Adoption of Bowling v. Bowling

631 S.W.2d 386, 1982 Tenn. LEXIS 396
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 631 S.W.2d 386 (Adoption of Bowling v. Bowling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Bowling v. Bowling, 631 S.W.2d 386, 1982 Tenn. LEXIS 396 (Tenn. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

BROCK, Justice.

In this case Jimmy Ralph Bowling opposes the termination of his parental rights and the adoption of his son Tommy (Thomas Stevenson Bowling II) by the child’s maternal grandmother, Muriel Sweet Keck Ahlers. The child’s paternal grandparents, Thomas Stevenson Bowling and Evelyn Ruth Bowling, also oppose the adoption. The child’s mother was murdered by her husband, Jimmy Bowling, on November 19, 1975.

I

A month after Jimmy Bowling killed his wife, Tommy’s paternal grandparents, the Thomas Bowlings, petitioned in Chancery Court to adopt the child. Ms. Ahlers intervened, also seeking to adopt the boy. In January, 1976, Ms. Ahlers was granted custody of Tommy by the Knox County Juvenile Court. The Bowlings took a voluntary *388 nonsuit in the Chancery Court case in March, 1976. Thereupon, the Chancery Court ordered that Ms. Ahlers’ intervening adoption petition be dismissed, that custody be awarded to Ms. Ahlers, and that visitation privileges be granted to the Thomas Bowlings. The instant proceeding was begun in August of 1976 when Ms. Ahlers petitioned in the Chancery Court for Knox County to adopt Tommy. The child’s father opposed the adoption and a full hearing was held.

In February, 1977, the court entered a memorandum opinion finding that Jimmy Bowling had abandoned his son. 1 The court ordered termination of Jimmy Bowling’s parental rights and decreed the adoption of the child by Ms. Ahlers. Before this decree became final the Thomas Bowlings intervened. They asserted that they had not been parties to the proceeding, although they had been present and had testified at the hearing, and that the order improperly cut off their visitation rights.

After a second hearing, the court rendered a second memorandum opinion, in September, 1978, in which the court again found that Jimmy Bowling had abandoned his son. In the second memorandum opinion the Chancellor based his finding of abandonment on defendant’s continued course of neglect and violent conduct. The court dismissed the Bowlings’ intervening complaint in November, 1978, and entered a second decree of adoption. The Court of Appeals affirmed this final decree.

Jimmy Bowling contests the holding of the lower courts that he abandoned his son within the meaning of the adoption statutes, T.C.A., §§ 36-101 et seq. and he challenges the decree of adoption of his son.

II

What constitutes “abandonment” for purposes of adoption? At the time of these proceedings “abandonment” was defined in the Code in the chapter on adoption as follows:

“36-102. Definitions. — . ...
“(5) For the purpose of this chapter an ‘abandoned child’ shall be:
“1. A child whose parents have willfully failed to visit or have willfully failed to support or make payments toward his support for four (4) consecutive months immediately preceding institution of an action or proceeding to declare the child to be an abandoned child; or
“2. When, as the result of a petition filed in the juvenile court the court has found a child to be a dependent and neglected child as defined in § 37-242, removed the child from the home of the parents and placed the child in the temporary custody of the state department of human services or the licensed child-placing agency and for a period of four (4) months the department or agency has given assistance to the parents in an effort to establish a suitable home for the child, as the result of a petition filed in the chancery or circuit court by the department of human services or the agency and the parents are duly before the court by service of process, the court finds that the parents have made no effort to provide a suitable home, have shown a lack of concern as to the child’s welfare and have failed to achieve a degree of personal rehabilitation as would indicate that, at some future date, they would provide a suitable home for the child, the chancery or circuit courts shall have jurisdiction to decree the child an abandoned child, to terminate the parental rights and appoint a duly authorized representative of the de *389 partment of human services or the licensed child-placing agency having custody of the child with authority to place the child for adoption and to consent to the adoption in loco par-entis.”

Since the child in this case has not been declared dependent and neglected as set out under paragraph (2), we are not directly concerned with that provision.

The Court of Appeals held that the statutory definition contained in paragraph (1) of subsection (5) was not applicable and applied the following definition instead:

“Abandonment imports any conduct on the part of the parent which evinces a settled purpose to forego all parental duties and relinquish all parental claims to the child.” (Citing Ex Parte Wolfenden, 49 Tenn.App. 1, 349 S.W.2d 713 (1959).)

The court held that when a parent murders his or her spouse, the other parent, and is sentenced to prison for a substantial period of time, he has thereby abandoned his child.

The definition of abandonment employed by the Court of Appeals was first laid down in 1959 in an opinion written by Judge Allison Humphreys, who later served with distinction as a member of this Court, in Ex Parte Wolfenden, 49 Tenn.App. 1, 2, 349 S.W.2d 713, 714 (1959), as follows:

“So, the issue of abandonment should be resolved by the Circuit Court under the following statement of the law:
‘Abandonment imports any conduct on the part of the parent which evinces a settled purpose to forego all parental duties and relinquish all parental claims to the child. It does not follow that the purpose may not be repented of, and, in proper cases all parental rights again acquired.... But when abandonment is shown to have existed, it becomes a judicial question whether it really has been terminated, or can be, consistently with the welfare of the child.’ 1 Am.Jur., Adoption of Children, § 42.” 349 S.W.2d at 714.

Certiorari review of the decision of the Court of Appeals in Wolfenden was sought but denied by this Court.

In this same Wolfenden

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631 S.W.2d 386, 1982 Tenn. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-bowling-v-bowling-tenn-1982.