Ljr v. Tt
This text of 739 So. 2d 1283 (Ljr v. Tt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
L.J.R., Natural Father of L.J.R., II, Appellant,
v.
T.T., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*1284 Darla Jean Christopher, Brown & Christopher, Starke, for appellant.
Robert E. Boone, John S. Cooper, P.A., Starke, for appellee.
BENTON, J.
L.J.R., the natural father of L.J.R. II (the child), appeals the final judgment granting the petition for adoption by birthparent filed by T.T., the child's natural mother. The final judgment granting T.T.'s petition expressly terminates L.J.R.'s parental rights and declares T.T. the child's sole parent. We reverse.
The petition for adoption by birthparent alleged that the child was born out of wedlock on April 29, 1996, and that
a. The consent of the birth father should not be required because: the birth father has not provided the child with support in a repetitive and customary manner.
b. The consent of the birth father should be excused ... because of prolonged, unexplained absence, unavailability, incapacity, or another circumstance constituting unreasonable withholding of consent.
In prison in Massachusetts, L.J.R. responded to the petition, admitting paternity and denying that he had abandoned the child.
Adoption may be viewed as a means of creating "a legal relationship of parent and child between persons who were not so related by nature or law." In re Estate of Baxter, 827 P.2d 184, 187 (Okla.Ct.App.1992). It has been said that "if the natural relationship of parent and child [already] exists, there is no need for a legally created relationship." Leake v. Grissom, 614 P.2d 1107, 1109 (Okla.1980).
"[A]doption" has been defined by some courts as the establishment or creation of a legal relationship of parent and child between persons who were not so related by nature or law, whereupon the person adopted becomes the legal heir of his or her adopter, and the rights and duties of domestic relation with the adoptee's natural parents are terminated. It has been said that adoption is the legal equivalent of biological parenthood, so that a decree of adoption renders the adoptee, for all intents and purposes, the child of the adoptive parent.
Mitchell Waldman, 2 Am.Jur.2d Adoption § 1 (1994) (emphasis supplied and footnotes omitted). See also 2 C.J.S. Adoption of Persons § 2 (1972) ("The purpose of an adoption is to change the status of the child in relation to its adoptive parents, and to create a new status, a new relationship of parent and child, and to make the adopter as genuinely the parent of the child and the child as genuinely the offspring of the adopter as can be accomplished in law." (emphasis supplied and footnotes omitted)).
Florida does not, however, disqualify birth parents from adopting.[1] Among those whom section 63.042(2)(b), Florida Statutes (1997), names as persons who may adopt is an "unmarried adult, including the birth parent of the person to be adopted." The Legislature has determined that it might be in the best interests of a non-marital child to be adopted, for example, by a birth parent who returns after an absence or recovers from circumstances that earlier led to proceedings terminating parental rights, see In re T.G.T, 433 So.2d 11 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983); Green v. State, Dep't of Health and Rehabilitative Servs., 412 So.2d 413 (Fla. 3d DCA 1982), or by a birth parent and the birth *1285 parent's spouse. See Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 103 S.Ct. 2985, 77 L.Ed.2d 614 (1983); McDonald v. Hester, 115 Ga. App. 740, 155 S.E.2d 720 (1967). But the present case
is not a situation analogous to stepparent adoption, wherein a stepparent adopts his stepchild.... Nor is it like adoption of a child whose parents' rights have been terminated due to neglect or dependent status of the child. In those situations the child is not deprived of any rights or parental obligations, but, rather, the child is acquiring all the rights of which he or she was previously deprived. Therefore, the goals of the adoption laws are fulfilled, and a new legal family relationship is created which before did not exist....
In re Adoption of Kohorst, 75 Ohio App.3d 813, 600 N.E.2d 843, 848-49 (1992). By statute, a judgment of adoption "creates the relationship between the adopted person and the petitioner ... that would have existed if the adopted person were a blood descendant of the petitioner born within wedlock." § 63.172(1)(c), Fla.Stat. (1997). This provision "purports to endow adopted children with an altered status[2] as a result of the adoption, the objective being to add, or at least to substitute, a new legal relationship in place of the old one." Green v. Sollenberger, 338 Md. 118, 656 A.2d 773, 777 (1995). In the present case, however, scant or "no new rights or obligations attach as a result of the adoption." Id.
The principal effect of the final judgment of birthparent adoption now under review is to terminate the parental rights and obligations of the father, L.J.R. While proceedings to terminate parental rights are ordinarily instituted by the Department of Children and Family Services, the statute also authorizes any "person who has knowledge of the facts" to file a petition for termination of parental rights. § 39.461(1), Fla.Stat. (1997). That is how T.T. might have proceeded here.[3] Granting her petition for adoption by birthparent
confer[red few or] no additional rights, privileges, or benefit upon the child[]. The termination of the legal relationship between the child[] and [his] natural and legal father would eliminate that inheritance and the responsibility of the father to support, maintain, and educate his minor child[] which he shares with the natural mother.
In re Adoption of Graham, 63 Ohio Misc. 22, 409 N.E.2d 1067, 1069 (Comm. Pleas 1980). Like the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, "we do not believe .... that the Legislature contemplated the use of adoption proceedings for the sole purpose of terminating parental rights; the Legislature provided a [separate] procedure for termination of parental rights...." Gilbertson v. Gilbertson, 498 P.2d 1381, 1384 (Okla.1972).
In Florida, moreover, the Legislature has specifically limited the ability to terminate the parental rights of only one parent. Under section 39.469(6), Florida Statutes (1997), the
parental rights of one parent may be severed without severing the parental rights of the other parent only under the following circumstances:
*1286 (a) If the child has only one surviving parent;
(b) If the identity of a prospective parent has been established as unknown after sworn testimony;
(c) If the parent whose rights are being terminated became a parent through a single-parent adoption;
(d) If the protection of the child demands termination of the rights of a single parent; or
(e) If the parent whose rights are being terminated meets the criteria specified in s. 39.464(1)(d).
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739 So. 2d 1283, 1999 WL 743565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ljr-v-tt-fladistctapp-1999.