In April 1988, an 18-year-old high school senior (hereinafter the biological mother) learned that she was approximately six months pregnant. She immediately informed her mother and respondent, her 23-year-old boyfriend. She dismissed respondent’s suggestion to have an abortion and decided instead that the baby would be placed for adoption upon birth. The biological mother never wavered from this decision of which respondent was at all times aware. Respondent was subsequently asked to vacate temporary sleeping quarters that he occupied in the rear of a store owned by the biological grandfather. He did so in early May 1988 and then quit his job; for the next six months respondent virtually became a street person without any address or employment, finding lodging with friends on a day-to-day basis. His relationship and contact with the biological mother deteriorated.
The biological mother received counseling and on May 5, 1988 retained counsel to assist with the proposed adoption. She gave respondent her attorney’s card to facilitate contact. On May 25, 1988 the biological mother went to a downstate home for unwed mothers and, thereafter, her only contact with respondent was a short telephone conversation in which the baby was not discussed. The infant was born on July 23, 1988 and surrendered to petitioners, the adoptive parents, at the hospital on July 26, 1988. The biological grandmother had contact with respondent in June 1988 regarding the adoption and again in mid-August 1988 concerning his medical history. She subsequently provided him with the name, address and phone number of the lawyer handling the adoption and informed respondent of the birth of the baby girl.
In October 1988, respondent informed his parents of the birth and, with their encouragement, took steps to locate the child. He contacted the biological grandmother for informa
The instant petition for adoption was filed in Rensselaer County on November 9, 1988. Because respondent had contacted the biological mother’s attorney, Family Court directed that he be notified of the proceeding. Following a hearing, the court concluded that respondent had failed to satisfy each of the three criteria set forth in Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (e) and determined that his consent to the adoption was not necessary. Respondent has appealed.
Respondent initially contends that because Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (e) has been declared unconstitutional (see, Matter of Raquel Marie X.,
Bearing in mind a child’s need for early permanence and stability, the key to the unwed biological father’s constitutional right to consent to the adoption is the prompt assertion of his interest and a manifestation of his ability and willingness to assume custody of the child (Matter of Raquel Marie X.,
Nothing in respondent’s lifestyle after his estrangement from the biological mother suggests that he had any desire to discontinue the use of drugs which had consumed most of his and a portion of the biological mother’s income. He manifested no provision in his life for a child, much less a willingness or ability to assume full custody of the baby or any other responsibility or duty related to the child (see, supra, at 402). He failed to make even the most rudimentary inquiry preliminary to any sort of parental tie, particularly during the critical months prior to the July 26, 1988 placement of the child for adoption. Respondent also failed to avail himself of any mechanism, legal or otherwise, to timely protect his right to establish a legal and emotional bond with the child (see, supra, at 402). Under the circumstances found here, respondent’s consent to the adoption was not necessary.
Levine, Mercure, Mahoney and Harvey, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, without costs.
