Adoption of Tobias D.

2012 ME 45, 40 A.3d 990, 2012 WL 1035614, 2012 Me. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 29, 2012
DocketDocket: Han-11-186
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2012 ME 45 (Adoption of Tobias D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Tobias D., 2012 ME 45, 40 A.3d 990, 2012 WL 1035614, 2012 Me. LEXIS 45 (Me. 2012).

Opinion

GORMAN, J.

[¶ 1] R.M. appeals from a judgment entered in the Hancock County Probate Court (Patterson> J.) denying his petition to establish his parental rights to Tobias D. and granting the petition of the child’s current guardians to terminate his parental rights to the child. R.M. argues that the court erred in failing to find that he is the child’s legal father, in determining that he is not entitled to parental rights pursuant to 18-A M.R.S. § 9-201 (2011), and in terminating his parental rights pursuant to *992 18-A M.R.S. § 9-204 (2011). He also challenges the constitutionality of section 9-201, and the court’s reliance on the testimony of a particular witness. We vacate the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] Tobias was born in September of 2009. His mother, who was living in Indiana, was sexually active with multiple men around the time of the child’s conception, including (1) her husband, who is not the child’s father according to a DNA test; (2) R.M.; and (3) a man she could identify only as “Jose.” At some point during her pregnancy, the mother informed R.M. that she was pregnant, he might be the father, and she was planning to terminate the pregnancy; the mother later informed R.M.’s aunt that she had had an abortion, and R.M. believed that to be true.

[¶ 3] Unbeknownst to R.M., however, the mother had informally arranged for the child to be adopted by a family friend and the friend’s husband (the guardians) in Maine. The mother gave birth to the child in Maine and left the child with the guardians a few days after giving birth. The child, now two and one-half years old, has resided with the guardians since then.

[¶ 4] The guardians filed three petitions in the Probate Court on November 9, 2009: a petition to adopt the child, a petition for guardianship of the child, and a petition for temporary guardianship of the child. 1 With the petitions for guardianship, the mother submitted a “Consent and Affidavit” dated October 22, 2009, and a separate undated affidavit, both listing the identity of the child’s father as “unknown.” 2 With the adoption petition, the mother submitted another affidavit of paternity dated October 22, 2009, naming the child’s father as “[n]ot known.” 3 On December 22, 2009, the mother submitted a second affidavit in the adoption matter, again naming the father as “unknown.” By order dated December 22, 2009, the *993 court appointed the mother’s friend and the friend’s husband as the child’s limited temporary legal guardians.

*992 If the biological mother does not know or refuses to tell the court who the biological father is, the court may order publication in accordance with the Maine Rules of Probate Procedure in a newspaper of general circulation in the area where the petition is filed, where the biological mother became pregnant or where the putative father is most likely to be located.

*993 [¶ 5] Despite these four affidavits, however, and apparently based solely on the child’s appearance at the time of his birth, the mother had concluded that R.M. was, in fact, the child’s father. By letter dated January 8, 2010, the mother informed R.M. that in fact she had given birth to the child and that he was the father.

[¶ 6] On January 11, 2010, the guardians filed a letter with the Probate Court advising it that “we now know that the biological father of [the child] is [R.M.]” Nine days later, they filed a motion requesting that the court order Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services to request from the State of Indiana an assessment of R.M. and the mother to determine the suitability of placing the child with either of them pursuant to the Interstate Compact for the Placement of Children, 22 M.R.S. §§ 4251-4269 (2011). They also requested that the court appoint a guardian ad litem for the child. On January 28, 2010, R.M. filed a request for a change of guardianship and an objection to the adoption petition. On the same date, the guardians petitioned for termination of R.M.’s parental rights. On February 1, 2010, R.M.’s parents also filed a request for change of guardianship and an objection to the adoption. The following day, the mother filed two additional affidavits of paternity in the adoption matter, and two additional affidavits in the guardianship matter, this time naming R.M. as the father. On February 26, 2010, R.M. filed a voluntary acknowledgement of paternity. 4

[¶ 7] The Probate Court assigned counsel to R.M. in May of 2010 and, after a significant amount of process and discovery, R.M. petitioned the court for parental rights in October of 2010. In December of 2010, the court appointed an attorney— with the powers and duties of a guardian ad litem — to represent the child. See 18-A M.R.S. § 5-407(a) (2011).

[¶ 8] The court conducted a hearing in January of 2011 on R.M.’s petition to establish parental rights and the guardians’ petition to terminate R.M.’s parental rights. By judgment dated March 28, 2011, the court found that “for purposes of these proceedings, [R.M.] shall be considered to be [the child’s] biological father,” but denied R.M. parental rights after concluding that R.M. both “failed to carry his burden of proving that he is able to take responsibility for [the child] within a time reasonably calculated to meet this child’s needs” and failed to establish that “a declaration of his parental rights will be in [the child’s] best interest.” The court granted the guardians’ petition to terminate his parental rights pursuant to 18-A M.R.S. § 9-204 for the same reasons. R.M. appeals.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Paternity

[¶ 9] We have consistently recognized that a biological parent has a fundamental liberty interest in parenting his child absent a showing of unfitness. E.g., Guardianship of Jewel M., 2010 ME 80, ¶ 6, 2 A.3d 301. Indeed, the parties in this matter have focused on the court’s fitness determination and whether the process afforded R.M. adequately protected that fundamental right to parent.

[¶ 10] Nevertheless, neither R.M.’s fitness as a parent nor the process due to him as a parent is implicated if he is not, in *994 fact, the child’s biological father. The paternity provision of the adoption statute, 18-A M.R.S. § 9-201, provides that the court may grant parental rights only to a putative father who is, in fact, the biological father of a child whose mother has placed him or her for adoption. 5 18-A M.R.S. § 9-201(i). Likewise, the court need not even consider whether to terminate R.M.’s rights before proceeding with the adoption if he is not the father of the child. See 18-A M.R.S. §§ 9-204, 9-302(b) (2011). The importance of R.M.’s paternity to the disposition of this case therefore cannot be overstated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 ME 45, 40 A.3d 990, 2012 WL 1035614, 2012 Me. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-tobias-d-me-2012.