Lary D. Garrett
Garrett & Garrett
Moorefield, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellant, Susan Kisamore
Jeffrey R. Bowers
Franklin, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellee, Virginia Grace Mitchell
James Paul Geary
Parkersburg, West Virginia
Attorney for Defendants Below, Appellees
John G. Ours
Petersburg, West Virginia
Attorney for Plaintiffs Below, Appellees
This Opinion was delivered PER CURIAM.
Justice Miller concurs and reserves the right to file a
concurring opinion.
Per Curiam:
This case is before this Court upon an appeal from the
August 4, 1992, order of the Circuit Court of Pendleton County,
West Virginia. The circuit court held that the appellant, Susan
Kisamore, failed to meet the criteria of being equitably adopted,
and thus, the executor of the estate of Elmer Kisamore was correct
in excluding the appellant as an heir to the estate. On appeal,
the appellant asks that this Court reverse the ruling of the
circuit court and find that Vivan Kisamore equitably adopted Susan
Kisamore. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, all
matters of record and the briefs of counsel. For the reasons
stated below, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
While at the Kisamore's home, the appellant celebrated
her third birthday on January 19, 1972. The appellant also
presented evidence before the trial court suggesting that Vivan and
Joy Kisamore and the appellant were developing strong family ties.
For example, the appellant referred to Vivan Kisamore as "Daddy."
Unfortunately, on February 11, 1972, Vivan Kisamore, who
was a truck driver, was killed in a trucking accident. As a
result, Joy Kisamore received Social Security benefits on behalf of
the appellant as a dependent of Vivan Kisamore.
However, the
appellant was not an heir to Vivan Kisamore's estate, as Joy
Kisamore was listed as the only heir to his estate.
On October 16, 1972, Joy Kisamore adopted the appellant.
Subsequently, Joy Kisamore remarried. The appellant then resided
with her adoptive mother and her husband.
Vivan Kisamore was the son of Elmer and Mabel Kisamore.
On August 13, 1991, Elmer Kisamore died intestate. Elmer Kisamore
was survived by his wife, Mabel Kisamore, nine living children and
one biological grandchild whose parents predeceased her. Elmer
Kisamore's estate was appraised at $95,700 for personal property
and $693,616 for real estate, for a total of $789,316. Part of the
real estate was sold by the widow and children to Bragunier Farms,
Inc., one of the appellees. After her husband's death, Mabel
Kisamore gave the appellant $5,000.00, because, according to the
appellant, she thought it was unfair that the appellant was
excluded as an heir to Elmer Kisamore's estate.
On April 27, 1992, Mabel Kisamore and some of the heirs
of Elmer Kisamore's estate filed a complaint requesting the trial
court to partition by sale certain tracts of real estate owned by
Elmer Kisamore at his death. The remaining heirs, and also
appellees herein, filed answers agreeing that the real estate was
not susceptible to division and requested that the land be sold.
On June 11, 1992, the appellant filed a motion to
intervene claiming she was an heir to Elmer Kisamore's estate
because she had been equitably adopted by Vivan Kisamore. A
hearing was held and on August 4, 1992, the trial court denied the
appellant's motion to intervene. The trial court found that the
appellant did not meet the standard necessary for an equitable
adoption. Because the relationship between Vivan Kisamore and the
appellant only existed for fifty-seven days, the trial court held
that this period of time was too brief to consummate an adoption.
It is from the order of August 4, 1992, that the
appellant appeals to this Court.
The requisite time frame to consummate a formal adoption
is set forth in W. Va. Code, 48-4-6(b) [1985]:
The petition for adoption may be filed at
any time after the child who is the subject of
the adoption is born and the adoptive
placement determined, . . ., but the hearing
on said petition shall not be held until after
the child shall have lived in the house of the
adopting parent or parents for a period of six
months.
However, as discussed below, satisfying this time frame is not the
exclusive method of obtaining adoptive status.
In Wheeling Dollar, this Court set forth several indicia
of an equitable adoption:
the benefits of love and affection accruing to
the adopting party; the performances of
services by the child; the surrender of ties
by the natural parent; the society,
companionship and filial obedience of the
child; an invalid or ineffectual adoption
proceeding; reliance by the adopted person
upon the existence of his adoptive status; the
representation to all the world that the child
is a natural or adopted child; and the rearing
of the child from an age of tender years by
the adopting parents.
162 W. Va. at 509, 250 S.E.2d at 373-74 (citations omitted).
Furthermore, in First Nat'l Bank in Fairmont v. Phillips,
176 W. Va. 395, 397, 344 S.E.2d 201, 203 (1985), we emphasized the
fact that "the status or position of the equitably adopted child
[is] not artificially limited to that of being a 'child' but [is]
recognized to be that of a 'family member,' just as a natural child
or formally adopted child[.]"
In order to protect against fraudulent claims, in
Wheeling Dollar, this Court imposed a demanding burden of proof:
We find that if a claimant can, by clear,
cogent and convincing evidence, prove
sufficient facts to convince the trier of fact
that his status is identical to that of a
formally adopted child, except only for the
absence of a formal order of adoption, a
finding of an equitable adoption is proper
without proof of an adoption contract.
162 W. Va. at 510, 250 S.E.2d at 374.
Thus, if the litigant can establish the existence of
equitable adoption through the circumstances mentioned above by
clear and convincing evidence, then she can inherit from the lineal
kindred of her adopting parent. See First Nat'l Bank, supra.
In the instant case, the Kisamores had a written
agreement of their intent to adopt the appellant with the West
Virginia Department of Welfare. The agreement gave the Kisamores
the right to have the appellant removed from their home at any time
during this six-month waiting period. The agreement further
provided that the West Virginia Department of Welfare was to be
notified by the Kisamores of any changes that may occur within the
family. In addition, if the child required surgery, the agreement
stated that the Kisamores, prior to surgery, must obtain consent of
the West Virginia Department of Welfare, as the child's guardian.
Obviously, the appellant had not been formally or legally adopted
during the time this agreement was in effect; and thus, looking at
this agreement and considering the rules to be obeyed by the
Kisamores, it is difficult to say that the appellant was in a
"position exactly equivalent to that of a formally adopted or
natural child[.]" Syl pt. 2, in part, Wheeling Dollar, supra.
Regardless of the agreement, we do not believe the
appellant has established, through the above-mentioned indicia, and
by clear, cogent and convincing evidence, the fact that Vivan
Kisamore equitably adopted the appellant. It is unfortunate that
Vivan Kisamore and the appellant only had fifty-seven days together
before Vivan Kisamore died. Due to the fact that Vivan Kisamore
was a truck driver, it is unclear as to how much time Vivan
Kisamore and the appellant really had together to form the bonds of
father and daughter.
Yet, even if we assume that Vivan Kisamore and the
appellant spent those fifty-seven days together, one could not
conclude that Vivan Kisamore satisfied the requirements of
establishing equitable adoption in the rearing or upbringing of the
child from tender years or that the appellant was able to perform
services for Vivan Kisamore. Furthermore, the sparse evidence we
do have before us suggests, first, it would be difficult to assume
that the appellant relied, at the time, upon the existence of the
adoptive status, and second, that there was a representation to all
the world that the child was a natural or adoptive child. We
should note again the fact that upon Vivan Kisamore's death, the
appellant did not inherit anything from his estate, as Joy Kisamore
was listed as the only heir.
The heightened standard of proof and the strong language
found in First Nat'l Bank and Wheeling Dollar cast a demanding
burden on the appellant to prove she was equitably adopted.
However, the facts in this case fall far short of the standard
followed in the above cases.
In the case of Spiegel v. Flemming, 181 F. Supp. 185
(N.D. Ohio 1960), the court therein was faced with very similar
facts as we are faced with in the instant case. The court in
Spiegel refused to grant child's benefits to a child who had been
placed in the home of the Spiegels, a husband and his wife, by a
welfare agency. The parties thereto signed an agreement which
provided for a six-month waiting period before commencement of the
adoption proceeding. Unfortunately, the husband died within the
six-month waiting period.
In arriving at its decision, the court relied upon the
fact there was not a complete surrender by the welfare agency to
the husband and wife; for example, the welfare agency had the right
to reclaim custody of the child and the husband and wife had the
right to return the child to the welfare agency. Specifically, the
court in Spiegel held:
There can be no doubt that in the case at
bar, the Spiegels intended to treat the child
as their own and to adopt him. The evidence
discloses, however, that at the time of the
[husband's] death [the wife] and her husband
were not bound to adopt the child. Nor was
the placement agency bound to relinquish the
child to the Spiegels.
181 F. Supp. at 188-89.
The concept of equitable adoption focuses on the fact
that the child was in every way equivalent to that of an adopted
child, absent a formal court order. The appellant alleges that she
was equitably adopted by Vivan Kisamore before his death, and as a
result, she is entitled to inherit from Elmer Kisamore. Yet, the
appellant has failed to satisfy the six-month waiting period as
required by the West Virginia Code in order to perfect a statutory
adoption, and more importantly, she has failed to satisfy the
indicia set forth in Wheeling Dollar in order to perfect an
equitable adoption. What the appellant is asking of this Court is
that we go beyond all our legal principles and guidelines to find
that she was equitably adopted. In light of this heightened
standard of proof and the facts herein, we are of the opinion that
the doctrine of equitable adoption is inapplicable in this case.See footnote 1
While we note that the passage of the six-month waiting period can
serve as a strong indicator that an equitable adoption has
occurred, it is not an absolute. In Wheeling Dollar, this Court
stressed that:
Clear, cogent and convincing proof of
treatment as a 'child' consistent with formal
adoption is the highest possible standard of
civil proof defined as 'that measure or degree
of proof which will produce in the mind of the
trier of facts a firm belief or conviction as
to the allegations sought to be
established.[']
162 W. Va. at 510, 250 S.E.2d at 374, quoting Cross v. Ledford, 120
N.E.2d 118, 123 (Ohio 1954). Thus, the appellant must prove by
clear, cogent and convincing evidence that her status is identical
to that of a formally adopted child except for the absence of a
formal order of adoption. The record in this case is not
sufficient to satisfy the appellant's burden of proof.
Therefore, based upon the foregoing principles, the
judgment of the Circuit Court of Pendleton County is affirmed.