127 N.W.2d 548 | Minn. | 1964
Appeal by the natural mother of a child from an order and decree of adoption granted by the Juvenile Court of Washington County in favor of the child’s stepmother.
The stepmother’s petition to adopt was filed with the consent of the natural father, whom she married following his divorce from the child’s mother. Although the father had physical custody of the child under the decree of divorce, and the natural mother received notice of the petition and participated in the hearing thereon, she refused to consent to the adoption.
The first and determinative question presented is whether the mother had “lost custody of the child through a divorce decree” within the meaning of Minn. St. 259.24, subd. 1(b), thus authorizing the child’s adoption without her consent.
Section 259.24, subd. 1, provides:
“No child shall be adopted without the consent of his parents * * * except in the following instances:
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“(b) Consent shall not be required of a parent who has abandoned the child, or of a parent who has lost custody of the child through a divorce decree, and upon whom notice has been served as required by section 259.26.” (Italics supplied.)
The facts necessary for our consideration may be briefly stated. The child, Dennis Parks, was bom in Sioux City, Iowa, on January 21, 1953. His parents are John Parks and Jacque Lee Torgerson (nee Salsness). They were married in 1951, little less than 2 years before the child’s birth. At the time of their marriage in Iowa, Jacque was 16 and
The day after she moved into the apartment, she became dissatisfied with the babysitter and called on Elizabeth Parks, John’s mother, to care for the child. Although employed full time and living alone, Grandmother Parks willingly arranged for the care of Dennis and continued to do so until August 1955 when Dennis reached the age of years. The testimony concerning Jacque’s care, attention, and visitation of Dennis, and her intentions toward him during this period, is in dispute. She insists that almost from the time Grandmother Parks accepted Dennis she was prevented from visiting and attending to his needs; John and his mother insist that she was not only guilty of improper and suspicious conduct but also of willfully neglecting the child. It was during this period that John returned from service, divorced Jacque, and both he and Jacque remarried.
On July 23, 1953, about 2 months after Grandmother Parks took Dennis, John, still in military service, instituted divorce proceedings in the Woodbury County District Court at Sioux City, Iowa. Early in June 1954, John returned to his mother’s home, and about 2 weeks after his return, on June 18, 1954, he was granted a divorce by the Iowa district court. The court granted the divorce solely upon John’s testimony.
“That the care, custody and control of the minor child of the parties, Dennis Lee Parks, bom January 21, 1953, be granted to Plaintiff subject to the right of Defendant to call for and take said child with her away from the premises of plaintiff or any home where he may be placed by Plaintiff, during the normal waking hours of two Saturdays each month commencing with the month of June 1954 and continuing during minority. The specific Saturdays to be agreed upon which will be most convenient for both parties having consideration for the then health of said child. That if Defendant shall fail to exercise the privilege thus given in any calendar month, the day or days thus lost shall not be cumulated but if for any other reason Defendant shall be prevented or denied such rights during any calendar month such lost day or days shall be accumulated. That after said child has attained school age Defendant shall have him in her custody for one month a year during summer vacations.” (Italics supplied.)
Before the petition for adoption was heard on the merits, Jacque sought a writ of prohibition from this court upon the ground that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing. In re Petition of Parks, 262 Minn. 319, 114 N. W. (2d) 667. She claimed that she had not lost custody through the divorce decree, and therefore her consent was a jurisdictional prerequisite. In refusing to grant the writ, we held that the juvenile court, under Minn. St. 259.23, subd. 1, had jurisdiction to proceed; and further, that her claimed loss of custody was a factual issue going to the merits of the controversy and that
We do not agree with the finding that the decree granted mere visitation rights and that the evidence warranted a finding that the mother lost custody through a divorce decree within the meaning of § 259.24.
Both the substantive and procedural phases of adoption are creatures of statute. These statutes were revised and codified in 1951 following the recommendations of a legislative interim study commission created in 1949. The provision dispensing with consent where custody is lost through divorce was not modified by the 1951 revision.
In the Jaren case the child had been adopted by her stepfather after his marriage to her mother. Upon their divorce, custody of the child was first awarded to the adoptive father because the natural mother was found unfit. Subsequently, the provisions of the divorce decree concerning custody were modified and custody taken from the adoptive father on the ground that he, too, was unfit. Custody was granted to the child’s maternal aunt and uncle who, with the consent of the natural mother, filed a petition to adopt. The trial court dis
In the Jordet case we held valid a decree of adoption granted upon the petition of the stepfather and the natural mother, who had custody through a divorce, even though the natural father refused to consent and the divorce decree granted him visitation rights. Contrary to petitioner’s primary contention, we do not believe that decision should control. Unlike this case, there the nonconsenting parent conceded in his brief that the statute permitted dispensing with his consent. His main contention was that the adoption was against the best interest of the child because it would forever sever his right of visitation and alienate his deep affection for the child. It is true that the opinion states that a mere right of visitation granted in a divorce decree “in itself is not enough to require the refusal of a petition for adoption.”
We have repeatedly declared that our adoption statute should be liberally construed to promote the welfare of the child “to which— in the event of conflict — every other interest must give way.”
Considering the statute in its application to the situation before us,
We are not unmindful that the custody provisions of a divorce decree, like the decree itself, are subject to modification.
Where the custody in one parent is based upon a stipulation of the parents, the language of which is approved and incorporated into the decree, whether the right to custody of the parent not having custody has been lost, or his right to veto adoption has been extinguished, depends upon the intention of the parties. Clearly, where joint custody was intended, the statute does not permit adoption with
Although the decree did award custody to the natural father, there is no basis to find that either the parties or the court intended to divest the mother of all parental rights or to free her of parental duties. Rather, the language of the decree forecloses such a conclusion since it granted the mother not only visitation rights but “custody” for one month each year after the child reached school age. The language is that of the parties submitted through counsel, and it is reasonable to infer that the word “custody” was deliberately chosen to preserve to the mother custodial rights and duties, contemplating more than the privilege and pleasure of visitation.
Even though it may be equally reasonable to infer from the language alone that divided custody was not intended, the conduct of the mother toward Dennis is wholly consistent with her claim that she at no time intended to desert him or to surrender her right to his future custody. The evidence does show lack of judgment and indifference in placing the baby with the paternal grandmother, but immediately thereafter she did not fail to visit the child. Shortly afterward, the divorce action was filed and, because of the objections of the grandmother and the father, it became increasingly difficult for her to see the child. After the divorce was granted, she persisted in her efforts to exercise her rights preserved by the decree but she was often frustrated by the unreasonable refusal and increasing opposition of John and his mother, joined later by petitioner.
The claim, if in fact asserted, that her activities subsequent to the
Inasmuch as the mother did not lose her right to custody through the divorce decree and did not subsequently forfeit such right, the court had no authority to grant adoption without her consent.
Reversed.
An appeal from juvenile court is expressly authorized by Minn. St. 259.32.
On June 19, 1954, one day after the divorce, Jacque married Verlin Torgerson, then a college student. At the time of the hearing, they had a boy, aged 7, and a girl, aged 6. They now live in Sioux City, Iowa, where Mr. Torgerson is employed as an electrical engineer.
John married the petitioner on May 3, 1955. At the time of trial, they had three boys, aged 5, 4, and 9 months, and a girl, aged 6. John has been unemployed since 1958. He is totally disabled by reason
The commission recommended that consent of natural parents not otherwise incapacitated be required in all cases exc'ept abandonment. Report of Interim Commission on Domestic Relations Problems 1951, pp. 37 and 38. However, the legislature chose to reenact the former provision which abrogated the necessity of consent “of a parent who has lost custody through a divorce decree.” L. 1951, c. 508, § 4, subd. 1(b) (Minn. St. 259.24, subd. l[b]).
See, Note, 36 Minn. L. Rev. 387.
In re Petition of Jordet, 248 Minn. 433, 441, 80 N. W. (2d) 642, 647.
In re Adoption of Jaren, 223 Minn. 561, 569, 27 N. W. (2d) 656, 661. See, also, In re Adoption of Anderson, 235 Minn. 192, 50 N. W. (2d) 278.
In re Adoption of Pratt, 219 Minn. 414, 427, 18 N. W. (2d) 147, 154. See, generally, Simpson, The Unfit Parent: Conditions Under Which a Child May Be Adopted Without the Consent of His Parent, 39 U. of Detroit L. J. 347.
Jackson v. Spellman, 55 Nev. 174, 28 P. (2d) 125, 91 A. L. R. 1381; In re Lease, 99 Wash. 413, 169 P. 816; Matter of Cozza, 163 Cal. 514, 126 P. 161; Annotation, 47 A. L. R. 824, 825, 844.
A similar construction has been made of the consent provision of a Washington statute which was somewhat similar to § 259.24, subd. 1(b). See, In re Beers’ Adoption, 78 Wash. 576, 139 P. 629; In re Lease, 99 Wash. 413, 169 P. 816; In re Force, 113 Wash. 151, 193 P. 698. A new adoption act enacted by the Washington legislature in 1943 codified the judicial construction of the earlier act. Laws of Wash. 1943, c. 268, § 4(b), (Wash. Rev. Code 26.32.040[2]). See, In re Gustafson, 28 Wash. (2d) 526, 183 P. (2d) 787; In re Hope, 30 Wash. (2d) 185, 191 P. (2d) 289.
See, also, Jackson v. Spellman, 55 Nev. 174, 28 P. (2d) 125, 91 A. L. R. 1381; Rubendall v. Bisterfelt, 227 Iowa 1388, 291 N. W. 401; In re Adoption of Perkins, 242 Iowa 1374, 49 N. W. (2d) 248.
Minn. St. 518.18.
§ 260.221.
In December 1954, after the divorce and before John’s remarriage, it was necessary for Jacque to obtain a court order directing the grandmother to permit visitation.