Adoption of Abigail

499 N.E.2d 1234, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 191, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1918
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 499 N.E.2d 1234 (Adoption of Abigail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Abigail, 499 N.E.2d 1234, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 191, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1918 (Mass. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Kass, J.

Sixteen days after her birth on October 27, 1982, Abigail was placed with the family by which the Department of Social Services proposes she be adopted. Nobody disputes the incapacity of Abigail’s biological parents at the time of her initial placement. The question is the fitness of the biological mother 2 to be Abigail’s parent in mid-April, 1985, when *193 the petition was heard. Abigail was then two and one-half years old; and the mother was then thirty years old. A judge of the Probate Court found the mother was not fit, and she has appealed.

Abigail suffers from a complex of neurological and psychological disorders which manifest themselves in defective motor control and delayed development, notably in the areas of language and cognition. Toward the reduction of her deficits, Abigail has had the assistance of speech therapists, physical therapists, psychologists and social workers. As to language, for example, it was possible to work out particular phrases which the foster parents would use consistently. What another child might learn casually, Abigail could learn through frequent and consistent use. For whoever acted as her parents, this was a demanding task because it required careful listening to seemingly insignificant differences. Yet those differences would be decisive of the child’s ability to understand. It was necessary to encode everyday speech into the more limited speech patterns within Abigail’s grasp.

Similar special methods could compensate for Abigail’s physical difficulties-. The child was wont to topple over when standing or sitting, but it was possible to stimulate her balance responses in a way which would refine them so that the inherent handicaps could, in significant measure, be overcome. This, too, required a high order of attention and consistency by the persons responsible for Abigail’s care.

Abigail’s special needs are relevant because they bear on whether this particular mother (i.e., the biological mother) can be a fit parent to this particular child. We summarize what the judge found on clear and convincing evidence (see Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745,769-770 [1982]) about the mother.

The mother is mildly retarded; her Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale quotient is 68. She has poor understanding of the meaning of simple vocabulary words. She shows little ability to understand how the world around her operates. Her judgment is limited, and she lacks a common-sense understanding of the *194 world. 3 During her own childhood, the mother moved among a series of institutions and foster homes. From age seven to fifteen she was a resident of the Belchertown State School, a facility for the mentally handicapped. From age fifteen to the time when Abigail was bom, the mother’s life was characterized by a series of moves, acute alcoholism, drug abuse, and intermittent encounters with the law. Often she was assaul-tive and suicidal. Her relationship with the biological father was on and off. At the time of Abigail’s birth, the mother had moved in with another man.

In 1977, the mother made a connection with a family then resident in Burlington, Vermont, which we shall refer to as the Bee family. She lived with the Bees in 1977 and again in 1982, when she became pregnant. That relationship becomes important in the case because with the Bees the mother’s life became less self-destmctive and, indeed, comparatively stable.

It is easy to exaggerate that stability. Trial and appellate counsel for the mother (they are not the same) have understandably done so. In 1982, the Bees moved to New Hampshire when the mother was eight months pregnant and she moved to Greenfield. In December, 1983, the mother moved back with the Bee family. That lasted for the better part of a year, but in March, 1985, one month before the court hearing, the mother was not living with the Bee family; she was staying with the biological father and his teenage girl friend.

In attempting to make her case for assuming full legal responsibility for Abigail, the mother gave voice to an expectation that the members of the Bee family would backstop her in coping with Abigail’s unusual problems. The probate judge was pessimistic about the prospects. The Bees, he found, had troubles of their own: Mr. Bee had undergone six major operations within a recent period; Mrs. Bee’s father had just had his remaining leg amputated; and their ten year old son was handicapped and had special needs.

*195 There were positive signs. The mother had held a job in a diner. She had brought her drinking and drug abuse under control and, when with the Bees, she was able to contribute to the care of the Bee children, preparing meals, getting them off to school and so forth.

If the question were simply one of the mother’s limited intelligence, matched with a child of normal needs, there might not be a lawful basis for the radical step of terminating the link between natural mother and child. Mental retardation of a parent is not of itself a ground for terminating parental rights. Petition of the Dept. of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 20 Mass. App. Ct. 689, 696 & n.4 (1985). For a mental weakness to be relevant, “there must be a showing that it has a bearing on the parent’s fitness or on the child’s well-being.” Petition of the Dept. of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 392 Mass. 696, 701 (1984).

We think the judge’s findings make the necessary link between the mother’s handicaps and her ability to raise Abigail. The child’s medication, for example, requires that she receive, at the correct times, half-doses of phenobarbital twice daily and Dilantin thrice daily. There are the speech and physical reinforcement exercises. Those activities require concentration and orderliness which cannot reasonably be expected of someone with the mother’s limited abilities. It may be, as the mother testified, “I got my act together” and that “[m]y past is my past.” Assuming that progress has occurred, it nonetheless does not equip the mother for the peculiarly demanding parent tasks which Abigail requires. Nothing in the record suggests that the mother was able to acquire habits of precision. The following segment from the mother’s direct examination illustrates the vague ideas she had about her child ’ s specific needs.

“Q.: Do you have any special schools in Vermont?

A.: I’m checking it out.

Q.: Do you know that she needs special medical care?

A.: Yes. I’m checking that out, too.”

Two clinical psychologists who had worked with the mother independently gave it as their opinion that the mother would *196 treat Abigail more as a doll to satisfy the mother’s needs for a love object, rather than treating the child as a growing being.

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Bluebook (online)
499 N.E.2d 1234, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 191, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-abigail-massappct-1986.