ESTATE OF PAMANET (Paul, Jr.,): BLACK, Guardian ad litem, Appellant, v. PAMANET (Paul, Sr.,) and others, Respondents.*
No. 186
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
March 31, 1970
Motion for rehearing granted, without costs, on June 2, 1970.
175 N. W. 2d 234 | 177 N. W. 2d 105
Argued March 6, 1970.
For the respondents Paul Pamanet, Sr., and Elsie Pamanet the cause was submitted on the brief of Jack J. Schumacher of Shawano.
For the respondent Frederic C. Eberlein, administrator, there was a brief by Eberlein & Eberlein of Shawano, and oral argument by Frederic C. Eberlein.
ROBERT W. HANSEN, J. This appeal asks one question only, involving the application of a particular Wisconsin statute to a set of facts that are undisputed.
The issue: Did the court order terminating the parental rights of the parents of Paul, Jr., terminate or cut off their right to inherit the estate left by Paul, Jr.?
The statute:
“(1) With the written consent of the parents to the termination of their parental rights; or
“(2) If it finds that one or more of the following conditions exist: . . .” (Emphasis supplied.)
Here the termination of parental rights under sub. (2) followed a course of parental neglect culminating in the death of one child and the conviction of both parents on charges of child neglect, and their subsequent imprisonment.
The holding: The statute must be read as it is written. It is clear in meaning, plain in intent, and unequivocal in the language used. It is “all rights of parents” that are terminated, not just some of them. If the legislature had intended to say, all rights except for the right to inherit from the child, it would have said so. It did not, and the parental right to inherit from his or her child is terminated along with the others.
The trial court reached a contrary conclusion, in part relying upon the rejection by the legislature, in its 1963 session, of a bill that would have provided that both parental rights, and rights of the child to inherit, would
Actually, the proposed bill would have added a cutoff of all rights of the child to an existing cutoff of all parental rights in termination cases. As to the rights of parents, the proposed amendment would have changed nothing at all. The statutory provision that all rights of parents are to be terminated might have been clarified by the amendment. It would not have been changed in any respect. Thus, the thrust of the defeated amendment would have been to add to the present statute a reciprocal termination of all rights of the child to the existing termination of all rights of the parent. However, that proposal was not enacted, so the statute, as it is, specifies that it is all rights of the parents that are terminated. We need not discuss, and we do not here deal with, rights of the child.
There remains only the belated objection to the 1956 proceeding in which the county court terminated all rights of these parents to their child, Paul, Jr. The time for appeal has long since expired and the challenge must be held to have been waived.
As the guardian ad litem for his brothers and sisters contends, Paul, Jr.‘s heirs at law are his brothers and sisters, not the parents whose rights as parents were terminated back in 1956. That is the result required by the law, and it certainly is not inconsistent with the equities in this situation.
By the Court.—Order reversed.
The following memorandum was filed June 2, 1970.
PER CURIAM (on motion for rehearing). We are asked on rehearing to clarify the last paragraph of the opinion by stating who are the brothers and sisters of Paul Pamanet, Jr. Prior to termination of the parental
We hold the termination of parental rights on July 6, 1956, as to Paul, Jr., Richard, Angela, and Arlin, did not affect their brother and sister relationship to those children born thereafter to the Pamanets. The disqualification of the parents to inherit from Paul, Jr., does not disqualify their children born after the termination from inheriting directly from the children born prior to termination.
No oral argument or costs are granted.
