In re J.J.J.

718 P.2d 948, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 334
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1986
DocketNo. S-718
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 718 P.2d 948 (In re J.J.J.) 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 J.J.J., 718 P.2d 948, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 334 (Ala. 1986).

Opinions

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

This is an expedited appeal from an adoption decree whereby a 7-year-old boy was adopted by his stepfather over the objections of the boy’s biological father. Because of the biological father’s history of nonsupport, his consent was deemed unnecessary. .

The primary issue in this case is whether the master erred in finding that for at least a 12-month period, the biological father failed significantly without justifiable cause to provide support required by judicial decree.1 This finding was sustained by the superior court. A second issue is whether the superior court erred in reversing the master’s determination that it was not in the best interests of the child for the adoption to be granted. Lastly, at issue is whether the superior court erred in ruling that the biological father could, upon a [950]*950proper showing be granted enforceable post-adoption visitation rights.

We conclude that the superior court correctly affirmed the master’s finding with respect to support and correctly reversed her best interests determination. However, the superior court erred in allowing for post-adoption visitation rights.2

I. BACKGROUND SUMMARY

On May 25, 1982 the boy’s biological parents were divorced. B.J., the biological mother, was awarded custody of the boy and J.B., the biological father, was ordered to pay $200 per month as child support. J.B. made no payments until August 1982, when he made a single $200 payment after being contacted by the Child Support Enforcement Agency (C.S.E.A.).

Thereafter, from September 1982 through March 1983, J.B. made no payments toward the support of the boy. In April and May of 1983 the C.S.E.A. garnished a total of $1,000 of J.B.’s wages to apply toward his child support arrearages. Thereafter, from May through October 1983, J.B. continued to pay nothing toward the boy’s support.3

In August 1983 the boy’s mother and his stepfather, S.J., decided that S.J. should seek to adopt the boy and so advised J.B.. In November 1983, shortly before the filing of the adoption petition, J.B. and his new wife paid $1,800 against part of his child support arrearages, after again being contacted by the C.S.E.A.

From December 1981 until the filing of the adoption petition, on December 19, 1983, J.B. had almost no contact with the boy.4 Twice during the last six months of this period J.B. reportedly informed the boy’s mother, B.J., that he now wanted to visit the boy. However, B.J. resisted J.B.’s request for unsupervised visitation with the boy, stating that she believed that J.B. should slowly develop a relationship with the boy after having had no contact with him for such a long period. It does appear that, beginning well before the divorce, J.B. virtually ignored the boy.5

During the period since his marriage to B.J., the boy’s stepfather evidently established a close parental relationship with the boy.

In December 1983 the boy’s stepfather, S.J., filed the petition to adopt him. The biological father, J.B., refused to consent to the adoption. The stepfather contended that J.B.’s consent was unnecessary pursuant to AS 25.23.050(a)(2)(B), because J.B. had “failed significantly, without justifiable cause ... to provide for the care and support of the child as required by law or judicial decree.”

The probate master found that J.B. had, for at least a year, significantly and unjustifiably failed to provide court-ordered support and had lost his right to withhold consent to the adoption. However, the master also found that the adoption decree would not be in the boy’s best interests because he was curious about his biological father and seemed interested in knowing him (notwithstanding the boy’s attachment to his stepfather). By law an adoption decree would terminate J.B.’s parental rights regarding the boy.

[951]*951The superior court sustained the master’s finding on consent, but overturned the “best interest” finding as clearly erroneous. The court also concluded that the adoption should be granted and that “upon a proper showing, the biological father can be afforded visitation rights.” This expedited appeal followed.6

II. DISCUSSION

A. STEPPARENT ADOPTION IN ALASKA

As commentators have noted,7 the very problem now before us is an increasingly common occurrence, given the increase in divorce and remarriage in our society. Nevertheless, despite voluntarily assumed obligations and the existence of a strong bond between stepparent and stepchild, such a relationship lacks legal protection in the event of the desertion or death of the stepparent’s spouse (the custodial “natural” parent).8 In such an event the noncustodial “natural” parent, even a parent who has rarely paid child support or merely made an occassional gesture of communication, may automatically assert primary rights to take legal custody of the child, despite the child’s need for a stable and continuous family relationship. Stepparent adoption assures that the child may remain with his existing family. However, adoption has seemed a harsh remedy when the biological parent refuses consent. In Alaska, as in most states, an adoption decree has the effect of terminating an adopted child’s legal relationship with all of his blood relatives.9

Well-known commentators have proposed “incomplete adoption” as a middle approach that would better accommodate the interests of both the stepparent and the noncustodial natural parent by giving equal custody rights to each.10 However, the Alaska legislature apparently has not yet considered this modern approach that would allow the courts a more reasonable choice in deciding stepfamily cases. Unfortunately, the present law’s all-or-nothing approach is unrealistic and often compels an unfair result for a child, for a stepfamily, or for a noncustodial “natural” parent. See also Note, Stepparent Custody: An Alternative to Stepparent Adoption, 12 U.C.D.L.Rev. 604 (1979), which we noted in D.L.J. v. W.D.R., 635 P.2d 834, 838 n. 5 (Alaska 1981).11 We are therefore left with [952]*952the harsh choices inherent in deciding between adoption or no adoption at all.

Alaska has adopted a modified version of the Uniform Adoption Act.12 The Uniform Adoption Act sets forth the circumstances under which an adoption should be granted without a natural parent’s consent, including a provision indicating that the court must consider the best interests of the child in determining whether to grant an adoption.13 Alaska’s version of the Act focuses on a noncustodial parent’s failure to meaningfully communicate with a child, significant failure to pay child support, and other acts of abandonment.

In this court’s prior decisions in this area14 we have declined to dispense with a noncustodial parent’s right to withhold consent to a stepparent adoption as long as the noncustodial parent had made a few perfunctory communications or an occasional gesture of support. In Matter of Adoption of K.M.M.,

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Bluebook (online)
718 P.2d 948, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jjj-alaska-1986.