DeGolyer v. Chesney

1974 OK 117, 527 P.2d 844, 1974 Okla. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1974
Docket44406, 46561
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1974 OK 117 (DeGolyer v. Chesney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeGolyer v. Chesney, 1974 OK 117, 527 P.2d 844, 1974 Okla. LEXIS 410 (Okla. 1974).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

The central figure in these consolidated appeals is Denise Ann DeGolyer [now Chesney], whose care, custody, visitation, and adoption has had attention from courts in two States on various occasions over a period of more than four years.

Denise, born May 31, 1964, was adopted in Rochester, New York by John H. De-Golyer and his then wife, Mary Lou, in 1965.

Later, when this couple separated in 1967, they agreed in writing that Mary Lou was to have Denise’s custody, with visitation rights in DeGolyer, who was to contribute $200.00 per month for the child’s support. When the DeGolyers shortly thereafter obtained a Mexican divorce, their separation agreement was approved and made a part of the divorce decree.

Mary Lou thereafter married the Appel-lee, James Lee Chesney, an employee of Allied Chemical Company in Pittsford, New York. In January, 1968, Chesney was transferred to Tulsa and the couple moved there, bringing Denise with them.

In April, 1968, DeGolyer married his present wife, Sandra, who has two sons by a former husband. This family still resides in Pittsford.

In April, 1970, the Chesneys instituted proceedings for Denise’s adoption in their new home city of Tulsa. In conjunction with their adoption petition, the Chesneys also filed an application for an order allowing Denise’s adoption without DeGolyer’s consent, which consent they alleged was unnecessary because he had wilfully refused and neglected to contribute to this minor’s support for a period of more than one year next preceding the filing of their petition. At the hearing on this application [which will hereinafter be more fully described] both the Chesneys and DeGolyer appeared and introduced evidence; but the Chesneys prevailed; and, on April 29, 1970, the court entered its order finding that they had sustained their application’s allegations and that they could proceed on their adoption petition without DeGolyer’s consent.

Later that year, DeGolyer lodged an appeal from that order docketed in this Court opposite No. 44,406. The Chesneys filed a motion to dismiss it on the ground that the order involved was not a final or appeala-ble order. Before this Court had determined any question in this appeal, De-Golyer and his present wife, Sandra, filed, in a separate proceeding in the District Court at Tulsa, their petition for Denise’s adoption.

Thereafter, and' before Appeal No. 44,406 had been adjudicated on its merits, counsel jointly apprised this Court that Mary Lou Chesney had died on February 23, 1972. In a supplemental brief thereafter filed, DeGolyer took the position that, by reason of his then being Denise’s only surviving legal parent, his rights were superior to those of any non-parent, such as Chesney, and that Mary Lou’s death had rendered her consent to Denise’s adoption by Chesney a nullity and caused the matter of such adoption to become moot.

In the meantime, the District Court, upon being apprised of Mrs. Chesney’s death, and after a hearing on the matter a few days later, made Denise a ward of the court and thereupon ordered her care and custody to remain temporarily in Mr. Ches-ney, who, by that time, had been transferred by Allied Chemical from Tulsa to Houston, Texas.

After considering the parties’ oral and written arguments on the new issue based upon Mrs. Chesney’s death, this Court, by order of February 5, 1973, temporarily remanded DeGolyer’s appeal [No. 44,406, supra] to the District Court for an original determination by that court as to the effect of Mary Lou Chesney’s death upon the adoption proceedings that she and James Lee Chesney had filed, and that were *848 still pending-, in that court. Thereafter, at the hearing the District Court held [pursuant to this Court’s order] on April 12, 1973, the proceedings of the DeGolyers to adopt Denise were consolidated with the Chesney proceedings to adopt her, and the court entered judgment [denominated “FINAL DECREE OF ADOPTION”], in which it sustained the Chesney petition for Denise’s adoption, changed her name to “Chesney”, and ordered that DeGolyer be [permanently] deprived of any and all rights to her care, custody, and control, after finding, in effect, that the Chesney adoption proceedings had not been affected [in any legal way] by Mrs. Chesney’s death. In said judgment the court specifically rejected the DeGolyers’ claim that before the entry of any final adoption decree, the investigation referred to in 10 O. S.1971, § 60.13, should be held. On the same date, said court entered a separate order in the DeGolyer adoption proceedings denying the petition for adoption theretofore filed therein.

Complaining of these last and most comprehensive of the trial court’s determinations, the DeGolyers lodged an appeal docketed in this Court opposite No. 46,561. To facilitate its adjudication, with its companion No. 44,406, supra, these two appeals were consolidated under No. 46,561.

As we have chosen to deal with the issues raised in this “two in one” appeal in the sequence in which they were first raised in the trial court, we revert to that court’s hearing of April 29, 1970, for the evidence as to whether or not Denise was eligible for adoption by the Chesneys without DeGolyer’s consent, as authorized by 10 O.S.1971 and 1969 Supp., § 60.7, and prayed for in the aforesaid application of Chesney and his late wife. We preface this by first overruling Chesney’s motion to dismiss Appeal No. 44,406, supra, as in this litigation’s present posture before this Court the question of whether the order entered at the close of that hearing was an appealable order is now moot.

At that hearing, Mrs. Chesney testified that DeGolyer’s last payment of child support was by a check he handed her while she and the minor were visiting in Rochester, New York, in February, 1969. She further testified that the proceeds of this check satisfied DeGolyer’s child support obligation through the month of March of that year. Mrs. Chesney specifically denied that DeGolyer had paid, or tendered, any child support since that time.

On cross-examination, DeGolyer’s counsel showed Mrs. Chesney a duplicator machine copy of a check [later admitted in evidence “for what it was worth”, over the Chesneys’ objections, as “Respondent’s Exhibit No. 1”] dated September 19, 1969, made to Mrs. Chesney’s order in the amount of $2,400.00, written by DeGolyer on his Rochester bank. Then counsel asked the witness if she had seen such a check. She answered in the negative. Mrs. Chesney further testified that in July, 1969, when DeGolyer was several months delinquent in child support payments, he promised to pay up his then arrearage on condition the minor would spend two weeks with him, which the minor did. Mrs. Chesney further testified that De-Golyer never kept his promise to pay up, and she had no more contact with him.

Mr. Chesney testified that, to the best of his knowledge, no payment from DeGolyer had been received at the Chesney address since the one of February, 1969.

DeGolyer testified that he sent the September, 1969, check [depicted by his aforementioned Exhibit No. 1] to the Chesneys’ Tulsa residence address, but that, since that time, it had not cleared his checking account, nor had he heard anything from Mrs. Chesney concerning “child support or back child support.”

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Bluebook (online)
1974 OK 117, 527 P.2d 844, 1974 Okla. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/degolyer-v-chesney-okla-1974.