E.H. v. K.S.

511 So. 2d 345, 12 Fla. L. Weekly 1687, 1987 Fla. App. LEXIS 9270
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 8, 1987
DocketNo. 87-191
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 511 So. 2d 345 (E.H. v. K.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E.H. v. K.S., 511 So. 2d 345, 12 Fla. L. Weekly 1687, 1987 Fla. App. LEXIS 9270 (Fla. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

LEHAN, Judge.

Appellants suffered a very unfortunate, emotional setback from this case. As a result of the judgment denying their petition for adoption, they lost the opportunity to adopt the child of whom they had custody for approximately sixteen months.1 The natural, biological, birth mother prevailed.

We very much sympathize with appellants. However, in order to keep this case in perspective, two aspects should be noted which indicate that appellants are not free from any responsibility for all that transpired.

First, appellants in effect contend in their motions for post judgment relief, the denial of which is now before us on this appeal, that the mother is unfit to be the parent of her child. This is a contention which was made by them on their prior appeal to this court when the judgment was affirmed and had also apparently been made in their argument to the trial court before the judgment was entered. But a contention of that kind is not properly made in this adoption suit brought under chapter 63, Florida Statutes (1985). Chapter 39 provides the method by which the natural mother’s fitness could have been challenged. Chapter 39 sets out the procedures, standards, and safeguards for that type of case. This court took the unusual step of specifically advising appellants in January of this year that a suit under chapter 39, not this adoption proceeding, would have provided the method of challenging the natural mother’s fitness.

The only real issue in this adoption case has been whether the natural mother made her child available for adoption by consenting to an adoption. There has never been, nor could there properly be, an issue in this case as to the fitness of the natural mother. Nor have there been any trial court findings in that regard. Appellants’ attempted arguments in that regard have been only that — arguments—and have never been litigated or ruled upon as they could have been if the appropriate proceeding for that purpose had been filed. Why such a proceeding has not been filed if, as appears from these continued contentions in this case, it has not been, we do not know.

Unfitness, as such, is not the literal basis for chapter 39 dependency proceedings. But that chapter, by specifying the grounds upon which a child may be taken from a parent, in effect provides the legal basis for a determination that a person is unfit to serve as the parent of the child. If there are to be other grounds, that is for the legislature to decide. Thus, if appellants feel that the natural mother should be declared unfit but cannot be so declared under chapter 39, their argument should be addressed to the legislature, not the courts.

We should point out that if contentions of that kind are ever made only to try to cause a child to be made available for adoption by showing that would-be adoptive parents would be better parents to the child than the child’s unconsenting natural parent or parents, those contentions would have no place whatsoever in either an adoption proceeding or a chapter 39 proceeding. How many parents could potentially be shown in a legal proceeding to be less good for their children than certain other would-be adoptive parents if the courts were empowered in such a proceeding to cause the adoption of children on that basis?

We should also point, out that even if a chapter 39 proceeding had been brought and appellants had prevailed, that would not have assured the adoption of the child by them. But the child could then have become available for adoption which is at the bottom of what this case is about.

Second, when appellants took custody of the child, they apparently knew that the natural mother had withdrawn her consent to permit the adoption of her child by anyone. That is indicated in the trial court’s order which is quoted below. The mother withdrew her consent about a week after she had signed the consent form. HRS, [347]*347which was actively involved, knew that the mother had withdrawn her consent and apparently so advised appellants. Thus, the natural mother did not mislead appellants or any would-be adoptive parents into thinking that she agreed that they could become the parents of her child. Appellants assumed the risk that they would not be. As the trial court specifically found, HRS gave appellants “the ‘choice’ of trying to live with an adverse ruling,” i.e., a ruling that the mother had not consented to an adoption of her child and that appellants would therefore not be permitted to adopt the child. It is the very understandable difficulty of living with that choice which has been a substantial cause of their setback.

We will now describe the proceedings which resulted in the judgment which denied appellants’ petition for adoption and the proceedings subsequent to that judgment up to the time of this appeal.

The judgment denying appellants’ petition for adoption was entered by the trial court on the basis of its determination that the natural mother, about a week after she had consented to the adoption of her child and before appellants took custody of the child, had validly revoked her consent. Section 63.082(5), Florida Statutes (1985), provides that a “[cjonsent [to an adoption] may be withdrawn only when the court finds that the consent was obtained by fraud or duress.” The trial court found that the natural mother’s consent had been revocable and had been effectively revoked because it had been given under such personal pressure from her fear of a forthcoming arrest and jail based upon statements to her by a detective (and, in fact, she was then jailed) as to impair her ability to make rational decisions and to constitute duress. The judgment included findings that

The Mother ... is a woman of limited intelligence. According to the psychological testimony, she has an I.Q. of approximately 83. Her state of mind at the time of this incident was such that she would have unusual difficulty making a rational decision under stress. The testimony which the Court accepts as true is that she would have “locked” her position and would have refused to rationally consider available alternatives.

The trial court was also concerned with another aspect of the circumstances under which the natural mother’s consent had been given. The judgment said in that regard,

It is of great interest that the Mother did not appear for her interview with [the intermediary attorney] to whom she was referred by HRS representatives [for the purpose of arranging for the execution of her consent to the adoption]. She was recruited to some extent as was shown by the fact that the secretary [for the attorney] called the Mother and then arranged transportation. Although the Mother was told in glowing terms of the future her child could expect, the court finds that very little real effort was made to determine if the consent was in fact voluntary. What efforts were made were simply pro forma.

In a footnote the trial court referred to the attorney’s secretary having sent a taxi for transportation for the natural mother to the attorney’s office and having thereafter given her $40.00, which was for the taxi ride home and the child’s possessions. The mother’s car had broken down which was the reason she had given the attorney for not keeping the appointment.

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Related

In Re Adoption of Baby Girl C
511 So. 2d 345 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
511 So. 2d 345, 12 Fla. L. Weekly 1687, 1987 Fla. App. LEXIS 9270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eh-v-ks-fladistctapp-1987.