Pearson v. Chakmakis

115 So. 2d 75
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 26, 1959
DocketNo. 59-52
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 So. 2d 75 (Pearson v. Chakmakis) 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
Pearson v. Chakmakis, 115 So. 2d 75 (Fla. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CARROLL, CHAS., Judge.

This is an appeal by the mother of the child involved, from a decree granting a petition of the child’s paternal grandparents for his adoption.

The appellant and the child’s father were married in 1949. The subject of the adoption, .a boy who was six years old at the time of the suit, was born to them in 1952, [76]*76Under circumstances more fully outlined below, the child had spent almost all of that time in the care of the petitioners.

Petitioner Apostólos George Chakmakis is a doctor and resides in Miami with his wife to whom he has been married since 1916. He is engaged in the practice of medicine, and stated that his income is $300 per week. The petitioners own their home which they value at $18,500 subject to a $9,000 mortgage; and they are able to give proper care to the child. Petitioners alleged their ages to be 58 and 57, but the investigation of the State Welfare Board as shown by its filed report in the case found them to be aged 63 and 61 respectively-

The child’s father gave his consent to the adoption, but the mother, the appellant, opposed the petition. She answered averring that approximately a month after the birth of the child in Georgia the child’s father was inducted into the army, and at the request of the petitioners she and the child went to live with them in Miami; that she continued to reside with them for six months and turned over her allotment checks to them (a fact which petitioner Chakmakis denied). She further averred that the child’s father was discharged from the army after about six months, and that they continued to reside with his parents for about two months more, after which it was decided that the child’s father should go to Cuba to study medicine; that appellant went there with her husband but it was thought best not to take the child to Cuba; that appellant and her husband returned from Cuba some months later, and again lived for a time with petitioners in Miami; that certain separations occurred thereafter between appellant and her husband; that they were reconciled in 1954 and moved from Massachusetts back to Georgia; that in 1955 the petitioners and the child were living in New Jersey, and that appellant and her husband lived with them and the child part of that time. The mother averred that she had desired to have the child at all times but that it was the insistence of the child’s father and his inability to adequately provide for his family which had kept them apart. She averred her love for the child, and that she had kept in touch with him and visited him during the intervals involved. Appellant averred that she was now remarried and able financially to care for the child; and she moved the court to deny the adoption, and moved affirmatively for custody of her child.

Returning to the petition, the allegations as to the reasons for the adoption were that the child had been with the grandparents since he was approximately one week old; that the child’s parents, although attending school and operating a dance studio in Macon, Georgia, had not had a happy life; that the mother had separated herself from petitioners’ son on several occasions, including a departure in June of 1958, “making no attempt to come to Miami to see her son, said minor child.”1 The petition then alleged the living conditions of the petitioners, and their ability to care for the child. The petitioners stressed their love for the child and their desire to continue him in their home as their own.

After the adoption suit had been filed in Florida in August of 1958, and before the appellant had received word of the adoption proceedings, she entered into an agreement with her husband on October 20, 1958, incident to their separation, which contained a provision relating to the child as follows:

[77]*77“Paul Chakmakis, the minor son of the parties hereto, has been with his paternal grandparents since an early-age. George Chakmakis agrees to support said child and each party hereto agrees that the other may have the right to visit said child at reasonable times and under reasonable circumstances, and each may have the right to have said child visit with them.”

While the above provision of the contract is not entirely clear, it is evident therefrom that it made no provision for any final award of custody to either party to the exclusion of the other party, nor did it provide for awarding custody to the paternal grandparents, but the agreement recognized that the grandparents had cared for the child since an early age, and it is reasonable to construe the agreement as presenting an assumption that the grandparents would continue to care for the child, because it does provide that each party should have the right to visit the child or to have the child visit him or her. At the same time, the agreement showed that the parties did not intend that caring for and supporting the child should be the undertaking and obligation of the grandparents, because in that agreement the child’s father obligated himself to support the child.

The decree entered in the State of Georgia which divorced the child’s parents recognized the agreement, but the decree made no award of custody, saying simply, “that there was one child, Paul Chakmakis, age six, born of said marriage. Plaintiff shows that there is no issue concerning the custody of said child and he is at present residing in Miami, Florida.”

The State Welfare Board filed a report in which it recommended that the adoption be granted. The report contained nothing adverse to the appellant, and noted her non-consent. The adoption suit was tried before the court, and there were present the petitioners, the appellant, her new husband William Pearson, and her former husband George Chakmakis. Testimony was given by the petitioner Apostólos George Chakmakis and by the appellant who was then Mrs. Pauline Pearson and her husband William Pearson.

The testimony reveals, and the decree makes no finding to the contrary, that the parents of the child did not abandon or lose interest in the child; that it was the child’s father who was primarily responsible for the child having remained with the grandparents instead of with him and his wife; and that there were practical reasons to prompt this young couple in that decision. It started when he went in the service; it continued when he went to medical school, and later when they went to Massachusetts to try to get a new start, and then was complicated when they had marital difficulties which occasioned at least two separations and reconciliations; further, when they found it necessary to return to Georgia and again try to make their way; all coupled with a willingness and ability on the part of the grandparents to care for and support the child; and interspersed with numerous visits with the child in the home of the grandparents and sometimes with the child being brought by one or more of the grandparents to the mother’s place of abode; that between times contact was maintained by telephone and correspondence and certain gifts were sent by the mother; that the adoption application of the grandparents came at the time of the final break-up between the parents of the child which was followed by their divorce; and that at the time of the adoption hearing the appellant had remarried, and was continuing in her operation of a dance studio in Macon, Georgia, with the assistance of her new husband who was a radio announcer; that they lived in Macon in a two-bedroom apartment, that they employed a maid, and that their combined income was $1,200 a month.

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Related

Chepan v. Murray
311 So. 2d 798 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1975)
In Re Adoption of Layton
196 So. 2d 784 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1967)
Pearson v. Chakmakis
116 So. 2d 256 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 2d 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-chakmakis-fladistctapp-1959.