In Re Adoption of Petersen

486 P.2d 887, 1971 Wyo. LEXIS 228
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1971
DocketNo. 3933
StatusPublished

This text of 486 P.2d 887 (In Re Adoption of Petersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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 Petersen, 486 P.2d 887, 1971 Wyo. LEXIS 228 (Wyo. 1971).

Opinion

Chief Justice McINTYRE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This matter involves a proceeding for the adoption of Teina Kay Petersen, a minor. The girl’s paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Petersen, of Sturgis, South Dakota, objected to the court’s jurisdiction. An order for the adoption was nevertheless entered and the Petersens have appealed.

Teina’s natural father died in an accident. Her mother remarried Raymond Byrd when Teina was seven years old. About a year and eight months later the mother died. Within a month thereafter Byrd petitioned to adopt Teina.

The order of events in connection with the adoption seems to have some significance. We will therefore relate them. They are not in dispute.

[888]*888Byrd’s petition for adoption was filed August 4, 1970. The court thereupon entered an order fixing August 14 as the date for hearing the petition and the examination of the parties in interest. No notice of the adoption proceedings was served upon appellants, but they admit they learned of them and had knowledge they were pending.

On August 11 the Petersens came to Worland to visit their granddaughter, hoping to take her home with them, supposedly for a visit. The petitioner refused permission for them to take the child. Counsel for appellants claims that thereupon the appellants took the child without permission. Counsel for appellee uses somewhat different language and claims the grandparents “stole” the child..

The next day, August 12, an attorney for the Petersens filed objections to the adoption by Byrd. The objections were that no medical report accompanied the petition; and notice of the petition had not been served on near relatives. With the filing of these objections, the court continued the hearing on Byrd’s petition for adoption to August 21.

Then, on August 14, Byrd petitioned to be appointed guardian of' the person and estate of Teina. The maternal grandmother of the child joined in this petition. On the same day an order was entered for such appointment.

Thereafter, on August 17, appellants obtained an order in South Dakota for their appointment as guardians of the person and estate of Teina; and on the next day, August 18, their attorney in Worland filed new objections to the adoption petition. These objections added to those formerly filed that the child was not within the jurisdiction of the court and is “now” a resident of South Dakota; and that no jurisdiction of the objectors has been obtained.

Finally, hearing was had on Byrd’s petition for adoption on August 21, 1970. The court found it had jurisdiction and entered an order for the adoption.

Appellants have specified four points to be considered in connection with their claims of error. We will confine ourselves to a discussion of these points.

Medical Report

Section 1-708, W.S.1957, 1969 Cum. Supp., provides that every petition for adoption shall be accompanied by certain things, including a medical report on the child. Appellants claim Byrd’s petition was fatally defective because such a report was not furnished.

Byrd’s attorney counters by saying in the first place the reason for the report is not present in this particular case where the child had lived in the petitioner’s home, as a stepchild, for nearly two years. He argues further that the medical report is not jurisdictional and its omission was not fatal.

Without deciding how meritorious these arguments are, we prefer to look at and consider the exception contained in § 1-708. It is expressly stated in the section that the medical report shall not be required in an adoption proceeding where one or both of the adopting parents is related to the child by either blood or marriage. Without question Byrd was related by marriage until his wife (the girl’s mother) died. Our question is whether for purposes of the exception in § 1-708 Byrd should be considered related by marriage at the time his petition for adoption was filed.

The trial court found Byrd related by marriage “under the evidence in this case.” As far as this particular case is concerned, where the same family ties continued after the mother’s death as had existed prior thereto, we will not say it was wrong for the trial court to consider Byrd as a stepfather and related by marriage to Teina. Therefore, the exception in § 1-708 would apply and a medical report was not necessary.

We will not pretend to answer the question of relationship by marriage for all [889]*889cases and all situations. Instead, we confine ourselves to the facts in this particular case, and particularly to the fact that the parties continued the relationship and the same family ties after the wife and mother died. In Steele v. Suwalski, 7 Cir., 75 F.2d 885, 888, it was held:

“Where the relationship by affinity is in fact, as it was in this case, continued beyond the death of one of the parties to the marriage which created the relationship, and where the parties continue to maintain the same family ties and relationships, considering themselves morally bound to care for each other, the District Court properly found that the relationship continued to exist and that ap-pellee, in this case, was the sister-in-law of the deceased veteran within the meaning of 38 USCA § 511.”

Attorneys on both sides of the case seem to agree the question of whether relationship by marriage is lost upon absolution of the marriage has usually arisen in insurance cases, incest cases, inheritance tax cases, and other cases not similar to the one we are dealing with. With respect to the general proposition, where the decision is not based on the facts similar to those in the case we are concerned with, the matter was gone into at great length in In re Bordeaux’ Estate, 37 Wash. 561, 225 P.2d 433, 434-444 and 451, 26 A.L.R.2d 249.

The Washington supreme court in the Bordeaux case stated, not unanimously, but in “an overwhelming preponderance of cases,” the courts have held the step-relative or in-law is to be considered as remaining in this capacity even after the death of the individual whose marriage brought the relationship into existence. The court then discussed particular cases which had followed the minority view. We find appellants relying primarily on the cases considered to be the minority view in Bordeaux.1

Notice

The second assignment of appellants is that no notice was served upon any of the near relatives of the minor, nor upon the guardians in South Dakota.

No statute is called, to our attention which requires the serving of notice on grandparents living in another state. Indeed, counsel on both sides seem to agree there is no such statutory requirement. We have already mentioned that the maternal grandmother, who lives in Wyoming, joined in Byrd’s application for guardianship in Wyoming. This grandmother also testified at the adoption hearing and approved the adoption by Byrd. After Byrd was appointed guardian, he gave the guardian’s consent to the adoption. No authority has been shown for appellants’ assertion that they should have been notified as guardians in South Dakota. They were not guardians when adoption proceedings were initiated.

Request for Continuance

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In Re the Estate of Ehler
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In Re the Estate of Bordeaux
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Steele v. Suwalski
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Depositors Trust Company of Augusta v. Johnson
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Bluebook (online)
486 P.2d 887, 1971 Wyo. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-petersen-wyo-1971.