Robards v. Barlow

404 Mich. 216
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1978
DocketDocket No. 60532
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 404 Mich. 216 (Robards v. Barlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robards v. Barlow, 404 Mich. 216 (Mich. 1978).

Opinion

Ryan, J.

In bringing this appeal, the plaintiff-appellant raises important questions of first impression arising under the Michigan Adoption Code, MCLA 710.21 et seq.; MSA 27.3178(555.21) et seq., effective January 1, 1975. Appellant asks us to reverse the Court of Appeals affirmance of an order of the probate court terminating his parental rights, pursuant to the Adoption Code, to a child fathered by him and born out of wedlock on [223]*223July 28, 1975. We conclude the probate court erred in finding that the best interests of the child mandated terminating appellant’s rights.

I

On July 29, 1975, one day after the birth of the child we will call Baby Boy Barlow, his mother, the appellee in this case, voluntarily placed him with an agency, Child and Family Services, Inc., with the ultimate goal of seeing him placed in a home for purposes of adoption. Temporary care of the child has been provided pending the outcome of these proceedings.

On September 4, 1975, a statutory petition for hearing to identify the child’s father and to determine or terminate his rights1 was filed in the Berrien County Probate Court and a copy was served on appellant.

On September 23, 1975, prior to the scheduled September 30 hearing on the petition, the appellant filed a petition admitting paternity and praying for custody of the child.

At the September 30 hearing, it was determined that the parties had no objection to the court determining that appellant was the father of the child. It was also agreed that appellant would begin making regular child support payments for the care and welfare of the infant. A further hearing was then scheduled for October 27, 1975 to take up the matter of custody.

At the October 27, 1975 hearing, appellant testified that he was 19 years of age and had known the child’s mother for approximately two years. He said that shortly after he learned that the appellee was expecting their child, he asked her to [224]*224marry him. The parties eventually agreed to be married; a wedding was planned and finally can-celled.

During this period and until shortly before the child’s birth, the parties discussed and received counseling concerning custody of the boy or his being placed for adoption. Appellant desired custody of the child; the child’s mother preferred adoption. No resolution was reached.

Appellant admitted that he did not contribute to appellee’s medical expenses associated with the child’s birth or to the child’s support until after receiving the petition for hearing.

Appellant testified that he had graduated from high school in June of 1975, had been employed since June of 1974 and was a foreman on the second shift at a factory in the area, and for much of the same time had also been holding a second, part-time job. He had saved some money and had made tentative plans with his mother and sisters to care for the child during his working hours.

A number of witnesses then gave favorable testimony concerning appellant’s fitness to care for a child. Appellant then rested his case.

The appellee testified that she believed that the child’s best interests would be served by placing him for adoption. Her opinion was concurred in by others, including placement workers associated with Child and Family Services.

At the request of counsel, the matter was adjourned and during the succeeding months the parties attempted, without success, to amicably resolve the matter of custody.

At an additional hearing on June 8, 1976, appellant testified that he had, in the interim, purchased a home, that his earnings had increased, that he had been paying for the child’s care and [225]*225that he had visited with the child as often as possible.

Child and Family Services, Inc. reported that the child had been transferred to a second foster home about four months after his birth.

On July 27, 1976, the court rendered its decision and terminated appellant’s parental rights.2

An appeal as of right was taken to the Court of Appeals3 which remanded the case to the probate court for more specific findings of fact.

That probate court’s supplemental statement of findings recited that the father was not unfit to care for the child in the sense that term is used in cases involving abused, dependent or neglected children.

However, the court reaffirmed' its conclusion that it would not be in the best interests of the child to award custody to his father based on a finding that appellant could not properly care for the child, that no emotional ties had developed [226]*226between the child and his father, that appellant was not inclined to raise the child in his religion and that it would be better for the boy to be adopted by his "foster parents”.

An order was entered terminating appellant’s parental rights. The probate court’s decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. In the Matter of Baby Boy Barlow, 78 Mich App 707; 260 NW2d 896 (1977). We granted leave to appeal. 402 Mich 856 (1978).

II

The time has long since passed when children born out of wedlock had no rights derived from their relationship to their natural parents and the parents had no rights with respect to their illegitimate children.

Justice (then Judge) Levin, writing for a panel of the Court of Appeals in In re Mark T, 8 Mich App 122; 154 NW2d 27 (1967), reviewed the early history of the common law concerning custody of illegitimates.

"Originally, in English law, the illegitimate child was the ward of the parish because, in one of the less charming fictions of our early common law, he did not exist.
" 'The common law of England did not contemplate illegitimacy and, shutting its eyes to the facts of life, described an illegitimate child as ñlius nullius.’ Galloway v Galloway (1955, HL), [1956] AC 299, 310, 311 (3 All Eng Rep 429, 431).” 8 Mich App 122, 136.

Consistent with the early common-law rule that the mother of a legitimate child had no custody [227]*227rights,4 the illegitimate, considered incapable of having a father known to the law,5 was said to be a fílius nullius, the child of nobody, and a ward of the parish. Over time, the law developed to recognize custody rights to an illegitimate child, first of all in the mother only.6

The general rule stated in the cases is that, as in the case of legitimate children,7 the mother is the natural guardian of her child and has a primary right to his or her custody, subject always to the child’s best interest. In re Mark T, supra; Anno: Right of mother to custody of illegitimate child, 98 ALR2d 417. See, also, In re Mathers, 371 Mich 516; 124 NW2d 878 (1963).

A number of courts have stated that, subject to the best interests of the child, after the mother the putative father of an illegitimate child has custody rights paramount to those of any other person. Caruso v Pima County Superior Court, 100 Ariz 167; 412 P2d 463 (1966); In re Baby Boy Shady, 264 Minn 222; 118 NW2d 449 (1962); Commonwealth ex rel Human v Hyman,

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Related

In the Matter of Bell
360 N.W.2d 868 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1984)
In the Matter of Barlow
273 N.W.2d 35 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
404 Mich. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robards-v-barlow-mich-1978.