In re M.M.D.

662 A.2d 837, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 141
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1995
DocketNo. 94-FS-620
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 662 A.2d 837 (In re M.M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re M.M.D., 662 A.2d 837, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 141 (D.C. 1995).

Opinions

Opinion for the court by Associate Judge FERREN.

Concurring Opinion by Senior Judge MACK at p. 862.

Dissenting Opinion by Associate Judge STEADMAN at p. 866.

Table of Contents

Page

INTRODUCTION. 840

I. Facts and Proceedings. 840

II. Summary of Decision. 842

[840]*840Page

III. Whether An Unmarried Couple Is Eligible To Adopt A Child. CO 00

A. Preliminary Observation: How To Conceptualize This Case. CO Tp 00

B. Applicable Statutory Provisions and the the Trial Judge’s Ruling. CO TP 00

C. Rules For Statutory Interpretation. id Tp 00

D. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: Language of the Adoption Statute, and the Statutory Rule of Construction in D.C.Code § 49-202 . CD ^ 00

E. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: Legislative History. 05 TP 00

F. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: Canons of Statutory Construction and “Strict” v. “Liberal” Construction. H ID 00

1. Expressio Urdus . H ID 00

2. Strict Construction. CO ID 00

G. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: Other Interpretative Criteria — “Absurd Results” and “Obvious Injustice”. Tp ID 00

H. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: A Final Interpretative Criterion— “Legislative Purpose”. TP ID 00

1. Legislative Intent. ID ID 00

2. Statutory Purpose. <D LD 00

I. Adoptions By Unmarried Couples: Furthering the Statutory Purpose By Achieving the Child’s Best Interests. CID 00

IV. Whether An Adoptive Parent’s Relationship With the Child Will Be Cut Off If That Parent’s Unmarried Life Partner is Permitted To Adopt 05 ID 00

A. The “Stepparent Exception” . 05 ID 00
B. Rejection of Possible Alternative Analysis. 1 — I íO 00
V. Conclusion. O 00

FERREN, Associate Judge:

This case presents the question whether, under District of Columbia law, two unmarried persons — in particular, a same-sex couple living together in a committed personal relationship — may adopt a child. If the answer is yes, there is a second question: whether the fact that one member of the couple already has adopted the child creates any impediment to both members’ joining in the adoption. We answer the first question “yes,” the second question “no.” The trial judge erred in answering each question but intimated that the adoption would be in the child’s “best interests” if the law were otherwise — as we hold it here to be. We therefore reverse and remand for issuance of factual findings and, if still indicated, for entry of a decree granting the adoption appellants seek.

I. Facts and Proceedings

We quote the statement of facts from the trial judge’s opinion (footnotes omitted):

Hillary is a healthy, happy, and delightful 2]é year-old Black/Hispanic child who was born on August 15,1991 in the District of Columbia. Hillary’s biological mother is a young, attractive Black woman who met Bruce and Mark after reading an advertisement that they had placed in a local newspaper. The ad identified the petitioners as a gay couple who were seeking to adopt a child. Bruce and Mark are adult, white, homosexual males who have shared an intimate relationship for almost five years.
At the time she read the newspaper advertisement, the birth mother was several months pregnant and was not on good terms with her mother with whom she then lived. The birth mother, therefore, not only answered the ad, but shortly after meeting the petitioners, she began living with them. Eventually, she delivered Hillary on August 15, 1991. All went as planned when Hillary’s mother signed her consent to an adoption of Hillary on September 9, 1991. Bruce filed the first petition to adopt the child on the following day.
The baby’s natural mother and Bruce reached an agreement that the mother would continue to have visitation privileges with Hillary, even after the adoption was finalized. These visitation arrangements, however, did not proceed smoothly. Rather, the mother accused Bruce of denying her access to Hillary and eventually she filed a motion to vacate her consent to the [841]*841adoption. This motion was submitted to this court and was scheduled for a hearing.
After much discussion and several preliminary hearings, the parties reached an accord which they reduced to writing. Essentially, Hillary’s mother and Bruce agreed again to permit the mother to visit with Hillary even after a final decree of adoption was issued.
In them discussion with the court about this agreement, the parties expressly stated that they understood that under the District of Columbia law, the natural mother had no enforceable right to visit Hillary after a final decree of adoption was signed because the law in the District of Columbia, as the parties understood it, mandated that upon the signing of the final decree of adoption, all of the mother’s rights as a parent would be terminated. No one suggested that this severance of Hillary’s mother’s rights was waivable. At the parties’ request, this court reviewed the agreement and satisfied itself that the natural mother understood that she was in no way obligated to settle the case; that she could instead proceed with the hearing on her motion to vacate her consent; and that the agreement to allow continued visitation with Hillary could not be enforced under the law as it existed in the District of Columbia. This court was further satisfied that the mother’s decision to reaffirm her consent to the adoption and to withdraw her motion to vacate her consent was voluntarily made. Therefore, since all of the evidence supported a finding that Bruce M. was a suitable person to adopt Hillary, and since Hillary was clearly suitable to be adopted, and because this court found that the adoption was in Hillary’s best interest, this court signed the final decree of adoption in favor of Bruce M.[1]
In March 1993, both Bruce M. and Mark D. petitioned to adopt Hillary. In addition, Bruce M. signed his consent to the petition to adopt in favor of himself and Mark D.
The petitioners, Bruce and Mark, are thirty and thirty-five respectively. They
are both Catholics who are members of a gay and lesbian religious organization called Dignity. Brace has a Bachelor’s Degree in Electrical Engineering and a Master’s Degree in Engineering Computer Science. He currently works as an engineer for a major corporation. Mark has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science and a Master’s Degree in Public Administration. He now works as a Court Administrator in the state of Pennsylvania.
The petitioners own a condominium that they bought jointly and have shared since 1990. They have committed themselves to each other as a family to the extent legally possible, and they seek to raise Hillary together, whether or not their joint petition to adopt her is approved. They have, for example, introduced Hillary to, and included her as, a part of both of them extended families.

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Bluebook (online)
662 A.2d 837, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mmd-dc-1995.