In Re Adoption of Burdette

83 N.E.2d 813, 83 Ohio App. 368, 38 Ohio Op. 429, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 693
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 4, 1948
Docket3945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 83 N.E.2d 813 (In Re Adoption of Burdette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals 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 Burdette, 83 N.E.2d 813, 83 Ohio App. 368, 38 Ohio Op. 429, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 693 (Ohio Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Hunsicker, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from the Probate Court of Summit county.

Norma Gills, a minor unwed mother, was delivered of a girl child on August 15, 1947, in the Peoples Hospital of Akron, Ohio.

On August 16, 1947, Norma and her father, Homer Gills, signed and acknowledged an answer and consent to adoption. The witnesses to the acknowledgment were Geo. A. Palmer, the attending physician, John *369 G. Rowley, attorney for the petitioners to adopt, and Mrs. O. H. Gills, wife of Homer and mother of Norma. Norma and her father then signed a waiver of notice as to “all future hearings relative to the aforesaid adoption matter.”

On August 20, 1947, Donald Allen Burdette and Thelma Mae Burdette, husband and wife, filed in the Probate Court a petition for adoption of Norma’s daughter, the answer and consent of Norma and her father, together with the waiver which Norma and Homer Gills had signed. At the same time a journal entry, approved by the court, was filed, appointing a next friend and setting September 23, 1947, as the date for a hearing on the petition.

The report of the next friend was filed on September 19, 1947, recommending the adoption.

On September 23, 1947, a copy of the notice of hearing and examination was filed, accompanied by the affidavit of John G. Rowley, which affidavit stated that he had on August 22, 1947, served a true copy of the notice “by personally handing the same to Norma Gills, a minor seventeen years of age.” To this copy of the notice was attached a post office department return receipt of registered mail signed by Norma Gills and dated August 22, 1947.

On September 23, 1947, the Probate Court, by journal entry, found. that an illegal placement of the infant child had been made, but approved the placement and granted to the petitioners an interlocutory order of adoption.

On December 16, 1947, Norma Gills filed a motion in Probate Court to withdraw her consent to adoption. On January 20, 1948, an amended motion to set aside the interlocutory order of adoption and to strike the consent from the record was filed.

*370 On May 1, 1948, the Probate Court, by journal entry,, denied Norma Gills’ application to withdraw her consent, overruled the amended motion of January 20,. 1948, and confirmed the interlocutory order of September 23, 1947.

A motion for a new trial, filed May 1, 1948, was overruled, and notice of appeal to this court was then filed by Norma Gills, by her mother and next friend, Myrtle Gills, claiming that the Probate Court erred in the following respects:

“(1) The so-called answer and consent of the said Norma Gills was signed four (4) days before any petition for adoption was filed. The court below found1 that the answer and consent was proper even though no case was pending at the time.

“(2) Norma Gills contended that the answer and consent was blank at the time that she signed the form submitted to her. Appellant contends that the signing of a blank form was a nullity, the lower court held the answer and consent proper.

“ (3) The said Norma Gills did not appear in court and sign her consent nor did she sign it in the presence of ‘next friend,’ as provided by statute.

“(4) The trial court held that she neither had to appear in court nor to sign it before the next friend, although it is admitted in the facts that Norma Gills was in the hospital at the time she signed the alleged answer and consent, and was physically not able to appear in court.

“ (5) The said alleged answer and consent was not witnessed by the statutory next friend as required by Section 10512-14 (2) (a).

“ (6) The alleged answer and consent was signed' by Norma Gills, who is an infant. The court found that it made no difference whether she was an infant or an adult..

*371 “(7) The court erred in finding that proper notice for the hearing on September 23, was had on Norma Gills, an infant.

“(8) The court found that Norma Gills was properly served with notice, although by agreement the facts are that no notice was left with her, but was taken away by the attorney for the adopting parents.

“(9) That the court erred in finding that proper service was had of the September 23rd hearing, although the father of said Norma Gills was not served as the next friend of an infant. •

“(10) Although the statute provides that if the child is placed in the home of the petitioners after the petition has been filed, a supplemental petition must be filed in accordance with Section 10512-12, the court totally ignored this section, and did not fix a later date for a hearing upon a supplemental petition that should have been filed.

“(11) Other errors apparent upon the face of the'' record, prejudicial to the rights of the said Norma-Gills.”

In this appeal on questions of law, we must bear in mind a fundamental principle, i. e., the judgment and findings of the trial court may be set aside or reversed only if they are contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence or are contrary to law. Where the evidence is conflicting, it is the duty of the trial court to .weigh the evidence and determine what inferences should be drawn. Therefore, a judgment based upon conflicting evidence may not be set aside by a reviewing court as against the manifest weight of the evidence, where the judgment is supported by competent evidence presented to the trial court.

The problems for our determination in this case are:

*372 (1) Can a consent to adoption be executed before a petition to adopt is filed?

(2) Must a minor parent of an illegitimate child give consent only in the presence of the “next friend” or in open court?

(3) Can a minor parent of an illegitimate child give consent to adoption of her child?

(4) Can a consent to adoption be withdrawn by the party giving consent, after an interlocutory order of adoption has been entered on the journal of the court?

■ (5) Was Norma Gills properly served with notice of the hearing had on September 23, 1947?

(6) Was it necessary to file a supplemental petition where (a) the trial court found that there had been an illegal placement of the child, (b) there was evidence that the petition had been added to at the time of filing by someone other than the petitioners or their counsel?

“* * * adoption was unknown to the common law of England; and in states whose jurisprudence is based on that system, the right exists by virtue of the statutes.” Sommers v. Doersam, 115 Ohio St., 139, at page 148, 152 N. E., 387. See, also, Blaustein v. Blaustein, 77 Ohio App., 281, 283, 66 N. E. (2d), 156.

The General Assembly enacted, effective January 1, 1944, House Bill No.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E.2d 813, 83 Ohio App. 368, 38 Ohio Op. 429, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-burdette-ohioctapp-1948.