Marion County Division of Indiana Department of Child Services v. S.M.

904 N.E.2d 203, 2009 Ind. LEXIS 339, 2009 WL 960327
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 2009
Docket29S02-0904-CV-140
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 904 N.E.2d 203 (Marion County Division of Indiana Department of Child Services v. S.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marion County Division of Indiana Department of Child Services v. S.M., 904 N.E.2d 203, 2009 Ind. LEXIS 339, 2009 WL 960327 (Ind. 2009).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

This appeal arises from an order of adoption granted to a New Jersey resident for children brought to Indianapolis for their birth to a South Carolina woman who had been inseminated with biological material from California. The adoption petitioner asked the trial court to waive various legislative safeguards designed to protect infants who are proposed for adoption. We reverse.

Facts and Procedural History

Twin girls whom we will call Infants H were born at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis in early April 2005, and a few days later, on April 13, attorney Steve Litz filed a petition for adoption on behalf of a man we will call Petitioner. The petition described the children as "white females" and asserted that Petitioner was an Indiana resident, born in Indiana, and employed as a teacher. The woman who gave birth, 23-year-old Zaria, attached an affidavit saying that she was inseminated with combined sperm from Petitioner and an unknown donor, and that she was waiving her rights with regard to the newborns.

The trial court held a hearing on the same day the petition was filed. Petitioner testified on his petition. He indicated that Zaria had been inseminated with sperm from him and from another donor. (Apr. 13, 2005, Tr. at 5-6.) He said he was "currently residing in Indianapolis" but worked as a school teacher in Union City, New Jersey. The court indicated orally it would approve the adoption. It released the children to Petitioner pending a final hearing and declared that the statutory requirement of prior written approval of a licensed placement agency or the Marion County Office of Family and Children (Ind.Code § 31-19-7-1) was being waived.

Litz subsequently provided the court with a document called an "Adoption Summary" prepared by "Paralegal on Call, Inc.," generated on April 27th. The report indicated that the babies were born prema *205 turely, but were progressing, and that they were "not considered 'hard to place' as defined by 1.C. § 81-9-2-51." The report indicated that Petitioner was born in New York (not in Indiana, as the petition to adopt had alleged). (Appellant's App. at 213.) It said Petitioner had lived for the last ten years in an apartment in Union City. (Fd. at 214.) (The Indianapolis residence alleged in the adoption petition turned out to be a hotel.) The report said the mother was a 28-year-old Caucasian. The trial court received the report and issued an adoption order two days later on April 29th.

In the meantime, personnel at Methodist Hospital's Newborn Intensive Care Unit became concerned "about [Petitioner's] ability to appropriately care" for the Infants H and asked Child Protective Services at the Marion County Office of Family and Children (now the Department of Child Services) to investigate. (Exhibits Vol. I, Ex. A at 8.) That office reported to the Marion Superior Court, Juvenile Division, that Petitioner had appeared in the ICU carrying a bird, which hospital personnel thought represented a risk of infection. On a separate occasion he had come to visit with bird feces on his elothing, "with no concern [for] the children's health and potential disease that could spread." Id.

Petitioner told the hospital staff that he planned to drive the two three-pound premature infants back to New Jersey in his automobile, alone, and had not yet thought about how he would manage for their care while he worked. The Marion Superior Court determined that the infants were in need of services and ordered them in the custody of the Office of Family and Children, on May 2nd. Among other things, the court observed that the requirements of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children, Ind.Code ch. 31-28-4, were not being followed. App. at 129-30.) (Appellant's

Alerted to the CHINS investigation, attorney Litz moved on May 4th to amend the adoption court's order to add a finding that the children where hard to place, as defined by Ind.Code § 31-9-2-51(1)(B), on grounds that Zaria was African-American and that the children were therefore biracial. (Id. at 185-86.) This motion was neither supported by affidavit nor otherwise verified under penalties of perjury.

Actually, it turned out that Zaria had received donor eggs, so the grounds on which Litz asserted the children to be biracial were untrue. (Id. at 54.) The earlier representation that Petitioner was a sperm donor likewise turned out to be untrue. (Tr. at 115.)

The adoption judge's effort to deal with these successive shifting factual claims was understandably daunting. The court observed that the petition to adopt and counsel's subsequent submissions reflected "lack of candor and mass confusion of crucial factors...." (Appellant's App. at 54.) We have not undertaken here to detail each twist in the road. Suffice it to say that in July 2005, the trial court vacated the original decree of adoption and an amended version that had been entered Nune Pro Tunc. (Id. at 165-66.) In November 2005, Petitioner's lawyer moved again to amend the petition for adoption, and requested a final hearing. (Id. at 68-70.) This time, he asserted that the infants were hard to place because they were part of a sibling group, citing Ind. Code § 31-9-2-51(2). (Id.)

In January 2006, the adoption court held its last hearing. It ordered a six-month period of supervision over the placement of the infants with Petitioner. (Id. at 45-59.) It entered a final decree of adoption on October 17, 2006. (Id. at 4-5.) The trial court contemporaneously dismissed the *206 CHINS case and found that consent to adoption by the Department of Child Services was not required. (Id.) The Court of Appeals affirmed. In re Adoption of Infants H., 878 N.E.2d 331 (Ind.Ct.App.2007). We grant transfer.

I. Nonresident Adoption of Nonresident Children

The Department's appeal requests a declaration that Indiana courts do not have authority to grant adoption requests made by non-residents for children who are not residents. (Appellant's Br. at 16-17.) It cites the general provision of our adoption statute that a resident may file to adopt a child in Indiana, Ind.Code. § 31-19-22 (2008), with its exception allowing nonresidents to adopt children in Indiana if the children qualify as "hard to place." Ind.Code § 31-19-2-3 (2008). This exception applies to children who are disadvantaged because off: ethnic background; race; color; language; physical, mental or medical disability; or age; or members of a sibling group that should be placed in the same home. Ind.Code § 31-9-2-51 (2008) (emphasis added).

Residency does matter as respects the delicate question of adopting a child.

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904 N.E.2d 203, 2009 Ind. LEXIS 339, 2009 WL 960327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-county-division-of-indiana-department-of-child-services-v-sm-ind-2009.