232 P. 738 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1924
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *3 This is an appeal from an order vacating and setting aside an order and judgment of the superior court of Solano County, made and entered in the matter of the adoption of Benetta DeLeon, an infant. *4
The facts, as gleaned from the judgment-roll herein, are as follows: On or about the first day of October, 1921, in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the county of Colusa, one George DeLeon was awarded a decree of divorce from Elizabeth DeLeon, then and theretofore his wife, on the grounds of cruelty. In the decree, and as a part thereof, the said George DeLeon was awarded the care, custody, and control of Benetta DeLeon, a minor child of said parties, then an infant of the age of about six years. After the entry of the decree of divorce, as herein mentioned, George DeLeon placed the said Benetta DeLeon with Alma E. Blood and Horace B. Blood, the petitioners for the adoption of said infant and the appellants in this proceeding. On the twenty-eighth day of October, 1921, the said Elizabeth DeLeon intermarried with one John Spurgeon. On the second day of September, 1922, George DeLeon died. Thereafter, and upon the 12th of September, 1922, the said Alma E. Blood and Horace B. Blood filed their petition for the adoption of the said Benetta DeLeon and thereupon, and upon the same day, the superior court of the county of Solano in which said petition was filed made and entered its order by the terms of which the said Benetta DeLeon was adjudged to become then and there the adopted child of the said Alma E. Blood and Horace B. Blood. No notice of the proceeding leading up to the order of the court last aforesaid, pertaining to the adoption of said infant, was given to the said Elizabeth DeLeon (Spurgeon), the surviving mother of said infant. Thereafter, and within the time mentioned in section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Elizabeth DeLeon (Spurgeon), as the mother of said child, filed her notice of motion in the matter of said adoption proceeding in the superior court of the county of Solano, accompanying said notice of motion with an affidavit setting forth, among other things, that she first learned of the death of the father of said child, George DeLeon, on or about the fourteenth day of September, 1922; that thereupon she endeavored to and did ascertain the whereabouts of the child in question, and then learned for the first time of the adoption proceedings taken and had as hereinbefore referred to. Application was then made by the said Elizabeth DeLeon (Spurgeon) to the superior court of the county of Colusa for a *5 modification of the order awarding custody of the said Benetta DeLeon to George DeLeon, and that such modification was made and the custody of said child purported to be given thereby to the said Elizabeth DeLeon (Spurgeon). Other matters are set forth in the affidavit not necessary to be mentioned herein. Thereafter, and in pursuance of said notice, the said Elizabeth DeLeon (Spurgeon) moved the superior court of Solano County to vacate the order of adoption theretofore made in the matter of the said Benetta DeLeon, an infant, upon the following grounds, to wit:
"1. That said decree of adoption was made in said above matter against the said Elizabeth Spurgeon, through her mistake, inadvertence, surprise and excusable neglect.
"2. That the court is and was without jurisdiction to hear, try or determine the matters or things set forth and contained in the petition for adoption in the above entitled matter, or to make or enter the said decree of adoption therein.
"3. That said decree of adoption is contrary to and in violation of article I, section XIII, of the Constitution of California, in that it deprives said Elizabeth Spurgeon of her property without due process of law."
Upon the hearing of said motion the trial court made and entered its order setting aside and vacating the decree of adoption theretofore entered in the matter of said minor, and set the petition of the said Horace B. Blood and Alma E. Blood for the adoption of said minor down for further hearing. It is from this order that the petitioners for the adoption of said minor prosecute this appeal.
The appellants base their appeal entirely upon subdivision 2 of section
"The remaining question to be considered is whether the validity of the order of adoption is affected by the fact that it was made without the consent of the father of respondent, and without notice to him. As already stated the father of respondent had been divorced from the mother on the ground of his adultery, and such being the case, his consent to the order of adoption was rendered unnecessary by the express provisions of section
The right of a natural parent to be heard in the adoption proceedings was not involved in the Williams case. The holding is, in effect, that, as the natural parent was not asserting any right to the care, custody, and control of the minor child involved, it did not lie within the power of anyone to assert such rights and privileges for the purpose of attacking collaterally the right of the minor to succeed to the estate of a deceased adoptive parent. In other words, the right of the parent was individual and could not be asserted by any other. In the case of Younger v. Younger,
The adoption in this case was had at a time when the award of the custody of the child involved, made at the time of the entry of the decree of divorce, was in full force and effect. The decree was entered against the father on the grounds of cruelty and gave to the mother the full power and control of disposition of the child, and this full control and power of disposition was subsisting, and in full force and effect, at the time she consented to the adoption of her infant son. Until the entry of the decree of adoption no modification of the order made under the provisions of section 138 had ever been made or petitioned for. At the time of the adoption the mother was the living person in whom the power of consent was vested, and having been duly and regularly exercised, the status of the child became inexorably fixed as the legal child of the adoptive parents and the superior court of Santa Clara County in the divorce proceeding thereafter had no jurisdiction to make any valid order pertaining to the custody of the child. *11
In the case of Bell v. Krauss,
"There was no finding that the father was an unfit person to have possession and control of the child. The placing of the infant in charge of the mother was not such judicial deprivation of the custody of the child on account of the neglect of the father as is contemplated in section
The case of Bell v. Krauss does not bear directly upon the interpretation of subdivision 2 of section
"The court found that, notwithstanding her primary right to her child and its custody, she had lost all right to object to being deprived of it under the adoption proceeding, or to insist that this could not be done by order of the court without her consent, by virtue of the decree of divorce, and, further, because, she had deserted and abandoned it within the meaning and intent of section
"We are satisfied, however, that the court improperly construed the section as to the effect on consent of the decree as the terms of that decree stand, and that the evidence does not sustain the conclusion of the court that either the child had been deserted or had been abandoned by its mother within the meaning of said section
"Discussing these matters separately, and, first, as to the effect of the decree of divorce on consent under the section. The trial court, reading this section literally, held that as the decree of the superior court in Washington between the parents of the child was granted to the husband for cruelty on the part of the wife, her consent to the adoption of her child was, under the section, unnecessary, ignoring entirely the fact that, notwithstanding the decree was in favor of the husband, the custody of the children was, by the very terms of the decree, awarded absolutely to her; not a limited but an absolute one as far as the custody is concerned.
"Appellant here — the mother — contends that this is not the proper construction to be given to the section, and that if it is to be so construed it is, as far as it attempts to deprive her of the right to the custody of her children judicially awarded her by the decree of divorce without notice or her consent, unconstitutional, as depriving her of a vested right to her child without due process of law.
"There is no necessity for considering this constitutional objection, because we do not think the section is subject to the literal construction which the superior court placed upon it. Such a superficial interpretation is not permissible when the spirit of our laws and the particular purpose of the enactment of the section respecting consent and the power of courts in divorce proceedings over the custody of the children of the marriage are considered. *14
"In the latter proceeding the court has power and authority to make such orders as it may deem necessary and proper for the custody of the children of the marriage, without being constrained in any respect by the cause for which the divorce is granted, and may at any time vacate or modify such order. While section
After further discussion of the case, the supreme court held that, even though the divorce had been granted to the husband on account of the extreme cruelty of the wife, the child having been awarded to her, notice of the proceeding to adopt the child in question was absolutely necessary, and the proceeding having been had without the giving of such notice and without her consent, the order of the trial court was reversed. In the instant case there are facts and circumstances disclosed by the record which differentiate it in some particulars from any of the cases which we have been considering. [8] The father, to whom the custody of the child was awarded by the superior court, when the decree of divorce was granted him on the ground of the cruelty toward him of the mother of the child, was dead. Whatever rights concerning the child theretofore vested in him immediately ceased. Was the child thereupon ipso facto set at large as an abandoned child or as a wanderer upon the face of the earth to whom nobody had any legal rights? We think not. In 19 C.J. 349, the general rule in regard to such cases is thus stated:
"On the death of the parent to whom the custody of the child is awarded, the other parent ordinarily succeeds to the right of custody, although where the surviving parent is an unfit associate for the children, their custody will not be taken from respectable relatives of the deceased parent; but, in analogy to the rule as to the termination of alimony on the death of the husband, it has been held that, upon the death of either parent, the right of the other to the custody of a child under the decree ends, at least in the case of the decree which awarded the custody `during the joint' lives of the *15 parents, the rights of the survivor in such cases thereafter being those of a surviving parent, governed by the common law and not by the decree. Neither parent can give away by will the custody of a child as against the survivor."
In Schammel v. Schammel,
In the Miller case, the case of Younger v. Younger, supra, is also considered and the fact pointed out, just as we have stated, that the status of the child had been changed during the time that there existed a living person actually capable of giving consent to such change, and, in that particular, differs from the case at bar. The question of concealment *17 was also involved in the Miller case, but that does not prevent that decision from being an authority upon the question of notice. [10] The Miller case has been called to our attention upon the further ground that adoption proceedings without notice may possibly be violative of section 13 of article I of the state constitution, but, for the reasons hereinbefore stated, we do not think it necessary to discuss any constitutional principles involved in this action, holding, as we do, that the natural and common-law right of the surviving parent to the custody of the child in question and to be heard as to any disposition proposed to be made of said child, immediately revived and came into active force and effect on the death of the parent to whom the child had been awarded. It follows that the trial court was correct in setting aside the decree of adoption made in this case without notice to the surviving parent. The order appealed from is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Finch, P.J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 22, 1925.
All the Justices concurred.