Hilton Adoption

2 Pa. D. & C.3d 499, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedOctober 29, 1975
Docketno. 16 of 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C.3d 499 (Hilton Adoption) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilton Adoption, 2 Pa. D. & C.3d 499, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

TAXIS, P. J.,

This matter is now before the court upon the petition of Charles E. Buzby, III, et al., to set aside an adoption decree.

On November 4, 1953, after hearing, this court (Holland, P. J.) entered a decree whereby Helene Norris (Helene) was adopted by Percival W. Buzby (Percival) and his wife, Helene T. Norris Buzby (Mrs. Buzby). Helene, who was 21 years of age at the time of the adoption, is the natural grandniece of Mrs. Buzby. She resided with Mrs. Buzby from about 1935 to the date of the adoption (about 18 years), and with both Percival and Mrs. Buzby [500]*500from about 1941, the date of their marriage, to the date of the adoption (about 12 years).

Charles Ernest Buzby, the father of Percival, died November 12, 1930, a resident of Philadelphia County. He left one-third of his residuary estate in trust, income to be paid to his son, Percival, for life, and then to Percival’s wife, for life, with the corpus to be paid upon the death of Percival and his wife to Percival’s children, or, failing to have children, then to the grandchildren of Charles Ernest Buzby. Percival died May 30, 1954, survived by his wife, Mrs. Buzby, and no children except Helene. Mrs. Buzby died on October 14, 1973, and Helene claimed distribution of the trust corpus. The grandchildren of Charles Ernest Buzby thereupon filed a petition seeking to set aside the adoption.

An adoption decree entered by a court having jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties is generally immune from collateral attack, particularly where the record shows a substantial compliance with the adoption statute. When an adoption decree is collaterally attacked, the entry of the decree raises a presumption of its validity and regularity, and an implication arises that the court did find the necessary facts and did perform all the steps essential to the jurisdiction of the court. The burden is upon the person attacking an adoption decree to establish its invalidity by clear and convincing evidence: List Adoption Case, 418 Pa. 503, 508-09, 211 A.2d 870 (1965). Proof of the invalidity of an adoption decree must be clear and convincing and, unless such qualitative standard of proof is met, an adoption decree will not be set aside: Id. at 517.

Petitioner contends that the adoption decree is [501]*501invalid because it was procured by a legal fraud practiced upon the court, and because Percival, at the time of the adoption proceeding, was mentally incompetent and lacked the ability to understand the nature and consequences of his acts.

Petitioner alleges that Mrs. Buzby affirmatively misrepresented to this court that she had, on the morning of the adoption hearing, left Percival in Stone Harbor, N. J., because he was suffering from sclerotic hypertension and the automobile trip to Norristown would have been detrimental to bis health; and that, in fact, on the date of the hearing, Percival was a patient at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital. Petitioner further alleges that Mrs. Buzby misrepresented the mental health of Percival by intentionally failing to disclose (1) that Percival had been suffering from serious mental illness for several years prior to the adoption proceeding, and (2) that on the date of the adoption hearing Percival was being treated for encephalopathy in the neuropsychiatric ward of the Philadelphia Naval Hospital, having been admitted there on October 26, 1953.

A careful reading of Mrs. Buzby’s testimony at the adoption hearing establishes that she did not say that she had left Percival in Stone Harbor, N. J. She stated that she had been at Stone Harbor, N. J. She also stated that she did not want to disturb Percival by taking him “all this distance.” She said that “It is a long trip all the way up.” It is entirely possible that Mrs. Buzby was, at this point in her testimony, thinking of the trip from the Naval Hospital to Norristown, especially since Percival’s appearance in court was excused, not because of his geographical whereabouts, but rather because of the danger which travelling a distance would pose [502]*502to his wellbeing. Accordingly, evidence that Mrs. Buzby defrauded the court, by misrepresenting Percival’s whereabouts, is not clear and convincing.

And with regard to the alleged misrepresentation of his mental health, the court was aware that Percival was 69 years of age, and one of the questions asked by the court indicated that the court appreciated the severity of Percival’s condition. The court asked:

“And, he read the petition, or, had it read to him, or, at least, had the contents explained to him?”

(This question was asked before Mrs. Buzby testified as to Percival’s condition, but it is apparent from the testimony of Roland Fleer, Esq., that the court had previously been advised of Percival’s condition.) Furthermore, Mrs. Buzby acknowledged that Percival was not in good health, that he suffered from severe hypertension, that he had a sclerotic condition with hypertension, and that his condition was such that it would have been a serious matter to have him travel a distance. This is not a misrepresentation of Percival’s mental health at that time, even as his condition is now described in the record.

The evidence that Percival suffered serious mental illness for several years prior to November 4, 1953, is weak and vague and lacks the qualitative standard of proof required in this proceeding. And the only evidence of Percival’s mental condition on November 4, 1953, is a copy of a record of the Philadelphia Naval Hospital, which indicates that he was admitted to the hospital on October 26, 1953, and that his admission diagnosis was “encephalopathy due to arteriosclerosis.” This same record indicates that Percival was discharged to his home on December 7, 1953.

[503]*503Doctor Wilson, testifying as petitioner’s witness, stated that it was December 29, 1953, when he first saw Percival and that he took Percival’s medical history from information given him on December 30, 1953, by Mrs. Buzby. The history indicates that Percival was taken to the Naval Hospital for a checkup in late October 1953, and was to be discharged after ten days, but a burn on his finger became infected and he remained at the Naval Hospitalfor about one month. Thehistory indicates that, upon discharge (December 7, 1953), Percival was “not the man [whom Mrs. Buzby] took in to the Hospital [on October 26, 1953]. The history further indie ate s th at Percival could re ad and write until the week before he was seen by Doctor Wilson on December 22, 1953. And Helene’s natural mother testified that she saw Percival around November 23, 1953, and that, although he was apparently under sedation, he knew her and called her by name. The evidence that Mrs. Buzby defrauded the court by misrepresenting Percival’s mental condition on November 4, 1953, is, therefore, not clear and convincing.

Petitioner alleges that, at the hearing, Mrs. Buzby affirmatively misrepresented to this court that Percival, as adopting father, fully understood the nature and import of the proceeding, and that, in fact, at the time of the hearing and for some time prior thereto, Percival had been mentally incompetent and lacked the ability to understand the nature and consequence of the adoption.

The record does not establish by clear and convincing evidence that Percival, on November 4, 1953,

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Related

In Re: Adoption of R.A.B., Appeal of: N.M.E.
153 A.3d 332 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C.3d 499, 1975 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilton-adoption-pactcomplmontgo-1975.