Gardner v. Hall

26 A.2d 799, 132 N.J. Eq. 64
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 5, 1942
DocketDocket 140/527
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 26 A.2d 799 (Gardner v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Hall, 26 A.2d 799, 132 N.J. Eq. 64 (N.J. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

By this petition the petitioner seeks the custody of Joseph Hayes Wiener, an infant twelve years of age, and appointment as guardian of his person and property. Upon the return of an order to show cause advised on the filing of this petition, counsel for the defendants moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that upon its face it exhibited no cause of action. Later, the defendants answered and the motion was held until final hearing, which has now been completed. This controversy arises out of the following facts:

Joseph Hayes Wiener, the infant whose custody and guardianship are the subjects of this controversy, was born on July 29th, 1929. His father was Dr. Joseph Wiener, a distinguished heart specialist, who, with his wife, K. Hazel Dowling Wiener, the mother of the infant, resided at Deal and Allenhurst, Monmouth County, New Jersey. Mrs. Wiener, the natural mother of the child, died within a week after its birth. On September 27th, 1930, Dr. Wiener married the petitioner and she, on October 19th, 1933, formally adopted this motherless child pursuant to proceedings in the Monmouth County Orphans Court, the decree of adoption bearing the last mentioned date. On January 27th, 1936, Dr. Wiener and the petitioner, his then wife, entered into a separation agreement, one of the provisions of which was that the custody of "Joseph H.D. Wiener, infant son of the party of the first part by a former marriage," was committed to Dr. Wiener. The petitioner then went to California, and later to Nevada, where, on April 10th, 1936, she obtained a decree of divorce from Dr. Wiener. The following year she remarried and moved to Arizona, and later to California, where she now resides. For a period of nearly five years after her separation from Dr. Wiener, from January, 1936, to December, 1940, she never saw this child and had no contact with him. During the Christmas holidays of 1940 and again during the summer of 1941, the child visited her in California. There was some intermittent correspondence between the petitioner and child during 1941, but she did not see him again until after Dr. Wiener's death. After the divorce Dr. *Page 67 Wiener also remarried, and was later again divorced. He died on September 8th, 1941, a resident of Monmouth County, unmarried and leaving as his only child, his infant son, Joseph Hayes Wiener. The decedent, by his will dated September 28th, 1938, named his son as sole beneficiary and appointed the defendants Emmet V. Hall and Alma Hall executor and executrix thereof and guardians of his infant son. The will has been duly probated and these defendants have duly qualified as executor and executrix thereof and as guardians of the infant. Dr. Wiener's estate is substantial and his life was insured for more than $100,000, all of the policies naming his son as beneficiary.

The petitioner bases her claim of right to custody and guardianship of the child upon the decree of adoption above referred to and asserts that by virtue thereof she became vested with all the rights of a natural mother of the child, and that Dr. Wiener's appointment of a testamentary guardian of his son is void and of no effect because such appointment was not consented to in writing as required by the statute, R.S. 3:7-15. On the other hand, the Hall defendants, testamentary guardians, while admitting that petitioner did not consent to such appointment, claim that the appointment was valid and effective and that the statutory requirement of consent applies only to a surviving natural parent and not to a surviving adoptive parent; that the word "parent" as used in R.S. 3:7 and R.S. 9:3 means a natural father or mother and not an artificial or adoptive father or mother created by law. Also; that by the provisions of the separation agreement whereby the custody of the child was committed to Dr. Wiener, and by reason of her actual abandonment of the child since the date thereof, and by her divorce from Dr. Wiener, the petitioner has forfeited all rights acquired by the adoption decree. The issues thus raised require a construction of the pertinent statutes and a discussion of or reference to some of the decisions of our courts touching the adoption, custody and guardianship of infants. The statutes to be considered are R.S.9:3, R.S. 3:7, R.S. 9:2 and their antecedents. They will be discussed in the order stated. *Page 68

I.
Adoption.
Adoption was unknown to the common law and is purely statutory.In re Book's Will, 89 N.J. Eq. 509 (reversed on other grounds,90 N.J. Eq. 549); Elmer v. Wellbrook, 110 N.J. Eq. 15. Statutes authorizing adoption of children, being in derogation of the common law, are to be strictly construed. Ibid. Our Adoption Statute is R.S. 9:3-1 to 9:3-11, and as applied to this controversy is essentially the same as that in force at the date of the adoption decree here involved. Sections 1 and 2 of that statute provide the qualifications of an adopting parent.R.S. 9:3-4 contains the requirements for consents to adoption, but only subdivision "c" of that section need be here considered. Under the circumstances therein mentioned the consent of but one parent is required. The pertinent language is as follows:

"One parent if the other is dead, unknown or mentally incompetent, or has forsaken parental obligations or been divorced from the father or mother of the child because of his or her adultery or desertion or extreme cruelty." (Italics mine.)

Section 7 provides for a decree of adoption "declaring and adjudging that, from the date of such decree, the rights, duties, privileges and relations theretofore existing between the child and his parent or parents shall be in all respects at an end, excepting the right of inheritance; and that the rights, duties, privileges and relations between the child and his parent orparents by adoption shall thenceforth, in all respects, be the same, including the right of inheritance, as if the child had been born to such adopted parent or parents in lawful wedlock,except only as otherwise provided in this chapter." (Italics mine.)

As to the intent of the legislature in using this language, this court, in In re Book's Will, supra, said:

"The legislature intended to permit the creation of an artificial status which would have so many of the incidents of the natural status of parent and child as indicated by the act, but it does not follow from this that it was the legislature's *Page 69 intent, because it attached to the artificial status most of the attributes which attach to the natural status, to create astatus which, aside from the exceptions specifically provided for by the act, should be in all respects equal to the naturalstatus." (Italics mine.)

The decision of this court in that case was reversed by the Court of Errors and Appeals (90 N.J. Eq. 549), but this statement was not criticised in any way.

Counsel for the petitioner cites Rosier v. Fischer, 2 N.J.Mis. R. 499, and claims that it is dispositive of the issues here, but it is not. There the petitioner had adopted the child of her husband by a former marriage. The father died and his widow sought the custody of her adopted child. Counsel quotes from Vice-Chancellor Leaming's opinion as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
26 A.2d 799, 132 N.J. Eq. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-hall-njch-1942.