A. v. B.
This text of 233 S.W.2d 629 (A. v. B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A.
v.
B.
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
*630 Kenneth C. Coffelt, Little Rock, for appellant.
Clayton Freeman and Robert E. Diles, Little Rock, for appellee.
LEFLAR, Justice.
This appeal involves two cases which were consolidated for trial below. In one case, Mr. and Mrs. A were petitioners in Probate Court seeking to adopt a child. After entry of an interlocutory order of adoption, but before entry of any final order, Mr. and Mrs. B intervened asking that the adoption be denied and that the child be turned over to them as its natural parents. The other case arose out of a petition filed by Mr. and Mrs. B in Chancery Court against Mr. and Mrs. A seeking custody of the same child. Since the same judge presides in both courts, the cases were tried together. The decision was for Mr. and Mrs. A in each case, and Mr. and Mrs. B appeal.
The child was born to C, now Mrs. B, but then an unmarried girl, on June 2, 1947. The mother cared for the child herself until Feb. 7, 1948, when she placed it with Mr. and Mrs. A agreeing to pay them $8.00 per week for its room and board. This she paid until April 10, 1948. On that date she left for California. The baby remained with Mr. and Mrs. A, but they received no further payments for its board and room.
On Nov. 20, 1948, Mr. and Mrs. A filed their petition for adoption of the child, and on June 17, 1949, the Probate Court's interlocutory order of adoption was rendered. Consent of the mother to the adoption was filed in accordance with Ark. Stats. § 56-106, after the consent form was mailed to her in California and there on Feb. 12, 1949, filled out and returned by her. Evidence at the hearing on the interlocutory order included a report of the Child Welfare Division of the State Department of Public Welfare to the effect that Mr. and Mrs. A were "conscientious, hardworking people, regular in their habits and financially able to assume the responsibility of rearing this child in a modest but wholesome manner." It was brought out that they owned their own suburban home, which was modern and comfortably furnished, that Mr. A was a carpenter by trade, that he also owned a farm, that they had given the child good care and were attached to it, that the child was in poor physical condition due to malnutrition when it was turned over to them but that they by medical care and personal attention had restored it to good health.[1] It was on the basis of this evidence that the interlocutory adoption order was issued.
Appellant Mr. B. is the putative father of the child. At the time of its birth, and until Sept. 2, 1949, Mr. B, a sergeant in the U. S. Army, was married to another woman. On the date named his wife secured a divorce from him, and custody of *631 their children. Then on Oct. 15, 1949, he and C were married. Early in January, 1950, they filed their custody suit and their intervention in the As' adoption proceeding. At the trial thereof, as already stated, Mr. and Mrs. A prevailed.
The principal argument presented for reversal, on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. B, is that the adoption order is ineffectual without the consent thereto filed by the mother, and that this consent was withdrawn before any final order of adoption was issued.
We have had occasion once before to discuss the question whether a consent to adoption filed under § 56-106 by the mother of an illegitimate child is final and conclusive on the mother, or can be withdrawn by her. In Combs v. Edmiston, 216 Ark. 270, 225 S.W.2d 26 our holding was that such consent could be withdrawn, under the circumstances of that case, prior to the entry of the interlocutory decree of adoption. We also mentioned, but had no occasion to pass upon, the question whether a consent given in statutory form by the mother could be withdrawn after entry of an interlocutory order of adoption and before final order, so as to defeat the adoption.
As pointed out in Combs v. Edmiston, there are three lines of authority on the latter question. The weight of authority among the older decisions was that the natural parent's consent to adoption might be effectively withdrawn or revoked at any time before the adoption was finally approved and decreed by the court. In Re White's Adoption, 300 Mich. 378, 1 N.W. 2d 579, 138 A.L.R. 1034. But it was pointed out that "the trend of the more recent authority is toward the position that where a natural parent has freely and knowingly given the requisite consent to the adoption of his or her child, and the proposed adoptive parents have acted upon such consent by bringing adoption proceedings, the consent is ordinarily binding upon the natural parent and cannot be arbitrarily withdrawn so as to bar the court from decreeing the adoption, particularly where, in reliance upon such consent, the proposed adoptive parents have taken the child into their custody, and care for a substantial period of time, and bonds of affection, in the nature of a `vested right,' have been forged between them and the child." [216 Ark. 270, 225 S.W.2d 28.] See In re Adoption of a Minor, 79 U.S. App.D.C. 191, 144 F.2d 644, 156 A.L.R. 1001. Finally, we stated the third view in the following language:
"It has also been said that, from a consideration of the cases generally, the question whether the natural parent may revoke consent previously given depends upon all the circumstances of the particular case, which may include such a variety of matters as the terms of the particular statute; the circumstances under which the consent was given; the length of time elapsing, and the conduct of the parties between the giving of the consent and the attempted withdrawal; whether the withdrawal was made before or after institution of adoption proceedings ; the nature of the natural parents' conduct with respect to the child both before and after consenting to its adoption; the `vested rights' of the proposed adoptive parents with respect to the child; and, in some cases, the relative abilities of the adoptive parents and the natural parents to rear the child in a manner best suited to its normal development, and other circumstances indicative of what the best interests of the child require. Annotation 156 A.L.R. [1011]".
Of these three views, we now conclude that the one last stated is preferable. It is the one under which maximum consideration can be given to the welfare of the child itself while at the same time the interests of the competing adults can be given fair weight. It has less of arbitrariness about it than has either of the more extreme views.
Applying then the rule which permits consideration of all the surrounding circumstances in the case, we hold that the mother's consent in the instant case could not be withdrawn, as was attempted. The baby has lived with Mr. and Mrs. A for most of the three years of its life; *632 they are the only parents it has really known. The mother left it in their hands and made no effort to support it or secure its custody from April 10, 1948, until the custody suit was filed in January, 1950. She gave her consent to the adoption freely and without any suggestion of coercion there were no questionable incidents to the consent such as were present in Combs v. Edmiston, supra.
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