People ex rel. Warner v. Wethel

202 Ill. App. 77, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 839
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 15, 1916
DocketGen. No. 22,295
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 202 Ill. App. 77 (People ex rel. Warner v. Wethel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Warner v. Wethel, 202 Ill. App. 77, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 839 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Goodwin

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error seeks to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court entered December 8th, 1915, in a habeas corpus proceeding giving custody of Vincent Harry Warner," an infant, to relators.

Plaintiff in error is the sole living natural parent of the infant involved in the case, who was bom out of wedlock, and was, at the time of the judgment, about the age of two years and eight months. Defendants in error, as relators, claimed the right to custody by virtue of a decree of adoption entered in the County Court of Cook county, December 26, 1913. Although plaintiff in error consented in writing to this decree of adoption she now insists that it is a nullity for the following reasons: First, because no summons was issued against the child or publication made for him; second, because the petition does not contain a statement of the residence of the mother; and third, because it does not set out a legal cause for adoption.

The contention that the infant himself is a necessary party to an adoption proceeding is based upon the second section of an act to revise the law in relation to the adoption of children, approved February 27, 1874, as amended by an act approved May 25, 1907. The portions of section 2 necessary to a determination of this question are as follows:

“2. Form of petition—notice to defendants—adoption notice.] § 2. The petition shall state one or more causes for adoption, the name, if known, the sex and the approximate age of the child sought to be adopted and if it is desired to change the name, the new name, and either the name, or that the name is unknown to petitioner (a) of the person having the custody of such child; and (b) of each of the parents or of the surviving parent of a legitimate child or of the mother of an illegitimate child; or (c) if it allege that both such parents are or that such mother is dead, then of the guardian if any of such child or (d) if it allege that both such parents are, or that such mother is dead and that no guardian of such child is known to petitioner, then, of a near relative, or that none such is known to petitioner; the petition shall also state the residences of such parties so far as the same are known to such petitioner. All persons so named in such petition shall be made defendants by name and shall be notified of such proceedings by summons if residents of this state in the same manner as is now or may hereafter be required in chancery proceedings by the laws of this state except only that the summons shall be made returnable at any time within twenty days after the date thereof. All persons, if any, who or whose names are stated in the petition to be unknown to petitioner shall be deemed and taken as defendants by the name or designation of ‘all whom it may concern:’ Provided, however, that in all cases where the peTsons or any of them hereinabove required to be made defendants shall have been deprived of the custody of the child sought to be adopted by a court of competent jurisdiction and such court in the order appointing a guardian of the person of such child shall have authorized such guardian to consent to the adoption of the child without (notice) to or assent by such person or persons, such person or persons need not be made defendants and no person other than such guardian need be made a defendant to such proceedings, and the consent by such guardian shall be sufficient to authorize the court before which the adoption proceedings are pending to enter a decree of adoption as hereinafter provided. The petition shall be verified by the affidavit of the petitioner.” (Hurd’s Rev. St. 1913, p. 34, J. & A. ¶ 194.)

The question immediately arises as to whether the words “all persons so named in such petition shall be made defendants” include the child. The original act in relation to the adoption of children, which remained in force from 1874 until it was amended in 1907, very clearly did not require the minor child to be made a defendant or to be.represented by a guardian ad litem. The court, therefore, must at the outset meet and determine the question of whether the amendment of 1907 was intended to change the public policy of the State in this regard. Some colpr for the contention that it was the intention of the Legislature to require the change to be made is found in the language contained in the body of section 2, which requires that the petition shall state the name of the child, and declares that “all persons so named in such petition shall be made defendants by name.” On the other hand, it is claimed that the grouping under letters (a), (b), (c) and (d) of parents and persons standing in loco parentis indicated that the persons so enumerated were the only ones intended to be made defendants. However, it seems to the court that the meaning of the words is made certain by the proviso “that in all cases where the persons or any of them hereinabove required to be made defendants shall have been deprived of the custody of the child sought to be adopted by a court of competent jurisdiction,” etc. This statement of circumstances under which “the persons or any of them hereinabove required to be made defendants” may be deprived of the custody of the child can have no other meaning than that all the persons required to be made defendants may be deprived of the custody of the child, and this, of course, necessarily excludes the child himself from the category of those required to be made defendants. We would not, of course, be justified in giving the language of the provision this restrictive effect which its literal sense logically requires, if an intention to make the child a necessary party was made apparent by language used in other portions of the statute or by the language of the statute as a whole. It is, moreover, to be noted that as the child had never been required to be made a party to adoption proceedings by the law as it existed prior to the amendment of 1907, it must be assumed that had the Legislature intended to make a radical change in this regard, it would have made its purpose clear by the use of clear and explicit language, and would not have left it in any way uncertain. The conclusion which the court has reached on this point is in harmony with the practical construction placed upon the act by court and counsel. For us now to place upon the act an interpretation which would invalidate a large portion, if not most, of the adoptions made in good faith during the past nine years, and so disinherit many who would otherwise be entitled to share in the estates of their adoptive parents, would, in the absence of language making such a ruling necessary, be, in pur opinion, an act of inexcusable injustice.

Counsel for appellant next contend that the failure of the petition to recite the residence of the mother of the child was fatal to the jurisdiction of the County -Court, because section 2 provides, “the petition shall also state the residences of such parties so far as the same are known to such petitioner.” The first case arising in Illinois in which the question of jurisdiction in adoption cases is discussed is Barnard v. Barnard, 119 Ill. 92, in which the mother appeared and consented to the adoption, but the father did not appear and no. allegation was made that he was dead or had abandoned the child. In support of the adoption the court said, at page 98:

“It is not important, here, to inquire,—this record coming before this court collaterally,—whether the County Court erred, simply, in decreeing as it did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 Ill. App. 77, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-warner-v-wethel-illappct-1916.