ADOPTION OF A MINOR.
Middlesex. March 2, 2015. - May 7, 2015.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
May 7, 2015
471 Mass. 373 (2015)
Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.
Adoption, Parent‘s consent. Parent and Child, Adoption. Minor, Adoption. Practice, Civil, Adoption. Notice. Consent. Words, “Lawful parent.”
This court concluded that the adoption statute,
PETITION filed in the Middlesex Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on April 25, 2014.
A motion to proceed without further notice was heard by Jeffrey A. Abber, J., and a question of law was reported by him to the Appeals Court.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Patience Crozier for the petitioners.
Kari Hong, of California, & Mary L. Bonauto & Vickie Henry, for American Academy of Adoption Attorneys & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
DUFFLY, J. The petitioners, J.S. and V.K, a married same-sex couple, filed a joint petition for adoption in the Probate and Family Court, seeking to adopt their son Nicholas.1 Nicholas was born to J.S. in 2014, during the petitioners’ marriage. He was conceived through in vitro fertilization (IVF),2 using a known
The petitioners filed a motion to proceed with the adoption without further notice, arguing that, as Nicholas‘s lawful parents, they could consent to the adoption, no other consent was necessary, and no notice to any other person was required under
Discussion. Adoption of children in the Commonwealth is governed by
1. Notice requirement. The adoption statute requires the written consent of certain persons before a decree of adoption may issue. Under
“[a] decree of adoption shall not be made ... without the written consent of the child to be adopted, if above the age of twelve; of the child‘s spouse, if any; of the lawful parents, who may be previous adoptive parents, or surviving parent; or of the mother only if the child was born out of wedlock and not previously adopted.”
The notice requirements for any person whose consent is required under this provision are set forth in
By its plain language,
Thus, if the known sperm donor is entitled to notice of the petitioners’ petition for adoption, the only potentially applicable category of persons to whom notice must be given under
2. Lawful parent. In his reservation and report, the judge stated as an “undisputed fact[ ]” that J.S. and V.K. are Nicholas‘s lawful parents. As an initial matter, we agree that, pursuant to
That conclusion, however, does not address whether, under
We have observed previously, in dicta, that, although the adoption statute “does not comment on the [parental] rights and obligations, if any, of the [sperm donor], . . . inferentially he has none.” R.R. v. M.H., 426 Mass. 501, 502, 509-510 (1998) (concluding that surrogacy agreement between plaintiff father, who had donated sperm, and defendant mother, who had agreed to act as surrogate and then changed her mind during pregnancy, was unenforceable). As to a child of a marriage who is conceived via artificial insemination or IVF, as here,
In certain contexts, however, we have concluded that there are circumstances in which a “putative father”7 may establish paternity, or claim at least some of the associated rights and obligations of parentage, where the child‘s mother was married to someone else at the time of the child‘s conception. See
A voluntary acknowledgment of paternity requires that the mother and her spouse sign an affidavit denying that the spouse is the child‘s father; the putative father and the mother must then sign a notarized acknowledgment of parentage stating that they are the parents of the child. These documents must be filed with the court or the registrar of vital records. See
Moreover, to bring a claim in equity to establish paternity requires establishing a “substantial parent-child relationship” between the putative father and the child. See C.C. v. A.B., 406 Mass. 679, 690 (1990). In the context of assisted reproductive technology, a putative father also may be a biological family member of one of the spouses; the petitioners indicate in their brief that choosing such a donor may allow a nonbiological parent to have a biological tie to the child. The existence of a relationship such as that of an uncle, cousin, or other family member, however, when coupled with being a sperm donor, does not itself give rise to a “substantial parent-child relationship.” See id. at 689. Contrast Youmans v. Ramos, 429 Mass. 774, 776, 782 (1999) (characterizing
Even if, as the judge contemplated, a known sperm donor could bring an action in accordance with
In Adoption of Tammy, 416 Mass. 205, 213 n.5 (1993), a case with facts similar to those here,9 we noted that the sperm donor provided his written consent to a joint adoption, “[a]lthough not required by the statute.” Here, following the plain and unambiguous language of the adoption statute, see Adoption of Daisy, 460 Mass. 72, 77 (2011), we make explicit the conclusion reached implicitly in Adoption of Tammy, supra. We will not extend the notice requirements of
Conclusion. Because
So ordered.
Notes
“If the written consent required by [
