Sadden v. Lutheran Welfare Service

134 N.W.2d 126, 270 Minn. 455, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 815
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 19, 1965
DocketNos. 39,566, 39,614
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 134 N.W.2d 126 (Sadden v. Lutheran Welfare Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sadden v. Lutheran Welfare Service, 134 N.W.2d 126, 270 Minn. 455, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 815 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Murphy, Justice.

By an order of the juvenile division of the District Court of Henne-pin County, respondent, Mohummed Sadden, was determined to be the father of an illegitimate child and entitled to notice of all proceedings relating to the child. Appeals by the mother and Lutheran Social Service, an agency with which the child has been placed for adoption, from an order denying their subsequent motion for amended findings or a new trial raise the issue as to whether the natural father of an illegitimate child has any legally cognizable interest in the child, and if so, whether that interest can be asserted without the possibility of irreparable harm to the child’s eventual best interests and without jeopardizing the integrity of welfare agency adoption practices in the State of Minnesota.

The proceedings were started by a complaint in which respondent alleged the birth of the child; that he repeatedly asked the mother to marry him; that she refused and has given custody of the child to a social service agency. By his complaint he sought custody of the child and an order restraining further proceedings to adopt the child. The defense, as set up by the answer of the mother and Lutheran Social Service, was that the custody of the child had been properly given to Lutheran Social Service and that she was being maintained in a foster home preliminary to adoption. They assert that the father is without legal rights and the court without jurisdiction to hear his claim. The findings of the trial court recite the pertinent facts. They are:

“The child was conceived as a result of an illegitimate alliance between two college students who for some time before and for some time after had romantic inclinations toward each other. Both come ol good families from about the same part of the country. Marriage had been discussed. When the pregnancy became known to them, the father again proposed marriage, on more than one occasion and with evident sincerity; the mother’s interest waned to the extent that marriage is not now a possibility.
“Various plans for the child were put forward thereafter: that the mother with her relatives raise the child, that the father with his relatives raise the child, that the child be placed for adoption. The plans [458]*458were each discussed, apparently quite thoroughly, by the mother and the father and various of their relatives. They were unable to agree.
“The mother is a protestant Christian, 20 years of age, residing in northeastern Nebraska with her family. She is unable to provide a permanent home for the child either by herself or with her relatives. She desires, therefore, to terminate her parental rights, but for adoptive placement with strangers. She does not want the child placed with the father, partly from animosity toward him, partly because of religious differences, and partly because she believes that, with the father, the child will know its origins and that such knowledge would be detrimental to it.
“The father is a Moslem, dark complected as is the child, 23 years of age, residing in northwestern Iowa, currently attending the first year of law school at the University of Nebraska. He desires to raise the child. His family are longtime and well respected members of their community, economically comfortable and of good moral character. They have proffered financial assistance to the extent necessary. One of his sisters is married to a successful physician in Iowa and lives in a six-bedroom home with her husband and six-year-old child. The other of his sisters is married to an electrical engineer in Minneapolis and currently living in an apartment while looking for a house to purchase.
“The father proposes to place the child with one of his sisters until he has completed law school and is married at which time he would take over the raising of the child. Both sisters have offered their homes for this purpose, both homes are excellent. The father would visit the child frequently during this interim period and would provide some support for himself and the child through employment which he now has. He is not now married and has no candidate currently for marriage. He would raise the child as a Moslem and would disclose to the child the facts of her origin when appropriate. He is of good character though he has lost his temper on one occasion.
“Lutheran Social Service is ready, willing, and able to accept the child and is confident of placing it in a qualified Christian adoptive home, the plan which the mother urges.” .

In its conclusions of law the court found that the father was a fit per[459]*459son to raise the child and, subject to certain contingencies, had a realistic plan for it. The court also found, with reservations, that the plan of the mother and the Lutheran Social Service was equally realistic. The court did not determine which of the plans was for the best interest of the child and limited itself to the following determination:

“The appropriate officers of the State of Minnesota are ordered to enter [respondent’s] name as father on the birth certificate of the child, indicating his age as 23, his occupation as student, and preserving the categorization of the child [as] illegitimate.”

The order further provided that the putative father “shall henceforth be duly notified of all proceedings relating to the child.”

Appellants insist that the order of the trial court should be set aside and vacated for the asserted reason that the court was without jurisdiction and acted beyond its power. They argue that there is no authority in law either for the right asserted or the remedy sought. They argue that the father of an illegitimate child has no rights with respect to the child except those given to him by statute. They cite In re Adoption of Anderson, 235 Minn. 192, 197, 50 N. W. (2d) 278, 283, to the effect that “[t]he power to decree an adoption being purely statutory, the statute is the measure of the court’s authority.”

Appellants would have us ignore the real character of this proceeding, which is one by a father to secure custody of his illegitimate child. They argue in effect that it is an illegal and unauthorized procedure which, by collateral means, seeks to frustrate the adoption process provided by Minn. St. c. 259, which relates to adoption, and § 260.221, which provides for termination of parental rights of dependent and neglected children and thus lays the groundwork for adoption under c. 259. They argue that adoption proceedings have already been instituted by the mother under c. 259 and assert that where the mother proceeds by a “direct surrender” of the child to a welfare agency pursuant to that chapter, the out-of-wedlock father is not entitled to be heard unless the adopting court so orders after having determined such hearing to be in the best interests of the child. They insist that the statutory scheme with reference to adoption does not comprehend notice to the father or consent by him.

[460]*460By the provisions of Minn. St. 259.25, subd. 1, the mother of an illegitimate child is permitted to enter into an agreement with a welfare agency giving it authority to place the child for adoption. It is provided by § 259.24, subd. 1(a), that the consent of the father of an illegitimate child to adoption “shall not be required” and by § 259.24, subd. 1(f), that the agency “shall have the exclusive right to consent to the adoption of such child.”1

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Related

State Ex Rel. Lewis v. Lutheran Social Services
178 N.W.2d 56 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1970)
In Re Brennan
134 N.W.2d 126 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 N.W.2d 126, 270 Minn. 455, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sadden-v-lutheran-welfare-service-minn-1965.