|   BE it enacted by the Senate and 
              House of Representatives, in General Court assembled, and by the 
              authority of the same, as follows: 
             Sect. 1. Any inhabitant of this Commonwealth may petition the 
              judge of probate, in the county wherein he or she may reside, for 
              leave to adopt a child not his or her own by birth. 
             Sect. 2. If both or either of the parents of such child shall 
              be living, they or the survivor of them, as the case may be, shall 
              consent in writing to such adoption: if neither parent be living, 
              such consent may be given by the legal guardian of such child; if 
              there be no legal guardian, no father nor mother, the next of kin 
              of such child within the State may give such consent; and if there 
              be no such next of kin, the judge of probate may appoint some discreet 
              and suitable person to act in the proceedings as the next friend 
              of such child, and give or withhold such consent. 
             Sect. 3. If the child be of the age of fourteen years or upwards, 
              the adoption shall not be made without his or her consent. 
             Sect. 4. No petition by a person having a lawful wife shall be 
              allowed unless such wife shall join therein, and no woman having 
              a lawful husband shall be competent to present and prosecute such 
              petition. 
             Sect. 5. If, upon such petition, so presented and consented to 
              as aforesaid, the judge of probate shall be satisfied of the identity 
              and relations of the persons, and that the petitioner, or, in case 
              of husband and wife, the petitioners, are of sufficient ability 
              to bring up the child, and furnish suitable nurture and education, 
              having reference to the degree and condition of its parents, and 
              that it is fit and proper that such adoption should take effect, 
              he shall make a decree setting forth the said facts, and ordering 
              that, from and after the date of the decree, such child should be 
              deemed and taken, to all legal intents and purposes, the child of 
              the petitioner or petitioners. 
             Sect. 6. A child so adopted, as aforesaid, shall be deemed, for 
              the purposes of inheritance and succession by such child, custody 
              of the person and right of obedience by such parent or parents by 
              adoption, and all other legal consequences and incidents of the 
              natural relation of parents and children, the same to all intents 
              and purposes as if such child had been born in lawful wedlock of 
              such parents or parent by adoption, saving only that such child 
              shall not be deemed capable of taking property expressly limited 
              to the heirs of the body or bodies of such petitioner or petitioners. 
             Sect. 7. The natural parent or parents of such child shall be 
              deprived, by such decree of adoption, of all legal rights whatsoever 
              as respects such child; and such child shall be freed from all legal 
              obligations of maintenance and obedience, as respects such natural 
              parent or parents. 
             Sect. 8. Any petitioner, or any child which is the subject of 
              such a petition, by any next friend, may claim and prosecute an 
              appeal to the supreme judicial court from such decree of the judge 
              of probate, in like manner and with the like effect as such appeals 
              may now be claimed and prosecuted in cases of wills, saying only 
              that in no case shall any bond be required of, nor any costs awarded 
              against, such child or its next friend so appealing.  
            Approved by the Governor, May 24, 1851. 
             
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