In Re Adoption of Wilcox

204 P.2d 168, 68 Ariz. 209, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 128
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1949
DocketNo. 5082.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 P.2d 168 (In Re Adoption of Wilcox) 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 Wilcox, 204 P.2d 168, 68 Ariz. 209, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 128 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

UDALL, Justice.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order in a proceeding initiated by Marguerite Wilcox joined by her husband, Walter Eugene Wilcox, Sr., the natural father, for the adoption of Walter Eugene Wilcox, Jr., a minor of the age (at time of hearing) of eleven years. These adoptive petitioners are hereinafter termed appellees. The natural mother and former wife of Walter Wilcox, Sr., is deceased. The maternal grandparents, W. H. Waggener and Lona Waggener, his wife, having unsuccessfully resisted in the lower court the petition to adopt, have brought their appeal to this court, and they have been joined by the minor acting by and through his guardians and next friends. They will be referred to as appellants.

By reason of the disposition made of the appeal, we consider it unnecessary to either recite further facts or state in detail the legal issues presented in the briefs.

After the appeal was filed the appellees made a timely motion to dismiss contending that there was no statutory right of appeal from an interlocutory order in an adoption case. By a minute order entered on May 12, 1948, this court granted the motion. Pursuant to a motion -for a rehearing, we reconsidered our action, and relying in part upon the case of In re Webb’s Adoption, 65 Ariz. 176, 177 P.2d 222 (wherein we considered an appeal from a similar inter *211 locutory order upon its merits, the question however of a right of appeal being neither raised by the parties nor passed upon by the court), we on June 18, 1948, improvidently vacated the previous order, thus reinstating the appeal. At the oral argument counsel for both appellants and appellees urged that for the future guidance of the bench and bar we expressly pass upon this procedural question in our formal opinion. We were agreeable to this suggestion and have made an intensive study of appellants’ right of appeal from the order in question. For the - reasons hereinafter stated we have reached the conclusion that our original action was correct, that there is in this jurisdiction no right of appeal from an interlocutory order in an adoption matter.

The contentions of the parties raised upon the motion to dismiss as to the appealability of the interlocutory order can be simply and briefly stated. Appellees maintain that the Arizona statutes fail to contain any provision for an appeal from an interlocutory order in adoption cases, and as the right of appeal is a creature of statute and appeals can be taken only in the time and manner provided by law, In re Sullivan’s Estate, 38 Ariz. 387, 300 P. 193, there can be no appeal from such an order. Appellants, on the other hand, take the position that our statutes permit this appeal, placing reliance upon certain subsections of the general appeal statute, section 21-1702, A.C.A.1939, and upon section 27-209, A.C.A.1939. This latter section specifically provides for an appeal .from a decree of adoption, and under the pronouncement of this court speaking through Justice Ross in Sargent v. Superior Court, 28 Ariz. 605, 238 P. 387, 388, we must find any authorization for an appeal in adoption cases within the confines of this section alone. The court stated in that case: “ * * * An adoption proceeding is a statutory one, and is governed by the terms of the statute providing for it. (Citing authorities.) If our adoption statute were silent on the right of appeal, it is possible the general statute governing such right might be invoked in aid thereof, but the adoption statute is not silent. It provides from what and by whom an appeal may be taken, and, in effect, excludes the right of appeal in all other cases. * * * ”

We direct our attention, then, to section 27-209, supra, which reads: “Appeal.— Any petitioner, parent, guardian, or other person having the custody of a child, may appeal to the Supreme Court from a decree of adpption as in other appeals; and the child adopted may, by next friend, appeal in like manner, but no bond shall be required or costs awarded against such child or next friend.”

This section originally came into our laws in 1913, sec. 1197, R.S.1913, and was enacted in its present form and wording in the 1928 revision of the Code, appearing as section 125. Prior to 1933 our statutes provided for a single hearing and order or decree of *212 adoption. Sections 122 and 123, R.C.A. 1928. No provision existed authorizing an interlocutory order, and therefore the appeal statute gave a remedy only from the decree of adoption as it then existed, i. e., a single, final order permanently transferring the legal rights of natural parents to another or others. In 1933 the legislature amended section 123, supra, so as to provide for an interlocutory order, to precede by a period of at least one year the granting of a final decree of adoption. Chapter 57, section 3, Laws 1933, now section 27-207, A.C.A.1939. It seems clear that in providing for this one-year probationary period, during which time the child to be adopted was to live with the adoptive parents, the legislature imposed a safeguard aimed at determining with' some certainty that the child’s best interests would be promoted by the adoption. The terms of this section (27-207, supra) express the intent of the lawmakers to be that until the final order of adoption is entered pursuant to statutory provisions, the minor child is not yet adopted, that up until that time the child is in law still the child of the natural parents. The strongest possible reinforcement for this proposition is in the wording of the statutes themselves:

“The court * * * if satisfied that the interests of the child will be promoted by the adoption, shall make an interlocutory order setting forth the facts and declaring that from the date of the final order of adoption in such case, if such final order be afterwards entered, as hereinafter provided, such child, to all legal intents and purposes, will be the child of the petitioner or petitioners and that its name may be thereby changed. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied.) Section 27-207, supra.

“ * * * The natural parents shall, by such final order of adoption, be divested of all legal rights and obligations in respect to the child, and the child shall be free from all legal obligations of obedience and maintenance in respect to them; * * (Emphasis supplied.) Section 27-208, A. C.A.1939.

Nor is our position weakened by the additional language of this last section: “ * * * such child shall from and after the entry of the interlocutory order herein provided for be, to all intents and purposes, the child and heir at law of the person so adopting it, and entitled, to all the rights and privileges and subj ect to all the obligations of a child of such person begotten in lawful wedlock.”

We cannot but take notice of the use in the preceding two quoted portions of sections 27-207 and 27-208, supra, of the word “legal”, and its omission before “intents and purposes” in this last quoted portion of the latter section. It appears to us that the omission was deliberate, that the legislature was here attempting to define the general position and standing of the minor child insofar as its treatment was concerned while it remained with the petitioners under an interlocutory order of court. Such an interpretation brings this *213

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204 P.2d 168, 68 Ariz. 209, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-wilcox-ariz-1949.