Phillips Adoption

12 Pa. D. & C.2d 387, 1957 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 260
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Somerset County
DecidedSeptember 6, 1957
Docketnos. 6, 7 and 20 of 1949 and 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Pa. D. & C.2d 387 (Phillips Adoption) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Somerset County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips Adoption, 12 Pa. D. & C.2d 387, 1957 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 260 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Lansberry, P. J.,

In this proceeding for vacation or annullment of three separate decrees of adoption, the pleadings consist of a petition alleging fraud in the procuring of the decrees of adoption and a responsive answer by the adopting father denying the allegations of fraud. The petitioners are the Rev. and Mrs. Clair E. Keafer who were instrumental in the placing of the three children with Mr. and Mrs. Phillips for adoption by them. The matter came on for hearing by the court at which hearing unusual latitude was allowed in the reception of testimony because of the nature of the allegations.

An understanding of the issue here presented requires a background resumé of the early married life of the principal parties, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Leroy Phillips, references to the adoption proceedings and [389]*389the basis for the allegation of fraud. On September 10, 1937, Irvin Leroy Phillips, then aged 22 years and an electrical engineering student in the senior class at the University of Pittsburgh and Marian Virginia Pillmore, then aged 18 years, were quietly married in Hagerstown, Md. Thereafter Mrs. Phillips lived with her widowed mother in Pittsburgh while Mr. Phillips completed his studies at the university, after which time the fact of the marriage was publicly revealed. At his request, Mrs. Phillips then lived with his grandparents in Conemaugh, Cambria County, for a period of several months and then the parties lived in their own apartment approximately one year. Thereafter they lived in Grantsville, Md., and vicinity for more than a year and then for several years with his grandfather’s widow. The parties later resided in the Oakhurst Housing Development near Johnstown for several years during most of which time Mrs. Phillips worked as a nurse’s aid while Mr. Phillips was employed at the Pennsylvania Electric Company. In the spring of 1945 the parties had marital differences, Mrs. Phillips left her husband, went to New Alexander, Pa., and resided with her mother and during that time filed her complaint in divorce in Allegheny County in the July term of 1945. Soon thereafter the parties reconciled their differences, the action in divorce was withdrawn and the parties returned to the Oakhurst Housing Development where they resided for a while and from thence moved to the home purchased by them in their joint names in northern Somerset County and in which home they were residing when this proceeding as well as the divorce, custody and support proceedings were instituted in the courts of Somerset County by Mrs. Phillips.

Sometime during the year 1946 or early 1947, through a mutual friend, Mr. and Mrs. Phillips be[390]*390came acquainted with the Rev. and Mrs. Clair E. Keafer, presently residing at Berwick, Pa., through whose efforts two children were placed with the Phillips for adoption after some investigation made by the Rev. and Mrs. Keafer. By proceedings had to no. 7 of 1949 in the Orphans’ Court of Somerset County, Linda Jane Phillips, born April 17, 1947, and by proceedings had to no. 6 of 1949 in the Orphans’ Court of Somerset County, Carl Irvin Phillips, born April 19, 1948, became the adopted children of Mr. and Mrs. Phillips by separate decrees of adoption entered March 7, 1949. Although a transcribed record of the testimony adduced at those hearings does not appear to have been made, from the available records of these adoption proceedings and the testimony in this record it appears that full hearings were had, that the proceedings were regular in all respects and agreeable to the Act of Assembly regulating adoptions then in force. In rather lengthy decrees of adoption entered by the Hon. Norman T. Boose, then president judge of this court, the basic facts are recited, the necessary consents (which are on file) are referred to and the formal adoptions together with changes of names are decreed.

By proceedings had to no. 20 of 1953 in the Orphans’ Court of Somerset County, David James Phillips, bom January 6, 1953, became the adopted child of Mr. and Mrs. Phillips by decree of adoption entered July 27, 1953. The testimony adduced at that hearing was reduced to writing and all of the basic facts are recited and found therein, the necessary consent filed and the formal adoption together with the change of name decreed. This child, like the other two, was brought to the attention of Mr. and Mrs. Phillips by the Rev. and Mrs. Keafer and by them placed for adoption. These children are not related by blood so far as the adoption records disclose.

[391]*391With reference to all three adoptions, the fact is that the early marital difficulties between these parties and the fact of the institution of the divorce action in 1945 and the subsequent withdrawal thereof and resumption of the marital relationship were not revealed to or learned by either the Rev. and Mrs. Keafer, the witnesses at the adoption hearings, or either of the presiding judges who entered the decrees of adoption. Not until 1955 did the Rev. and Mrs. Keafer learn these facts, and, following their consultations with the parties and as a result of subsequent investigations, instituted this proceeding to revoke or annul the three decrees in adoption.

In their petition, Clair E. Keafer and Iva Keafer, after reciting the facts relating to the adoptions, alleged the following:

“FIFTH: That sometime ago your Petitioners learned that the said adopting parents had committed fraud upon the Court at the time of the adoption proceedings in that neither the Court nor their reputation witnesses nor your Petitioners were informed that the said adopting parents had had domestic trouble from the date of their marriage, which became so intense that a divorce proceeding was entered in the Courts of Allegheny County, but later dropped. That such domestic trouble between the adopting parents continued from that time on through till the date of the last adoption, to-wit: July 27, 1953, which said matters were carefully concealed by the adopting parties from their witnesses, your Petitioners and the Court.
“That since July 27, 1953, conditions have become worse and the difficulties arising between the adopting parents have resulted in an action in divorce being filed as of March 4, 1957; that desertion and nonsupport proceedings were instituted and heard in the [392]*392Courts of Somerset County, Pennsylvania, on the 16th day of April, 1957, which resulted in the Court of Quarter Sessions making an order on the said Irvin L. Phillips for the support of the wife and children in the sum of Two Hundred ($200.00) Dollars per month.
“That following said hearing the said Irvin L. Phillips, has, on the 16th and 17th day of April, 1957, conducted himself in a very disorderly manner, threatening violence, and to protect the children from said commotion, quarrelling and violence, the Court, on April 18th, 1957, ordered the children brought to the Children’s Aid Society on proceedings instituted under the Juvenile Court Act; that due to the conduct of the said Irvin L. Phillips, one of the adopting parents, his wife, Virginia Phillips, the other adopting parent, has been compelled to withdraw from the home of the parties in Conemaugh Township, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, because of her fear for her health and life.

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Related

In Re: Adoption of R.A.B., Appeal of: N.M.E.
153 A.3d 332 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Pa. D. & C.2d 387, 1957 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-adoption-paorphctsomers-1957.