283 Mass. 415 | Mass. | 1933
This is a petition praying for leave to appeal from a decree of a probate court, whereby the respondents were made parents by adoption of a natural child of the petitioner. The case was referred to a master under an order, in the usual form, to hear the parties and their evidence, to find the facts and make report. The evidence is not reported.
The familiar practice in these conditions is that the findings of the master must be accepted as true, since they are not inconsistent with each other, or plainly wrong in view of incontrovertible facts.
The essential facts thus displayed are that the petitioner, a single woman and resident of Boston, gave birth to a female child on December 16, 1918, at St. Mary’s Infant Asylum and Lying-in Hospital, an incorporated charitable institution hereafter called St. Mary’s Asylum. The pe
The petitioner filed exceptions to the master’s report and appealed from the interlocutory decree overruling those exceptions and confirming the master’s report and from the final decree denying the petition.
The case must be considered on the footing that the petitioner voluntarily, intelligently and intentionally signed the instrument surrendering her child to the St. Mary’s Asylum for the purpose of enabling it to procure her adoption. That is the explicit finding of the master. Moreover, even if she had not read the instrument, having admittedly signed it, she would be bound by it. Clark v. Boston, 179 Mass. 409, 412. Porter v. Spring, 250 Mass. 83, 86.
The decree of the Maine court, duly authenticated, must be accepted as valid on its face. It constituted Mr. and Mrs. Rancourt the adopting parents. The finding is express to the effect that the adoption was assented to by St. Mary’s Asylum. To it the petitioner had by explicit words in writing delegated all her authority over the child for the declared purpose of enabling it to find a suitable home for the child with a good family and to procure her adoption. Its consent in the circumstances shown was, or might have been found by the Maine court to be, the consent of the petitioner. There is no force in the contention that the
The present petition is brought under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 210, §11. So far as material to the facts of the case at bar, that section provides that “The supreme judicial court may allow a parent, who, upon a petition for adoption, had no personal notice of the proceedings before the decree, to appeal therefrom within one year after actual notice thereof.” This petition was filed on May 2, 1927, and the decree from which the petitioner seeks to appeal was entered on December 31, 1925. There was no proof of personal notice to the petitioner of the proceedings before the entry of the decree. It was therefore essential for the petitioner to prove that she brought this petition within one year after she had actual notice of the decree. The burden of establishing this fact by a preponderance of the evidence rested on the petitioner. On this point the master reports that he was not satisfied and was unable to find that the petitioner “never knew of or was ignorant of the pendency or filing of the petition for adoption, filed by the respondents” in Bristol County or of the proceedings resulting therefrom. It appears that the master discredited in considerable part the testimony of the petitioner and her mother. He saw them on the witness stand. His conclusion on this question of fact must stand. It is manifest that the petitioner has failed to sustain the burden of proof resting upon her on this vital part of her case. In the absence of such proof, the court has no power to grant her petition.
Interlocutory and final decrees affirmed.