ADOPTION OF TAMMY
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
September 10, 1993
Middlesex. May 4, 1993.
416 Mass. 205
Present: LIACOS, C.J., WILKINS, ABRAMS, NOLAN, LYNCH, O‘CONNOR, & GREANEY, JJ.
Nothing in the provisions of the adoption statute,
NOLAN, J., dissenting. LYNCH, J., dissenting, with whom O‘CONNOR, J., joined.
In the circumstances of an adoption case, the judge correctly concluded that the joint adoption of a child by two unmarried individuals was in the best interests of the child. [212-215] NOLAN, J., dissenting.
This court, reading the adoption statute (
PETITION filed in the Middlesex Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on December 13, 1990.
The case was heard by Sheila E. McGovern, J., and was reported by her to the Appeals Court. The Supreme Judicial Court transferred the case on its own initiative.
Justine H. Brousseau (Laura R. Studen with her) for the minor.
Katherine Triantafillou (Joyce Kauffman & Mary Notaris with her) for the petitioners.
Mary L. Bonauto, for Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
Clare C. Conley, Jamie Ann Sabino, Jacquelynne Bowman, Carol Brill, John R. Jackson & Elaine M. Epstein, for Women‘s Bar Association of Massachusetts & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
We summarize the relevant facts as found by the judge. Helen and Susan have lived together in a committed relationship, which they consider to be permanent, for more than ten years. In June, 1983, they jointly purchased a house in Cambridge. Both women are physicians specializing in surgery. At the time the petition was filed, Helen maintained a private practice in general surgery at Mount Auburn Hospital and Susan, a nationally recognized expert in the field of breast cancer, was director of the Faulkner Breast Center and a surgical oncologist at the Dana Farber Cancer Insti
For several years prior to the birth of Tammy, Helen and Susan planned to have a child, biologically related to both of them, whom they would jointly parent. Helen first attempted to conceive a child through artificial insemination by Susan‘s brother. When those efforts failed, Susan successfully conceived a child through artificial insemination by Helen‘s biological cousin, Francis. The women attended childbirth classes together and Helen was present when Susan gave birth to Tammy on April 30, 1988. Although Tammy‘s birth certificate reflects Francis as her biological father, she was given a hyphenated surname using Susan and Helen‘s last names.
Since her birth, Tammy has lived with, and been raised and supported by, Helen and Susan. Tammy views both women as her parents, calling Helen “mama” and Susan “mommy.” Tammy has strong emotional and psychological bonds with both Helen and Susan. Together, Helen and Susan have provided Tammy with a comfortable home, and have created a warm and stable environment which is supportive of Tammy‘s growth and over-all well being. Both women jointly and equally participate in parenting Tammy, and both have a strong financial commitment to her. During the work week, Helen usually has lunch at home with Tammy, and on weekends both women spend time together with Tammy at special events or running errands. When Helen and Susan are working, Tammy is cared for by a nanny. The three vacation together at least ten days every three to four months, frequently spending time with Helen‘s and Susan‘s respective extended families in California and Mexico. Francis does not participate in parenting Tammy and does not support her. His intention was to assist Helen and Susan in having a child, and he does not intend to be involved with Tammy, except as a distant relative. Francis signed an adoption surrender and supports the joint adoption by both women.
Helen and Susan, recognizing that the laws of the Commonwealth do not permit them to enter into a legally cogni
Over a dozen witnesses, including mental health professionals, teachers, colleagues, neighbors, blood relatives and a priest and nun, testified to the fact that Helen and Susan participate equally in raising Tammy, that Tammy relates to both women as her parents, and that the three form a healthy, happy, and stable family unit. Educators familiar with Tammy testified that she is an extremely well-adjusted, bright, creative, cheerful child who interacts well with other children and adults. A priest and nun from the parties’ church testified that Helen and Susan are active parishioners, that they routinely take Tammy to church and church-related activities, and that they attend to the spiritual and moral development of Tammy in an exemplary fashion. Teachers from Tammy‘s school testified that Helen and Susan both actively participate as volunteers in the school community and communicate frequently with school officials. Neighbors testified that they would have no hesitation in leaving their own children in the care of Helen or Susan. Susan‘s father, brother, and maternal aunt, and Helen‘s cousin testified in favor of the joint adoption. Members of both
The Department of Social Services (department) conducted a home study in connection with the adoption petition which recommended the adoption, concluding that “the petitioners and their home are suitable for the proper rearing of this child.” Tammy‘s pediatrician reported to the department that Tammy receives regular pediatric care and that she “could not have more excellent parents than Helen and Susan.” A court-appointed guardian ad litem, Dr. Steven Nickman, assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, conducted a clinical assessment of Tammy and her family with a view toward determining whether or not it would be in Tammy‘s best interests to be adopted by Helen and Susan. Dr. Nickman considered the ramifications of the fact that Tammy will be brought up in a “non-standard” family. As part of his report, he reviewed and referenced literature on child psychiatry and child psychology which supports the conclusion that children raised by lesbian parents develop normally. In sum, he stated that “the fact that this parent-child constellation came into being as a result of thoughtful planning and a strong desire on the part of these women to be parents to a child and to give that child the love, the wisdom and the knowledge that they possess... [needs to be taken into account] . . . . The maturity of these women, their status in the community, and their seriousness of purpose stands in contrast to the caretaking environments of a vast number of children who are born to heterosexual parents but who are variously abused, neglected and otherwise deprived of security and happiness.” Dr. Nickman concluded that “there is every reason for [Helen] to become a legal parent to Tammy just as [Susan] is,” and he recommended that the court so order. An attorney appointed to represent Tammy‘s interests also strongly recommended that the joint petition be granted.
Despite the overwhelming support for the joint adoption and the judge‘s conclusion that joint adoption is clearly in
1. The initial question is whether the Probate Court judge had jurisdiction under
There is nothing on the face of the statute which precludes the joint adoption of a child by two unmarried cohabitants such as the petitioners. Chapter 210,
While the Legislature may not have envisioned adoption by same-sex partners, there is no indication that it attempted to define all possible categories of persons leading to adoptions in the best interests of children.4 Rather than limit the potential categories of persons entitled to adopt (other than those described in the first sentence of
In this case all requirements in
Of equal, if not greater significance, adoption will enable Tammy to preserve her unique filial ties to Helen in the event that Helen and Susan separate, or Susan predeceases Helen.8 As the case law and commentary on the subject illustrate, when the functional parents of children born in circumstances similar to Tammy separate or one dies, the children often remain in legal limbo for years while their future is disputed in the courts. Polikoff, This Child Does Have Two Mothers: Redefining Parenthood to Meet the Needs of Children in Lesbian-Mother and Other Nontraditional Families, 78 Geo. J.L. 459, 508-522 (1990); Comment, Second Parent Adoption for Lesbian-Parented Families: Legal Recognition of the Other Mother, 19 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 729, 741-745 (1986). In some cases, children have been denied the affec-
2. The judge also posed the question whether, pursuant to
Section 6 clearly is directed to the more usual circumstances of adoption, where the child is adopted by persons who are not the child‘s natural parents (either because the natural parents have elected to relinquish the child for adoption or their parental rights have been involuntarily terminated). The purpose of the termination provision is to protect the security of the child‘s newly-created family unit by eliminating involvement with the child‘s natural parents. Although it is not uncommon for a natural parent to join in the adoption petition of a spouse who is not the child‘s natural parent, see, e.g., Adoption of a Minor (No. 1), 367 Mass. 907 (1975); Erickson v. Raspperry, 320 Mass. 333 (1946), the statute has never been construed to require the termination of the natural parent‘s legal relationship to the child in these circumstances. Nor has
3. We conclude that the Probate Court has jurisdiction to enter a decree on a joint adoption petition brought by the
4. So much of the decree as allows the adoption of Tammy by both petitioners is affirmed. So much of the decree as provides in the alternative for the adoption of Tammy by Helen and the retention of rights of custody and visitation by Susan is vacated.
So ordered.
NOLAN, J. (dissenting). I write separately in dissent only because I do not agree with the sentiments expressed by my brother Lynch in the first few sentences of his dissent. His dissent is otherwise a faultless analysis of our existing jurisprudence to which I subscribe.
LYNCH, J. (dissenting, with whom O‘Connor, J., joins). At the outset I wish to make clear that my views are not motivated by any disapproval of the two petitioners here or their life-style. The judge has found that the petitioners have provided the child with a healthy, happy, stable family unit. The evidence supports the judge‘s findings. Nor is my disagreement with the court related to the sexual orientation of the petitioners. I am firmly of the view that a litigant‘s expression of human sexuality ought not determine the outcome of litigation as long as it involves consenting adults and is not harmful to others. However, the court‘s decision, which is inconsistent with the statutory language, cannot be justified by a desire to achieve what is in the child‘s best interests. Indeed, those interests can be accommodated without doing violence to the statute by accepting the alternative to joint adoption suggested by the Probate Court judge (ante at 206 n.1); that is, permitting Helen to adopt Tammy while al
The court concludes that the Probate and Family Court has jurisdiction to grant a joint petition for adoption by two unmarried cohabitants because they meet the statutory requirements of
The court opines that the use of the singular form “a person” in the first sentence of the statute should not be construed as prohibiting joint petitions by unmarried persons because such an interpretation would not be in the best interests of the child. I have already demonstrated that, whether the petition be singular or joint, has nothing to do with the best interests of the child. The court‘s reasoning in part 2 of its opinion amounts to a tacit agreement with this position. Furthermore, on examining
A biological mother may petition alone for the adoption of her child. Curran, petitioner, supra. Helen also meets the statutory requirements and may petition alone for the adoption of Tammy with Susan‘s consent.3
