Smith v. Green

480 P.2d 437, 4 Or. App. 533, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 11, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 480 P.2d 437 (Smith v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Green, 480 P.2d 437, 4 Or. App. 533, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 934 (Or. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

This is an appeal from a decree denying a petition for adoption of a minor child. The petition was based upon the narrow ground under ORS 109.324 of “neglect without just and sufficient cause to provide proper care and maintenance for the child for one year next preceding” the filing of the petition.

The parents of the child were properly served with citation at their domicile in Utah, as required by ORS 109.330, and they appeared by written answer and in person. The answer, inter alia, alleged that the child was being wrongfully withheld from them by petitioners, that it is in the child’s best interest that she be returned to their custody, and demanded the same.

*535 Evidence was that petitioner wife is an aunt of the natural father of the child, who was born January 29, 1964. Petitioners and the child’s parents were domiciliarles of Utah. The women worked together and the men had worked together. The parents were having marital and financial trouble and, as a result, on August 21, 1964, they and the petitioners went to a Utah lawyer and had him prepare a written contract which they all then signed, under which, in consideration of the agreement of the petitioners to support and maintain the child and give her the same love and affection they gave their own children, they placed the custody of the child with the petitioners. The parents agreed that after the child had resided with the petitioners for one year they would “appear in court and give the consent necessary for the adoption of such child.” This written contract was received in evidence without objection.

In July or August of 1965, a disagreement arose between petitioner wife and the natural mother, and the latter sought return of the child. The evidence as to time when this occurred is disputed, but from all of the evidence it can be inferred that one year from August 21, 1964, had elapsed. She met resistance and did not take the child. The evidence also is disputed as to the exact time, but about September 5, 1965, according to the most reliable testimony in the record, petitioner wife took the child to Colorado for about two months, and then, taking the child with her, moved to Grants Pass, Oregon, to join her husband. Previous to their Utah residence, all of the parties had resided in the Grants Pass area. Petitioner husband, when he went to Grants Pass in 1965, continued to work for the same man that he and the child’s natural father had together previously worked for in the same area. *536 Petitioners never notified the parents where they had gone. Prom 1965 until the petition was filed in 1969, they lived continuously in Grants Pass and nearby Glendale. The parents of the child continued to live in Utah. They were frequently in contact with relatives of both couples in Oregon and Utah who knew the whereabouts of each. They visited several times in Oregon during the same years and made no serious effort to locate the petitioners and the child on those occasions, although the circumstances shown in evidence make it apparent that they must have known petitioners were in the Grants Pass area. Obviously, they made no contribution to the child’s support. The evidence which we have reviewed, although it is in sharp conflict, fairly supports the findings of the trial court in the following regards:

* * More probably than not Mrs. Smith [petitioner] left [Utah in 1965] to prevent the mother from retaking her child. * * # [T]he court is satisfied from the evidence that had the Greens during the year immediately preceding the filing of the petition seriously undertaken to locate Smiths and their child, they would have in all probability succeeded. * * * [Petitioners] have reared a healthy, happy, contented child. * * * [If] the rule applicable was that of custody in a suit for divorce, i.e., the best interest of the child, the result herein would be different. It does no injustice to the parents to say that after the period of time that has elapsed in this case — here the child has virtually spent the first six years of her life in the home of the petitioners, whose rearing of the child simply cannot be faulted — that it would seem the child’s best interest dictates that she remain where she is. She is virtually a stranger to her parents and her brothers and sister * * *.”

*537 As an additional finding, although, the evidence is conflicting, we think that if the parents had seriously wanted their child back within a year after they made the custody contract, they could have required it. As we have already observed, the most reliable evidence indicates that petitioners waited, after the dispute in July or August 1965, until September 5,1965, before they left with the child.

The part of OES 109.324 involved here was interpreted in Wilcox v. Alexander et ux, 220 Or 509, 514, 515, 349 P2d 862 (1960). That ease holds:

o * rjnjie requirement that the nonsupport must be without 'just and sufficient cause’ denotes *538 an equivalent, if not broader, stricture than ‘wilful’. No court would allow an adoption for nonsupport only unless the failure to provide was by intentional, deliberate or wilful design. The language of OES 109.324 requiring the nonsupport to be ‘without just and sufficient cause’ is identical to the language of OES 167.605 which makes it a crime to fail to support a wdfe or child ‘without just and sufficient cause.’ It is apparent, therefore, that the legislature intended that the nonsupport be of the same wilful or deliberate character as that defined in the criminal code. See State v. Francis, 126 Or 253, 268, 269 P 878 (1928).”

The next to the last sentence in OES 109.324, which was a part of the statute when Wilcox was decided, states that in determining whether there has been wilful neglect the court should disregard incidental visits, communications and contributions. This language, to us, casts doubt upon the interpretation placed upon the statute in the language quoted from Wilcox above. See Larson, Trends and Developments in Oregon Family Law: Parental Rights and Child W elf are, 43 Or L Eev 193, 207-208, 211 (1964). However, we are bound by that interpretation as the trial court was. We affirm the trial court’s decree insofar as it denied the adoption.

The decree, pursuant to the demand in the answer, also provides for transfer of custody of the child to the natural parents. This requirement, on motion of petitioners at the suggestion of the trial court, was held in abeyance by this court pending determination of this appeal.

OES 109.307 (1), which defines the court’s authority in adoption proceedings, provides that after hearing the court shall:

* # i's #
“(a) Enter a final decree under OES 109.350;

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Bluebook (online)
480 P.2d 437, 4 Or. App. 533, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-green-orctapp-1971.