Id. See also Cox. v. Whitten, 288 Ark. 318, 704 S.W.2d 628 (1986) (will executed in 1951 that left life estate to siblings and remainder to their "children" did not give adopted adult a remainder interest); Bilsky v. Bilsky, 248 Ark. 1060, 455 S.W.2d 901 (1970) (in interpreting "issue" used in a will executed in 1955, court observed that "[t]erms such as bodily heirs, issue, etc. have long been defined in the law, and the definition does not include adopted children"). Thus, the Davis court concluded that the adoption-inheritance laws were not intended to modify the established meaning of terms used in deeds.
" Id. (Citation omitted.) See also Cox v. Whitten, 288 Ark. 318, 704 S.W.2d 628 (1986) (holding that a will executed in 1951 that left a life estate to siblings and remainder to their "children" did not give adopted adult a remainder interest); Bilsky v. Bilsky, 248 Ark. 1060, 1064, 455 S.W.2d 901, 903 (1970) (noting that, in interpreting "issue" used in a will executed in 1955, "[t]erms such as bodily heirs, issue, etc. have long been defined in the law, and the definition does not include adopted children"). Thus, the Davis court concluded that the adoption-inheritance laws were not intended to modify the established meaning of terms used in deeds.