In re Adoption of a Minor

155 F.2d 870, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 138, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 20, 1946
DocketNo. 9104
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 155 F.2d 870 (In re Adoption of a Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Adoption of a Minor, 155 F.2d 870, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 138, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294 (D.D.C. 1946).

Opinions

PRETTYMAN, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court granting adoption of an infant, and from an order denying a motion of the natural mother to vacate the decree of adoption and either to reopen the case for the introduction of further evidence or to grant a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence.

The father and mother of this infant first met in the fall of 1941 in a southern town where they both lived. The child was conceived there out of wedlock in June, 1943. Almost immediately thereafter the father, who was then in the armed forces, entered an officers’ training school in New York. He received his commission in October and was thereafter ordered to Boston. He and the mother saw one another from time to time until January, 1944. He was then promised a 48-hour leave, and they planned to be married in Boston during that period. Two days before it was to begin, his leave was cancelled, he was ordered aboard ship and sailed for the Pacific on combat assignment. The baby was born March 1, 1944. The mother signed a consent to the adoption on March 7, 1944, and the proposed adopters immediately took custody of the child. Early in April the mother sought the assistance of welfare authorities and was referred to the Legal Aid Bureau. A petition for the adoption was filed by the proposed adopters in late April, 1944.

The adopters averred that the father of the infant was unknown to them. The mother, having already given notice of the withdrawal of her consent, answered. She averred that the father had acknowledged paternity and that a marriage by proxy was in course of arrangement, and asserted that she withdrew the consent she had given. The petition was referred to the Board of Public Welfare, and an exhaustive report was filed, which contained, among other things, the name, full description and then address of the natural father. He was on combat assignment in the Pacific. The report stated, "Investigation indicates that [the baby] is not available for adoption since the natural father who has both acknowledged paternity and contributed over one thousand dollars for support does not consent to the adoption.” The petitioners filed objections to the report.

The record does not show any attempt by anybody to notify the father of the pen-dency of the proceedings or to secure from him any authoritative statement of his attitude or wishes. The proceeding came on for hearing during February, 1945, and extensive testimony was taken. The father was still on combat assignment in the Pacific. He was not represented at the hearing, and his actions and attitude were evidenced by testimony of the mother and by his letters to her. It appeared that beginning with October, 1943, when he received his commission, he had sent the mother various amounts of money each month, until he had sent a total of about $1,000. He stopped sending funds in April or May, 1944, after the baby had been placed in the custody of the proposed adopters. When he began these payments, he wrote, "Naturally I’ll let you have every cent I possibly can. $180 a mo. is about the max.” The mother testified that she and the father had been in constant correspondence from the time he left the country; that he was very much conscience-stricken on the one hand but, on the other hand, was reluctant to accept his responsibilities; that he had agreed to a proxy marriage if she could arrange to have the papers sent him, but that he later changed his mind and did not send the papers back; that she wrote him that mar[873]*873riage was necessary and that she would refer the matter to his superiors, which she did. As a result, in September, 1944, he wrote that the authorities could not force him into marriage and that he would “contest paternity to the last ditch.” The mother explained his attitude by the facts that he was in a battle area and that his mail was censored by brother officers with whom he associated constantly, but she said that she felt that he would come immediately to her upon his return to this country, and pointed to the fact that he had never stopped writing her.

In the letters to the mother, introduced in evidence, written between October, 1943, and late April, 1944, the father acknowledged responsibility for her condition by repeated expressions of contrition, pleadings for forgiveness, assertions of affection, interest in how she was, acquiescence in the proposal for proxy marriage, and unqualified offers of financial assistance to the full of his ability. He made a jesting suggestion concerning the name of the baby and, after it was born, cautioned the mother in affectionate terms against going to work until she was absolutely well.

The father returned to this country in April, 1945, and he and the mother were married almost immediately. Thereupon the mother filed the motion to which we have referred and attached to it an affidavit of the father which recited, among other things, an unequivocal acknowledgment that he was the father of the child, his voluntary contributions over a period of. months in recognition of his obligation to the mother and to the child, and a categorical denial of consent, past, or present.

The statute provides :1

“Jurisdiction is hereby conferred upon the District Court of the United' States for the District of Columbia to hear and determine petitions and decrees of adoption of any adult or child (hereinafter called adoptee) with authority to make such rules, not inconsistent with this section and sections 16 — 202 to 16 — 207, as shall bring fully 'before the court for consideration the interests of the adoptee, the natural parents, the petitioner, and any other properly interested party.”

It further provides :2

“If adoptee is under twenty-one years of age, no decree of adoption shall be made unless the court shall find that the following persons have consented to the adoption: Adoptee, if fourteen or more years of age; . and the natural parents or adoptive parents by a previous adoption, if living. The consent of the father of an adoptee born out of wedlock shall not be necessary unless he has both acknowledged the adoptee and contributed voluntarily to its support.”

We do not find in the scant provisions of Rule 50 of the Local Civil Rules, which encompasses the whole of “Adoption Rules”, compliance with the statutory mandate inherent in the provision first above-quoted. This adoption law was carefully designed.3 The provision quoted was a well-grounded recognition of the fact that adoption proceedings are not merely ordinary law suits, that they require special rules, and that to bring fully before the court for consideration the interests of the natural parents, is a problem of peculiar difficulty. It is a difficult problem in a case involving a proposal to adopt a legitimate child. It is a more difficult one when the child was bom out of wedlock. In the latter case, the father may be unknown. He may be known to the mother only. Although named by the mother, he may deny his identity. Even where his identity is certain, his whereabouts may be unknown. Notice by publication is not available as a process, because the interests of the child dictate that publicity must be avoided to the fullest possible extent in these proceedings. Congress placed upon the District Court the responsibility of designing rules which will operate to the specified end under these difficulties.

The major premise underlying this law is the unity of the natural family.

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Related

In re M.M.D.
662 A.2d 837 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1995)
Adoption of a Minor
156 N.E.2d 801 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1959)
In Re Adoption of a Minor
194 F.2d 325 (D.C. Circuit, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
155 F.2d 870, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 138, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-a-minor-dcd-1946.