Smith v. Smith

180 P.2d 853, 67 Idaho 349, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 110
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1947
DocketNo. 7324.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 180 P.2d 853 (Smith v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Smith, 180 P.2d 853, 67 Idaho 349, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 110 (Idaho 1947).

Opinions

BUDGE, Chief Justice.

The facts in this case are not materially in conflict. Briefly stated, they are substantially as follows:

September 19, 1941, appellant was granted a default decree of divorce from respondent. The decree provided that appellant should have the custody of Julia Smith, minor child of the parties, subject ta the right of respondent to see said minor child a,t reasonable times and places. October 3, 1945, respondent filed a petition for a.n order to show cause In re Application for Modification of Decree and, among other things, set up that September 19, 1941, the court awarded appellant a decree of divorce; that since the granting of the decree conditions and circumstances surrounding the parties and the child had materially changed; that appellant had remarried and was a resident of Ada County; that for more than a year last past his former wife had completely abandoned said child to its grandparents, who reside in Weiser, Wash *352 ington County; that appellant had given up all parental control over said child, and was no longer giving her the motherly care she needed and deserved. Respondent also set out that he has fully complied with the decree and is not in default thereunder; that appellant refused to permit respondent the right of visitation with said child at reasonable times and places or otherwise; that appellant has influenced the child’s mind against her natural father, thereby wilfully and maliciously alienated the affection of said child; that respondent repeatedly made attempts to visit the child, and each time appellant or her agents, the grandparents of the child, refused respondent the right of visitation. There are other allegations in the petition to the effect that the grandparents had prejudiced the child’s mind so that she refused to accept presents from respondent, refused to associate with him as she had formerly done, and had apparently lost all regard and affection for him due to the acts and conduct of appellant and the grandparents.

It is further alleged that January 13, 1945, Lenore Sanders Weeks, husband of appellant, petitioned the Probate Court of Washington County for an order of adoption of the minor child, Julia Cecil Smith, alleging, among other things, that the custody of the child was given to Lucille Smith Weeks, his wife, by the decree of divorce heretofore referred to and, further, that consent of adoption was filed by appellant, together with an agreement of adoption signed by Lenore Sanders Weeks. The petition for adoption of the minor child, the agreement, the consent of appellant to the adoption, and the order of adoption were all filed January 13, 1945. No time was set for the hearing of said petition, and no notice of said hearing was served upon respondent, the natural father, and he had no knowledge of said proceedings until the 19th day of September, 1945. The order of adoption changed the name of the minor child from Julia Cecil Smith to Julia Ann Weeks, and effectively and absolutely deprived respondent of his child.

The petition for adoption alleges, inter alia, “that Julia Cecil Smith is a minor of the age of 5 years * * * and is domiciled in Washington County, Idaho.” The petition does not allege the domicile or residence of the petitioner Weeks. The order of adoption recites, independent of any allegation in the petition, that Weeks, the petitioner, “is an inhabitant and resident of the County of Washington, State of Idaho.” The petition is silent as to the domicile or residence of the mother of the minor child, now Mrs. Weeks. There is no allegation of abandonment contained in the petition, although abandonment is recited in the order, the order, therefore, not being sustained by the petition.

Nonsupport and abandonment are not synonymous. Nonsupport, in and of itself, does not constitute abandonment.

*353 “In the second place we are persuaded to say that the mere failure of the parents of a minor child, in the custody and under the care of a third party, to contribute while it is in such custody and care, to the support and maintenance of such child for a period of one year, does not itself constitute an abandonment of the minor within the purview of said section of the Code, [sec. 224, C.C., same as our sec. 31-1104, I.C.A.] If the rule were otherwise — that is, if an adjudication of abandonment could legally be predicated on the mere failure by the parents to support their minor children — the result, in inumerable instances, would be to work a manifest wrong upon parents. It is not difficult to conceive of circumstances wholly beyond the control of parents having the deepest affection for their children which would render it impossible for them to support their children or care for them in a proper way. It would, indeed, be a harsh rule which would, under such circumstances, authorize a judicial determination by which the natural right of the parents to the custody and control of their children would be forever severed.” In re Kelly, 25 Cal.App. 651, 145 P. 156, 158. See, also, Platt v. Moore, Tex.Civ. App., 183 S.W.2d 682.

The record in this case shows the father of the child made all payments of support money prior to the application for modification of the decree, consequently he was not in contempt.

In respondent’s petition for modification of the decree it is alleged that the proceedings and order of adoption had and entered in the Probate Court of Washington County are void.

This appeal is, first, from the judgment ’declaring the probate proceedings heretofore referred to, void and, second, from the order of the court modifying the decree of divorce awarding the custody of the minor child to Lucille Smith Weeks during each regular school year, and that Virgil Smith, respondent here, should have the custody of said minor child during the summer vacation period during the minority of said child, otherwise the decree to be and remain as heretofore.

The two questions, as above stated, are here for determination. If the proceedings in the probate court were valid and not subject to collateral attack, no necessity would exist for deciding the second question, namely, modification of the decree of divorce.

Directing our attention to the first question, can the order of adoption be collaterally attacked,' appellant’s contention is that the order made and entered by the probate court is regular on its 'face therefore cannot be attacked collaterally; that said order determined ^the status of the child, and the district court was without jurisdiction to change or modify said decree of divorce, having been divested of its jurisdiction.

*354 In the opinion of the writer, in' a proceeding of this nature which must be strictly construed, the order of adoption is not regular on its face. The recitals in the order, as pointed out, are not alleged in the petition for adoption. Abandonment, which under certain circumstances may be urged as obviating the necessity for personal service or notice, is not alleged in the petition. It is not alleged nor contended that the father is not a fit and proper person to have custody of the child. The respondent, not being made a party to the adoption proceedings, had no right of appeal. The method pursued to attack the illegality of the order was available to respondent. Hay v. Hay, 40 Idaho 159, 232 P. 895. The order of adoption was void ab initio.

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Bluebook (online)
180 P.2d 853, 67 Idaho 349, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-idaho-1947.