People ex rel. Stone v. Maglio

62 Misc. 2d 292, 308 N.Y.S.2d 604
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 Misc. 2d 292 (People ex rel. Stone v. Maglio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family 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. Stone v. Maglio, 62 Misc. 2d 292, 308 N.Y.S.2d 604 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

Nanette Dembitz, J.

This habeas corpus proceeding, referred to this court by a Justice of the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, was instituted by the natural mother of Baby L., to obtain his custody from Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maglio, to whom she had released him for adoption in February, 1969. Also pending before this court is Mr. and Mrs. Maglio’s petition for a final order of adoption of Baby L.

Baby L. was born out-of-wedlock to the habeas corpus petitioner, then Miss Sally Carr, on February 9, 1969 in a Miami, Florida, hospital. Following the pattern of many Florida — New York adoptions, Miss Carr had arranged through a Florida attorney before the baby’s birth for his adoption. Miss Carr by choice never saw Baby L., nor did she supply a first name for his birth certificate.1

When Baby L. was five days old, Mr. and Mrs. Maglio brought him from the Miami hospital to their residence in New York City where he has remained to date.

LEGAL PRINCIPLES GOVERNING ADOPTION PETITION.

If the adoption petition is granted, the natural mother’s habeas corpus petition must be denied — that is, a ruling in favor of the child’s adoption obviously dictates a negative answer to the habeas corpus question of whether his custody should be transferred to his natural mother.2 Since this court [294]*294concludes that the adoption petition must be granted, and it necessarily follows therefrom that the habeas corpus petition must be denied, this opinion will deal with the law controlling adoptions.

The rule now established by the appellate courts is that a deliberate, voluntary consent by the natural mother to her child’s adoption is binding, unless she shows that the welfare of the child requires that her consent be set aside. The primacy of the natural mother’s right to the child is basically recognized; however, her valid waiver of her right will be effectuated except when enforcement is detrimental to the third and silent party, the child — who is under the special protection of the State as parens patrien. And in the determination of whether the child’s welfare requires nullification of his mother’s consent to his adoption, the primacy of her right is expressed in a presumption in favor of her custody and care. (As to this body of law, see Matter of Anonymous, 286 App. Div. 161, 164-165, emphatically rejecting lower court declarations that a mother’s consent to an adoption is revocable at will at any time prior to the final order of adoption; People ex rel. Anonymous v. Anonymous, 10 N Y 2d 332, 335; Matter of Roe v. New York Foundling Hosp., 33 A D 2d 83; People ex rel. Doe v. Edwards, 31 A D 2d 64, 65, affd. 23 N Y 2d 925; see, also, Matter of Bock, 280 N. Y. 349, 353.)3

This principle of limited revocability of a mother’s valid consent — that is, the enforcement of a prior consent to an adoption unless the mother shows that the best interests of the child require its abrogation — is the rule in Florida as well as New York and is the majority rule throughout the country.4 In addition to its propriety from the standpoint of the rights of the mother, this doctrine is eminently desirable from the [295]*295standpoint of the over-all duty of the courts to protect the welfare of the child. Certainly a mother’s deliberate and uncoerced choice, to cut herself off forever from her child, is reason for a court to require clear assurance that her motives and feelings have so completely changed and have become so stabilized that her care of this previously discarded child now serves his welfare.5

Under the controlling principles, the first question is whether Miss Carr’s consent to the adoption was deliberate and voluntary.

petitioner’s consent to adoption.

On February 11, 1969, Miss Carr executed and acknowledged before Florida Circuit Court Judge Hal P. Dekle an agreement and three separate documents of consent to Baby L.’s adoption, as well as a waiver of any further notice in connection with the adoption. On one typewritten form, Judge Dekle added in his own handwriting “by petitioners only” after the words “consents that the infant be adopted”, and Miss Carr initialed this addition. Before the Judge, Miss Carr also executed a lengthy affidavit as to her reasons for placing the baby for adoption, as well as an affidavit as to payments she had received for her expenses. Judge Dekle orally propounded to Miss Carr the question ‘‘ Is this an act of your own free will and volition and the way you want it done ’ ’, and he personally recorded her affirmative answer as well as consistent answers to similar questions.

In the instant proceeding Miss Carr submitted two affidavits from Judge Dekle, executed in October, 1969, and January, 1970 (admitted in evidence by consent), in which he voices regret that he yielded to Miss Carr’s “ insistence to get some papers signed to ‘ get away ’ ” in a hurry, and states that he thinks she was physically uncomfortable, distressed, agitated, and not in a state of mind to exercise “ an informed judgment.” It is clear from the affidavits themselves as well as the testimony of the Maglios’ Florida attorney, Mrs. Helen Taños Hope, that our respected and humanitarian Florida colleague as a matter of social policy disfavors private-placement adoptions such as the instant one.6 However, a consent to a private-[296]*296placement adoption stands on the same footing as a consent to an agency adoption (see n. 3, above); and obviously Baby L.’s welfare cannot be jeopardized because of the controversy over proposed innovations in adoption legislation, nor because his mother chose to disregard the available adoption agencies and instead to approach Mrs. Hope (whose name she obtained from another young woman bearing an illegitimate child).

Nevertheless, Judge Dekle’s affidavits sharply pose the issue of whether Miss Carr’s consents, despite their facial validity, failed in fact to represent her informed and deliberate choice. This issue must be determined on the basis of the preceding and surrounding circumstances, which were of necessity outside Judge Dekle’s knowledge but which were developed in the lengthy hearing before this court.7

CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING CONSENT.

The putative father of Baby L., according to Miss Carr, was a Dr. L. Petitioner, then almost 22, and Dr. L., age 30, both at the time divorced and living and working in Florida, met on January 1, 1968. In June or July, a month or two after Dr. L. broke off their relationship, she told him she was pregnant; but he was unwilling to accede to her desire for them to marry. After intermittently considering an abortion, Miss Carr returned to her mother’s home in Alabama and in November wrote to Florida attorney Mrs. Hope, asking the attorney in an unequivocal and business-like manner to arrange for her expected baby’s adoption. Miss Carr, who had been a secretarial employee in a county office, was again clear and precise in two detailed letters to attorney Mrs. Hope in December; she asked for reimbursement for her past medical expenses (forwarding her receipted bills) and for an agreement by the adoptive parents to pay for her support for a month following the delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Misc. 2d 292, 308 N.Y.S.2d 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-stone-v-maglio-nycfamct-1970.