Matter of Three Minor Children

406 A.2d 14, 1979 Del. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 11, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 406 A.2d 14 (Matter of Three Minor Children) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Three Minor Children, 406 A.2d 14, 1979 Del. LEXIS 410 (Del. 1979).

Opinion

HORSEY, Justice:

Respondent appeals an order terminating her parental rights as the mother of three minor children on the statutory ground of unfitness, 13 Del.C. § 1103(4). The children, now five, six and ten years old, have been living in foster homes 1 almost since birth. Legal custody has been in the Division of Social Services, Department of Health and Social Services of Delaware, petitioner, since year of placement. Termination is sought for the purpose of placing the children for adoption by their foster parents. The Superior Court, in a statutory *15 proceeding brought under 13 Del.C. Chapter 11, titled, “Termination and Transfer of Parental Rights and Adoption Proceedings” found, after hearing, respondent to be unfit to continue to exercise parental rights and granted the Division’s petition for termination. The Trial Judge stated:

“The evidence presented at trial clearly indicated that the mother is unfit to continue exercising parental rights over these children. She simply cannot care for them and the likelihood is that she never will. To deny the petition would be to condemn these children to a tragic limbo; a situation where they will never know a childhood home.”

Respondent makes three arguments for reversal—two related to the available grounds under 13 Del.C. § 1103 for termination as to a parent without custody at time of the proceedings and the third related to what showing must be made under § 1108 for termination to be found to be in the “best interests” of the child.

Respondent’s arguments may be summarized as follows: (1) a petitioner in custody may not rely on the statutory ground of unfitness, 13 Del.C. § 1103(4), and must show abandonment; (2) if unfitness is an available ground for termination, petitioner cannot be found unfit without proof of failure to exercise visitation privileges; and (3) proof that termination is in the “best interests” of the child under § 1108 requires proof that failure to terminate either has resulted or will result in physical or psychological harm to the child.

Petitioner, the Division of Social Services, contends that the statute makes no distinction as to procedures or grounds for termination of parental rights between parents with custody or parents without custody at the time of the proceedings; that the rights of respondent were subject to termination on the grounds of unfitness, as to which exercise of visitation rights are irrelevant or not determinative; and that petitioner made the required statutory showing (1) that respondent was unfit and (2) that termination was in the best interests of the children.

I

Since termination of parental rights is controlled by statute, we look to § 1103, as amended, of Title 13 to determine the merit of respondent’s contention that rights of a parent cannot be terminated on the grounds of unfitness as to a child no longer in the parent’s custody. The pertinent provisions of § 1103 provide as follows:

“§ 1103. Grounds for termination of parental rights.
The procedure for termination of parental rights for the purpose of adoption . may be initiated whenever it appears that:
(1) The parent or parents of any child, or the person or persons or organization holding parental rights over such child, desires to relinquish such parental rights; or
(2) Any child has been abandoned; or
(3) The parent or parents of any child or any person or persons holding parental rights over such a child are found by the Court to be mentally incompetent . . ;
(4) The parent or parents of any such child, or any person or persons or organization holding parental rights over such child are not fitted to continue to exercise parental rights; or
(5) Both parents of a child are deceased.
♦ *****’’

To recite the statute would seem to be sufficient to dispose of respondent’s argument. The statute makes no distinction between procedures or grounds for termination of rights of parents in custody as opposed to parents whose custody has been previously relinquished, either voluntarily or otherwise. 2 Nor do any other provisions of the Act, 13 Del.C. Chapter 11 of the 1974 *16 Revised Code, contain any language suggesting any support for respondent’s position.

Further, § 1103, by listing the grounds for termination in the disjunctive, evidences clear legislative intent that each of the stated grounds is to be considered an independent basis for termination, with the choice of grounds depending upon the facts of the particular case and with the choice lying with the petitioner, subject, of course, to proof thereof.

Notwithstanding § 1103’s clarity, respondent contends that a “conflict” exists between § 1103(2) and § 1103(4) without demonstrating any conflict in fact between these provisions of the 1974 Revised Code. Since the “conflict” is imagined and not real, there is no reason to search for resolution of the conflict through previous provisions of the statute as found in the 1953 Delaware Code, Title 13, Chapter 11. Suffice it to say that we have examined the ’53 Code provisions as to termination of parental rights and we likewise find no support for respondent’s contention. In any event, provisions of the ’53 Code are irrelevant to this proceeding filed in 1975 and controlled by the 1974 Revised Code of Delaware. Under 13 Del.C. § 1104(8) authority is conferred upon the State Department of Health and Social Services to petition for termination of parental rights; and under § 1103(4) parental unfitness is an available statutory ground. Moreover, parental unfitness has been a statutory ground for protecting children from “immoral or negligent parents” since 1907. See 24 Laws of Delaware, Chapter 223. After 1933 a showing of either unfitness or abandonment in an adoption proceeding overcame a need of parental consent. 38 Laws of Delaware, Chapter 162; see also 1935 Revised Code of Delaware, § 3551; 41 Laws of Delaware, Chapter 187. And, when the legislature in 1951 established a separate statutory proceeding for termination of parental rights to precede adoption (where the termination was contested) the two statutory grounds of abandonment and unfitness were carried over into 13 Del.C. Chapter 11. See 38 Laws of Delaware, Chapter 162.

Respondent’s argument implies, in effect, that custody of a child is a condition precedent to being an unfit parent in the statutory sense. The corollary to that argument is that a child in the custody of a parent who is, by definition, unfit to continue to exercise parental rights, must continue to be in the custody of that parent until termination is ordered. Neither § 1103 nor the law generally imposes such an unreasonable condition to the administration of these sensitive proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
406 A.2d 14, 1979 Del. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-three-minor-children-del-1979.