In Re De Walt's Adoption

101 So. 2d 915
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 28, 1958
Docket290
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 101 So. 2d 915 (In Re De Walt's Adoption) 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.

Bluebook
In Re De Walt's Adoption, 101 So. 2d 915 (Fla. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

101 So.2d 915 (1958)

In re Adoption of Phyllis Irene DE WALT, a Minor.
Cleopatra Helen DE WALT, Appellant,
v.
Lawrence DE WALT and Clara DeWalt, Appellees.

No. 290.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

March 28, 1958.
Rehearing Denied April 25, 1958.

*916 Shutts, Bowen, Simmons, Prevatt & Julian, John Cotton Howell, Wm. P. Simmons, Jr., Miami, for appellant.

Warren Goodrich, Jerry Hussy, Bradenton, for appellees.

ALLEN, Acting Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree of adoption, dated February 25, 1957, which granted the petition of Lawrence DeWalt and Clara DeWalt for adoption of the minor daughter of their deceased son. The child's mother, Cleopatra Helen DeWalt, contested the adoption.

The record discloses that the appellant, Cleopatra Helen DeWalt, and Lawrence Philip DeWalt, the parents of Phyllis Irene DeWalt, a nine year old child who was the subject matter of the adoption proceedings, were divorced by a decree of the Circuit Court for Dade County, Florida, on or about the 13th day of August, 1954. The appellant was granted custody of the minor child, but subsequently, on or about November 9, 1954, the court changed the custody of the child from the mother to the father, determining that the mother was unfit to have the custody of the child. The order granted custody of the child to Lawrence Philip DeWalt with reasonable rights of visitation to the mother.

The father of the child carried her to Lee County, Florida, to the home of his parents, petitioners in the adoption proceedings, and left the child in their custody. The child's father was an aviator, and on or about February 8, 1956, was killed in an accident. Fifteen days later Lawrence DeWalt and Clara DeWalt filed a petition to adopt the minor child without the consent of the natural mother. The mother of the child vigorously opposed the adoption proceedings, questioning the jurisdiction of the court, the validity of the petition for adoption, and other aspects of the proceedings.

The appellant, in her question No. 1, contends that since the divorce was instituted in Dade County and custody was granted the father in the divorce proceedings, the court retaining jurisdiction to change that custody if necessary, a Circuit Court in another circuit did not have jurisdiction to proceed under the adoption statutes.

In the case of Younger v. Younger, 1895, 106 Cal. 377, 39 P. 779, 780, an action was brought by the father for modification of the divorce decree awarding him the custody of the child. In the decree the father sought to modify, a divorce was granted to the mother of the child and she was awarded custody of the child. The mother removed with the child to another county and took up her residence in the family of her grandfather. Subsequently, the child was, by consent of the mother, adopted by the grandfather. It was after the adoption proceeding that the father filed the petition in the original divorce proceeding, praying that the custody of the child be awarded him on the ground that the mother had abandoned the child to the control of others and had since married again. The mother answered the petition by alleging the adoption in another court, and denying the jurisdiction of the divorce court to make any order in the premises. The court modified the divorce decree by requiring that the child be permitted, at all reasonable times, to be in the custody of the father. An appeal was taken, and the Supreme Court of California, in its opinion, said:

"It is contended by appellant, and, we think, correctly, that the Santa Clara court had no jurisdiction to *917 make the order appealed from, for the reason that its jurisdiction over the child had ceased and determined absolutely upon its adoption. The Civil Code provides for the adoption of minor children and the circumstances and conditions under which such adoption may be had. * * * The jurisdiction of the court in Santa Clara county over the child in the divorce proceeding grew out of and depended solely upon the fact that it was the child of the parties to that action. As such, the law gave that court jurisdiction to award the custody of the child as it might deem for its best interest, and to direct provision for its maintenance and support. By the adoption proceeding, however, the status of the child was wholly changed. It became ipso facto the child of another, and ceased to sustain that relation, in a legal sense, to its natural parents. * * * In other words, the child ceased to sustain any such relation to the parties or the cause as warranted any further exercise of jurisdiction over it. It was withdrawn as a part of the res of that proceeding, and the jurisdiction of the court, so far as it was concerned, was as absolutely extinguished as though death had removed it.
"* * * And, for these reasons, there is nothing in the point that the superior court or judge in Yolo county was without jurisdiction in the adoption proceedings by reason of the fact that the jurisdiction of the Santa Clara court in the action for divorce had first obtained. The jurisdiction of the judge of Yolo county was as exclusive and complete in the one instance as that of the superior court of Santa Clara in the other. The one was in no way dependent upon or subject to the other. * * *"

In the case of In re Whetstone, 1939, 137 Fla. 712, 188 So. 576, the Court held that attempted adoption proceedings of an illegitimate child was not binding on the child's mother, notwithstanding that the mother appeared in commitment proceedings in juvenile court, where no notice of proceedings had been given to her. The ground for such holding was that since judicial proceedings for commitment of dependent children and judicial proceedings for adoption are distinct, notice of and participation in commitment proceedings cannot be substituted for the required consent to or notice of subsequent, proposed adoption proceedings.

The appellant's question No. 2 challenges the sufficiency of the petition for adoption for allegedly failing to charge that the mother was an unfit person to care for the minor child.

Chapter 72 of the Florida Statutes contains the statutory law on adoption. Said chapter requires that all petitions for adoption be filed in the county in which the petitioner or petitioners reside, or in which is located any licensed child placing agency to which the child sought to be adopted has been permanently committed, or in which such child may reside. Said chapter also requires that the petition shall state the name, sex, color and age of the child, if known; the new name of the child if change of name is desired; the name, age and place of residence of the adopting parent or parents, and if married, the place and date of their marriage; the name and address of the agency to which such child has been permanently committed, and whether or not the agency is a licensed child placing agency as defined in said chapter; and the reasons why the petitioner or petitioners desire to adopt the child. See Sections 72.08 and 72.12, Florida Statutes, 1955, F.S.A.

We note from the record that the petition for adoption had attached to it a certified copy of the order by the Dade County Circuit Court in which custody of the involved child was changed from the *918 mother, appellant here, to the father. Such order found that the mother was unfit to retain custody of the child. We think this, together with the other allegations of the petition, stated sufficient grounds for seeking adoption under the above sections of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
101 So. 2d 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-de-walts-adoption-fladistctapp-1958.