Petition for Revocation of a Decree for Adoption of a Minor

189 N.E.2d 194, 345 Mass. 663, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 727
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 2, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 189 N.E.2d 194 (Petition for Revocation of a Decree for Adoption of a Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition for Revocation of a Decree for Adoption of a Minor, 189 N.E.2d 194, 345 Mass. 663, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 727 (Mass. 1963).

Opinion

Spiegel, J.

This is a petition for revocation of a decree of adoption brought by the natural mother of the minor. The petitioner also seeks custody of the child. The petition was filed on March 29,1961. A hearing on the petition was begun on November 20,1961. The probate judge entered a decree vacating the decree for adoption and ordered that the petitioner be given custody of the child, from which the respondents appealed. The evidence is reported, and the exhibits are before us. The judge incorporated in the decree the following findings: That ‘ ‘ the petitioner . . . was misled at the time the adoption petition was prepared and that at no time did she consent either verbally or in writing to give up her child for adoption but believed that she was leaving the said child in the care of her parents so that if anything happened to her until she was ready to take the child, they could continue to raise the said child; and it appearing that upon requesting the child when she and her husband . . . were in a position to take the child, it was necessary for her to hire an attorney to secure the informa[665]*665tian concerning the alleged adoption; and it appearing to the Court that at all times the petitioner . . . insisted the child know that she was the mother of the child and that she asked for the child at her earliest opportunity, and it appearing further that the respondents through their attorney hastened the hearing on the adoption and secured the waiver of the year’s residence period through false allegations; and . . . that the alleged signatures of the petitioner and her husband on the petition for adoption were forged . . .

On February 23,1956, a petition for adoption and change of name was filed by the parents of the natural mother seeking the adoption of a child who was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on January 26, 1956. The petition states that the parents of the child “consent to the adoption” and the document bears two signatures purporting to be those of the parents of the child. A report of the Department of Public Welfare, dated May 11,1956, signed by a supervisor of the department was filed in the Probate Court. This report stated, among other things, that the natural mother of the minor had said that she “signed the petition and consents” to the adoption and that her husband “signed the petition and as legal father consents to the adoption. ’ ’ On May 22,1956, the same probate judge who heard the instant matter entered a decree allowing the petition for adoption and ordered the minor’s name changed to that of the parents of the natural mother.

The following is a condensation of the evidence as revealed from a detailed examination of the transcript of testimony and of the exhibits. Sometime in 1955, the petitioner, while attending college, became aware of the fact that she was pregnant. • She did not inform her parents about her condition until she “went home in November.” Her mother was educated at several colleges, holds a master’s degree in Education, has thirteen credits toward a Ph.D., and is a teacher in a junior high school. She testified that her daughter told her she was pregnant and there was a conversation about the “expected birth of this child.” The daughter said that “she didn’t care about it, she didn’t [666]*666want it . . . she didn’t feel it moving and . . . hoped it was dead.” The petitioner’s mother took her to a local physician and made arrangements for the birth of the child. The petitioner had a “private doctor,” “private room” at the hospital, and “everything she wanted,” provided for by her parents. The child was born on January 26, 1956.

From the “very beginning” the petitioner’s mother discussed the adoption of her daughter’s child and said to her daughter, “it is better that your father and I adopt the baby, because it is our blood; and, of course . . . [your husband] is not our blood, and if anything should happen to you the baby will be with its blood kin.” The petitioner agreed and, as a result, arrangements were made with an attorney to draft a petition for adoption.

Subsequently the attorney appeared at the home of the petitioner’s parents and the petitioner and her husband signed the petition consenting to the adoption. The attorney also “signed” the “paper.”

The natural father of the child was a married man and the last time the petitioner saw him was in May of 1955. She and her husband were married on January 20, 1956. She denied that the signature purporting to consent to the adoption was hers and her husband denied that the signature on the petition was his.

The petitioner is a schoolteacher and has a son, fourteen months old. She testified that her mother had told her that she “had signed guardianship papers so that the child’s real father could not come and take . . . [the child] away.” She claimed that she had understood that when her husband ‘1 got out of college’ ’ and they were “financially able,’’ they could have the child. She admitted that when she and her mother consulted the doctor he asked her “one simple question” as to whether she wanted the child and she “just said, ‘No.’ ”

The husband testified to a conversation with his wife’s father concerning his “feelings” for the child about to be born “since the child was not . . . [his]” and he agreed that his wife’s parents would “care for the child.”

[667]*667The petitioner and her husband each testified that they first learned the child had been adopted shortly after Christmas, in 1958, through the “investigation of a lawyer” in Connecticut whom they had retained. They subsequently retained a lawyer in Massachusetts who in turn referred them to their present attorney.

A “handwriting and document expert” testified that in her opinion the petitioner and her husband did not sign the petition consenting to the adoption and that the signatures were forgeries. This opinion was based on a comparison of certain ‘ standards ’ ’ of signatures of the petitioner and her husband written sometime in 1960 with those appearing on the petition for adoption.

The expert testified at some length as to the characteristics of the “genuine” signatures and the differences between those and the signatures appearing on the adoption petition. It was her opinion that the signature of the petitioner was ‘ ‘ a slowly made drawn copy, ’ ’ and the signature of her husband was ‘ ‘ a slowly drawn, carefully made, hesitatingly conceived copy of . . . [his] signature.” She defined a “forged signature” as a “carefully made copy, sometimes a tracery, of a genuine signature. It is similitude of somebody’s known writing.” She also testified that the petitioner “signs” her middle name with one “n” in all the “standards” she had seen whereas on the adoption petition the middle name is written with a double “n.” Her opinion was not based on this fact.

The attorney who drafted the petition testified that he had known the parents of the petitioner “since about 1940,” and that he also had known their children. He drew the petition for adoption in his office from a “birth certificate . . . furnished” him, because he wanted to be sure he was “getting the correct names.” The birth certificate shows the middle name spelled with two “n’s.” On February 8, 1956, he visited the home of the petitioner’s parents. All of the parties signed the petition in his presence. Before the petitioner signed he said to her “ [h] ere is a petition for the adoption of your youngster by your mother and father. [668]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 N.E.2d 194, 345 Mass. 663, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-for-revocation-of-a-decree-for-adoption-of-a-minor-mass-1963.