Davies Adoption Case

46 A.2d 252, 353 Pa. 579, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 9, 1946
DocketAppeal, 16
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 46 A.2d 252 (Davies Adoption Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies Adoption Case, 46 A.2d 252, 353 Pa. 579, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 282 (Pa. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This is an appeal from an Orphans’ Court decree dismissing a petition for adoption. The mother of the girl child involved refused her consent and appeared in opposition to the petition. The appellant petitioners are an uncle and a paternal aunt with Avhom the child has lived and by whom she has been reared and cared for exclusively since her earliest infancy. The only matter in issue is whether the mother,- Avho is the sole surviving parent, abandoned the child thereby rendering unnecessary her consent to the proposed adoption: see Act of April 4, 1925, P. L. 127, Sec. 2 (c), as amended (1 P.S. §2). The learned trial judge found as a fact and concluded as a matter of law that the abandonment “required under the provisions of the Act of Assembly” had not been proven; and, the final decree from which the petitioners have appealed was thereupon entered. The question involved is whether the alleged abandonment Avas proven with required legal sufficiency.

The appellee urges upon us that under the Pennsylvania Adoption Act, loo. eit. supra, the fact of abandonment, as the alternative of a parent’s consent to an adoption, must be “. . . proven to the satisfaction of the court or judge hearing the petition . . .” and that the trial judge in the instant case “found there Avas no abandonment”. The conclusion of a trial court in such, regard is reViewable none the less: Weinbaeh’s Appeal, 316 Pa. 333, 336, 175 A. 500. Cf: also Hazuka’s Case-, 345 Pa. 432,435,29 A. 2d 88. While it so happens that in both the Haznka and Weinbáeh cases, supra, abandon *581 ment was proven to tlie satisfaction- of the respective trial courts, our power to review, is no different where the hearing judge, is not satisfied that abandonment was proven. The term “satisfaction”, when used, to specify the degree of persuasion which- a trier, of facts must, experience from the evidence to warrant his niaking a particular finding, has “a clear legal meaning”. The standard of proof so required does not .mean that the fact-finder may “decide the issue arbitrarily”.: See Toplis & Harding, Inc. v. Murphy, 384 Ill. 463, 5 N.E. 2d 505, 509.

It could not have been the legislature’s intention in the Adoption Act to authorize a court or judge hearing a petition to ignore out of hand a conclusion with respect to the proofs of abandonment which the evidence, as accredited by such court or judge, legally warrants and impels. We hold, therefore, that the. requirement; that the fact of abandonment is to be “. . . proven to the satisfaction of the court or judge hearing the petition ...” means that the evidence shall be legally-sufficient to support the finding and that it does not mean that the finding of a trial judge in such connection is. ipso facto binding and conclusive without right to the party aggrieved to appellate review of the court’s action. .It has been held, however, that upon an appeal;-from a final decree or order in an adoption proceeding, the matter!^ beforé the reviewing court as on certiorari. In that, situation our examination of the notes of testimony taken on the hearing below is limited to determining, whether there is any evidence to support the findings and . ultimate conclusion of the trial judge: Weinbach’s Appeal, supra, at pp. 336-337.

The sustainable findings in this case as amplified and explained by the testimony of witnesses whom; the .trial judge accredited disclose the following factual, situation.

The child in controversy was born on March 13,. 1942, in a hospital in Washington, D; C.-, where the mother, a native of’ Scranton, Pennsylvania,, was employed as a *582 typist in a government office. The father, Joseph Davies, who also was from Scranton, was in the military service of the United States. Anticipating the baby’s birth, he obtained a leave and, arriving at the hospital the day following the birth, he visited the mother and-child there.

On April 18,1942, when the baby was but five weeks old,- the mother, accompanied- by a woman friend, took the child on an all-night bus trip from- Washington to Scranton to the home of Mrs. Ruth Davies,- Joseph’s mother, with -whom resided her daughter, Esther (Davies) Phillips, and the latter’s husband, Walter P. Phillips, the present appellants.

When the child’s mother and her companion (the latter carrying the baby) entered the Davies home, the companion handed the baby to Mrs. Phillips, the mother saying at the same time, “Here she is, she is yours; I don’t want no part of her.” The mother and her friend remained in the Davies home overnight. The next morning (Sunday), upon being bidden by Mrs.■ Phillips .to hold the baby after she had bathed it, the mother refused to do so and repeated, “I don’t want no part of her.” It was testified at the hearing, without denial from the mother, that, on the same day she had said that, had it not been for the fact that the father had come to the hospital and had there seen the baby alive, she would have placed it in “a home” and have told him that it was stillborn. The 'court below justifiably found that the respondent “. . . did not deny the statements she was alleged to have made on that occasion” (i.e., the time of the delivery of the baby to the Davies home).

Late in the-afternoon of the.day last above-mentioned the mother “. . . left the Davies home and her child and resumed her work in Washington, D. C. She visited the child some three or four months later but did not again return for two years.” The fact is that the one time that she saw the child (in what was actually more than two years) was around June 1942 when Joseph Davies was ■on a visit to his mother at her home in Scranton.. During *583 the better than two-year period following that visit, the mother of the child was in Scranton twice, once before going to Atlantic City on vacation and again to attend the funeral of an uncle, but on neither of those occasions did she go to see the child, as she. herself admitted. In the meantime (September 1943) Joseph Davies, the father, was sent overseas in military service.

In June of 1944 (the child then being over two years old), Walter Phillips wrote to Mrs. Joseph Davies in Washington offering her the use of his cabin for her vacation. To that invitation she responded by letter which, in material part, reads as follows:

“June 22nd [1944]
“Dear Walter,
“I’ve received your letter in which you so generously offer to arrange for my spending my vacation at your cabin. While I thank you Walter, for all your thoughtfulness, I’m afraid I’m going to have to decline. I don’t think I’m quite ready to spend any time at all with the child yet. I feel nothing but resentment for her and all she stands for. I know you will say that I have absolutely no reason for thinking as I do. . . . However, I still resent her presence. I think the only thing that will make me able to stand her is the feeling Joe has for her and sometimes I even wonder if I think enough of him to make myself put up with something I have absolutely no desire to be with.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 252, 353 Pa. 579, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-adoption-case-pa-1946.