In re Estate of Fusae Obata
In re Estate of Fusae Obata
Opinion of the Court
The sole issue on appeal is whether California law recognizes the Japanese practice called (yoshi-engumi) as an "adoption" within the meaning of California Probate Code sections 6450 and 6451.
Factual and Procedural Background
The decedents, Fusae Obata and Emi Obata, are sisters who in June 2013 died intestate, having never been married and *547with no descendants. In September 2013, letters of administration of the two estates were issued in the Alameda County Superior Court. Thereafter, a dispute arose regarding the line of succession that centered on the decedents' father, Tomejiro Obata, and the impact of his yoshi-engumi by Minejiro Obata and Kiku Obata in 1911. Appellants are the descendants of Tomejiro's biological parents, Hikozaemon Nakano and Haru Nakano, and respondents are the descendants of the Obata family.
Following a hearing in September 2016, the court found in favor of respondents, the Obata family members. The court concluded that California recognizes Tomejiro's yoshi-engumi as a legal adoption and that under the Probate Code, "The adoption of Tomejiro Obata by Minejiro Obata and Kiku Obata severed the relationship of parent and child between Tomejiro Obata and his natural parents, Hikozaemon Nakano and Haru Nakano."
Appellants timely filed a notice of appeal.
Discussion
Under section 6450, "A relationship of parent and child exists for the purpose of determining intestate succession by, through, or from a person in the following circumstances: [¶] (a) The relationship of parent and child exists between a person and the person's natural parents, regardless of the marital status of the natural parents. [¶] (b) The relationship of parent and child exists between an adopted person and the person's adopting parent or parents." Under section 6451, subdivision (a), "An adoption severs the relationship of parent and child between an adopted person and a natural parent of the adopted person unless both of the following requirements are satisfied: [¶] (1) The natural parent and the adopted person lived together at any time as parent and child, or the natural parent was married to or cohabiting with the other natural parent at the time the person was conceived and died before the person's birth. [¶] (2) The adoption was by the spouse of either of the natural parents or after the death of either of the natural parents."
Appellants challenge the trial court's conclusion that the adoption of decedents' father in Japan in 1911 severed his relationship with his biological parents thereby precluding intestate inheritance by the descendants of his biological parents. "Under rules of conflict of laws and principles of comity, the status of adoption is determined by the laws of the jurisdiction where the adoption was effected, and the rules of inheritance are determined by the laws of the jurisdiction of domicile of the decedent at time of death." ( Estate of O'Dea (1973)
*548A person's status as an adoptive child is determined as of the date of adoption. ( Estate of Summer (1942)
"In Japan the concept of adoption or yoshi has a much wider meaning than in modern western nations." (O'Halloran, The Politics of Adoption: International Perspectives on Law, Policy and Practice (3d ed. 2015) p. 639 (hereafter O'Halloran).)
The first Japanese Civil Code (Meiji Civil Code), enacted in the 1890s, incorporated provisions relating to the historical practice of yoshi-engumi. Under article 860 of the Meiji Civil Code,
Under the Household Register Law of May 1871, "legal registries" were compiled for all households in a district. (Schmidt, supra , p. 268.) "From 1875 on, an adoption was only effected upon registration in the household register." (Id. at p. 276.)
Appellants contend the trial court erred in recognizing yoshi-engumi as an adoption because the practice does not "satisfy the elemental characteristics of adoption recognized in California and the Western/American context." Specifically, they argue (1) yoshi-engumi does not create a sufficient parent/child relationship between the adoptee and adopting parents; (2) it does not terminate the parent/child relationship between the adoptee and the adoptee's biological parents; (3) it does not require a judicial or neutral third party review process that ensures the legitimacy of the adoption; and (4) it does not result in a permanent relationship. We disagree.
In Sanders v. Yanez (2015)
Here, while the primary purpose of the adoption may have been to create an heir, the role of an heir in Japanese society at the time of the adoption was considerably more expansive than what under California law we consider the role or status of an heir. Being an heir involved not just inheritance rights, but financial and moral obligations to care for relatives and honor the family's ancestors. (O'Halloran, supra , p. 641 ["The adoption of a son-in-law continues its historical legal and social functions of providing an heir to carry on the family line, its business, its ancestor worship duties and to undertake care responsibility for elderly parents (the latter being an attraction for many elderly persons as it brought with it an assurance that care responsibility would fall to their daughter rather than their daughter-in-law)." (Fns. omitted.) ].) Accordingly, both culturally *550and under the terms of the statute, the adopted person is considered a biological child for all purposes.
The additional elements proposed by appellants are neither required by California law nor sufficient to defeat Tomejiro's status as an adopted child. Whether Tomejiro's adoption would have terminated his relationship with his biological parents under Japanese law now or in 1911 is largely immaterial. As noted above, the rules of inheritance are determined by the laws of the jurisdiction of domicile of the decedent at time of death. More importantly, even assuming that in 1911 an adopted person might have maintained some ongoing relationship with that person's biological family, that relationship does not necessarily alter the status or character of his relationship with his adopted family. Likewise, judicial approval and permanence are not determinative characteristics of a valid adoption. Adoptions that were recorded in the family registry, as Tomejiro's was, were undisputedly considered "legal" and enforceable under Japanese law. And, the potential lack of permanency of the relationship does not impact the status of the relationship while it exists.
For purposes of intestate succession, under California law, the 1911 adoption severed the relationship between decedents' father and his natural parents. ( §§ 6450, 6451, subd. (a).) Accordingly, the court properly granted respondent's petition.
Disposition
The order determining entitlement to estate distribution is affirmed. Respondents shall recover their costs on appeal.
We concur:
Jenkins, J.
Ross, J.
Judge of the San Francisco Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
All statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise noted.
This is an oversimplification of the parties' lineage as there were inter-marriages between the two families. For purposes of this appeal, however, the description is sufficient.
The parties devote considerable briefing to the impact of a second yoshi-engumi within respondents' lineage and whether it rendered Tomezo Shimizu the adoptive brother of Tomejiro Obata. Having determined that Tomejiro's adoption should be recognized in California, we need not reach the arguments regarding the second adoption. The number of heirs is unchanged whether respondents trace their lineage through Tomezo or his sister/wife Kumano Shimizu.
O'Halloran's book is volume 41 of the IUS Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice series of books. The Westlaw citation for the relevant chapter is 41 IUS Gentium 637.
The book is volume 12 of the Handbook of Oriental Studies.
Appellants do not dispute that exhibit A to respondents' petition in the trial court contains a correct copy of the relevant statutes and their English translations.
Subsequent amendments to the Minpo , or Civil Code of Japan, modified the laws regarding adoption separating futsu yoshi-engumi or "ordinary adoption" which most often involved adult adoptions from tokubetsu yoshi-engumi or "special adoption" which involved the adoption of children only. (O'Halloran, supra , p. 638 ["While the Civil Code continues to govern adoption and other family law matters, it was completely revised in 1947 and is now totally different from the Civil Code of 1898."].) These amendments undoubtedly reflect changing cultural norms in Japan. For purposes of this appeal, however, we focus on the laws in effect at the time of the adoption in 1911. Likewise, the fact that the United States Department of State currently recognizes only "special adoption" for purposes of immigration to the United States does not alter the parent-child relationship established by the yoshi-engumi in 1911.
We note that adult adoptions in California do not necessarily meet all of appellants' proposed requirements. For example, an adopted adult, in some instances, retains the right to inherit from that person's biological parent and can dissolve the adoption by consent of the parties. (§ 6451 ; Fam. Code, §§ 9306, 9320, 9340.)
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.