Noone Adoption Case

103 A.2d 729, 376 Pa. 437, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 461
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 1954
DocketAppeal, No. 32
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 729 (Noone Adoption Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noone Adoption Case, 103 A.2d 729, 376 Pa. 437, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 461 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Chidsey,

This is an adoption proceeding instituted on May 18, 1953 by Dayton E. Hixon and Angelina M. Hixon, his wife, under the Act of April 4, 1925, P. L. 127, as amended by the Act of June 30, 1947, P. L. 1180, in which the petitioners sought to adopt Gary Anthony Noone, the minor male child of Josephine Noone and Walter E. Noone. The court below entered a final decree granting the adoption. Josephine Noone, the child’s mother, appeals therefrom.

The minor child after his birth at the Easton Hospital on August 12, 1952 was released to the custody of appellant who resided with her parents on North Bose Street, Easton, Pennsylvania, she and her husband having separated during the fifth month of her pregnancy. On November 13, 1952 appellant delivered the infant child to Mr. and Mrs. Hixon for adoption. They have had the child continuously since that time. Separate formal written consents to the adoption were executed on November 12, 1952 by appellant and her husband. The custody of the child by the petitioners for the purpose of adoption, was not disturbed or ques-. tioned until the, hearing on the adoption application [440]*440held on June 1, 1953. There it developed that although appellant represented herself as 19 years of age, she was only 16 years of age when she executed her consent to the adoption. It is not disputed that the father of the child was of age when he executed his separate consent thereto.

Under the adoption law of 1925, as amended, then in effect, consent of the natural parents to the adoption of a child was required and no such consent was effective unless the j>arents had reached the age of 18 years. However, no consent was necessary where there had been abandonment of the child for six months proven “to the satisfaction of the court”. Because appellant was not 18 years of age when she executed the consent, it was necessary for the petitioners to prove abandonment, and if abandonment was established, before granting the adoption it was essential for the court to find that the adoption would be for the best interests and welfare of the child: Dougherty Adoption Case, 358 Pa. 620, 58 A. 2d 77; Davies Adoption Case, 353 Pa. 579, 46 A. 2d 252; Weinbach’s Appeal, 316 Pa. 333, 175 A. 500.

Although the case comes before us as on certiorari, it is our duty to consider the evidence which is brought up by the certiorari, and determine whether there is any evidence to sustain the ultimate conclusions of fact deduced or inferred by reasoning from established facts: Ashton Adoption Case, 374 Pa. 185, 97 A. 2d 368, and cases, cited therein; After a careful review of the. evidence in this case, we are satisfied that the court below properly, found-there had'been ..an., abandonment of the child for six months- and upwards,' and -that; the best interests' and .welfare of. the child-would..be served by .the adoption. We subscribe to. the .narration ..of facts and. apprehension of their, pertinency, by. the 'hearting judge, contained in.; the. following:.portion ofe.his [441]*441opinion: “The testimony discloses that some months after the birth of the child Mr. Hixon talked to Mrs. Noone about the child, at which time it was suggested that petitioners ‘board the baby’. Mr. Hixon declined this offer and said that he would be interested in taking the child only if he be permitted to adopt it. Several days later Mrs. Noone told him that she had decided to permit the adoption, whereupon petitioners arranged with their attorney for a conference with them and Mrs. Noone. At this conference the attorney, a reputable member of the Northampton County Bar, and a person of unquestioned moral character, explained in detail the rights and liabilities and the legal procedure of and for adoption. Mrs. Noone replied, ‘I don’t care, I don’t want the child, my husband and I are separated, I can’t make a home for it’. She then signed a ‘consent agreement’, having represented her age as 19 years. She stated that she was bom January 10, 1933, whereas, her birth certificate, produced at the adjourned hearing, states her birthday as January 10, 1936. The next day, November 13, 1952, Mrs. Noone brought the child to the Hixon home, handed the baby to Mrs. Hixon and said, ‘Here is your son’. She returned to the Hixon home only one time subsequently, at which time she brought a few pieces of the child’s clothing. That occurred during the first week after the Hixons received custody. Since that time, Mrs. Noone never saw her child, never made any inquiry concerning its health or condition, never gave the child any gifts for Christmas or Easter or otherwise, and never objectively manifested any interest in the child or its whereabouts. In this connection it is to be noted that 514 Pine Street [where the petitioners resided] and North Bose Street, Mrs. Noone’s residence during most of this period, are in close proximity. The child’s ..father..also .signed, a written consent for. the [442]*442adoption. He admitted that he has seen the child only one time since its birth and that he has failed to pay the lying-in expenses of the doctor and hospital, and that he has failed to contribute anything toward the child’s support. He testified that he left Mrs. Noone and that he has instituted an action in divorce against her. On the hearing date the child’s parents appeared in court and objected to the adoption. No previous notice was given to petitioners that the parents’ consent would be withdrawn and objection made. Mr. Noone, despite his failure to provide for his child’s expenses and support, testified, ‘I’m against the adoption. I want my child back’. Mrs. Noone testified that two weeks after she had surrendered custody to petitioners she ‘changed her mind’ and decided to resist the adoption. The record is silent, however, as to any objective conduct or statements on her part in support of such testimony.”.

It may be added that Mr. Hixon, the adopting father, testified that the privilege of visiting the child weekly was expressly given to Mrs. Noone. This was not denied, and this privilege was at no time exercised except two or three days after the Hixons received the child, when Mrs. Noone delivered the few additional pieces of the child’s clothing. Mrs. Noone testified that during the interview with the attorney at the time she executed the written consent, she was advised and understood that six months was the time limitation for a change- of mind on her part as to the. child’s adoption. When asked why . she didn’t express the change of mind to which she testified at the hearing as. having' Occurred two weeks after giving up.the child,..she replied, “I didn’t-get to see'the..people.”.- 'The Hixons lived about two blocks away. ' :.

-■ - In his opinion, -the--hearing', judge-states :• ..‘.‘Npr are wev impressed-.with:' -the-mOtk'erls^ .She^Jadt [443]*443mittedly falsified her age to petitioners as being 19 when she was only 16. She acted irresponsibly in the matter of giving custody to the petitioners with the understanding that she did or would consent to the adoption, only to endeavor to withdraw that consent, without notice, on the hearing day. ... In our opinion she testified falsely that she went to the petitioners’ home three or four times to see the child but never found them at home, and that she ‘couldn’t get to see them’. We do not place any credence in this testimony under all the circumstances of the case. Neither do we believe her testimony that she changed her mind two weeks after the placement. Her conduct compels a contrary inference.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 729, 376 Pa. 437, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noone-adoption-case-pa-1954.