In Re Adoption of MAH
This text of 411 So. 2d 1380 (In Re Adoption of MAH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re the ADOPTION OF M.A.H., a Minor Child.[1]
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*1381 Sharyn D. Garfield of Law Office of Chesley V. Morton, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
Charles R. Forman of Gill & Forman, Ocala, for appellee.
LETTS, Chief Judge.
The paternal grandparents, age 52, here protest the denial of their petition to permanently adopt their 5 year old granddaughter. The natural father consented, but the natural mother, age 26, to whom the child was born out of wedlock, opposed the adoption although she herself had been found by the court ordered Health & Rehabilitative Service's (HRS) investigation to be an unfit mother incapable of assuming responsibility for the child "at this time nor in the foreseeable future." We reverse.
This is a tragic tale perhaps complicated by the fact that, because of the circumstances and through no fault of those instrumental to the outcome, four different judges and at least three counselors from HRS have handled bits and pieces of this situation.
In the beginning, when the child was but two years old, HRS placed her in its emergency shelter and shortly thereafter, in October of 1977, temporary custody of the child was, by court order, officially given to the paternal grandparents. With only a few interruptions, they have had physical, though not official, custody since the child was six months old. The mother has never protested this custody and does not do so now. It is only the adoption that is opposed.
As the natural mother's counsel concedes in her brief, the mother has a long history of drug related emotional problems and since April of 1978 has never attempted to directly contact the child, or the child's grandparents, up to and including the date of the hearing on the adoption in June of 1980, a period of over two years. The only attempts at contact were the sending of Christmas presents one Christmas in 1979, (which were never received[2]) and several telephone calls or letters to HRS officials in which she expressed interest in the child and hopes for visitation.[3] Moreover, at a November, 1977, hearing the judge ordered the mother to pay $7.00 a week towards the child's support which she totally failed to do except for one lump sum payment of $48.50 made in 1978 to avoid being held in contempt. Her arrearages at the time of the adoption hearing amounted to $7.00 a week for some 130 weeks, the last 116 weeks of which had produced no contribution whatever.
There is, however, conflict regarding her ability to make support payments. The mother has been unemployed, and has changed jobs and locations several times while battling her emotional, psychological and drug problems. Nonetheless, we have read every word of the record for ourselves and find, according to the mother's own testimony for example, that for the entire year preceding the adoption hearing she worked steadily for one employer, earning up to $240 per week gross. At no time during that period did she send as much as one penny of the court ordered support.
We would comment that our litany of the natural mother's shortcomings is not set forth to make her look bad, for we recognize that she has endured and continues to *1382 endure severe problems.[4] Rather we recount them because the legislature requires a showing of abandonment and our Supreme Court in Wiggins v. Rolls, 100 So.2d 414 (Fla. 1958), denied an adoption request because the following factors negated an abandonment by the non-consenting parent who: (1) consistently showed affection for the child, (2) furnished regular funds for support and maintenance, (3) maintained as close a contact with the child as circumstances could permit, (4) remembered her with gifts on holidays, birthdays and at Christmas time, (5) wrote regular letters, and (6) came from New York each summer during vacation to visit the child.
By contrast, the non-consenting parent here has done none of these things except for never received Christmas presents one Christmas and a few contacts with HRS. Moreover for the two years preceding the adoption hearing it was not New York that she failed to come to Broward County from for a visit, but rather Ocala, Florida.
Finally, to complete enough of a factual dissertation necessary to support our conclusion, the HRS evaluation furnished for the adoption hearing, said of the grandparents:
It is clear that the petitioners enjoy a warm, loving relationship with their granddaughter and have provided her with good care in pleasant surroundings. They have adequate income and resources to provide for her needs.
Concluding that same evaluation however, the HRS report gave two reasons for opposing the adoption:
In the opinion of the undersigned counselor, the best interests of [the child] would not be served by granting this petition, for the following reasons:
1. Through adoption ... the child would lose forever her maternal heritage, her right to visit and know and love and be loved by her natural mother. This is not the case with her natural father, who, although he has given his consent to the adoption, will still have access to the child.
2. Adoption by the petitioners will result in no additional benefits to [the child]. Her living situation will remain as it has been for the last 32 months. Her paternal grandparents will continue to provide for her physical, emotional and spiritual needs.
Both from an examination of the applicable statute[5] and this court's decisions in The Matter of the Adoption of Serpe, 395 So.2d 1240 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981) and in The Matter of Adoption of Noble, 349 So.2d 1215 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977) it would appear (as this trial judge expressed it at the adoption hearing) that the sole question absent consent is:
Did the mother abandon the child?
We agree, but it was not always thus and in the end this is not the basis on which this judge made his decision. Prior to 1973, the Florida Statute did not require the parent to have "abandoned" the offspring and indeed it spoke to "the best interests of the child." Section 72.20, Florida Statutes (1955). However, our no doubt well intentioned legislature has orchestrated the new statute to specifically negate the child's best interests and make the adoption, without consent, subject only to abandonment.[6] Thus the comforting words of Wiggins v. Rolls, supra, "that the courts will always consider first and primarily the welfare of the minor," have been superceded. Id. 100 So.2d at 416. This is hard to accept. In matters relating to children it appears that the best interests of a child are always at least considered in all facets of the law. Yet in that most sensitive of areas, adoption *1383 of minor children, the legislature has seen fit to jerk the rug out from under us.[7] (See Nelson v. Herndon, 371 So.2d 140, 141 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979) and Solomon v. McLucas, 382 So.2d 339 (Fla. 2d DCA 1980), cert. den. 389 So.2d 1112 (Fla. 1980). We are thus required, on a case by case basis, to decide what constitutes abandonment.
Significantly, the confidential report and testimony by HRS concludes that the mother has not abandoned the child for two reasons.
1. The undersigned counselor has had several phone calls from [the mother] at various times over the past year in which she expressed a desire to visit M.A.H.
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411 So. 2d 1380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-mah-fladistctapp-1982.