On Petition eor Rehearing
Before Lusk, Chief Justice, and Brand, Rossman, Hay, Latourette and Warner, Justices. LATOURETTE, J.Petitioners have filed a petition for rehearing *324and urge that the court, in its opinion, erred in holding that: “The court necessarily acquires jurisdiction through the allegations of the petition.” It is argued that: “There is a presumption of jurisdiction which attaches to courts of general jurisdiction.” Counsel cites 1 Am. Jur. § 33, 636, and 1 Am. Jur. § 34, 637, and In re Grazzini’s Estate, 31 Cal. App. (2d) 168, 87 P. (2d) 713.
A close analysis of the text in 1 Am. Jur., § 33, supra, reveals that counsel has sequestered a portion of the text in his quotation of the rule which gives what is called the modern tendency of the courts in adoption matters. Had he read further from such § 33, he would have found, quoted at p. 637, that :
“Other courts regard adoption proceedings, even in a court of general jurisdiction, as being a special and summary power conferred upon the court not after the course of the common law, and therefore regard the action of such a court in adoption proceedings as being similar to that of a court of limited and special jurisdiction in that all jurisdictional facts must appear affirmatively by the record. There can be no presumption, in such case, that jurisdiction was obtained over the parent of the child if the record of the adoption is silent on the subject.”
If counsel had taken the trouble to run down the Oregon authorities, he would have discovered In re Frazier’s Estate, 180 Or. 232, 238, 177 P. (2d) 254, wherein this court, after calling attention to l'R. C. L., Adoption of Children, § 4, 595, repudiated the so-called modern tendency of the courts doctrine in the following language:
“As recently as Williams v. Capparelli, ante p. 41, 175 P. (2d) 153, decided December 10, 1946, this court held that, the right of adoption being of *325civil origin and unknown to the common law, statutes of adoption must he strictly construed. See, to the same effect, Long v. Dufur, 58 Or. 162, 170, 113 P. 59; Purgeson v. Jones, 17 Or. 204, 217, 20 P. 842, 11 Am. St. Rep. 808, 3 L. R. A. 620.”
In the case of In re Grazzini’s Estate, supra, the modern tendency rule was adopted, which, as above stated, is not the law in Oregon.
The court’s attention is also called to Furgeson v. Jones, supra. In that case the child’s mother, who had been awarded the custody of the child in a divorce proceeding, gave her consent to the adoption. The child’s father, who resided without the state of Oregon, was not served with notice. This court, speaking of the jurisdiction of the county court in ordering the adoption, at p. 210, said:
“To give its decree any force or effect, jurisdiction must have been acquired by the court (1) over the person seeking to adopt the child, (2) over the child, and (3) over the parents of the child.”
In that case the court was referring to the jurisdiction of the persons and not of the subject matter. In the present case we are concerned only with the jurisdiction of the subject matter.
We find in 2 C. J. S. § 37, 419, the following: ’
“Under statutes authorizing adoption without the natural parent’s consent where he has abandoned the child or is unfit to have custody of it, it is generally held that a petition alleging such abandonment or unfitness must comply with the statutory requirements in order to confer jurisdiction.”
In the case of State ex rel. v. Frentz, 256 Ill. App. 259, involving a collateral attack on the order of adop*326tion, that court held that the petition for adoption of a child, setting forth as a ground the abandonment of the child for a period of three years by the surviving parent, was insufficient under the law in not averring abandonment for a period of six months next preceding the filing of the petition and ruled the adoption void.
In the case of Truelove v. Parker, 191 N. C. 430, 132 S. E. 295, the court held that a petition in an adoption proceeding, alleging abandonment of child by parents, must comply strictly with the provisions of the statute relating to such abandonment.
After drafting and printing the petition for rehearing in the instant case, petitioners attached an appendix to the same in which it is stated:
“ * * * we believe the court further erred in failing to consider Section 63-402, O. C. L.A., which provides that in case the legal custody of such child shall have been awarded in divorce proceedings, the consent of the person to whom such custody has been so awarded may be held by the court sufficient, but in such case citation to show cause shall be served upon the person not having the custody, and the objections of such parent shall be heard, if appearance be made. In this case the petitioners have been awarded the custody of the child.
“ Therefore, it is not a question of jurisdiction in this case, as the natural father’s consent was not legally essential. ’ ’
This question has not heretofore been before the court in the instant case, and we will now consider the same.
To understand the question before us, we will recount the facts applicable to the matter. Upon the divorce between the father and the mother of the child, the mother was awarded the child’s custody. The mother died, whereupon, petitioners, on the 1st day *327of February, 1949, filed a petition for the adoption of said child. Upon a hearing the court denied the adoption, whereupon, on the 11th day of April, 1950, a petition for the adoption of said child in the instant case was filed.
From such petition we find that the court, on its own motion, after all of the evidence was in, issued an order in the divorce case between the father and mother of said child, because of the death of the mother of said minor, vesting the care, custody and control of the minor in the petitioners, i. e., the maternal grandparents.
The question before us turns upon the legality of the modification of the divorce decree awarding the custody of the child in question to the petitioners.
"When the wife died in the instant case, the divorce court ceased to have jurisdiction over the divorce proceedings as to any further or future action in the matter. In 17 Am. Jur. § 689, 524, we find:
“The general rule is that where the custody of children is granted to one spouse, such custody does not forever cut off and bar the other spouse’s right to their custody so long as the decree is unmodified, but only establishes the right between the two spouses during their lives; and upon the death of the one to whom the custody of the child was awarded, his or her right does not descend nor can it be transmitted, and therefore the right of the other spouse to the custody of the child revives or attaches as against third persons, provided, of course, he or she is a suitable person. In other words, upon the death of one of the parties divorced by judicial decree, the divorce proceeding falls so far as concerns any further right to the custody of children. ’ ’
*328The ease of LeClerc v. LeClerc, 85 N. H. 121, 155 A. 249, 74 A. L. R. 1348, 1350, announces the rule as follows:
“When the joint rights of the parties were terminated by the death of the father, the problem of custody, so far as it concerned the divorce court, ceased to exist, just as the problem of divorce disappeared when the. libelant died in the case of Kim-ball v. Kimball, supra. * * * The provisions for custody also were abated or expired by limitation.”
In the case of Hughes v. Bowen, 193 Okla. 269, 143 P. (2d) 139, 140, the mother, to whom the custody of the child had been awarded in the divorce case, died, whereupon, the. maternal grandmother moved the divorce court for an order awarding her the custody of the child. The following is from the opinion:
“However, the trial court on its own motion should have dismissed the proceedings for want of jurisdiction of the cause.
“Though the trial court in a divorce action has continuing jurisdiction over the custody and support of minor children even after final judgment in the action, 12 O. S. 1941 § 1277, when a party to the action dies the court’s jurisdiction for all purposes ceases so far as the custody and control of the children are concerned. In 17 Am. Jur. 525, it_ is said that upon the death of one of the parties divorced by the judicial decree, the divorce proceeding falls so far as concerns any further right to the custody of the children.
“Upon the death of the parent into whose custody the children are placed by the decree of divorce, the children stand, with relation to the surviving parent and all the world, as if no decree of divorce had .been entered. In such case the right to custody of .the children inures automatically to the surviving parent. 74 A. L. R. 1353, annotation. It is there said by the annotator: ‘ The prevailing rule clearly *329is, that, upon the death of the parent who has held custody under a divorce decree, the right to custody automatically inures to the surviving parent. ’ ’ ’
In the case of Barry v. Sparks, 306 Mass. 80, 27 N. E. (2d) 728, 128 A. L. R. 983, 987, we find: “But when such a decree has been entered, upon the death of one of the parents * * * the divorce decree ceases to have any further continuing effect.”
In the case of Rice v. Andrews, 217 N. Y. S. 528, 533, 127 Misc. 826, the father, to whom the custody of the child was given in the divorce proceedings, died. The statute gave either spouse, or any person having the care and custody of the child, the right to petition the court for a modification of the decree. An application was made to modify the decree after the death of the father, and the court held, among other things, that the application to modify must be made while both parties are alive. The court said:
“It must be borne * * * in mind that the court has no inherent authority to modify its final judgment in this action. Any right it has along this line must be given it by the Legislature. ’ ’
In the early case of Weber v. Weber, 16 Or. 163, 164, 17 P. 866, this court said “that the power to grant a divorce, and such other relief as is usually incident thereto, is purely statutory.”
Again, in State ex rel. v. Tolls, 160 Or. 317, 323, 85 P. (2d) 366, 119 A. L. R. 1370, it was said by this court:
“The proceedings in a suit for divorce are purely statutory, and the powers which the court exercises are the mere creation of statute. The court is ‘exercising a special power conferred upon it by statute, and not according to the course of common law.’ ”
*330In the ease of Zachary v. Zachary, 155 Or. 346, 63 P. (2d) 1080, it was held that a person not a party to the divorce suit had no standing in court to request a modification of a divorce decree as to the custody of a child.
In the case of Bryant v. Dukehart, 106 Or. 359, 210 P. 454, this court held that where the mother having custody of the child under a divorce decree had died, the other parent becomes entitled to its custody, unless he has forfeited his parental rights, and the burden of proof to show that the surviving parent was not a fit person to have the custody and control of the child is upon the party asserting the unfitness.
The authority of the court to modify a decree as to the custody of a child is found in § 9-915, O. C. L. A., and then on motion of either party, which means either party to the law suit. When the mother died, as in the instant case, the husband was the only remaining party in the divorce case. He thereby eo instanti became entitled to the legal custody of his child. It was unnecessary for him to obtain a modification order from the court. Such a proceeding would be supererogatory as there would be no one to contest it since no outside party could be legally impleaded in the case.
To deprive the father of his legal and natural right to the custody of his child, it would be necessary for anyone challenging his unfitness to either bring a suit in equity to determine such matter, if that party had the actual custody of the child, or to bring a habeas corpus proceeding, should the child be in the custody of another. In a proper ease a guardianship or dependency proceeding could be invoked.
Since the custody of such child was not legally awarded to petitioners in the divorce proceedings, *331§ 63-402, O. C. L. A., relied on by petitioners, is of no help to petitioners, and the consent of the father not having been obtained, there can be no legal adoptive order.
The petition for rehearing is denied.