custody of the adopted child shall be determined as though the child was natural born of the adopting parents." CLS 1956, § 710.9, as amended by PA 1957, No 255 (Stat Ann 1959 Cum Supp § 27.3178[549]).
It appears clear that it is this statute which is controlling in our present case since it is the one which was in effect at the death of the intestate. In re Loakes' Estate, 320 Mich. 674; In re Dempster's Estate, 247 Mich. 459.
See, also, 18 ALR2d 960.
Appellant contends that absent the 1957 amendatory language just quoted, he would still be entitled *584 to be regarded as an heir-at-law under the statutes of descent and distribution. In this regard, he relies upon In re Rendell's Estate, 244 Mich. 197, and Fisher v. Gardnier, 183 Mich. 660, as well as a 1956 opinion of the attorney general, No 2405, p 104.
The case upon which the trial judge based his grant of the motion to dismiss was decided subsequent to both cases and the opinion. It held squarely that for purposes of a statute granting a State inheritance tax exemption, the term "lineal descendant" did not include the natural child of an adopted daughter of a decedent. In re Smith Estate, 343 Mich. 291 (51 ALR2d 847).
The opinion in this case contained this language (p 299):
"Able amicus curiae argues to us that:
"`A sound policy requires that the consequences of an adoption should, for the adopting parents, be the same as the consequences of a natural birth and that if a couple has through the adoption process accepted the responsibilities of parents that couple should have the same rights and privileges as are enjoyed by others who became parents by the birth process.'
"The argument is compelling but it is addressed to the wrong forum. It lies within the province of the legislature, not of this Court, to assimilate the position of the adopted child completely to that of the natural child, should sound social policy so require."
It was decided October 3, 1955. Subsequent thereto, the Michigan legislature enacted the amendments to the adoption laws which we have previously quoted. The amendatory language included that adoptive parents of an adopted child should stand in the place of his parents "in all respects as though the adopted child had been the natural child of the adopting parents," and "thereupon there shall be no *585 distinction in any way between the rights and duties of natural children and adopted children." The statute as it now stands makes reference to an adopted child as "heir-at-law of the lineal and collateral kindred of the adopting person or persons, and entitled to inherit property from such person or persons in accordance with the law of descent and distribution of this State."
Appellee's basic argument, however, does not deny this. It admits that the 1957 amendment gave the adopted child the right to inherit under the statutes of descent and distribution, but argues that it made no reference to the children of the adopted child.
We cannot escape the conclusion that the 1957 legislative enactment resulted directly from the invitation contained in the Smith Case, and that our current case is governed by it.
We believe that the right to have their children inherit under the statute of descent and distribution was one of "the rights" as to which the 1957 amendment abolished any remaining distinctions as between "natural children and adopted children." We can think of few instances where the legislative intent has been more clearly indicated.
On this record (assuming adoption of his mother by Louise H. Miner), John Miner Caruthers is a lawful lineal descendant of Louise H. Miner, and hence an "interested party" for purposes of the will contest.
This, of course, requires us to deal with appellee's contention that the 39-year-old adoption order was void because neither it nor the file contained reference to a release by the natural and legal father to the agency which consented to the adoption.
Appellee's brief, in this regard, asserts that the "father, William Craig, did not consent to her adoption." This record contains no such affirmative showing. The consent upon which the adoption order *586 is based is that of the Michigan Children's Home Society, which is in the probate file. What is missing is any release by the father to the Michigan Children's Home Society, similar to that of the mother which is contained in the file and dated a year and a half preceding the date of the adoption.
At this point, we have no way of ascertaining what the actual facts were. Of the many possibilities, we will mention only 2. There may have been a release signed by the father which was subsequently lost from the file. The father may have died before the adoption, and this fact may have been proved before the probate judge. Failure to have such a fact properly recorded would hardly render the adoption order void.
In such speculation, we are engaged in groping in the mists of history. Appellee suggests that the judicial order is void where a fact which is needed to show statutory compliance is thus obscured. To the contrary, the adoption order itself implies a finding of the necessary facts, and the burden of proof is on the party attacking it. Slattery v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co., 254 Mich. 671; Von Beck v. Thomsen, 44 App Div 373 (60 N.Y.S. 1094), aff'd 167 NY 601 (60 N.E. 1121); Wilson v. Otis, 71 NH 483 (53 A 439, 93 Am St Rep 564); 1 Am Jur, Adoption of Children, § 33.
In the Slattery Case, supra, this Court, in upholding an adoption order subjected to a collateral attack, said (p 675):
"`The better rule would seem to be that the adoption will be upheld as against a collateral attack unless the want of jurisdiction is affirmatively shown.' 1 CJ, Adoption of Children, § 114, p 1394."
Appellee relies upon In re Ives, 314 Mich. 690. In that case the natural mother brought habeas corpus to attack a recently entered adoption order on the *587 ground that she received no notice of the proceeding. The parties and the facts herein are dissimilar.
Appellee City Bank, in attacking the adoption proceedings of 1919, stands at best in the shoes of testatrix. Testatrix petitioned for the adoption, recognized it, reared her adopted daughter in her own home, and never in any wise prior to her death sought to upset the adoption order. Her will describes contestant as "my grandson." Louise H. Miner would long ago have been held estopped to dispute the validity of the adoption order. Slattery v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co., supra; In re Gunn's Estate, 227 Mich. 368. So is her representative after her death.
Reversed for denial of motion to dismiss will contest, and remanded for further proceedings. Costs to appellant.
DETHMERS, C.J., and CARR, KELLY, SMITH, BLACK, KAVANAGH, and SOURIS, JJ., concurred.