Judges: Stacy
Filed Date: 5/4/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
Special proceeding to determine proper distribution of moneys paid into Clerk's office by administrator of estate of Eugenia E. Hunter pursuant to provisions of G.S. 28-160.
The petition alleges that Eugenia E. Hunter, late of Wake County, died intestate on 14 June, 1947; that T. Lacy Williams was duly appointed administrator of her estate, and that on 2 July, 1948, said administrator filed his final account, which was approved, and contemporaneously therewith deposited with the Clerk the net proceeds of the estate amounting to $4,957.32 for distribution among the lawful heirs-at-law, as this sum arose principally from the sale of lands of which the deceased died seized.
There is also allegation that the petitioner, James Robert Hunter, Jr., is an adopted son of the deceased and her late husband, James Robert *Page 385 Hunter; and, as such, is an heir-at-law of the deceased. His adoption was had in the Commonwealth of Virginia on 27 September, 1917.
There is further allegation that the respondents, Kathleen Hunter Nunnamaker and Isabel Hunter Hilmer, also claim to be heirs-at-law of the deceased by adoption, but it is not known whether they are legally adopted daughters of the deceased, nor whether the deceased left her surviving any other heirs-at-law or next of kin.
The petition concludes with the prayer that the court judicially determine the respective rights of petitioner and respondents, and all other persons, who may have an interest in or claim upon the proceeds arising from the estate of the deceased.
The respondent, Isabel Hunter Hilmer, made no claim to any part of the funds in the hands of the Clerk and filed no answer to the petition. The has no interest in the proceeding.
Respondent, Kathleen Hunter Nunnamaker, filed answer, admitted all the allegations of the petition and alleged that she was legally adopted by the deceased and her late husband on 23 December, 1904, in the City of Columbia, South Carolina, which made her a lawful heir of the deceased and entitles her to share in the net proceeds of the estate now in the hands of the Clerk.
The answering respondent offered a certified copy of her adoption issued to the deceased and her husband on 23 December, 1904, by the Epworth Orphanage of the South Carolina Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, under and by virtue of authority vested in the Orphanage by Act of the South Carolina General Assembly, 22 St. at Large, 319, approved 28 February, 1896.
A jury trial was waived, the court found the facts and concluded that the petitioner was the sole heir-at-law of the deceased; that the respondent, Kathleen Hunter Nunnamaker, had not been legally adopted by the deceased and her husband, and was therefore not entitled to share in the distribution of the net proceeds of the subject estate.
The respondent, Kathleen Hunter Nunnamaker, excepts and appeals, assigning errors. The appeal poses the question whether Kathleen Hunter Nunnamaker is entitled to share in the distribution of the net proceeds of the estate of Eugenia E. Hunter. The trial court answered in the negative. We are inclined to a different interpretation of the record.
On the hearing, the appellant offered a certified copy of her adoption by the deceased and her late husband in the City of Columbia, Richland *Page 386 County, South Carolina, on 23 December, 1904. She had been a ward in the Methodist "Epworth Orphanage of the South Carolina Conference, " a charitable organization chartered by Act of Assembly in that State and authorized to grant adoptions. 1 Am. Jur. 633. Nothing else appearing, this would seem, prima facie at least, to make her an heir-at-law of the deceased. 1 R.C.L. 598.
While no specific reason is assigned for holding the appellant's adoption illegal, it may be accepted as was stated on the argument, that the trial court regarded the legislative grant of adoptive powers to the Epworth Orphanage violative of the South Carolina Constitution, and hence the exercise of such authority by the Orphanage was a nullity. Evidently, the trial court, in reaching this conclusion, did not have before it the cases of Epworth Orphanage v. Wilson and Same v. Manning,
The petitioner disavows any assault upon the legality of appellant's adoption. In respect of this question, which the parties have refrained from raising by plea or otherwise, he stands mute and rightly so, perhaps, for it may be doubted whether he would be permitted to interpose such a challenge in the circumstances of the case. Cribbs v. Floyd,
Error and remanded. *Page 387