Adoption of Gregory

501 N.E.2d 1179, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 948, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1949
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 501 N.E.2d 1179 (Adoption of Gregory) 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 Gregory, 501 N.E.2d 1179, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 948, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1949 (Mass. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

We affirm decrees of the Probate Court for Plymouth County which, at the suit of the Department of Social Services (Department), declared pursuant to G. L. c. 210, § 3, that the consent of the parents, the Johnsons (not their real name), is not required .in connection with any petition for the adoption of their three children, whom we shall call Gregory, Christine, and Renee.

As is so often the case in proceedings of this sort, the record is lengthy and some of it is diffuse. We attempt a short account of the case; then go into some further detail; and finally deal with the contentions of the parents, the appellants.

1. Statement. Upon a petition alleging that the children were in need of care and protection (see G. L. c. 119, § 24), a judge of the Brockton District [949]*949Court on June 21, 1979, entered an order granting temporary custody of the children to the Department of Social Services (then the Department of Public Welfare).1 Gregory was then seven years old; Christine, six; Renee, five. The Department placed the children with their paternal grandparents. After about a year, the grandparents stated they were unable to continue to care for the children, and apparently they expressed the view that the children should be taken for adoption. A social worker of the Children’s Protective Service applied for an order granting “permanent” custody to the Department, and the court, after receiving a report from the court-appointed investigator and hearing evidence, granted the order on July 1, 1980. The judge made findings of parental incompetence and abuse resulting in serious damage to the children, and concluded that the children required an environment which the parents were unable to provide.

The Department placed the children with the Italian Home for Children (IHC) in Jamaica Plain, Boston, in August (Christine and Renee) and September (Gregory), 1980. This residential treatment facility, with which the Department contracted for services, housed at the time some forty disturbed children who (typically) had suffered from parental maltreatment of various sorts. IHC undertook to try to rehabilitate the children to the point where they could be considered for release either to the parents, assuming the home situation could be sufficiently improved, or to suitable foster homes. The record allows the inference that, taking account of what appeared at the time of intake about the condition of the children and the disabilities of the parents, the people at IHC proceeded at first on the basis (perhaps not squarely articulated) that the children, if and when sufficiently rehabilitated, would be tendered for adoption and not returned to their parents, since adequate improvement in the latter direction was not to be expected. The record further suggests that, conformably with that view, there was no defined program in the early months for visits by the parents with the children at IHC, although the parents were permitted such (supervised) visits. Nor does there appear to have been a defined program, either on the part of the IHC or the Department, for counseling or other work with the parents with a purpose, if possible, to reunite the family.

The situation was markedly changed after a meeting in February, 1981, with counsel for the Department.2 As the meeting can be reconstructed, counsel advised, in effect, that there should be no assumption that the parents’ disabilities excluded any reasonable likelihood of their regaining custody of the children; on the contrary, IHC and the Department should make definite efforts to assist the parents to overcome their disabilities, these efforts to proceed alongside the attempts to help the children. The workers at IHC established accordingly a schedule for the parents’ visits at IHC, and representatives of IHC and the Department commenced meetings [950]*950on a regular basis with the parents to counsel them about their “parenting” problems and to encourage them to join programs in the community that could afford them practical lessons to overcome these problems. In September, 1981, the parents endorsed a “service plan” prepared by the Department which, after recounting some of the deficiencies found in the parents’ attitudes and performance, outlined the cooperative efforts expected of them that might lead to a favorable evaluation and avert their losing the children to adoption. As of January 29, 1982, we have an important “Diagnostic Evaluation” by Linda S. Gamitz of IHC which pictures the still unresolved inadequacies of the parents and the improved, yet still fragile conditions of the children. In March, 1982, the present proceeding was filed. However, visits with the children and counseling remained available to the parents.

The record indicates that in mid-December, 1982, Gregory and Renee went from IHC to a preadoptive home; their sister Christine, a more aggravated case, was released to a different preadoptive home in February, 1983.

The present proceeding came on for trial in March and September, 1983, and findings of fact, rulings of law, and decrees favorable to the Department were filed on October 31, 1983. The guardian ad litem had advised the court to the same effect. The parents took their appeal, but after the record was assembled the Department moved to amend the findings and rulings and to take further evidence. This formed the basis for a “review hearing” of October 23, 1985, after which the judge made findings of fact dated December 2,1985. These reaffirmed his earlier findings of parental unfitness and his conclusion that parental consent to adoption should not be required. The parents have appealed on the enlarged record.

2. Further detail. We draw a more detailed picture from the judge’s findings as amplified from the extended record.

(a) Care and protection. The mother’s1 cousin, a nurse, complained in 1975 that Renee had been neglected. This resulted in the child’s hospitalization. From 1975 onward the Department received a number of substantiated reports that the children were suffering physical and emotional abuse at the hands of the mother.3 She resisted the attempts by various agencies to provide help to the family, was openly hostile to the workers, missed appointments with them, and so forth. The care and protection application followed, ending in the temporary order of June 21, 1979. The findings which supported the permanent order of July 1, 1980, confirmed by particular instances that the mother had maltreated the children both physically and verbally, with Christine perhaps suffering the most serious abuse. The father figured as a cipher in the household and could not be looked to for [951]*951intervention or remedy. Concluding his findings, the judge recommended long-term treatment in a supportive and stable setting. IHC provided just such an environment, and the record indicates that the workers there concentrated medical, psychological, and educational attention on the children in a conscientious and impressive way.

(b) Condition of the children. Some idea of the children’s basic characteristics follows. Of the three, Gregory was perhaps nearest “normal.” He had above average intelligence, but was having trouble functioning mentally because of his emotional difficulties, which interfered with his ability to fix on a problem without his mind wandering. He was highly anxious as a result of his unstructured and ambiguous family life. The anxiety manifested itself in hyperactivity.

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Bluebook (online)
501 N.E.2d 1179, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 948, 1986 Mass. App. LEXIS 1949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-gregory-massappct-1986.