In Re Adoption of Baby Boy

472 P.2d 64, 106 Ariz. 195
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1970
Docket9762-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 472 P.2d 64 (In Re Adoption of Baby Boy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court 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 Baby Boy, 472 P.2d 64, 106 Ariz. 195 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

106 Ariz. 195 (1970)
472 P.2d 64

In the Matter of the ADOPTION OF a BABY BOY.
NATURAL MOTHER, Appellant,
v.
ADOPTING PARENTS, Appellees.

No. 9762-PR.

Supreme Court of Arizona, In Banc.

July 16, 1970.

W. Michael Hammer, Phoenix, for appellant.

Benton L. Blake, Phoenix, for appellee.

McFARLAND, Justice:

This case comes before us on a petition for review of a decision of the Court of Appeals reversing an interlocutory order of the Superior Court for the adoption of a baby boy by the adopting parents. 10 Ariz. App. 47, 455 P.2d 997. Decision of the Court of Appeals vacated.

The names of the persons involved are not set forth in this opinion and have been deleted from direct quotations from the record. They will be referred to as the baby boy, the adopting parents — father or mother, as appropriate — and the natural mother. The natural father will be referred to hereinafter as the natural father or the husband.

The natural mother at the time of the hearing was twenty-six years of age. She had previously been a resident of Minnesota. She is a graduate of high school, and for three months attended an airline business school at St. Paul, Minnesota. She had previously worked for The West Publishing Company in St. Paul as a typing clerk for about two and a half years. She *196 was married to the natural father August 1, 1963, in South Dakota, at which time she was one month short of twenty-two years of age. The husband had been previously married and was divorced. They moved from Minnesota on August 25, 1963, to Tucson, Arizona. While they were living in Arizona the infant child was born to them on the 19th day of October 1965. Six days later, on the 25th day of October, while the mother was lying on the couch with the infant child, the police came to the door and arrested her. She later pled guilty to two charges of passing checks with insufficient funds, and was given a sentence of one to five years in the Arizona State Prison on each of the charges, to run consecutively. She had previously pled guilty to a charge of "cashing a forged instrument" which instrument had been forged by the husband, in Monroeville, Missouri. She was given a six months suspended sentence and two years probation. Both she and her husband had been arrested on the charge, but she stated that she took the blame for the check.

Upon the arrest of the natural mother in Phoenix, the husband took the child to the adopting mother's brother, who called his sister [the adopting mother] and asked her to take care of the child. The adopting mother was a half sister of the natural father. The evidence shows that the adopting parents were responsible people, approximately twenty years older than the natural mother. The ages of their six children ranged from twenty-four to thirteen, the three youngest living with the parents at the time of the hearing. The adopting father had a substantial position, and both were fond of the infant child. The adopting mother was appointed guardian of the person and estate of the baby boy, with the understanding — according to the natural mother — that they would never seek his adoption. The record shows that the natural mother had never given her consent to the adoption. The adopting parents — after approximately a year and a half — filed a petition for the adoption of the baby boy, representing that the natural father of the child had abandoned the minor child and wilfully deserted and neglected him, and had completely failed to provide the child with any financial assistance whatsoever — that the natural mother was at the time incarcerated in the Arizona State Prison serving two consecutive terms of one to five years. The record shows that after the filing of the petition for adoption the natural father died on May 9, 1967 — before the hearing on the adoption. Since his death the adopting parents have received $82.20 a month from the Veterans' Administration and Social Security for the child which they deposited to the child's credit. The testimony of the natural mother was to the effect that the natural father had never held a job since their marriage except for a very short period; that he drank heavily, and that he was an alcoholic. This was corroborated by the social worker's report.

The court appointed Inez McLain, court investigator, and Catherine Fernandez, social worker, to investigate the case, who filed a joint report but did not personally appear at the hearing. The petition was set down for hearing, and the natural mother appeared and was ably represented at the time of the petition by a representative of the Legal Aid Society in Pinal County and the present attorney who is also a representative of the Legal Aid Society. She was well represented at both the trial and on appeal.

The natural mother's brother also appeared at the trial and testified to his willingness to assist his sister by caring for the child, and that their father would also assist in the child's care. The brother was farming 320 acres of land owned by the parents of the natural mother and her brother. A letter was also filed by the natural mother from her former employer, The West Publishing Company, in which it was stated that the company was perfectly agreeable to re-employing her, based upon her good work during her previous employment, and that if she continued to perform her work in the same manner she could be assured of permanent employment. *197 The court in its interlocutory order for adoption made the following findings:

"1. That the petitioners herein are husband and wife and that they desire to adopt the said minor child herein as their own child.
"2. That * * * the natural father of said minor child died on May 9, 1967.
"3. That * * * the natural mother of said minor child has not consented to the adoption of said child by the petitioners.
"4. That the natural mother has not seen the child since October 25, 1965, when the child was six (6) days old.
"5. That on October 25, 1965, the natural mother was arrested in Maricopa County, Arizona, on one or more charges of having passed bogus checks or checks drawn on accounts of insufficient funds; that she subsequently pleaded guilty to two counts and was sentenced to serve consecutive terms of one to five years each."

The court further found that the natural mother at the time was in the Arizona State Prison, and would not be eligible for parole before January 1969 [the record shows that she was paroled some two months after that date]. The court further found that the natural mother was promised a job by her former employer, The West Publishing Company, at St. Paul, Minnesota [the record shows that she accepted such employment after her parole]. The court further found that the natural mother's brother and sister-in-law living in Herring Lake, Minnesota, were willing and able to take care of the child; that the natural mother was twenty-six years of age, in good health, without physical defects.

The court also found that the adopting father was forty-seven years of age and the adopting mother forty-five years of age; that they had six children, were in good health, and that the adopting father had a good position; that the adopting parents had had the child since he was six days old, and that the adopting parents had given him good care, that they were entitled to an interlocutory order of adoption, which was granted, based upon the findings of fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
472 P.2d 64, 106 Ariz. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-baby-boy-ariz-1970.