Court Opinion

ID: 4016039
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-15 14:06:20.471365+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:27:27.041731
License: Public Domain

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
07/15/2016 09:06 AM CDT

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                                  Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                                          294 Nebraska R eports
                                            BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                                              Cite as 294 Neb. 152

                               Roger Jerome Burnett, appellee, v. Jeffrey
                                 Clyde M addocks, appellant, and Opal
                                      M addocks et al., appellees.
                                                  ___ N.W.2d ___

                                        Filed July 15, 2016.    No. S-15-712.

                1.	 Equity: Quiet Title. A quiet title action sounds in equity.
                2.	 Equity: Appeal and Error. On appeal from an equity action, an appel-
                     late court resolves questions of law and fact independently of the trial
                     court’s determinations.
                3.	 Foreign Judgments: Jurisdiction: States. Under the Full Faith and
                     Credit Clause of art. IV, § 1, of the federal constitution, a judgment ren-
                     dered in the court of a sister state which had jurisdiction has the same
                     validity and effect in Nebraska as in the rendering state.
                 4.	 ____: ____: ____. The validity and effect of a judgment is determined
                     with reference to the laws of the rendering state.
                5.	 Wills: Intent. The cardinal rule in construing a will is to ascertain and
                     effectuate the testator’s intent if such intent is not contrary to the law.
                6.	 ____: ____. A court must examine a will in its entirety, consider and
                     liberally interpret every provision in the will, employ the generally
                     accepted literal and grammatical meanings of words used in the will,
                     and assume that the testator understood the words used in the will.
                7.	 Parent and Child: Words and Phrases. The generally accepted mean-
                     ing of the word “son” is a parent’s male child.
                8.	 Wills: Parent and Child: Intent. Stepchildren are generally not
                     included in a devise to “children” unless the testator shows a differ-
                     ent intent.

                  Appeal from the District Court for Pawnee County: Daniel
               E. Bryan, Jr., Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions.
                Eugene L. Hillman, of Hillman, Forman, Childers &
               McCormack, for appellant.
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           Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                   294 Nebraska R eports
                     BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                       Cite as 294 Neb. 152

   Heather Voegele-Andersen and Brenda K. Smith, of
Dvorak & Donovan Law Group, L.L.C., for appellee Roger
Jerome Burnett.
  Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Miller-Lerman, Cassel,
and K elch, JJ.
  Connolly, J.
                          SUMMARY
   Roger Jerome Burnett seeks to quiet title to a quarter sec-
tion of farmland in Pawnee County, Nebraska (Property). He
argues that he owns the Property because he is the “eldest son”
of Merrill Maddocks under the will of Merrill’s great-uncle.
In 2006, a Colorado court entered a decree for adult adoption
which made Burnett, then 58 years old, Merrill’s heir under
the intestacy laws. The trial court quieted title to the Property
in Burnett.
   Jeffrey Clyde Maddocks, the person who takes the Property
if Burnett is not Merrill’s “eldest son,” appeals. We conclude
that Burnett is not Merrill’s “son” under the will because he
lacked a parent-child relationship with Merrill. We reverse,
and remand with directions to quiet title to the Property
in Jeffrey.
                        BACKGROUND
   Charles W. Maddocks died in 1938. His will directed the
executor to reduce certain assets to cash and purchase a farm
selected by Charles’ nephew, A. Walter Maddocks (Walter).
Item 7(b) of the will provided:
     I give and bequeath to my said nephew, A. WALTER
     MADDOCKS, a life estate for the term of his natural
     life in and to the . . . farm so purchased, and at his death
     I give and bequeath to MERRILL MADDOCKS, a son
     of said A. Walter Maddocks, a life estate for the term of
     the natural life of said Merrill Maddocks, in and to said
     . . . farm, with remainder over at his death to his eldest
     son, in fee simple; or, if said Merrill Maddocks shall
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                Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                        294 Nebraska R eports
                           BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                             Cite as 294 Neb. 152

      leave no son surviving, then with remainder over in fee
      simple to the eldest grand-son in the male line of said A.
      Walter Maddocks, then living; or, if there is then living no
      grand-son, in the male line of descent, of said A. Walter
      Maddocks, then with remainder over to the surviving
      heirs at law of said A. Walter Maddocks . . . .
The county court for Pawnee County admitted Charles’ will
for probate.
   A few years later, the executor of Charles’ estate bought
the Property. The deed quoted part of item 7(b) of Charles’
will and stated that Walter had selected the Property. The
deed further stated that the parties intended that “title to
the premises herein and hereby conveyed shall vest in the
grantees strictly in the manner provided by said last will
and testament.”
   Walter died in 1977. His grandson, Jeffrey, survived him.
Burnett stipulated that, at Walter’s death, Jeffrey was “the
eldest grand-son in the male line of said A. Walter Maddocks,
then living.”
   In 1988, Burnett’s mother married Merrill. In 2006, a
Colorado court entered a decree for adult adoption under
which Merrill adopted Burnett as his adult “heir at law.” As a
legal term of art, “heir” means one who receives an intestate
decedent’s property.1 And, as discussed below, the only effect
of the decree was to make Burnett the heir of Merrill for intes-
tate succession.
   In 2014, Merrill died. He did not leave any surviving
children.
   After Merrill died, Burnett filed a complaint to quiet title to
the Property in him. Burnett alleged that the Property was his
because he was Merrill’s “eldest son” under Charles’ will.
   Jeffrey was the only defendant who answered. He alleged
the Property passed to him under Charles’ will because he
was the eldest grandson in Walter’s male line. Jeffrey argued

 1	
      See Black’s Law Dictionary 839 (10th ed. 2014).
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                Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                        294 Nebraska R eports
                           BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                             Cite as 294 Neb. 152

that Burnett was not Merrill’s “eldest son” under the will
because “it was not legally possible to adopt an adult” in
Nebraska when Charles died. Jeffrey alleged a counterclaim
against Burnett and a cross-claim against the other defendants
seeking to quiet title to the Property in him.
   In its decree, the court quieted title to the Property in Burnett
and dismissed Jeffrey’s counterclaim and cross-claim. It stated
that Burnett was Merrill’s “eldest son” because the Colorado
decree was entitled to full faith and credit in Nebraska.
   Jeffrey appeals. We note that neither he nor Burnett informed
the trial court of what effect the decree for adult adoption had
under Colorado law. We asked the parties to submit supple-
mental briefs on that issue.

                  ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Jeffrey assigns, restated, that the court erred by (1) quieting
title in Burnett and (2) not quieting title in Jeffrey.

                  STANDARD OF REVIEW
  [1,2] A quiet title action sounds in equity.2 On appeal from
an equity action, an appellate court resolves questions of law
and fact independently of the trial court’s determinations.3

                          ANALYSIS
   Jeffrey argues that Charles, the testator, did not intend the
“eldest son” of Merrill to include an adult man whom Merrill
adopted in 2006. Jeffrey notes that Nebraska did not allow
stepparents to adopt their adult stepchildren until 1984.4 So
he argues that Charles would not have contemplated Merrill’s
adopting an adult “son” when Charles died in 1938.
   This is not the first case to challenge an adult adoptee’s
status under the will of a testator who died before Nebraska

 2	
      Schellhorn v. Schmieding, 288 Neb. 647, 851 N.W.2d 67 (2014).
 3	
      Id.
 4	
      See 1984 Neb. Laws, L.B. 510, § 1.
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                Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                        294 Nebraska R eports
                             BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                               Cite as 294 Neb. 152

permitted adult adoption. We held in Satterfield v. Bonyhady5
that a person adopted as an adult by her stepfather was her
stepfather’s “child” under a will executed by a testator who
died before Nebraska allowed adult adoption. We emphasized
that adoption under Nebraska law, whether the adoptee is a
child or an adult, creates the “usual relation of parent and
child and all the rights, duties and other legal consequences
of the natural relation of child and parent.”6 In Satterfield, the
stepfather adopted his stepdaughter in Nebraska.
   [3,4] Merrill did not adopt Burnett in Nebraska. Instead, he
adopted Burnett as his “heir at law” in a decree entered by a
Colorado court. Under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of art.
IV, § 1, of the federal constitution, a judgment—including an
adoption decree—rendered in the court of a sister state which
had jurisdiction has the same validity and effect in Nebraska
as in the rendering state.7 And we determine the validity and
effect of a judgment with reference to the laws of the render-
ing state.8
   So we must look to Colorado law to determine the effect of
the Colorado decree. Under title 19, article 5, of the Colorado
Revised Statutes, a child under 18 years of age or, with the
court’s approval, an adult who is 18, 19, or 20 years old
may be “adopted as a child.”9 A person so adopted becomes,
“to all intents and purposes, the child of the petitioner”
and is entitled to all the rights and privileges and subject
to all the obligations of a child born in lawful wedlock to

 5	
      Satterfield v. Bonyhady, 233 Neb. 513, 446 N.W.2d 214 (1989).
 6	
      Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-110 (Reissue 2008).
 7	
      In re Trust Created by Nixon, 277 Neb. 546, 763 N.W.2d 404 (2009),
      citing Russell v. Bridgens, 264 Neb. 217, 647 N.W.2d 56 (2002).
 8	
      See, Russell v. Bridgens, supra note 7; Susan H. v. Keith L., 259 Neb. 322,
      609 N.W.2d 659 (2000); Gruenewald v. Waara, 229 Neb. 619, 428 N.W.2d
      210 (1988); 50 C.J.S. Judgments § 1278 (2009).
 9	
      See Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 19-5-201 (West 2016).
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                        294 Nebraska R eports
                            BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                              Cite as 294 Neb. 152

the ­petitioner.10 Conversely, the legal rights and obligations
between the adoptee and the adoptee’s biological parents
are severed.11
    But the parties agree that Merrill did not adopt Burnett under
title 19, article 5. Instead, he adopted Burnett under Colo.
Rev. Stat. Ann. § 14-1-101 (West 2016). Section 14-1-101
allows a person to “adopt an adult as [an] heir at law” by
petitioning for a decree “declaring [the adult] the heir at law
of the petitioner and entitled to inherit from the petitioner any
property in all respects as if such adopted person had been the
petitioner’s child born in lawful wedlock.”
    Under Colorado law, the “legal effects of adult adoption
are quite different from those flowing from adoption of a
child.”12 More specifically, the effects of adult adoption are
relatively minor:
      No obligation whatsoever is placed upon the person
      adopted with respect to the adoptive parent. He is granted
      no rights whatever, other than the acquisition of an heir at
      law, who may or may not even bear his name. It is merely
      a means of giving effect to a personal transaction mutu-
      ally agreeable between two adults. No rights of the natu-
      ral parents of the person adopted are taken from them, or
      even mentioned, where the purpose of the adoption is to
      acquire an adult “heir at law.”13
A decree for adult adoption “does not have the power to affect
the interests determined by an express disposition.”14 Section

10	
      Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 19-5-211(1) (West 2005).
11	
      § 19-5-211(2).
12	
      Matter of Trust Created by Belgard, 829 P.2d 457, 459 (Colo. App. 1991).
13	
      Martin v. Cuellar, 131 Colo. 117, 122, 279 P.2d 843, 845 (1955). See, In
      re P.A.L., 5 P.3d 390 (Colo. App. 2000); Herrera v. Glau, 772 P.2d 682
      (Colo. App. 1989).
14	
      Matter of Trust Created by Belgard, supra note 12, 829 P.2d at 460.
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               Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                       294 Nebraska R eports
                          BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                            Cite as 294 Neb. 152

14-1-101 has the “express purpose of making one an intestate
heir of the adopting person.”15
   So, giving the decree for adult adoption the same effect it
has in Colorado, Burnett is entitled to inherit from Merrill as
if he were Merrill’s child born in lawful wedlock for intestate
succession. Does that make him Merrill’s “son” under Charles’
will? In a similar case, a California court held that the settlor
did not intend the word “issue” to include adults adopted in
Colorado under § 14-1-101. In Ehrenclou v. MacDonald,16 the
settlor made his daughter, Jacqueline Wolber (Jacqueline), a
life beneficiary of a trust. On Jacqueline’s death, the trustees
were to distribute the assets to her “‘living lawful issue.’”17
Jacqueline had two biological children, and she adopted
two adults—Steven MacDonald (Steven) and Cynthia Hutt
(Cynthia)—as her heirs at law in Colorado under § 14-1-101.
After Jacqueline died, her biological children sought a declara-
tion that they were her only “living lawful issue.”
   The court said that whether Steven and Cynthia were
Jacqueline’s “living lawful issue” depended on whether they
had the “status of being Jacqueline’s children with all the
rights and duties between them as parent and child.”18 Their
status, in turn, depended on the legal relationship between
Jacqueline and Steven and Cynthia under Colorado law.
   The court concluded that the relationship between Jacqueline
and her adopted adult heirs was something decidedly less than
the relationship between a parent and her children:
         The status conferred by a Colorado adult “adoption” is
      that of “heir at law.” Nothing more. Nothing less. Thus,
      although the adopted person gains the right to inherit

15	
      Id. at 459.
16	
      Ehrenclou v. MacDonald, 117 Cal. App. 4th 364, 12 Cal. Rptr. 3d 411
      (2004).
17	
      Id. at 367, 12 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 413.
18	
      Id. at 373, 12 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 417 (emphasis in original).
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                Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                        294 Nebraska R eports
                            BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                              Cite as 294 Neb. 152

      from the adopting person, the adopting person does not
      gain such a right from the adopted person. And the “adop-
      tion” does not sever the parent-child relationship between
      the adopted person and his or her natural parents. The
      adopted person retains all the rights and duties as the
      child of the natural parents, including the right to inherit
      from them as their heir at law.19
Because Steven and Cynthia did not have a parent-child rela-
tionship with Jacqueline, the court determined that the settlor
would not have considered them Jacqueline’s “living law-
ful issue.”
   We likewise conclude that the Colorado decree did not cre-
ate a parent-child relationship between Merrill and Burnett.
There is more to being a parent than serving as a medium
through which property passes to an heir under the laws of
intestate succession. The critical point is not that Colorado
might define the parent-child relationship differently than
Nebraska, but that Colorado extends the relationship to one
class of adoptees and not to another.20 Burnett is a member of
the latter class.
   Burnett argues that the effect of the decree under Colorado
law is irrelevant. He cites In re Trust Created by Nixon,21
in which we held that an adult adopted in California was
the adopting person’s “child” under a will which stated that
“‘issue’” included “‘persons legally adopted.’” Our focus
in In re Trust Created by Nixon was whether the adoption
decree violated Nebraska’s public policy. We concluded that
the decree was not contrary to our public policy and was
therefore entitled to full faith and credit. Burnett correctly

19	
      Id. at 374, 12 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 419.
20	
      See Sanders v. Yanez, 238 Cal. App. 4th 1466, 190 Cal. Rptr. 3d 495
      (2015).
21	
      In re Trust Created by Nixon, supra note 7, 277 Neb. at 553, 546 N.W.2d
      at 410.
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                Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
                        294 Nebraska R eports
                           BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                             Cite as 294 Neb. 152

notes that we did not belabor the effect of the decree under
California law.
   But this case shows that we cannot assume that any foreign
decree with “adoption” in its title has the same effect as an
adoption decree entered by a Nebraska court. Not all “adop-
tion” decrees are equal. As we said in In re Trust Created by
Nixon, a foreign adoption decree has “the same validity and
effect in Nebraska as in the state rendering judgment.”22 A
foreign judgement is not entitled to greater effect in Nebraska
than it would have in the rendering state.23
   [5,6] Now we reach the ultimate question in this case: Did
Charles intend the “eldest son” of Merrill to include a man
who lacked a parent-child relationship with Merrill but is
treated as if he was Merrill’s child for intestate succession?
The cardinal rule in construing a will is to ascertain and effec-
tuate the testator’s intent if such intent is not contrary to the
law.24 A court must examine the will in its entirety, consider
and liberally interpret every provision in the will, employ the
generally accepted literal and grammatical meanings of words
used in the will, and assume that the testator understood the
words used in the will.25
   [7,8] We conclude that Burnett is not Merrill’s “eldest son”
under item 7(b) of Charles’ will. From the execution of the
will to the present, the word “son” has referred to a parent’s
male child.26 The will does not show Charles’ intent to depart

22	
      Id. at 550, 546 N.W.2d at 408 (emphasis supplied).
23	
      50 C.J.S., supra note 8.
24	
      In re Estate of Mousel, 271 Neb. 628, 715 N.W.2d 490 (2006).
25	
      Id.
26	
      The New Oxford American Dictionary 1625 (2001); Webster’s Encyclopedic
      Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language 1356 (1989); Webster’s
      Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged
      2172 (1981); Webster’s New International Dictionary of the English
      Language 2397 (2d ed. 1943).
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                            BURNETT v. MADDOCKS
                              Cite as 294 Neb. 152

from this generally accepted meaning. The Colorado decree
did not create a parent-child relationship between Merrill
and Burnett, so Burnett is not Merrill’s male child. Nor does
Burnett’s status as Merrill’s stepson make him Merrill’s “son”
under item 7(b). Stepchildren are generally not included in
a devise to “children,” and nothing in the will suggests that
Charles had a different intent.27
   Burnett and Jeffrey stipulated that, other than Burnett,
Merrill did not have a surviving son. They also stipulated that
Jeffrey was the “eldest grand-son in the male line of said A.
Walter Maddocks” when Walter died in 1977. Jeffrey’s allega-
tion that he was the eldest grandson in Walter’s male line liv-
ing when Merrill died was not contested by Burnett or any of
Jeffrey’s codefendants. We determine that Merrill did not leave
a surviving son and that Jeffrey was the eldest grandson in
Walter’s male line when Merrill died. So, the Property passed
to Jeffrey under Charles’ will.
                          CONCLUSION
   Because Merrill and Burnett did not have a parent-child
relationship, Burnett was not Merrill’s “eldest son” under item
7(b) of Charles’s will. Merrill did not leave a surviving son,
so the Property passes to the eldest grandson in Walter’s male
line. That person is Jeffrey. We therefore reverse, and remand
with directions to quiet title to the Property in Jeffrey.
                      R eversed and remanded with directions.
   Stacy, J., participating on briefs.

27	
      See, 80 Am. Jur. 2d Wills § 1037 (2013); 96 C.J.S. Wills § 1032 (2011); 4
      William J. Bowe & Douglas H. Parker, Page on the Law of Wills § 34.17
      (rev. ed. 1961).