Kirsch v. Parker

375 So. 2d 693
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 10, 1979
Docket10054
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 375 So. 2d 693 (Kirsch v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirsch v. Parker, 375 So. 2d 693 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

375 So.2d 693 (1979)

Mary Agnes Pfister KIRSCH
v.
Wayne P. PARKER, Registrar of the Bureau of Vital Statistics of the City of New Orleans.

No. 10054.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

August 10, 1979.
Rehearing Denied October 18, 1979.

*694 Victor J. Bradbury, Metairie, for plaintiff.

H. M. Westholz, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant.

Before REDMANN, BEER and GARRISON, JJ.

REDMANN, Judge.

A child due to be born in three to nine months may mean embarrassment, inconvenience, difficulty, or even tragedy for its mother-to-be. The mother may, however, be able to solve her problem: she may give the child up for adoption or, since 1973,[1] she may extinguish its embryonic life by abortion.

A three-year-old child may also mean embarrassment, inconvenience, difficulty or tragedy for its mother. Its mother, too, may be able to solve her problem by giving the child up for adoption.

But the mother of a three-year-old child may not extinguish its life.

That difference between the pregnant woman of today and the mother of years ago is a prime factor in our affirming a judgment enforcing plaintiff late-adoptee's right to access to her original birth certificate: notwithstanding Louisiana's recent pro-adoption, anti-abortion legislation,[2] plaintiff's certificate remains "sealed" by *695 law only against her blood parents and strangers.

The issues are of statutory construction and retroactivity.

Mary Agnes Pfister was nearing five years of age at her final decree of adoption in 1949. If her biological parents were then alive and if she meant a problem to them, they did not have the legal right to solve the problem by extinguishing the child's life. If the parents were living and gave Mary Agnes up for adoption, they cannot have done so with any expectation of secrecy. First, their identity as the parents of Mary Agnes was presumably known to her and to their acquaintances throughout three years or more and it was therefore impossible for full secrecy to be provided. Second, no statute promised them secrecy, and no statute authorized anyone to agree that state vital statistics records would be more "sealed" than the law itself allowed.[3]

In Louisiana before 1977, adoption records were always open to the adopted child and to the adoptive parents (and, until 1942, to the biological parents), and were "sealed" *696 only against busy bodies; Massey v. Parker, La.1979, 369 So.2d 1310; Chambers v. Parker, La.App. 4 Cir. 1977, 349 So.2d 424, writ refused La., 351 So.2d 170.

La. Acts 1977 No. 659 added to La.R.S. 40:81 A a requirement of "compelling reasons" for opening the records for adoptee or adopter, and limited the opening to the extent necessary to satisfy the compelling reason. When Mary Agnes Pfister filed this suit in November 1977, the 1977 amendment, effective September 9, 1977, made R.S. 40:81 A read:

Whenever a final decree of adoption shall be entered, the clerk of court shall forward, on a form supplied by the office of family services of the Department of Health and Human Resources, his certificate of the decree to the state registrar who shall make a new certificate of live birth of the person adopted, in the new name if the name has been changed in the decree. If the child is adopted by a single person and the surname of the child is changed, the word `adopted' shall be written on the new birth certificate. The state registrar shall seal and file the original certificate of birth with the certificate of the decree. This sealed package may be opened only on the order of a competent court either upon its own motion, or upon the demand of the adopted child or the adoptive parent, or the state registrar, for compelling reasons and only to the extent necessary to satisfy such compelling necessity. [Emphasis added.]

That plainly prospective language governed future actions: "whenever" an adoption decree is entered, the clerk and the registrar "shall seal" the birth certificate and the decree. And it is "This sealed package"—one made by the registrar subsequent to the 1977 amendment—which may be opened on the adoptee's demand only "for compelling reasons."

Prospective interpretation of that 1977 amendment makes sense. The amendment was the product of pro-adoption and anti-abortion forces. Insofar as the amendment has the purpose of persuading pregnant women to elect adoption over abortion by promising undiscoverability not previously available, that purpose cannot be accomplished in respect to women who had already made their irrevocable election before the amendment was even introduced into the Legislature. That purpose is especially unachievable in the case of plaintiff's mother, who had apparently had her child three years before giving it up for adoption, apparently unconcerned with concealing its birth or her maternity, decades ago. A legislature could also have the purpose of providing a kindness to the blood parents of adoptees of years ago by now denying the adoptee access to the parents' identity, upon the hypothesis that blood parents would be offended, disgraced, or otherwise damaged by the adoptees' exercise of the right to discover the identity of their parents. We observe only that the 1977 Act did not, by its words, express such a purpose, and that to so interpret it would burden that Act with serious questions about overbreadth (in addition to other constitutional questions even its prospective purpose already raises).

Accordingly the trial judge's judgment of June 10, 1978 could easily have been affirmed on the basis that both the language and the purpose of the "compelling reasons" amendment of R.S. 40:81A in 1977 were prospective in intent, especially in respect to an adoption under the circumstances of plaintiff's.

La. Acts 1978 No. 450[4] and Massey v. Parker have intervened, however. The 1978 Act (effective September 8, 1978, after the trial court's June 10, 1978 judgment in this case) declares the provisions of R.S. 40:81 (containing the 1977 amendment) applicable *697 to all "adoption decrees" (sic) whenever rendered (thus not purporting to make R.S. 40:81 applicable to the original birth certificate sought by our plaintiff). Massey applied the 1978 Act to a case already decided by trial court judgment and already affirmed by the court of appeal before the Act became law.[5] Although the Louisiana Supreme Court holds that the Constitution of Louisiana or of the United States does not ordinarily apply unless the constitutional question was pleaded in the trial court, Summerell v. Phillips, 1971, 258 La. 587, 247 So.2d 542, failure to plead the unconstitutionality of the 1978 Act as applied is not a problem here because one can not, consistent with due process, be obliged to have pleaded in 1977 in the trial court the unconstitutionality of a 1978 Act that was not itself pleaded or even a possible issue because it did not exist then nor until after the trial court's final judgment.

Accepting that Massey would suggest general applicability of the 1978 Act (and therefore also of the 1977 Act) to earlier adoptions of newborns,[6]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kirsch v. Parker
378 So. 2d 437 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
375 So. 2d 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirsch-v-parker-lactapp-1979.