M.M. v. Adoption of J.T.M.

821 So. 2d 1134, 2002 Fla. App. LEXIS 8800, 2002 WL 1369890
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 26, 2002
DocketNo. 4D01-3447
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 821 So. 2d 1134 (M.M. v. Adoption of J.T.M.) 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.

Bluebook
M.M. v. Adoption of J.T.M., 821 So. 2d 1134, 2002 Fla. App. LEXIS 8800, 2002 WL 1369890 (Fla. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

PER CURIAM.

We grant appellees’ motion for rehearing to correct statutory citations and further clarify our original opinion filed April 17, 2002. We withdraw the prior opinion and substitute the following in its place.

Appellant, M.M., appeals a trial court order granting her parents’ (Grandparents) Motion to Withdraw Birth Mother’s and Birth Father’s Consent to have their infant son, J.T.M., adopted by a third party prospective adoptive couple. We reverse the trial court’s ruling with regard to M.M., because the Grandparents failed to present clear and convincing evidence that M.M. had abandoned J.T.M. The father, R.R., has not appealed this ruling. However, we conclude that the trial court properly found that R.R. abandoned J.T.M. and excused his consent.

The present case began when an adoption intermediary (Intermediary), on behalf of a prospective adoptive couple (Adoptive Couple), filed a Petition for Adoption of J.T.M., based upon consents to adopt signed by both birth parents. (Case No. 4D01-3447) The -Grandparents had previously filed their own Petition for Adoption. (Case No. 4D01-3467) After the second petition was filed, the Grandparents moved to intervene in the Adoptive Couple’s case. The trial court allowed the Grandparents to intervene, a decision which this court affirmed. Hausmann v. L.M., 806 So.2d 511 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001). The Grandparents filed Motions to Withdraw Birth Mother’s and Birth Father’s Consent in each adoption case, claiming that both birth parents had abandoned J.T.M. After a full evidentiary hearing regarding the abandonment issue, the court granted the Grandparents’ motions in both cases. These orders are almost identical. M.M. has appealed both of these rulings to this court.

Facts

M.M. became pregnant with. J.T.M. while living with R.R. in Kentucky. She was nineteen years old. M.M. and R.R. separated early in the pregnancy and M.M. returned to Florida, where she had grown up and where her parents, the Grandparents, live.

M.M. and the Grandparents had suffered a strained relationship for quite some time. The Grandparents believed M.M. to be irresponsible and immature. Upon hearing of the pregnancy, the Grandmother suggested that M.M. abort the child. When M.M. refused, the Grandmother obtained the name of an attorney who could place the baby for adoption. M.M. originally agreed to give the baby up for adoption but changed her mind before the baby was born.

Due to the volatile relationship between M.M. and the Grandparents, M.M. had moved into a two bedroom apartment with a male friend upon her return to Florida. While pregnant, M.M. began dating a different man, Tim, who moved in with M.M. and her roommate shortly thereafter.

M.M. gave birth to a boy, J.T.M., on October 1, 2000. M.M. had custody of J.T.M. for three months. During those three months, M.M., J.T.M., Tim, a German Shepard, and a puppy lived in one bedroom of a two bedroom apartment. M.M.’s Mend occupied the second bedroom with his dog.

According to witness testimony at the hearing on the Grandparents’ motions, the bedroom in which J.T.M. lived was in deplorable condition. The dogs urinated and defecated on the floor of the room. There [1136]*1136were also beer bottles, garbage, urine, and dog feces throughout the room, which sometimes was not cleaned for days. It was dark, smoky, unventilated, and smelled horrible and foul. The carpets were chewed up by the dogs and the blinds were frequently closed during the day, prohibiting any light from entering the room.

The physical condition of J.T.M. was akin to the state of the bedroom. He consistently smelled of urine and other foul odors, his carseat was soaked with urine, he often had the remains of food on his face and neck, his diapers were not changed on a regular basis,, and his head was covered in cradle cap.

J.T.M. had a rash, primarily on his neck and chest area, from the time he was born. As the condition worsened close to Christmas, M.M. took J.T.M. to the hospital. The rash continued to worsen to the point that J.T.M. had to be taken to the hospital a second time on December 31. By this date, the rash had progressed to eczema with open sores and oozing green puss.

M.M. called the Grandmother to meet her at the hospital. After the Grandmother arrived, M.M. left her with J.T.M. to pick up Tim from work, but did not return for hours. The Grandmother was with J.T.M. when he was admitted and accompanied the medical staff in preparing him for care. When M.M. ' returned, the Grandmother accused her of abusing J.T.M. and reported it to the abuse hotline. M.M. forbade the Grandmother from seeing J.T.M. while the child was in the hospital. .

In response to the Grandmother’s report, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) sent an investigator to assess J.T.M.’s condition. M.M. told the investigator that she would be moving into Tim’s grandmother’s home with Tim and J.T.M. M.M. and Tim did in fact move into Tim’s grandmother’s home while J.T.M. was in the hospital. The investigator inspected the condition of this home. Dog feces was spread all over the lawn and the smell of dog feces overwhelmed the inside of the house. The investigator was refused entry into the room where J.T.M. would be sleeping. Based upon these observations, he determined that J.T.M. could not properly recover in that environment. M.M. and Tim both admitted that the house was covered with “forty years of dirt.”

When the investigator revealed his findings to M.M., she told him that she would not have the home cleaned in time for the baby’s homecoming and requested foster care. The Grandparents offered M.M. and J.T.M. .free use of a newly renovated duplex which they owned, but M.M. refused to live there without Tim and the dogs.

On January 3, 2001, DCF filed a Verified Shelter Petition and removed J.T.M. from M.M.’s care. The Grandparents were given temporary custody of J.T.M. against M.M.’s wishes. M.M. decided that she wanted to give J.T.M. up for adoption and contacted the Intermediary. On January 26, she signed a consent to have J.T.M. adopted by the Adoptive Couple. R.R. was contacted and signed a consent for adoption on February 13. M.M. and the Intermediary filed a Motion for Shelter Review and Change of Placement. J.T.M. was taken from the Grandparents and placed with the Adoptive Couple on February 16, where he has since resided.

When DCF learned that M.M. was placing J.T.M. for adoption, it voluntarily dismissed its dependency case, claiming that it no longer had jurisdiction.

After intervening in the adoption case filed by the Adoptive Couple, the Grandparents filed Motions to Withdraw Birth Mother’s and Birth Father’s Consent to [1137]*1137have J.T.M. adopted based on abandonment by both parents. The trial court granted the Grandparents’ motion.

Discussion

To determine whether M.M.’s and R.R.’s consents were valid, we must examine the relevant statutes concerning adoption in Florida. Section 68.062, Florida Statutes (2000), states:

(1) Unless consent is excused by the court, a petition to adopt a minor may be granted only if written consent has been executed after the birth of the minor by:
(a) The mother of a minor.
(b) The father of the minor, if:
1.

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Related

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198 So. 3d 1025 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
821 So. 2d 1134, 2002 Fla. App. LEXIS 8800, 2002 WL 1369890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mm-v-adoption-of-jtm-fladistctapp-2002.