Adoption of Oliver

554 N.E.2d 40, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 620, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 266
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 25, 1990
Docket89-P-1371
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 554 N.E.2d 40 (Adoption of Oliver) 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 Oliver, 554 N.E.2d 40, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 620, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 266 (Mass. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

The mother of Oliver appeals from a decree of the Probate and Family Court entered March 15, 1988, dispensing with the mother’s consent to Oliver’s adoption. It was contemplated at that time that Oliver’s foster parents would adopt him. Due to a change of counsel for the mother and to difficulties in locating the trial testimony and getting it transcribed, the appeal was not entered in this court until December 4, 1989. (Prompt briefing allowed the case to be heard March 12, 1990.) The decree provided that it should be reviewed one year from its date unless within that time a decree of adoption should have been entered. See pars. 12 and 13 of Rule Xa of the Uniform Practices of the Probate Court (1982), which call for inclusion of a target date for adoption in a decree dispensing with parental con *621 sent. We assume no such review took place while the case was on appeal.

We need not decide in this case whether the one-year period stated in the decree was intended to run from the date of entry of the decree or from the date of the rescript affirming (as this decision does) the decree. Because of the two-year period that was lost in the appellate process, coupled with the sixteen-month period between the principal trial and the entry of the decree, 1 it is appropriate in this case that such a review be scheduled without delay, giving the mother an opportunity to provide any additional evidence that she may feel has a bearing on the question of her fitness to care for Oliver.

We emphasize this point, because it dilutes to some extent one of the principal contentions made by the mother in this court — namely, that the decree was based in large part on stale information, dating, as it did, from mid-1984, when the Department of Social Services was awarded permanent custody of Oliver. 2 The principal source of that allegedly stale information was the findings and rulings of the Boston Juvenile Court judge who heard the permanent custody case (a care and protection proceeding). These were entered February 28, 1985. The findings, which numbered 223, may fairly be characterized as an exhaustive treatment of the problems of the mother, Oliver, and Oliver’s three brothers (all older) up to the trial in 1984. 3 The findings of the Juvenile Court judge were entered as an exhibit in this case, without objection or restriction. Approximately sixty of the judge’s findings in the present case are based on (or are exactly duplicative of) those entered in the Juvenile Court. The remaining findings (about fifty in number) are, the mother argues, insufficient to show “grievous shortcomings or handicaps that *622 would put [Oliver’s] welfare in the family milieu much at hazard,” Petition of the New England Home for Little Wanderers to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 367 Mass. 631, 646 (1975), this being an essential precondition to dispensing with parental consent. Ibid.

The mother does not dispute the general rule that the findings in earlier custody or care and protection proceedings are admissible in later proceedings relative to adoption and can be given evidentiary weight but not preclusive effect. Adoption of Frederick, 405 Mass. 1, 5-6 (1989). Rather, the gravamen of the argument seems to be that, (1) because the trial in this case took place before Adoption of Frederick, at a time when attorneys assumed that the findings essential to judgment in the earlier custody case were preclusive in their effect in the later adoption proceeding (see Petition of the Dept. of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 384 Mass. 707, 710 n.9 [1981]), (2) because those findings were stale (two and one-half years old at trial, nearly four years when the probate judge’s findings were entered 4 ), and (3) because they were the basis of more than half of the probate judge’s findings, their admission in this case was “improper, prejudicial . . . , and patently unfair.”

We should be concerned if there were some indication that the probate judge had given the Juvenile Court findings improper effect: if, for example, he had treated the earlier finding of the mother’s unfitness as determinative of her current unfitness or had depended on specific incidents of neglect at remote times to determine the mother’s current capacity to care for Oliver. This certainly was not the case. The judge was fully aware that the issue before him was the mother’s current fitness, not her past fitness. Reading his findings as a whole, it is clear to us that he used the findings for the entirely proper purpose of illuminating the history of the case, the events that led to the current proceeding, and underlying conditions, medical and otherwise, that are not readily susceptible of change.

*623 Here, we refer to the facts that the mother is afflicted by alcoholism and Oliver in turn by the symptoms of fetal alcohol syndrome. These were the subject of Juvenile Court findings. Under the holding of Adoption of Frederick, the mother could contest their veracity in the current proceeding. In fact, she did not do so; through counsel she readily conceded both facts. The focus of the trial, properly, was not on placing blame for what happened in the past but, rather, on the mother’s current success (or lack thereof) in coping with her alcoholism, on Oliver’s particular needs arising out of his impaired condition, and on the mother’s potential for success in responding to those needs.

The mother’s focus at trial was in showing that she had come to grips with her alcoholism in late spring, 1984, when she participated in a twenty-eight day alcohol treatment program at the Mattapan Hospital; that from that time she had attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings on a fairly regular basis; that, following several years of trying to cope with her problems and those of her four children as a widow, 5 *5 the mother remarried in 1985 and now had an established home; that she worked on a regular basis; and that since losing custody she had shown up often for scheduled visitations with Oliver and his next older brother. 6

The petitioner, in seeking to dispense with the mother’s consent to Oliver’s adoption, was less sanguine about the mother’s success in dealing with her alcoholism. It adduced evidence, which the judge believed, that its social workers had thought the mother to be under the influence of alcohol at least twice during the previous year and a half; that the mother’s interaction with the children at the visitations was *624 minimal (for the most part the two brothers played with each other, largely ignoring the mother’s presence); that, while she had attended many of the bi-weekly meetings scheduled with Oliver and his older brother (see note 6, supra), she had generally failed to attend the meetings scheduled with a social worker to review the children’s progress in their foster homes 7

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Adoption of Lurleen.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
ADOPTION OF JANICE (And a Companion Case).
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
Care and Protection of Verena.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
Adoption of Gino.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
ADOPTION OF GURPRIT (And Two Companion Cases).
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
Adoption of Flavia
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
ADOPTION OF EVELYN (And a Companion Case).
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2023
In re Adoption (And
102 N.E.3d 1018 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Adoption of Lisette
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018
Commonwealth v. Cokonougher
585 N.E.2d 345 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
554 N.E.2d 40, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 620, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-oliver-massappct-1990.