OPINION
These cases were consolidated for trial because of a common background of facts.
Wambles v. Conn,
Civil Action No. 75-233-N, is a class action challenging the constitutionality of Alabama’s child neglect law, Alabama Code, Title 13, § 350
et seq.
(1958). Plaintiff Margaret Wambles represents a class composed of mothers who have been or may be deprived of the custody of their
Defendants in these cases are Cecil Cop-page; Hon. Walker Hobbie, individually and in his official capacity as Judge of Probate of Montgomery County, Alabama; L. T. Conn, individually and in his official capacity as a patrolman with the City of Montgomery Police Department; E. L. Wright, Jr., individually and as Chief of Police of the City of Montgomery Police Department; Barbara Ward, individually and as Director of the Montgomery County Youth Facility; Julia Oliver, individually and as Commissioner of the Alabama Department of Pensions and Security (DPS); Ada Kate Morgan, individually and as Director of the Montgomery County Department of Pensions and Security; and Hon. William F. Thetford, individually and as Judge of the Montgomery County Family Court. During the course of the lawsuit, Hon. John W. Davis succeeded Judge Thetford as Judge of the Montgomery County Family Court and Mr. Charles Swindall replaced Mr. Wright as Chief of the Montgomery Police Department. The successors were automatically substituted as defendants pursuant to F.R.C.P. 25(d).
A three-judge court has been convened pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281 to decide these constitutional questions. After a pretrial conference at which many of the facts were stipulated, the case was submitted for decision upon the briefs and documents supplied by the parties.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Margaret Wambles is a 25-year-old white woman who has never married. On September 15, 1971, Plaintiff Wambles gave birth to a son, Richard Roe, who lived with her continuously until June 2, 1975, when he was seized by Officer L. T. Conn of the Montgomery Police Department and placed in the custody of the Montgomery County Department of Pensions and Security. This seizure was ordered by Judge Thetford of the Montgomery County Family Court without affording Plaintiff Wambles prior notice and a hearing. Such authority as exists for this action is provided by Alabama Code, Title 13, §§ 350(2) and 352(4), which purports to permit a juvenile court judge to summarily remove a “neglected child” from its home if the judge believes the child’s welfare so warrants. 1
At approximately 8:30 P.M. on June 2, 1975, after obtaining the pick-up order, Defendant Conn, accompanied by two other Montgomery police officers, returned to Plaintiff Wambles’ home. When Defendant Conn announced that he had come to take Richard Roe, Plaintiff Wambles picked up her child and ran to the back of the apartment. After Defendant Conn showed Plaintiff Wambles the pick-up order, she still refused to surrender the child. Thereupon, with the child crying, “No, mama, don’t let him take me,” Defendant Conn grabbed Plaintiff Wambles by the arm and pulled her back into the living room, took Richard Roe from her arms, and left without leaving a copy of the pick-up order. After the seizure, Defendant Conn took Richard Roe to a DPS-licensed shelter home in Montgomery.
No hearing was scheduled or held following Richard Roe’s removal until July 10, 1975. No attorney was requested or appointed to represent Richard Roe at the July 10 hearing. At the hearing in the Family Court of Montgomery County, both Defendant Coppage and Plaintiff Wambles were present and represented by counsel. Judge Thetford entered an order on July 11, 1975, wherein he awarded Defendant Coppage custody of Richard Roe after making a finding that he was the natural father of the child. The temporary custody order gave Margaret Wambles “the right to petition the court for custody of [Richard Roe] at any future date.” Plaintiff Wambles’ first petition for custody, filed on August 5, 1975, along with her motion for a new trial and motion for order for blood tests, was denied on August 14, 1975, by Judge Thetford as untimely filed. 4 A second petition for custody was filed by Plaintiff Wambles in November and denied by Judge John W. Davis, III, on December 22,1975. The denial of this last petition was affirmed by the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals. Wambles v. Coppage, Civil No. 746, filed June 16, 1976.
On December 11,1975, Plaintiff Wambles learned for the first time that Defendant Coppage had executed a declaration of fatherhood with respect to Richard Roe and had his last name changed from Wambles to Coppage. Since Margaret Wambles was unmarried at the time of Richard Roe’s birth, under Title 22, § 33, he was given his mother’s surname, and no information as to his father appeared on his birth certificate. The declaration of fatherhood and the name change were effected on August 22, 1975, when Cecil Coppage executed a document before Defendant Hobbie, Judge of the Probate Court of Montgomery County, pursuant to Alabama Code, Title 27, §§ 11-12 (Supp.1973). The address which appeared on Defendant Coppage’s declaration of fatherhood is the Montgomery address of his attorney, although Defendant Coppage is a resident of Troy, Alabama, which is in Pike County. Neither Margaret Wambles nor Richard Roe was given notice or an opportunity to be heard relative to the August 22, 1975, declaration of fatherhood and name change.
On October 9, 1975, the Alabama Legislature passed Alabama Act No. 1205 to implement the new judicial article of the State Constitution. Article V of this Act purported to immediately repeal §§ 350,
et seq.
of Alabama Code, Title 13, replacing them with new statutory provisions. Defendants Oliver and Morgan moved to dismiss for mootness, citing the legislative repeal of the challenged statute. The Alabama Supreme Court, in reviewing Act No.
EXPERT TESTIMONY
Plaintiffs Wambles and Roe have submitted the testimony of witnesses Dr. Sally A. Provence 5 and Dr. Albert J. Solnit 6 as experts in the field of child care and development. Drs. Provence and Solnit summarized their views as follows:
1. Summary removal of a young child from a parent who has been his major caregiver is a severe threat to his development. It disrupts and grossly endangers what he most needs, that is, the continuity of affectionate care from those to whom he is attached through bonds of love.
2. Summary removal should be allowed only under conditions in which physical survival is at stake.
3. In situations in which some interference is indicated because parents are unable to take good care of their child, there are alternatives to summary removal which should be used either singly or in combination. Among these are the following: (a) the provision in the child’s home of assistance to parents with child care and with managing a household; (b) the provision of counselling to parents about how to care for a child in ways that enhance his development and well-being; (c) the provision of a day care center or day care family in which assistance to child and parent can be provided which is addressed to their specific needs; (d) the provision of a residential facility or foster family in which both parent and child can receive the nurture and guidance they may need (in extended families, relatives often supply such benevolent help, and when they are unavailable, it is one of society’s responsibilities to organize and make available such assistance); and (e) the provision of 24-hour substitute care for a child, which does not cut him off from contact with his parents.
Another witness, Dr. Jonas Robitscher, 7 gave similar testimony in his deposition:
All authorities agree that there are circumstances under which summary removal of the child from his or her parent should be allowed. These circumstances would include and would be very much limited to situations in which the child was being physically abused as in the battered-child syndrome, where the child was being sexually abused as in the examples we see of stepfathers or sometimes real fathers having incestuous relationships with children, when children are brought up in an atmosphere incompatible with physical health because of neglect, lack of food and extreme uncleanliness, and when there is so little care taken of the child that the child is in danger as when small children are allowed to roam unsupervised in dangerous streets. However, most authorities agree that even psychotic or disturbed mothers can often do a good mothering job and psychotic and disturbed mothers are preferable, providing the circumstances described immediately above are not present, to institutional or impersonalcare. The thrust of studies in child development then indicates that children should be summarily removed from their mothers only when their physical health and emotional health are at serious risk and only after all other alternatives to removal have been thoroughly studied.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
The Fundamental Right to Family Integrity:
A district court in Iowa recently reviewed the long line of Supreme Court cases addressed to the constitutional interests at stake where various aspects of family life are threatened and concluded that there is a fundamental right to family integrity protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Alsager v. District Court of Polk County, Iowa,
It is cardinal with us that the custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and freedom include preparation for obligations the state can neither supply nor hinder * * * and it is in recognition of this that these decisions (Meyer and Pierce) have respected the private realm of family life which the state cannot enter.321 U.S. at 166 ,64 S.Ct. at 442 .
A more recent Supreme Court decision,
Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur,
This Court is in full agreement with the conclusion of Chief Judge Hanson in
Alsager, supra,
that the Constitution recognizes as fundamental the right of family integrity. This means that in our present case the state’s severance of Plaintiff Wambles’ parent-child relationship and of Plaintiff Roe’s child-parent relationship will receive strict judicial scrutiny.
See Roe v. Wade,
Summary Seizure; This Court holds that Alabama Code, Title 13, § 352(4), which authorizes summary seizure of a child “if it appears that * * * the child is in such condition that its welfare requires,” violates procedural due process under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The facts of this case dispel any notion that the State was faced with an emergency situation. As we earlier found, Officer Conn’s investigation revealed that Richard Roe was clothed, clean, and in “fairly good” physical condition with no signs of physical abuse. The Wambles’ home was “relatively clean” and stocked with “adequate food.” Without danger of immediate harm or threatened harm to the child, the State’s interest in protecting the child is not sufficient to justify a removal of the child prior to notice and a hearing. Additionally, even in the event summary seizure had been justified, a hearing would have had to follow the seizure “as soon as practicable” and not six weeks later as it did in the present case. See
Goss
v.
Lopez, supra; Laing v. United States,
Removal Upon a Finding of “Neglect”:
After the hearing on July 10, 1975, Judge Thetford ordered the termination of the parental rights of Plaintiff Wambles to Richard Roe on the basis that the child was “a dependent or neglected child as defined by the laws of Alabama.” As mentioned earlier, Alabama Code, Title 13, § 350, defines a “neglected child” as “any child, who, while under sixteen years of age * *
As discussed
supra,
the Constitution includes the right to family integrity among the fundamental rights secured to all persons. This right is applied to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment and is accorded strong protection from state interference. States, in the exercise of their inherent police powers, may abrogate such rights only to advance a compelling state interest and pursuant to a narrowly-drawn statute restricted to achieve only the legitimate objective. See, e.
g., Roe v. Wade,
Here, the State offered no assistance to Plaintiff Wambles, who was faced with the troubling predicament of raising a young child without the aid of a husband, nor did it explore the possibility of accomplishing its objective of protecting Richard Roe’s welfare by use of alternatives other than termination of custody.
The Alabama statute defining “neglected” children sweeps far past the constitutionally permissible range of interference into the sanctity of the family unit. The fact that a home is “improper” in the eyes of the state officials does not necessarily mean that a child in that home is subject to physical or emotional harm. 13
In
Alsager v. District Court of Polk County,
Iowa,
This Court holds, as an alternative ground, that the challenged statutory provisions are unconstitutionally vague. We adopt the reasoning and the language of the district court in Alsager v. District Court of Polk County, Iowa, supra, which states that,
Nevertheless, Due Process requires the state to clearly identify and define the evil from which the child needs protection and to specify what parental conduct so contributes to that evil that the state is justified in terminating the parent-child relationship.406 F.Supp. at 21 .
In the present case, not only is the statutory definition of neglect circular (a neglected child is any child who has no proper parental care by reason of neglect), but it is couched in terms that have no common meaning. See
Connally v. General Construction Co.,
Appointment of Counsel for the Child:
The Plaintiffs maintain that the Alabama child custody procedure violates the due process clause of the Constitution because that procedure does not provide for the appointment of independent counsel to represent a child in a neglect proceeding, and none was appointed here. We agree. Alabama Code, Title 13, §§ 350,
et seq.,
applies not only to “neglected” children but also to “delinquent” children. In this regard, it is similar to the Arizona juvenile delinquency law challenged in
In re Gault,
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that in respect of proceedings to determine delinquency which may result in commitment to an institution in which the juvenile’s freedom is curtailed, the child and his parents must be notified of the child’s right to be represented by counsel retained by them, or if they are unable to afford counsel, that counsel will be appointed to represent the child.387 U.S. at 41 ,87 S.Ct. at 1451 .
Much the same reasoning applies to a neglect determination proceeding. The juvenile court judge should, however, independently appoint counsel for the child, requiring the parents, if they are financially able, to pay for this legal representation. 14 If the parents are indigent, free counsel should be afforded the child. See id.
Consideration of Race:
Plaintiffs contend that there was a racial animus behind the decision to remove Richard Roe from his mother’s custody.
15
It is undisputed that Judge Thetford, at the time he signed the pick-up order, knew only that Margaret Wambles was unemployed, that she and her
While a white child who is part of an interracial family unit and lives in a black neighborhood may be disadvantaged socially or culturally, this fact alone does not rise to the level of harm to the child that is required before the State can terminate the parent’s right to custody of the child. 16 Since race per se can never amount to sufficient harm to justify a constitutional termination, this Court finds it unnecessary to decide whether consideration of racial factors by a juvenile court judge represents prohibited racial discrimination.
Legitimation and Procedural Due Process: Alabama Code, Title 27, § 11, provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
The father of a bastard child may legitimate it, and render it capable of inheriting his estate, by making a declaration in writing, attested by two witnesses, setting forth the name of the child proposed to be legitimated, its sex, supposed age, and the name of the mother, and that he thereby recognizes it as his child, and capable of inheriting his estate, real and personal, as if born in wedlock; the declaration being acknowledged by the maker before the judge of probate of the county of his residence, or its execution proved by the attesting witnesses, filed in the office of the judge of probate, and recorded on the minutes of his court, has the effect to legitimate such child * *.
Pursuant to this statutory provision, Cecil Coppage, through his attorney, filed a document in the Probate Court of Montgomery County declaring himself to be the father of Richard Roe. No notice or opportunity to be heard was provided to either Plaintiff Roe or Plaintiff Wambles.
Defendant Hobbie testified that, when a declarant and the mother of a child appear together at the Probate Office, the mother, as well as the father, signs the declaration. When, however, the mother does not come in with the declarant, there is no formal procedure for notifying the mother. Nor is there any procedure established for the mother to appear before the probate judge and express her objections when she learns of the declaration and objects to the legitimation. Finally, there is no opportunity in this ex parte legitimation proceeding for the interests of the child to be heard.
Legitimation confers benefits on the child and mother by obligating the father to support the child and allowing the child to inherit from the father’s estate. One would expect that the usual legitimation proceeding would thus be agreeable to the parties affected. This, however, is not the case in all situations.
The legitimation proceeding is recognized for purposes of establishing fatherhood. See
Bagwell v. Powell,
Since legitimation might possibly be adverse to the interests of the mother and her illegitimate child in the exercise of their family integrity, the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of procedural fairness must apply. The question then becomes, what process is due? As Justice Harlan, writing in
Boddie v. Connecticut,
Here, at a minimum, due process requires notice to the mother before legitimation .takes effect. Such notice should inform the mother that she has a reasonable period of time within which to notify the Probate Court if she objects to the legitimation. Upon being so notified, the Probate Court should appoint a guardian ad litem to represent the child and should conduct an informal hearing at which all interested parties could present evidence for determination of whether legitimation is in the best interest of the child.
Failure to Leave a Copy of the Pick-up Order with Margaret Wambles: Plaintiffs assert that the failure of Defendant Conn to leave a pick-up order with Plaintiff Wambles violated Title 13, § 352(5) of the Alabama Code, which requires delivery of a summons to the custodian of the child. While undoubtedly, Defendant Conn’s actions were not in conformity with the dictates of the statute, we find that such violations do not give rise to an independent cause of action, cognizable under state law, over which this forum would have pendent jurisdiction. Plaintiffs’ remedy for this violation should have been pursued in the original custody proceeding.
Name Change and Procedural Due Process: In connection with the legitimation procedure set out in Title 27, Code of Alabama, section 12 provides:
The father may, at the same time, change the name of such child, setting in his declaration the name it is then known by, and the name he wishes it afterwards to have.
Pursuant to this provision, Defendant Cop-page, as part of his declaration of fatherhood, changed Plaintiff Roe’s last name from Wambles to Coppage. 17 As with the legitimation procedure, the question is whether Title 27, § 12 violates due process by permitting a declarant to change a child’s name without providing the mother and/or the child notice and an opportunity to be heard. 18
In an earlier order filed March 8,1976, on Defendant Hobbie’s motion to dismiss, this Court rejected his contention that a parent’s interest in the name of a minor child does not constitute a “property” right within the meaning of the due process clause. Persuasive opinions are two Texas decisions, Esc
hrich v. Williamson,
The challenged statute, purporting to be concerned with the best interest of the child, at the same time denies the opportunity to show factors bearing on that issue. The statute presumes a fact—that the child’s best interest will be served by his bearing the name of the declared father— which is not necessarily or universally true. Due process requires an individual determination as to the appropriateness of the name change. To enable the probate judge to make this determination, notice and an opportunity to be heard must be given to the mother and to the child before a name change takes effect.
Name Change and Sex Discrimination:
Plaintiffs contend that Title 27, § 12 works a discrimination on the basis of sex by permitting the declared father to control the child’s name, irrespective of the wishes of the natural mother whose name the child has carried since birth. Surnames give an individual a personal identity and selfawareness. It seems clear that Plaintiff Roe has a “liberty” interest at stake when
This Court concludes that there is no rational basis for the state’s policy of giving to the declared father complete control over the child’s name. For this reason, we find that Title 27, § 12 violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In changing a child’s name pursuant to a declaration of father, the State should be directed not by the desires of the father but by the best interest of the child.
Failure of Defendants to Comply with the Statute: Alabama Code, Title 27, § 11 provides that the father of an illegitimate child must make his declaration of fatherhood before the judge of probate of “his” residence. While the statute is not altogether free from ambiguity (“his” residence could mean the child’s), apparently the Legislature was referring to the residence of the father. 20 Yet, in the present case, Defendant Coppage, a resident of Pike County, Alabama, filed his declaration in the Probate Court of Montgomery County, Alabama. Plaintiffs, however, have not established that this violation of the venue provisions of Title 27, § 11 gives rise to an independent cause of action against Defendant Coppage that may be asserted in a collateral proceeding in federal court. Like the failure of Defendant Conn to leave a copy of the pick-up order, this procedural error is cognizable only in the original proceeding in the state court.
APPENDIX A
THE STATE OF ALABAMA _....................JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
OCTOBER TERM 1975-76
RESOLUTION AND ORDER CREATING AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO MAKE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR RULES OF ADMINISTRATION, PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE IN JUVENILE COURTS
WHEREAS, the Supreme Court of Alabama, in reviewing Act No. 1205, Acts of Alabama 1975, approved October 10, 1975, concludes that Article 5 shall become effective January 16, 1977, statutory provisions currently effective remaining in full force and effect until that time; and
WHEREAS, the effectuation of Article 5 of said Act No. 1205 on the effective date requires the Supreme Court to promulgate certain rules of practice and procedure as set forth throughout Article 5 of said Act No. 1205; and
WHEREAS, said Act No. 1205 and Article 6, Section 150 of the Constitution of Alabama, as amended, conferred upon the Supreme Court of Alabama the authority to
WHEREAS, the Supreme Court wishes to appoint an advisory committee to make recommendations for rules of administration, practice and procedure for juvenile cases;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDERED by the Supreme Court of Alabama, on this 1st day of December, 1975, as follows:
(1) That an Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice be, and hereby is, created, with the following membership as indicated hereafter:
Dr. Annette Dodd, Cumberland School of Law, Birmingham—Chairperson
Judge James Strickland, Mobile
Judge G. Ross Bell, Birmingham
Judge James Buck, Tuscaloosa
Judge James Brotherton, Jasper
Judge William Sanford, Opelika
Judge Jerry Vanderhoef, Tuscumbia
Honorable Robert M. Hill, Jr., Florence
Honorable Fred D. Gray, Montgomery
James Lavender, Dept, of Youth Services, Montgomery
Dr. Wayne Teague, State Superintendent of Education, Auburn
Dr. Thomas F. Staton, Chairman, Board of Corrections, Montgomery.
(2) That said advisory committee report to the Supreme Court with recommendations concerning a set of rules for administration, practice and procedure in juvenile courts on or about June 1, 1976.
All Justices concur.
Notes
. Title 13, § 350(2) reads in pertinent part: “The words ‘neglected child’ shall mean any child, who, while under sixteen years of age * * * has no proper parental care or guardianship or whose home, by reason of neglect, cruelty, or depravity, on the part of his parent or parents, guardian or other person in whose care he may be, is an unfit and improper place for such child * * * or is under such inlproper or insufficient guardianship or control as to endanger the morals, health or general welfare of such child * * * or who for any other cause is in need of the care and protection of the state.” Sec. 350(4) provides that any child described as neglected shall be subject to the guardianship of the state and entitled to its care and protection. Sec. 352 sets forth the procedure to be followed in a child
. In Montgomery County, both the Youth Aid Division of the Police Department and the County Department of Pensions and Security may investigate cases of possible child neglect or dependency and request an immediate pickup order or file a removal petition.
. Plaintiff Wambles had lived in Montgomery, Alabama, since 1969 and had worked at Morrison’s Cafeteria from 1969 to 1972 and again from August 1974 until May 1975.
. The motion for a new trial had requested that blood tests be taken of the parties involved and a new determination be made of Richard Roe’s parentage in light of the results of those tests.
. Dr. Sally A. Provence is professor of pediatrics at Yale University Child Sltudy Center and Director of the Child Development Unit, author of Guide to the Care of Infants in Groups (1967), and co-author of Infants in Institutions. For the past 25 years, she has been involved in clinical work with children and parents in child development research.
. Dr. Albert J. Solnit is Sterling Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry and Director of the Child Study Center at Yale University. In this capacity, he teaches child development, child psychiatry, family law, and child psychoanalysis. Dr. Solnit has published, in corroboration with Dr. Milton J. E. Senn, a textbook, Problems in Child Behavior and Development (1968), and, in corroboration with Drs. Gold-stein and Freud, a book entitled, Beyond the Best Interests of the Child (1973).
. Dr. Jonas Robitscher is a Henry R. Luce, Professor of Law and the Behavioral Science at Emory University Schools of Law and Medicine.
. See
Goldberg v. Kelly,
. The drastic nature of summary seizure can be' seen in the testimony of the experts. Drs. Provence and Solnit state that “summary removal of a young child from a parent who has been his major caregiver is a severe threat to his development [because] it disrupts and grossly endangers what he most needs, that is, the continuity of affectionate care from those to whom he is attached through bonds of love.” These two doctors believe that summary seizure should be resorted to only when the child's “physical survival” is at stake. Dr. Robitscher states that summary seizure is justified in his opinion only when the child’s “physical health and emotional health are at serious risk after all other alternatives to removal have been thoroughly studied.”
. See
Golberg v. Kelly,
. A “dependent child” is “any child, who, while under sixteen years of age, for any reason, is destitute, homeless, or is dependent on the public for support; or who is without a parent or guardian able to provide for his support, training and education; or whose custody is the subject of controversy.” Alabama Code, Title 13, § 350 (1958). Apparently, none of these apply to the present case, and Judge Thetford relied solely on the “neglected child” rubric.
. It must be emphasized that this standard . does not apply to all custody proceedings but only those where the State seeks to assume custody. In proceedings where the parties have an arguably equal right to custody, such as pursuant to a divorce, a “best interest of the child” standard is entirely appropriate.
. Although the Alabama Department of Pensions and Security has published a Manual for Administration of Services for Children and Their Families (January, 1969), refining somewhat this definition, the manual is for administrative purposes only and is not binding on the juvenile court judges who ultimately decide these cases.
. In a juvenile delinquency proceeding, having the parents retain counsel for the child normally does not present the same kind of potential conflict as in a proceeding where the parents are accused of abusing the child.
. The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals in its decision, Wambles v. Coppage, Civ. No. 746, filed June 16, 1976, refused to consider the question of whether race influenced Judge Thetford’s decision since the appeal was taken from Judge Davis’ denial of Plaintiff Wambles’ motion for modification of custody and not the original custody order.
. Neither is the fact that the parent is living with someone to whom he or she is not married. “Immorality” of the parent, without a showing that the child is being physically or emotionally harmed in a real way, is not sufficient justification for the State to terminate a parent-child relationship.
. Plaintiff Roe was born out of wedlock, no information relative to his father was entered on his birth certificate, and he was given the surname of his mother. Alabama Code, Title 22, § 33 (1958).
. Title 27, § 12, has not been construed in any published cases, but the procedure followed in the present cases indicates that a notice requirement has not been read into the statute.
. Furthermore, since
Forbush
was decided, the Supreme Court, in
Reed v. Reed,
. Who would always be a “he,” which is not necessarily the case with the child.
