In re the Adoption Doe

42 Haw. 250, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 4
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1957
DocketNo. 3073
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 42 Haw. 250 (In re the Adoption Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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 the Adoption Doe, 42 Haw. 250, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 4 (haw 1957).

Opinion

[251]*251OPINION OF THE COURT BY

MARUMOTO, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of adoption entered by the judge of the juvenile court of the first circuit without the consent of the mother.

In this opinion the names of the parties are not used, pursuant to rule 7 (h) (1) of the rules of this court applicable to confidential and restricted matter. The minor with respect to whom the petition was filed is referred to as the “child,” and the natural parents and the persons who filed the petition are referred to as “father,” “mother,” and “petitioners” or “male petitioner” and “female petitioner,” respectively.

The principal, and the sole substantial, question raised on this appeal is whether the mother abandoned the child or voluntarily surrendered the care and custody of the child to another for the statutory period.

The child was born of a tempestuous union. It is unnecessary to recount the details of the domestic strife between the father and the mother. Suffice it to say that the child is an innocent victim of the discord. When the child was born on November 1, 1947, a suit for divorce by the mother against the father was pending, and an interlocutory decree of divorce had already been entered. After [252]*252the birth of the child, there were sporadic efforts at reconciliation, all of which failed, and a final judgment of divorce was entered on December 30,1948. The final judgment continued in effect the provisions of the order and decree modifying the interlocutory decree of divorce entered on April 9,1948, which awarded the sole care, custody and control of the child to the mother.

During the fourteen-month period that intervened between her birth and the final divorce of her parents, the child was under the personal care of the mother not more than two months. She was with the mother about one month after her birth and about another month in July and August of 1948. During the rest of the period, except for a short stay in a juvenile home in San Jose, she was in the care of a foster home in Palo Alto, California. The mother testified with regard to the home as follows: “I didn’t like the condition of the home when I saw the child. I didn’t like the small basket she was in. I didn’t like the dirty fireplace. I was very much upset about everything.”

In August 1948, when the child was less than ten months old, the mother sent the child back to the foster home in Palo Alto, despite the fact that she had the sole legal custody of the child and despite the fact that she did not like the condition there, according to her own testimony.

On December 15, 1948, the father, who was then employed in Medford, Oregon, received a telegram from the foster home, stating that the child could no longer be taken care of at the home. In the circumstance, the father found a foster home in Medford, and, with the consent of the mother, took the child there on Christmas eve of 1948.

After the child was taken to Medford, the mother did not see her until April 1949. On March 16, the mother sent a telegram to the father from Alta, Utah, stating that she would be married on April 2 and would be in Medford on April 8 to see the child. She appeared in Medford with [253]*253her fiance on the day mentioned in the telegram. She was then unmarried. Later she married but the marriage ended in annulment. On the visit she saw the child a few times but did nothing to assert her legal right over her.

After the mother’s visit, the foster home in Medford indicated an unwillingness to take care of the child any further. The father then placed the child in the care of a foster home in Ashland, twenty miles from Medford. At that time the father had a job in Ashland. He was not satisfied with the foster home in Ashland. He therefore made an arrangement with the petitioners for the care of the child. The male petitioner was then, and now is, employed at a school in Honolulu. The female petitioner is the wife of the male petitioner and sister of the father.

The arrangement with the petitioners involved the transportation of the child on a trans-Pacific flight from Portland, Oregon, to Honolulu. Preliminary to sending the child on such flight, the father, on April 20,1949, filed a petition in the circuit court of the State of Oregon, for Jackson County, to have the child adjudged a dependent ward of the juvenile court, “in order to insure a secure plan of care for said minor.”

Pursuant to such petition a “Temporary Commitment” was entered on May 13,1949, under section 93-610, Oregon Laws 1940, by which the child was temporarily committed to the care, custody and supervision of the petitioners until the further o^der of the court. The mentioned section of the Oregon Laws 1940 provides: “Temporary commitments shall be made when the court for good and sufficient reasons decides that final adjudication of the case must be delayed, or that the child or children involved can reasonably be expected to soon return to ordinary home conditions in their own families; and in temporary orders of commitment guardianship of the persons of the children shall remain with the court, and children under such orders may [254]*254be recalled by tbe court for further action at any time.”

The mother had notice of the father’s plan. She did nothing to oppose it. On April 25, 1949, the father wrote to the mother: “Please be advised that I have taken action to have the legal custody of our daughter transferred from you to me.” On May 3, he advised the mother that at an informal hearing he was given temporary custody of the child pending a formal hearing, which was tentatively scheduled for the following week, and stated: “If I am granted custody I am sending [the child] to Honolulu as soon as transportation can be arranged.” On the following day, the father advised the mother that the formal hearing, originally scheduled for the following week, was moved up and was held that morning, that he was awarded the custody of the child, and that the child would leave for Honolulu as soon as transportation was arranged.

On this appeal the mother complains of lack of proper notice to her of the formal hearing. The mother received the father’s letter informing her of the result of the formal hearing on May 7. At that time she did not complain about lack of notice. Instead, she inquired of the father about the day and time of the child’s departure and the exact flight number of the airplane on which the child was scheduled to leave. Upon receiving the requested information, she sent a telegram to the father, stating: “THANKS POR INFORMATION UNABLE TO MAKE IT.” However, she proceeded to Medford a few days before the child’s departure.

The child left Medford, in the company of her father for Portland, there to be placed in the care of an airline for a long trans-Pacific flight unaccompanied by either parent. This was on May 18, 1949, when she was only eighteen months old. The mother saw the child leave Medford. She did not go to Portland. Perhaps, enough of the “spark of maternal care” that the attending physician [255]*255tried to kindle in the mother at the time of the child’s birth remained to kindle in her a desire to see her child as she departed from Medford. The spark was not strong enough to kindle in her an interest in accompanying the child to Portland to see that she was properly placed on the trans-Pacific airplane.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Haw. 250, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adoption-doe-haw-1957.