Hangartner Adoption Case

181 A.2d 280, 407 Pa. 601, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 21, 1962
DocketAppeal, 233
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 181 A.2d 280 (Hangartner 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
Hangartner Adoption Case, 181 A.2d 280, 407 Pa. 601, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 632 (Pa. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin B. Jones,

On this appeal from a decree of adoption entered by the County Court of Philadelphia the sole issue is the sufficiency of the evidence on this record to support the finding by the court below that the natural father of the child abandoned the child.

The seven and one-half year old child sought to be adopted is Kathleen B. Hangartner. Her natural parents are Margaret C. Hangartner, now Margaret C. White, * who not only consents to the adoption but is one of the petitioners for the adoption, and Jimmie G. Hangartner, who opposes the adoption. The Hangartners were married in Texas on November 22, 1953. Pri- or to that marriage, Mrs. Hangartner had been married to one Frank B. Germana and that marriage was dis *603 solved by a divorce granted on September 2, 1952 in Nueces County, Texas.

Hangartners lived together at several places: (a) in Austin, Texas, from the time of their marriage until October, 1954; (b) in Roanoke, Illinois (the home of Mr. Hangartner’s parents), from October, 1954 until February, 1955; (c) in a trailer court at Urbana, Illinois (where Mr. Hangartner attended the University of Illinois), from February, 1955 until April, 1957. In April, 1957, Mrs. Hangartner, taking with her the child, left the matrimonial domicile and established a separate residence in Champaign, Illinois, a city in close proximity to Urbana. In February, 1958, Mrs. Hangartner and the child moved to Pennsylvania where for varying periods of time they lived at, at least, four different addresses in the Philadelphia area.

At the wife’s instance, Hangartner’s marriage was dissolved by a divorce granted by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County on May 26, 1959. Three days later — May 29, 1959 — Mrs. Hangartner married R. W. White, one of the petitioners for the adoption of this child. With the exception of several months in Alabama, the Whites have lived continuously since the date of their marriage in the Philadelphia area and with them has lived the child Kathleen. 1

On April 12, 1961 Whites petitioned the County Court of Philadelphia County for the adoption of Kathleen R. Hangartner. After hearings at which Mr. Hangartner appeared and opposed the adoption, the court found that Mr. Hangartner had abandoned the child since April, 1957 and entered a decree permitting the adoption of the child by Whites. 2 From that decree this appeal was taken.

*604 In our approach to this problem we bear in mind that which Chief Justice Stern stated in Harvey Adoption Case, 375 Pa. 1, 3, 4, 99 A. 2d 276: “Proceedings for the adoption of a child must be carefully differentiated from those involving merely a question of its custody; they are of far greater importance and involve more serious consequences. Custody may be awarded for a more or less temporary duration, but a decree of adoption terminates forever all relations between the child and its natural parents, severs it entirely from its own family tree and engrafts it upon that of its new parentage: Schwab Adoption Case, 355 Pa. 534, 536, 50 A. 2d 504, 505. For all purposes, legal and practical, the child thenceforth is dead to the [parent] . . .; [the parent] has lost the right ever to see [his or her] child again or even to know of its whereabouts. Because, therefore, of these direful results of an adverse adoption proceeding the rights of the natural parent should not be terminated unless the record clearly warrants such a decree: Southard Adoption Case, 358 Pa. 386, 392, 57 A. 2d 904, 907”. (Emphasis supplied.)

Abandonment is clearly defined by the adoption statute (Act of April 4,1925, P. L. 127, §1, as amended, 1 PS §1) as “conduct on the part of a parent which evidences a settled purpose of relinquishing parental claim to the child and of refusing or failing to perform parental duties”. See also: Schwab Adoption Case, 355 Pa. 534, 538, 50 A. 2d 504; Southard Adoption Case, 358 Pa. 386, 391, 57 A. 2d 904; Harvey Adoption Case, supra, p. 6; Maisels Adoption Case, 395 Pa. 329, 332, 149 A. 2d 38. While failure on the part of a parent to support a child is a factor to be considered in determining whether the parent has abandoned the child, yet *605 failure to support, standing alone, is not conclusive of an intent to abandon the child: Southard Adoption Case, supra, pp. 391, 392.

A review of this record clearly indicates that, until April, 1957, the child lived with both natural parents at which time the mother and child established a new and separate residence in Champaign, Illinois. Mr. Hangartner was not informed of the address of this new residence and, only after he had followed Mrs. Hangartner’s car, did he learn where the child was residing. Some time later, Mrs. Hangartner established another residence in the same city again without informing Mr. Hangartner of the address and, only after he had contacted a babysitter, did he learn the new address. After the father on each occasion learned the whereabouts of the child, at his insistence, he visited the child at least once every two weeks, 3 took the child to lunch and occasionally took the child for visits to her paternal grandparents’ home in Roanoke, Illinois. It is also clear that during this period the child was financially supported by Mrs., not Mr., Hangartner.

In February, 1958, without any notice to her husband and without giving any address where the child could be located, Mrs. Hangartner left Illinois and established residence in the Philadelphia area, Pennsylvania. 4 Not only did she conceal her new residence from Mr. Hangartner but even from her own parents who, according to Mrs. Hangartner’s own testimony, were informed only that her new residence was “somewhere in the east”. In Pennsylvania, Mrs. Hangartner and the child lived at various addresses in the Philadel *606 phia area and it was not until Mrs. Hangartner instituted divorce proceedings in Philadelphia County that Mr. Hangartner was given any inkling of the whereabouts of the child. At that time Mrs. Hangartner gave as her residence, in Philadelphia County, 7509 Tor-. resdale Avenue, Philadelphia, a, place of residence she-occupied for only four days.

In the meantime, Mr. Hangartner had contacted the parents of Mrs. Hangartner in Texas and was unable to secure from them any information as to the whereabouts of the child. He sent a money order for $75 and-a letter addressed to Mrs. Hangartner, General Delivery, Champaign, Illinois, and the money order and letter were returned to him, having been refused by Mrs: Hangartner. Mr. Hangartner, prior to the institution, of the divorce action, had received a letter from Mrs. ' Hangartner instructing him to send her furniture to. the residence of a Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A.2d 280, 407 Pa. 601, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hangartner-adoption-case-pa-1962.