In the Interest of K, a baby girl.
No. B-5242.
Supreme Court of Texas.
March 31, 1976.
Rehearing Denied April 28, 1976.
535 S.W.2d 168
REAVLEY, Justice.
Franklin L. Smith, County Atty., T. R. Bandy, Jr., Asst. County Atty., Corpus Christi, for respondent.
REAVLEY, Justice.
In April of 1974 an unwed mother gave birth to a baby girl, whom we shall call K. The young mother was unable to care for the child, and she relinquished her parental rights to the Nueces County Child Welfare Unit of the Department of Public Welfare. The Child Welfare Unit took responsibility as soon as the baby was released from the hospital, providing her with foster care and locating suitable adoptive parents. The instant legal proceeding was initiated to terminate the parent-child relationship, to afford the father of the child an opportunity to be heard if he wished, and for the designation of the Child Welfare Unit as managing conservator of the child as a predicate for ultimate adoption.
S.D.A. is the child‘s father-only in the sense of that relationship which is the biological consequence of erotic ecstasy on a summer night. After learning of the moth-
Our question is whether the rights of this biological father have been abused. He contends that he is entitled to the legitimation of the child and to full parental rights by virtue of the fact that he is the biological father. He further contends that those parental rights cannot be terminated except by proceeding under
We first look to the statute in effect at the time of the hearing in 1974 to see if the trial court complied with the enactment of the Legislature. Title 2 of the Family Code at that time was in the form enacted in 1973 and effective on January 1, 1974. Acts of the 63rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1973, Ch. 543. Reference will be made below to the change in Title 2 which was made in 1975 after the hearing in this case.
Under the Family Code a “parent” is not necessarily an immediate progenitor of the child; the term applies only to those named in
The alleged father of an illegitimate child is entitled by
If a statement of paternity is filed with the State Department of Public Welfare, the father, the mother, or the department may institute a suit for a decree establishing the child as the legitimate child of the person executing the statement. On the consent of the mother, the managing conservator, or the court, and on the filing of the statement of paternity with the petition, the court shall enter a decree declaring the child to be the legitimate child of the person executing the statement of paternity.
Neither the mother of the baby girl K, nor the Child Welfare Unit as managing conservator, nor the trial court has consented that S.D.A. may obtain a decree establishing this child as the legitimate child of S.D.A. Such a decree would entitle S.D.A. to the legal relationship as a parent under the Code. S.D.A. argues that the only matter to be considered in the legitimation proceeding is the paternity of the child and that, since it is conceded that S.D.A. is in fact the father
S.D.A. then points to
It is clear that the law as S.D.A. says it ought to be is not the law of the Texas Family Code.
We come now to the constitutional question. S.D.A. contends that the United States Supreme Court has in Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 92 S.Ct. 1208, 31 L.Ed.2d 551 (1972) equated fathers of illegitimate children with fathers of legitimate children and has required the states to do likewise. In that case the State of Illinois had removed three children from the father‘s custody following the death of the children‘s mother. The father had over prior years taken part in the care and custody of his children and was then living together with them as a family unit. Illinois denied the father an opportunity to appear in court to show why his family should not be dismembered, and he was denied a hearing on his fitness to keep his children. Despite the existing family relationship, because of the lack of a legal marriage to the deceased mother of the children, the State presumed the father to be unfit as a parent. The Supreme Court held:
We conclude that, as a matter of due process of law, Stanley was entitled to a hearing on his fitness as a parent before his children were taken from him and that, by denying him a hearing and extending it to all other parents whose custody of their children is challenged, the State denied Stanley the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. 405 U.S. 649, 92 S.Ct. 1211.
Counsel for S.D.A. reads Stanley to preclude any and all distinctions between fa-
Stanley does not decree that all unwed fathers have fundamental rights to full parental status or that every statutory discrimination against the unwed father is suspect. The overriding interest of state and courts is the welfare of the affected children. We are not nearly so far down the road to unrestrained egalitarianism as to hold that the Constitution guarantees an unwed father parental rights in violation of the best interests of the child.
The Court of Appeals of New York has upheld a New York statute which requires consent of the natural mother, without requiring consent of the natural father, for adoption of an illegitimate child. In re Adoption of Malpica-Orsini, 36 N.Y.2d 568, 370 N.Y.S.2d 511, 331 N.E.2d 486 (1975). That court wrote:
Of course, the primary concern of the Legislature and the courts is with the welfare of the children involved rather than with the allocation of rights between the mother and the usually uncertain and reluctant father of the children born out of wedlock. In this context, legislation and policy are governed by general conditions rather than the special circumstances of a sympathetic and idiosyncratic situation. Moreover, as noted earlier, the father in this case was given notice and an opportunity to be heard on the issue of what was in the best interest of the child. 36 N.Y.2d 579, 370 N.Y.S.2d 521, 331 N.E.2d 493.
There is a rational basis for the state, which has an interest in securing stable homes and supportive families for children, to distinguish between the father who has accepted the legal and moral commitment to the family and the father who has not done so. The biological father may be a sperm donor or a rapist or someone as S.D.A. who has simply engaged in a single hit and run sexual adventure. He may, on the other hand, be devoted to child and family even though the legal contract has not been sealed. Texas law offers the biological father of an illegitimate child the opportunity to prove which category in which he falls and to show that he should not be treated differently from fathers legally committed to the mothers of their children. Thus S.D.A. sought and received a fair hearing. The evidence proved him to be an unfit person to act as parent of this child, and the denial of his petition for parental status was shown to be in the best interest of the child. His rights have been respected. The rights of society and baby girl K permit him nothing more.
The judgments below are affirmed.
POPE, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. The majority opinion unnecessarily construes the Family Code in such a way as to deal unequally between men and women and between an unwed mother and an unwed father. Among those differences are:
(1) An unwed woman is treated in law as a parent by force of her biological motherhood, whereas the undisputed fact of fatherhood does not constitute the unwed man a parent.
(2) The unwed father bears the burden of the duties which flow from parenthood upon proof of his biological fatherhood, Gomez v. Perez, 466 S.W.2d 41 (Tex.Civ.App. 1971, writ ref‘d n. r. e.), rev‘d, 409 U.S. 535, 93 S.Ct. 872, 35 L.Ed.2d 56 (1973), but the same unwed father has no parental rights by force of his fatherhood.
(3) An unwed man‘s parental rights may be permanently terminated without compliance with
I rather suppose that S.D.A., the father, would have had problems preserving his parental rights if he had been tried under the correct test; but we pursue a dangerous technique when this court suggests that we might be excused from following the law because, after all, one of the parties is undeserving of an equal rule.
Legitimation Proceedings
According to
“Parent” means the mother, a man as to whom the child is legitimate, or an adoptive mother or father, but does not include a parent as to whom the parent-child relationship has been terminated.
It is at once apparent that the word means one thing as to the mother and an entirely different thing as to the father. Biological motherhood means parenthood in the case of the woman. The majority holds that admitted biological fatherhood does not mean parenthood in the case of the man.
The evidence without dispute conclusively established the biological fatherhood of S.D.A. S.D.A. pleaded the fact, and he filed his statement of paternity which was sufficient under
S.D.A. also contended that he is a parent within a reasonable construction of
Voluntary Legitimation
(a) The father of a child not the legitimate child of another man may institute a suit for a decree designating him as the father of the child unless the parent-child relationship has been terminated under Chapter 15 of this code. With the consent of the mother or the managing conservator, if one has been appointed, and
(b) If a statement of paternity is filed with the State Department of Public Welfare, the father, the mother, or the department may institute a suit for a decree establishing the child as the legitimate child of the person executing the statement. On the consent of the mother, the managing conservator, or the court, and on the filing of the statement of paternity with the petition, the court shall enter a decree declaring the child to be the legitimate child of the person executing the statement of paternity.
(c) A suit for voluntary legitimation may be joined with a suit for termination under Chapter 15 of this code. [Emphasis added.]
The correct test in a legitimation proceeding is the fact, vel non, of fatherhood, and not as the majority has held, what is the best interest of the child. Chapter 14 says that the best interest of the child is the correct test for conservatorship, possession and custody and support matters. Those matters are not issues in these proceedings, but the majority has transplanted that test from chapter 14 into legitimation proceedings which involve paternity under chapter 13. Chapter 13 does not mention that test as an appropriate one. When the 63rd Legislature first enacted chapter 13 of the Family Code, it made no provision for involuntary legitimation, that is, paternity suits. It only authorized a father‘s voluntary suit for legitimation. The 64th Legislature amended all of chapter 13 and for the first time in Texas authorized an involuntary paternity suit so that either the mother or father could prove paternity.
By way of analogy, once the fact of fatherhood is established, an unwed father has certain parental duties fixed upon him. When Gomez v. Perez, 466 S.W.2d 41 (Tex.Civ.App.1971, writ ref‘d n. r. e.), came to this court in 1971, we refused the writ by reason of a long line of Texas precedents which held that a father of a child born out of wedlock was under no duty to support the child. As is true in our present case, the proof established the fact of biological fatherhood. The United States Supreme
Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship
Even more surprising, however, is the way the courts below and the majority of this court have arrived at a judgment which permanently terminates S.D.A.‘s parental rights.
The trial court‘s judgment orders the permanent termination of the father‘s parental rights in these words: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that all parental rights of G.K. and all rights which S.D.A. may have the right to assert in regards to said Baby Girl K, born April 6, 1974, be and are hereby terminated.” The court of civil appeals and this court have affirmed the judgment of termination and have done so in spite of the Welfare Department‘s admission that it neither pleaded nor proved any of the facts required by
The majority announces the rule that the Family Code is for the protection of mothers and women, but in the case of fathers and men, it is all right if the court invents a different and special rule. The reason this lack of equality is all right, says the court, is that the father in this case was given notice of the hearing, citing Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 92 S.Ct. 1208, 31 L.Ed.2d 551 (1972). Stanley has now been construed to hold that a man is equally treated if he has notice of the hearing in which the court ignores the Family Code. The rule violates the Equal Protection Clause of the
I would reverse the judgments of the courts below and remand the cause (1) for the determination of the fact of S.D.A.‘s paternity; (2) for the determination of the termination issue under
STEAKLEY and DENTON, JJ., join in this dissent.
Notes
The statement of paternity authorized to be used in Section 13.01 of this code must be executed by the father of the child as an affidavit and witnessed by two credible adults. The affidavit must clearly state that the father acknowledges the child as his child, that he and the mother, who is named in the affidavit, were not married to each other at the time of conception of the child or at any subsequent time, that the child is not the legitimate child of another man, and that the child is entitled to support from the father. The statement must be executed before a person authorized to administer oaths under the laws of this state.
(a) A statement of paternity executed as provided in Section 13.02 of this code is pri-ma facie evidence that the child is the child of the person executing the statement and that the person has an obligation to support the child.
(b) If the father‘s address is unknown or he is outside the jurisdiction of the court at the time a suit is instituted under Section 13.01 of this code, his statement of paternity, in the absence of controverting evidence, is sufficient for the court to enter a decree establishing his paternity of the child.
A petition requesting termination of the parent-child relationship with respect to a parent who is not the petitioner may be granted if the court finds that:
(1) the parent has:
(A) voluntarily left the child alone or in the possession of another not the parent and expressed an intent not to return; or
(B) voluntarily left the child alone or in the possession of another not the parent without expressing an intent to return, without providing for the adequate support of the child, and remained away for a period of at least three months; or
(C) knowingly placed or knowingly allowed the child to remain in conditions or surroundings which endanger the physical or emotional well-being of the child; or
(D) engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the child with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical or emotional well-being of the child; or
(E) failed to support the child in accordance with his ability during a period of one year ending within six months of the date of the filing of the petition; or
(F) abandoned the child without identifying the child or furnishing means of identification, and the child‘s identity cannot be ascertained by the exercise of reasonable diligence; or
(G) contumaciously refused to submit to a reasonable and lawful order of a court under Section 34.05 of this code; or
(H) been the major cause of:
(i) the child‘s repeated violations of the compulsory school attendance laws; or
(ii) the child‘s absence from his home without the consent of his parents or guardian for a substantial length of time or without the intent to return; or
(I) executed before or after the suit is filed an unrevoked or irrevocable affidavit of relinquishment of parental rights as provided by Section 15.03 of this code; and
(2) termination is in the best interest of the child.
