In re the Adoption of Infant H

69 Misc. 2d 304, 330 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2115
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 Misc. 2d 304 (In re the Adoption of Infant H) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family 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 of Infant H, 69 Misc. 2d 304, 330 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2115 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Nanette Dembitz, J.

In this unusual child adoption proceeding, an unmarried woman now aged 42 petitioned this court to adopt an unrelated baby obtained from Florida, now 13 months old. The agonizing and unprecedented question presented to this court is whether under a proper interpretation of the Domestic Relations Law, Baby H should be removed from the adoption petitioner, and placed through an authorized child-care agency with a husband and wife who are highly desirable parents for her.

Section 116 of the Domestic Relations Law provides that upon a petition for a private-placement adoption (that is, an adoption that has not been screened or approved by a child-care worker or adoption agency), the Judge or Surrogate shall order an investigation, and may require ‘ further investigations from time to time ”, of the “ marital and family status, and history, of the adoptive parents”; (their) “physical and mental health”; and “facts relating to the familial, social, religious, emotional and financial circumstances of the adoptive parents ’ ’ (subds. 2, 3). Section 116 further provides in subdivision 2: “ Should such investigation give apparent cause, the judge or surrogate shall require the petitioners to show cause why the child should not be removed from the home * * * If the court is satisfied that the welfare of the child requires that it be removed from the home, the judge or surrogate shall by order remove the child from the home of the petitioners and return the child to a natural parent or place the child with an appropriate authorized agency. ’ ’ In the case at bar the natural mother definitely does not want this out-of-wedlock child returned to her and has not divulged the putative father’s name. Accordingly, if the welfare of the child requires her removal from petitioner, she would necessarily be placed with an authorized agency.

The Florida mother’s affidavit of consent to her child’s adoption, which was filed with petitioner’s adoption petition (see Domestic Relations Law, § 115, subd. 7), was a consent to an adoption by a married couple to be designated by the Florida attorney who obtained the affidavit. This document obviously did not authorize petitioner’s adoption of Baby H, nor has a valid consent to her adoption by anyone been obtained from the natural mother.1 However, whether or not the child is ever adopted, since her natural mother does not want her, either petitioner or the husband and wife with whom she would be placed [306]*306through an authorized agency will have a life-long parental relationship to her. Thus the issue herein is in essence the establishment of a permanent family for Baby H, and precedents as to a child’s welfare in permanent custody or adoption are therefore pertinent. On the basis of these precedents this court determines, despite great sympathy for petitioner’s emotional and financial loss, that under the mandate of section 116 of the Domestic Relations Law to remove the child if required by the child’s welfare — as distinguished from the petitioner’s — removal and placement with an authorized agency for permanent parental care by an available and desirable husband and wife must be ordered.

PROCEDURE UNDER SECTION 116 OF THE DOMESTIC RELATIONS LAW

Research has disclosed no prior use of the removal provision of section 116, except to return a child to his natural mother,2 nor has this Judge in scores of previous private-placement adoptions encountered any occasion to apply it. Here, however the initial report of the court’s adoption investigator gave “ apparent cause ” to consider removal in that it showed, among other adverse factors, that the middle-aged petitioner lived with an elderly mother in a cramped apartment in a deteriorated hotel; that petitioner, who has no independent resources, worked full time in a 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. office job; that her mother, for physical or emotional reasons that petitioner was unable or unwilling to articulate, did not take care of the baby while petitioner worked; that petitioner used babysitters whom she did not trust to take the baby outside the apartment; and that her account of her married life before her divorce of four years before was puzzling.

The court therefore directed “further investigations” by means of home visits to petitioner by the court’s adoption investigator, a psychiatric examination of petitioner, and a psychological study of the child. Petitioner’s attorney agreed to the court’s use of the psychiatric and psychological reports, all reports being disclosed to him. As to the fairness of this procedure see Kesseler v. Kesseler (10 N Y 2d 445); People ex rel. Fields v. Kaufman (9 A D 2d 375, 378 [1st Dept]). In addition to the reports, upon notice to the natural mother as required by section 1163 and appropriate notice to petitioner’s attorney, prolonged [307]*307hearings were held pursuant to section 116 for her ‘ ‘ to show cause why the child should not be removed from the home.” There is no controversion or doubt as to any significant fact; the only questions herein are of law.

THE COURT’S FUNCTION IN ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS

Petitioner’s attorney suggested that this court disqualify itself from conducting the show-cause hearing because of its preconception adverse to petitioner; he also objected to the court’s communication on its own motion with the natural mother as to her consent to her baby’s adoption and as to her rights and options in view of her expressed opposition to a single-parent adoption. These objections must be rejected. The procedure prescribed by section 116 for the Judge to hold a hearing to resolve doubts arising from an investigative report on an adoption petitioner, is fair and constitutional. (See Friedman v. State of New York, 24 N Y 2d 528, 541-542; also People v. Horton, 18 N Y 2d 355, 361-362; Federal Trade Comm. v. Cinderella Career Schools, 404 F. 2d 1308, 1315 [C. A., D. C. 1968].) And it is clear that under subdivision 3 of section 115, subdivision 7 of section 115 and subdivision 2 of section 116 the court has the duty of examining into the meaning and validity of an alleged consent, and of acting on its own motion as in effect guardian of the child’s interests.

The legislative grant of such broad authority and discretion to the court has two-fold justification: (1) Adoption proceedings differ from ordinary civil cases in that except for the very small minority of contests of adoption by a natural parent or other relative, there is only one party- — the petitioner — before the court; there is no adversary to present opposing evidence or arguments either to prevent fraud or mistake or to protect the welfare of the inarticulate child. (2) Usually a private-placement adoption, as in the case at bar, is entirely arranged by attorneys for the adoption petitioner and no one has the duty or function of considering, prior to the child’s placement and the filing of the adoption petition, whether the adoption is t-o the child’s interest as distinguished from the petitioner’s. Thus, with no one representing the child’s interest or welfare, the exercise of the State’s power as parens patries as provided in section 116 is not only reasonable but obligatory.4

[308]*308Petitioner’s objection is in reality to the fact that the Legislature does not countenance a catch-as-catch can, free enterprise market in babies.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Misc. 2d 304, 330 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adoption-of-infant-h-nycfamct-1972.