delivered the opinion of the court:
Respondent Pamela Ray appeals from the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Clair County terminating her parental rights to her three children, Gregory Ray, age 6, Tamidj Agnew, age 5, and Latresha Ray a/k/a Latresha Agnew, age 2. Specifically, respondent attacks the constitutionality of section lD(f) of the Adoption Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1979, ch. 40, par. 1501D(f)), insofar as it provides that “° " ° a criminal conviction resulting from the death of any child by physical abuse ° ° constitutes a ground for a finding of parental unfitness.
The Department of Children and Family Services filed a petition in the trial court alleging that the children were neglected and the respondent was an unfit parent, and requesting that the children be adjudicated wards of the court, that the respondent be adjudicated unfit and her parental rights terminated, and that a guardian be appointed with power to consent to adoption. Subsequently, the respondent was convicted of murder and cruelty to children and sentenced to concurrent terms of 20 and 2 years. The victim was respondent’s daughter, Sheritta Agnew, who was 17 months of age at the time of her death. We affirmed the respondent’s conviction, and the supreme court denied leave to appeal. People v. Ray (1979),
Following respondent’s conviction, the State filed a motion for summary judgment in the instant proceeding alleging that no material issue of fact existed concerning the respondent’s unfitness under section lD(f) of the Adoption Act, and requesting that the respondent be found unfit and her parental rights terminated. Subsequently, the court granted this motion. Also, in proceedings not challenged here, the court found the children neglected as alleged in the petition, adjudicated them wards of the court, and entered guardianship orders.
Respondent contends that the statute violates equal protection and due process. The State asserts that the applicable equal protection standard is whether the statutory classification is rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose, rather than the “strict scrutiny” analysis of whether the classification is necessary to promote a compelling governmental interest. The respondent apparently concedes that the rational relationship test applies, for in her brief it is said that the “determining question” is whether “* * * the classification is reasonable in light of its A A H » purpose .
The parties have not cited nor are we aware of any case in which our own supreme court or the United States Supreme Court has squarely decided the appropriate test for an equal protection challenge to a statutory ground for a finding of parental unfitness. However, in Regenold v. Baby Fold, Inc. (1977),
Although Regenold involved consensual adoption, it constitutes some authority for the application of the rational relationship test here, where legislation for the termination of parental rights and protection of children is again called into question. However, the application of “strict scrutiny” would appear to be supported by a recent decision of this court. (Helvey v. Rednour (1980),
This last conclusion is certainly correct, and it might appropriately have been reached by simply holding that termination of parental rights based on a mere finding of mental retardation would be arbitrary and irrational under the traditional equal protection test. As in Helvey, the various generalized pronouncements of the Supreme Court relating to parental rights have been interpreted to establish the fundamental nature of those rights in the context of a substantive due process analysis of Iowa parental rights’ termination statutes. (Alsager v. District Court of Polk County, Iowa (S.D. Ia. 1975),
The respondent acknowledges the State’s legitimate interest in protecting children who cannot protect themselves. She nonetheless argues that a parent who abuses and kills one child will not automatically mistreat her other children and that the causes of abuse can be treated and eliminated.
Laws of other States making child abuse a ground for termination of parental rights have been upheld against constitutional attack and applied to terminate rights to more than one child based on a finding of abuse of a single child. (Annot.,
We have affirmed the respondent’s conviction of murder and cruelty to children on evidence of common design and participation in her boyfriend’s course of torture and abuse that resulted in the death of her child. (People v. Ray.) The conflict inherent in parental fitness legislation between the State’s interest in legislation for the protection of children and the continuation of parental rights must be resolved in favor of the former in this case. One who would attack an allegedly unconstitutional feature of a statute must bring himself within the class to whom the law is unconstitutional. (City of Chicago v. Lawrence (1969),
Yet to be discussed is the respondent’s reliance on Stanley v. Illinois (1972),
The respondent argues that the statute before us also imposes an impermissible “irrebuttable” or conclusive presumption. We fail to see that the statute constitutes a conclusive presumption or a presumption in any sense.
In Stanley, the father was presumed unfit in the sense that, because of illegitimacy, he was required to institute a proceeding and to bear the burden of establishing parental authority for custody of his children. No such presumption was employed in the instant case. Rather, the State bore the burden of proving and did prove the respondent’s unfitness on a ground we have held proper. As argued by the State, the “irrebuttable presumption” challenged by the respondent is nothing more than the relation between a fact and its legal result. In light of the undisputed facts that a defendant had a criminal conviction resulting from the death of any child by physical child abuse, the court correctly determined that there was no material issue of fact and granted summary judgment finding her unfit and terminating her parental rights.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Clair County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
JONES, P. J., and SPOMER, J., concur.
