In Re Philip S.
This text of 881 A.2d 931 (In Re Philip S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
This case, in which the underlying dispute revolves around the petitioner’s professed need to have access to the records of his own adoption, involves a clash of rights — each of which deserves respect, even though they cannot be reconciled with each other. The petitioner asserts that his religious convictions are of such a magnitude that the confidentiality that ordinarily attaches to adoption records should be subordinated to his convictions. In our judgment, the petitioner has failed to proffer adequate proof that he is entitled to such a result.
The petitioner was born in 1971. He was later adopted after the services of the Sophia Little Home (a home for “unwed mothers”) had been engaged with respect to the arrangement of an adoption. In or about April of 2001, petitioner (who, at least at some times during the pendency of this case, was incarcerated in Pennsylvania) commenced the process of seeking an order from the Rhode Island Family Court so that he could determine the identity of his biological parents. 1 The petitioner based his claim of entitlement to that information upon his own understanding of the teachings of Mormonism. The state resisted, asserting that the birth mother’s right to privacy should prevent the re *933 quested information from being revealed. 2
We need not narrate at length the travel of this case through the Family Court. Suffice it to say that, in the end, the Chief Judge of that court ruled, in a thoughtful rescript opinion, that petitioner had not proven his case.
Although this case could potentially plunge us into a lengthy discussion of several tantalizing and significant issues, it is our opinion, upon reviewing the record of the case as litigated, that the Family Court correctly disposed of this matter on the basis of its determination that there was a failure of proof on petitioner’s part. The petitioner presented the Family Court with no meaningful evidence to support his petition other than his own subjective assertions about what he considered to be the requirements of his religion. 3
In Rhode Island, access to the records of an adoption proceeding is permitted only pursuant to a court order, and such an order is issued only upon a showing of good cause. In re Christine, 121 R.I. 203, 207, 397 A.2d 511, 513 (1979). Moreover, we have expressly held that “[t]he one seeking access to the information * * * bears a heavy burden in establishing the requisite good cause.” In re Assalone, 512 A.2d 1383, 1385 (R.I.1986) (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added). 4
The reason why the good cause requirement is so exigent in this context is that the confidentiality of the adoption process is deemed to be of an extraordinarily high value. 5 In his opinion for the Court in the case of In re Christine, 121 R.I. at 206, 397 A.2d at 512-13, Justice Kelleher summarized the benefits that “the statutory shield of confidentiality” brings to each of the parties to the adoption triangle. 6 With *934 respect to the benefits that the statutory assurance of confidentiality brings to those who choose to give a child up for adoption, Justice Kelleher spoke as follows in In re Christine, 121 R.I. at 206, 397 A.2d at 513: “Secrecy enables the natural parent to place the child for adoption with a respectable agency with the assurance that his or her identity will not become public knowledge.” See In re Adoption of Baby S., 308 N.J.Super. 207, 705 A.2d 822, 823-26 (1997) (discussing at length this Court’s opinion in In re Christine); see also In the Matter of Roger B., 85 Ill.App.3d 1064, 41 Ill.Dec. 386, 407 N.E.2d 884, 886-87 (1980); Bradey v. Children’s Bureau of South Carolina, 275 S.C. 622, 274 S.E.2d 418, 421-22 (1981).
We continue to adhere to the philosophy that this Court endorsed in the case of In re Christine, according to which confidentiality is deemed tó be a value of a high order in the adoption context. The subject of adoption and the expectations of confidentiality that so often surround it are inherently complex and delicate. We give the benefit of the doubt to the preservation of confidentiality in close cases. There is much wisdom in the venerable opinion of the English Court of Chancery in Pearse v. Pearse, 1 DeG. & Sm. 12, 28-29, 63 Eng. Rep. 950, 957 (Ch. 1846): “Truth, like all other good things, may be loved unwisely — may be pursued too keenly — may cost too much.”
It is our opinion that a petitioner who seeks to bear the heavy burden of establishing “good cause” must submit objective evidence in support of the petition — usually in the form of professional opinions that support the petitioner’s case. 7 Otherwise, the very important personal and societal interests that the adoption process serves might well be exposed to abuse on the basis of utterly subjective assertions. 8
*935 Although we set forth in footnote nine some of our preliminary thoughts about the subject, we need not rule definitively in this case on the relationship between religious convictions and the “good cause” requirement — because the Family Court had before it nothing more than petitioner’s ipse dixit as to his subjective interpretation of his religion. 9 Putting aside for a moment the constitutionally based reservations that we have briefly summarized in footnote nine, it is our opinion that petitioner utterly failed to present adequate evidence to support his petition, even on his own chosen grounds.
In short, the petitioner in this case fell far short of sustaining his burden of proving the existence of good cause. We can apply to this case the words that we used in our opinion in In re Assalone, 512 A.2d at 1390: “In the instant case the initial burden of establishing good cause or compelling need has not been sustained.”
*936 Conclusion
For these reasons, the judgment of the Family Court is affirmed. The record may be returned to that court.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
881 A.2d 931, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 185, 2005 WL 2264703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-philip-s-ri-2005.