In Re Adoption of KS

543 P.2d 1191
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1975
Docket2359
StatusPublished

This text of 543 P.2d 1191 (In Re Adoption of KS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska 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 KS, 543 P.2d 1191 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

543 P.2d 1191 (1975)

In the Matter of the ADOPTION OF K.S., a minor child.

No. 2359.

Supreme Court of Alaska.

December 22, 1975.

Gregory D. Hoffman, Legal Intern, and John Silko of Alaska Legal Services Corp., Ketchikan, for appellant (natural mother).

W. Clark Stump, of Stump & Stump, Ketchikan, for appellees.

Before BOOCHEVER, C.J., and RABINOWITZ, CONNOR, ERWIN and BURKE, JJ.

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

This case involves an appeal from a superior court decision which granted Richard and Celeste's petition for adoption of K.S. The appellant is the natural mother of K.S.

On June 16, 1969, Carol gave birth to K.S. out of wedlock in Portland, Oregon. For the next eleven months Carol and K.S. lived in Portland with the child's maternal grandmother, Betty.

In the summer of 1970, Carol and K.S. moved to a residence in northwest Portland and began living with John, Carol's boyfriend. An unemployed heroin addict, John supported his habit by selling drugs to other users. Among those purchasing narcotics from John were Richard and his wife, Celeste, appellees in this matter. Through this relationship Carol became acquainted with Richard and Celeste in January, 1971.

In the summer of 1971 Carol began to suspect that K.S. might have a hearing problem. In June she took K.S. to the Portland Center for Hearing and Speech, where it was determined that a serious hearing deficiency did in fact exist. In addition, Carol took K.S. to a private physician, who diagnosed the deafness as the result of a birth defect.

Richard and Celeste continued to purchase heroin from John throughout 1971, and in January of 1972 they moved into a *1192 house in Portland with John, Carol and K.S. It was during this time that Carol began using heroin. A few months later Richard and Celeste moved to Astoria, Oregon, but continued to see Carol and John in order to transact drug business.

In late May or early June of 1972, Carol allowed Richard and Celeste, who were again living in Portland, to take temporary custody of K.S. while she and John moved. The length of time that K.S. stayed with Richard and Celeste is in dispute, but it was somewhere between three weeks and two months. During this separation Carol visited Richard and Celeste's home almost every day to buy drugs and see K.S.

In September of 1972 Carol, John and K.S. moved to Tucson, Arizona. Approximately one month later John was arrested for armed robbery, and Carol was arrested as an accessory.[1] While Carol was incarcerated K.S. was placed in foster care and enrolled in the Easter Seal School for the Deaf in Tucson. Upon her release from jail, Carol entered a hospital for three weeks' detoxification. One month after her release from the hospital, approximately eight weeks after the initial arrest, Carol regained custody of K.S.K.S. continued attending the Easter Seal school until May, 1973; and as a result of the training provided, Carol and K.S. learned to use some sign language.

In May of 1973 John (who had since been placed on probation for the robbery), Carol and K.S. moved back to Portland; and in the latter part of July, Richard and Celeste, who were then living in Myrtle Creek, Oregon, met them there. During this visit Carol gave Richard and Celeste custody of K.S., although there is a dispute surrounding the terms under which they were to take care of the child. It was Carol's contention that they agreed to care for K.S. while she went through a heroin withdrawal program in a local hospital, which she did enter on July 26, 1973. Richard and Celeste, on the other hand, denied any knowledge of Carol's plans for hospitalization and claimed that they offered to care for K.S. while John and Carol, who had been evicted from their apartment, found another place to live.

Upon returning to Myrtle Creek, after having had custody of K.S. for about five days, Richard and Celeste decided to visit Thorne Bay, Alaska. Apparently because they were unable to contact Carol or find out where she was Richard and Celeste called the child's maternal grandmother, seeking permission to take K.S. for a two-week vacation in Alaska. At this time the maternal grandmother had no knowledge of Carol's heroin addiction, hospitalization, or whereabouts, and because she was unable to take care of the child herself at that time, she consented to the trip. The maternal grandmother, who was in the process of moving, informed Richard and Celeste that they could obtain her new telephone number through the area operator upon returning from the vacation.

Richard, Celeste and K.S. departed for Alaska during the last days of July, 1973. Less than a week later Carol was released from the hospital and discovered that K.S. had gone to Alaska. Although Carol was upset about K.S.'s absence, no steps were taken to find her because the maternal grandmother assured Carol that K.S. would be returned in due time, as initially planned. After waiting for several weeks, Carol grew impatient; and on August 29, 1973, she called the Portland Police and the juvenile authorities concerning K.S.'s whereabouts.

*1193 Also, according to Carol's testimony, she attempted to locate Richard and Celeste through Richard's father in Oregon, although the circumstances surrounding this matter are in dispute. Carol and the maternal grandmother testified that Richard's father refused to disclose his son's location when they initially telephoned him. Only later, they contend, could they obtain the Alaska address, and then only by deceiving him into believing Richard had become a beneficiary in a will. On the other hand, although Richard and Celeste admit that they made no attempt to inform Carol or the maternal grandmother as to their location or plans, they claim that they did converse with Richard's father in Oregon (because Carol had located them on a prior occasion by calling him), to determine whether he had received any inquiries regarding K.S. They testified that Richard's father informed them that he had not received any calls concerning K.S. Richard and Celeste interpreted this to mean that Carol was not looking for K.S. Thus they saw no need to inform Carol or the maternal grandmother as to their whereabouts or the fact that they planned to stay in Alaska, without returning K.S., longer than two weeks.

When the Alaska address was ultimately obtained in October of 1973, it was given to the juvenile authorities in Portland, who thereupon contacted Richard and Celeste through the Alaska Division of Family and Children's Services. Richard, Celeste and Carol talked a number of times by phone, and it was eventually agreed, because both parties were in poor financial condition, that K.S. would be returned in January when Celeste went south for surgery, unless Carol could come to get the child sooner.

Although Carol was given the impression in October that K.S. would be returned in January, during the latter part of 1973 Richard and Celeste began contemplating retaining custody of K.S.

Eventually Carol and the maternal grandmother saved enough money to fly the maternal grandmother to Ketchikan, and Richard and Celeste were notified that she would arrive at the end of January to get K.S. Though Richard and Celeste led them to believe that this would be the final arrangement, it was during the last days in January that they secured a restraining order to prevent Carol from obtaining custody of K.S. and filed a petition for adoption.

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Related

Turner v. Pannick
540 P.2d 1051 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
Reynardus v. Garcia
437 S.W.2d 740 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1968)
In re the Adoption of K. S.
543 P.2d 1191 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
In re Spencer
74 Misc. 2d 557 (NYC Family Court, 1973)
Confessora B. v. Ana L.
75 Misc. 2d 576 (NYC Family Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
543 P.2d 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-ks-alaska-1975.