Smith v. Dear

390 P.2d 209, 143 Mont. 330, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 273
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1964
DocketNo. 10575
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 390 P.2d 209 (Smith v. Dear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Dear, 390 P.2d 209, 143 Mont. 330, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 273 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment and decree entered on Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, which decree confirmed a prior order of adoption.

On May 17,1958, an illegitimate child, known as Baby Curtis, was born to appellant. The respondent acknowledged the child as his. At the time of birth, both natural parents were unmarried. Appellant mother lived in Missoula, Montana, from [332]*332about September 1958, until October 1960. Respondent father lived and resided in Cascade County. Respondent supported appellant and the child for a time from birth. Appellant rejected respondent’s proposals of marriage.

Respondent then married appellant’s mother, who will be referred to as respondent’s wife. Subsequently, respondent sought to adopt Baby Curtis. Appellant agreed, and the two consulted a Missoula attorney.

On March 30, 1960, the positively verified joint petition of appellant and respondent was filed in the district court of Missoula County praying that the court enter an order of adoption awarding Baby Curtis to respondent. The petition recited in part as follows:

“(1) That your Petitioner, Fred Nathaniel Dear, is the natural father of Baby Curtis, and that said child was born out of wedlock to your petitioner and Judith Jean "Williams, who is said child’s natural mother.

“(2) That your Petitioner, Fred Nathaniel Dear, is forty-six (46) years of age, is a citizen of the United States, and a resident of the State of Montana for forty-six (46) years, and that he is of the white race, and more than ten years older than said child, and is at present a resident of Cascade, Montana, is married and resides on a ranch near Cascade, Montana. And that your petitioner, Judith Jean Williams is 21 years of age and resides in Missoula, Montana, and is unmarried, and that said child is now in her custody.

“(3) That said child, Baby Curtis, was born in Spokane, Washington, on May 17, 1958.

“ (4) That said child has no property of any kind.

“(5) That your Petitioner, Judith Jean Williams, the natural mother of said child, has given her full consent to the adoption of said child by your Petitioner, Fred Nathaniel Dear, who is the natural father of said child, and that said child bear his name.

“(6) That it is for the best interest of said child that the [333]*333natural father and Petitioner herein, be allowed to adopt said child, for the reason that the said child’s natural mother is unable to support said child and care for, maintain and educate said child, and that the natural father is now married and has a good home in which to raise said child and is well able financially to care for, support, maintain and educate said child and will give said child a good Christian home and background, and has all the affection of a natural father for said child.

“ (7) That your petitioner, Fred Nathaniel Dear, wishes said child to bear his last name, which is the right of said child as the natural son of said petitioner, and prays that said child’s name be changed to Curtis Dear.

“ (8) That the wife of your Petitioner, Fred Nathaniel Dear, namely, Nina Margaret Dear, has filed her consent in writing to said adoption.

“WHEREFORE, your Petitioners, the natural father and mother of Baby Curtis, infant child herein, join in this petition, and pray this Court for an order of adoption, legally awarding said child to the Petitioner Fred Nathaniel Dear, and that said child be henceforth known and named as Curtis Dear.”

With this petition was filed a “Consent of Wife to Adoption” by Nina Dear, respondent’s wife; a “Consent of Mother to Adoption” by appellant; and an “Agreement of Father Adopting Child” by respondent.

On the same day in open court, the appellant, the respondent and the respondent’s wife testified in favor of the adoption. A decree of adoption was entered.

On the same day, and prior to entry of the adoption order, appellant and respondent executed a written agreement prepared by their attorney that the child “may be in the custody of his natural mother * * * during the winter and school months of the year * *

This unusual arrangement can only be explained, if need be, by the strange family relationship described above.

[334]*334After the adoption, respondent received custody of the child, then approximately two years old. According to respondent’s version, the child wa,s retarded and had been abused. In any event, respondent refused to allow custody in the appellant natural mother. The child lived with respondent and his wife on their ranch.

Meantime, from a record not too clear, appellant had been married, divorced, and remarried and had given birth to another child. Some two years after the adoption of Baby Curtis, on January 15, 1962, appellant filed a petition to vacate the adoption decree. The grounds of the petition were threefold: (1) that her agreement to the adoption had been obtained by fraud; (2) that since respondent’s wife did not join in the adoption, it was void under the statute; and (3) that since the adoption took place in Missoula County, rather than Cascade County, it was likewise void under the statutes.

The petition was met by a motion to quash on grounds, among others, that the original decree was res adjudicata, that the court lacked jurisdiction to vacate the decree, and that the validity of the decree and the issue of fraud could not be tried in summary fashion.

However, a hearing on the petition to vacate the decree was held on March 12, 1962, and after hearing and briefing by both parties, the court made findings and conclusions, and confirmed the adoption. A partial quotation from the trial court’s conclusions is as follows:

“That whether in law, petitioner’s attack upon the decree of adoption, which she herself joined, voluntarily, in procuring from this court is direct or is collateral, petitioner is estopped from any attack upon this court’s decree under the circumstances of this case, as it presently stands before this court;

“That the physical well being of Baby Curtis Dear requires that the adoption heretofore decreed remain presently undisturbed; 1

“That in the proceedings had by the parties before this court [335]*335on the 30th day of March, 1960, jurisdiction obtained, decree was regularly uttered, and no fraud was perpetrated upon petitioner thereby.”

The appellant lists eight alleged errors which are grouped for argument. We shall adopt these groupings but in a different order. They are:

(1) Whether any proof of fraud in securing the adoption existed;

(2) Whether one who petitions a court for an order of adoption, appears in open court to testify in support thereof, and after entry of a decree, absent fraud, is estopped to deny the validity of the decree; and

(3) Whether the trial court erred in admitting certain evidentiary matters covering conduct of the parties and looking to the interests and welfare of the child.

As to the fraud alleged, the trial court specifically found no fraud was proven. We have checked the record thoroughly and find too, a complete absence of any testimony or proof of fraud.

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Related

Riley v. Byrne
399 P.2d 980 (Montana Supreme Court, 1965)
McKerron v. Celebrezze
236 F. Supp. 382 (D. Montana, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
390 P.2d 209, 143 Mont. 330, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-dear-mont-1964.