People ex rel. Grament v. Free Synagogue Child Adoption Committee

194 Misc. 332, 85 N.Y.S.2d 541, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1677
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 194 Misc. 332 (People ex rel. Grament v. Free Synagogue Child Adoption Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Grament v. Free Synagogue Child Adoption Committee, 194 Misc. 332, 85 N.Y.S.2d 541, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1677 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Botein, J.

On March 9, 1948, the relator and her since-divorced husband turned over their infant son of nine months to the defendant, an authorized child adoption agency as defined by subdivision 10 of section 371 of the Social Welfare Law. At that time, each parent signed an unconditional ” surrender agreement. There was also available, for irresolute parents, an agency procedure whereunder the child could have been surrendered conditionally — so that at any time during a specified period of [334]*334either thirty or sixty days the child would have been returned to its parents upon the mere request.

On March 22, 1948, or about two weeks later, the child was placed with the prospective adoptive parents, with whom he has since continued to live. On April 5,1948, the relator telephoned the offices of the defendant and demanded that the child be returned to her. A conference was arranged, and the relator wavered in her resolution to secure the return of the child. There followed a four- or five-month period of indecision on the part of the relator. Then, when her eventual firm demands met with refusal by the defendant to return the child, she instituted this habeas corpus proceeding to obtain custody of her child.

The relator does not recall that at the time she relinquished custody she was advised of the alternative of a conditional surrender. She would have the court infer either that she was not so informed, or if so, that she was in such a state of emotional turmoil that she failed to grasp its significance.

I find, as asserted by the defendant, that both relator and her husband were advised in painstaking fashion of all their rights and of all available procedures; also, that from the time she first broached the subject of adoption to her husband, as correlative to her insistence upon divorce, to the time they turned over the child, the relator was clear in mind and sure of purpose.

I make this finding at the outset because much emphasis has been placed by both parties upon the circumstances surrounding the signing of the surrender instrument. Any consideration of the law of this case must necessarily commence with a determination of the legal import of that instrument. The relator regards it in the nature of a material and relevant evidentiary act reduced to writing, to be viewed in that light and not as a contract with any binding force. The defendant, on the other hand, asserts that an unconditional surrender to an authorized agency, while not irrevocable, is at least much more conclusive, much more impregnable to attack, than a surrender of custody to an individual for adoptive purposes.

The contract of surrender may not be shaken off as lightly as urged by the relator. Surrender of custody of a child by a parent to an individual as an incident of adoption by the latter, whether or not by written instrument, is without statutory cognizance ” (People ex rel. Anonymous v. Perkins Adoption Soc., 271 App. Div. 672, 673, affd. 297 N. Y. 559). But the Social Welfare Law, taking cognizance of the surrender of a child to an authorized agency, states that the instrument relinquishing guardianship and custody to an authorized agency may also [335]*335provide for the absolute surrender of such child to such authorized agency. * * * ” (§ 384, subd. 2.)

Any argument that a contract bearing statutory sanction and approval is without binding force is simply untenable. Such a contract derives dignity and strength from its very inclusion in the legislative pattern for the adoption of children. True, it may not accomplish an irrevocable commitment of custody and guardianship. But, as shall be developed, it materially alters and diminishes the rights of a mother seeking to regain custody after such a surrender.

In its endeavor to distinguish between the strength of a surrender to an authorized agency and one to an individual, the defendant places great reliance upon People ex rel. Anonymous v. Perkins Adoption Soc. (supra). It seems to me that the only distinctions drawn in that case between the rights of an agency and those of an individual receiving custody of a child pursuant to surrender relate to requirements of consent for actual adoption and the power to return the child to its natural parent. We are concerned with neither of these aspects in this proceeding. Furthermore, the prevailing opinion upon which defendant relies states: ‘1 The only issue here is whether the best interests of the child would he promoted, in accordance with the statutory language, or even under the parens patriae doctrine, by returning the child to respondent ” (p. 674).

Neither does People ex rel. Harris v. Commissioner of Welfare, New York City (188 Misc. 919) support the defendant’s contention. The position taken by the court therein is qualified by its recognition that “ the fact that the surrender was made and the fact that the agency obtained possession of the child and placed it with a family with a view to adoption, do not prevent the court from giving the child back to the mother if convinced that under all the circumstances that course is proper ” (p. 923).

If any distinction exists between the rights of an individual and an authorized agency upon a custody proceeding of this nature, it must find its justification and its origin in the laws under which the agency operates. The relevant statutes will be searched in vain for any such difference in legislative treatment or for any expression of policy arguing such a difference in treatment.

The statutes do establish a procedure for the adoption of a child surrendered to an authorized agency different from that prescribed for a child surrendered to an individual. Subject to [336]*336certain limitations, the consent to adoption of the parents of a child born in wedlock is required (Domestic Relations Law, § 111, subd. 2); but such consent is not required of -parents who have surrendered their child to an authorized agency for adoption (§ 111, subd. 4). The consent only of the agency is necessary. Great, usually decisive, consideration is given in adoption proceedings to the wishes of parents who have surrendered infants to individuals. Little, if any, weight is attached to the status of parenthood in adoption proceedings after surrender to an authorized agency.

The Social Welfare Law nowhere endows surrender to an agency, insofar as custody prior to adoption is concerned, with irrevocability or expressly with less limitations than surrender to an individual. In' fact, subdivision 1, of section 383, provides that ‘ the parent of a child remanded or committed to an authorized agency shall not be entitled to the custody thereof, except * * * in pursuance of an order of a court or judicial officer

of competent jurisdiction, determining that the interest of such child will be promoted thereby and that such parent is fit, competent and able to duly maintain, support and educate such child.

It is thus apparent that the Legislature has gone to great pains to circumscribe, in connection with adoption, the rights of parents who have surrendered their child to an authorized agency, and that it has gone to equal pains to define their rights to custody prior to adoption.

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Bluebook (online)
194 Misc. 332, 85 N.Y.S.2d 541, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-grament-v-free-synagogue-child-adoption-committee-nysupct-1949.