St. Peter's Orphan Asylum Ass'n v. Riley

311 S.W.2d 336, 43 Tenn. App. 683, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 4, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 311 S.W.2d 336 (St. Peter's Orphan Asylum Ass'n v. Riley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Peter's Orphan Asylum Ass'n v. Riley, 311 S.W.2d 336, 43 Tenn. App. 683, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The appellant, St. Peter’s Orphan Asylum Association, of Memphis, Tennessee, a licensed child-placing agency, appeals from a decree of the Chancellor dismissing its petition to have an infant child declared an “abandoned child” within the meaning of the adoption laws of the State of Tennessee. The Chancellor held that the Chancery Court was without jurisdiction to decree such abandonment in the instant case and that the proper forum for the filing of such petition was in the Juvenile Court as provided in Section 37-243 of Tennessee Code Annptated.

The petition did not pray for an adoption of the infant child. It prayed the Court to declare the child an abandoned child; that the parental rights of the appellee mother of said child be terminated and that the care, custody and control of said child be awarded to the [685]*685appellant, St. Peter’s Orphan Asylnm Association, and that the appellant be authorized to give or withhold consent to any proposed adoption as provided in Section 36-110 of Tennessee Code Annotated.

Appellant has filed the following assignment of error:

“The Court erred in holding that Section 37-243 deprived Chancery Courts of the right to declare a child to be an abandoned child and to terminate the parental rights of the natural parents thereof because :
“1. Chancery Court has jurisdiction of the persons and estates of infants, which jurisdiction is conferred by Section 16-610 T. C. A.
“2. Chancery Court is a Court of competent jurisdiction authorized to decree a child to be an abandoned child, by the express provisions of Section 36-102 and 36-110 T. C. A.
“3. The right to adjudicate a child to be an abandoned child, in adoption proceedings, is conferred upon the Chancery Court by Section 37-243(3) T. C. A.”

By Chapter 202 of the Public Acts of 1951, the General Assembly of Tennessee passed and enacted a complete and comprehensive revision of the law of adoptions and the procedure to be followed in adoption cases. Sections 36-101 through 36-137 of the Tennessee Code Annotated under the chapter title “Adoptions” are the codification of Chapter 202 of the Acts of 1951.

Section 36-105 authorizes petitions for adoptions to be filed in the Chancery or Circuit Courts and makes no provision for adoptions to be decreed in any other court.

[686]*686Section 36-108 requires the parents or parent of the child to be made parties or party to the adoption proceedings unless such parents or parent shall have consented to the adoption in writing.

Section 36-110, as amended by the Acts of 1955, is as follows:

“36-110. Abandonment — Determination — Consent of parents. — In all cases where a court of competent jurisdiction has not heretofore terminated the parental rights and placed the child with the state department of public welfare or a licensed child-placing agency for adoption, then on written notice of not less than ten (10) days to the parent, parents, or guardian of the person, if the address be known, or if unknown, then by publication, as provided by law, the court in the adoption proceeding is hereby authorized to determine that an abandonment has taken place.
“If the parent, parents, or guardian of the person of the minor deny that an abandonment has taken place and there has been no previous adjudication of abandonment by a court of competent jurisdiction, this issue of fact shall be determined in the court considering the adoption; and if said court determines that the parent, parents, or guardian have abandoned said child, then the consent of the parent, parents, or guardian of the person shall not be required.
“A copy of the order of the court terminating the parental rights shall be filed in the proceeding with the petition, in which case consent shall be given or [687]*687withheld in accordance with sec. 36-112. (Acts 1951, ch. 202, sec. 5 (Williams; sec. 9572.19); 1955, ch. 320, sec. 1; 1957, ch. 292, sec. 1.)”

Section 36-112 provides as follows:

“36-112. Filing of consent makes consenting person party — Waiver of service — Appointment of agency to give cpnsent. — When the consent of any person or agency is required under the provision of this chapter, the filing of such consent with the petition shall he sufficient to make the consenting person or agency a party of record to the proceeding.
“In the following instances written consent sufficient for the purposes of adoption filed with the petition shall be sufficient to make the person giving consent a party to the proceedings and no service of any process need be made upon such person:
“ (a) When the parent, parents, or guardian of the person of the child, has in writing surrendered the child to the state department of public welfare, or to a licensed child-placing agency, and at the same time in writing has consented for the child to be placed for adoption, the department or the executive head of such agency may give consent to the adoption of the child by the petitioners. The commissioner of the state department of public welfare, through his authorized agents, or a licensed child-placing agency, may accept the surrender of a child.
“(b) If the court finds as a fact there is no person qualified to give consent, or that the child has been abandoned by one or both parents or by the guardian of the person of the child, or in any case where the [688]*688surrender has not been to a licensed child-caring agency, or to the state department of public welfare, the court shall appoint a licensed child-placing agency, or the county director of public welfare where the child resides to act in the proceeding as next friend of the child to give or withhold such consent. The court may make the appointment immediately upon such determination and forthwith may make such further orders as the court may deem proper. (Acts 1951, ch. 202, secs. 9, 11 (Williams, secs. 9572.23, 9572.25).) ”

By Chapter 177 of the Public Acts of 1955 the General Assembly of Tennessee enacted a comprehensive procedure for the “Disposition of delinquent, dependent, neglected and abandoned children.” Under the title “Juvenile Courts” the provisions of Chapter 177 are codified in Tennessee Code Annotated as Sections 37-242 through 37-274.

Section 37-243 is as follows:

“37-243. Jurisdiction of juvenile courts. — The juvenile courts shall have original, exclusive jurisdiction of:
“(1) All cases to adjudicate a child dependent and neglected, delinquent and/or abandoned as defined in sec. 37-242, subsections (4) through (6) and to enter all proper orders and decrees, except that this does not deprive circuit and chancery courts of the right to adjudicate an abandonment, where abandonment has been alleged in a petition to adopt as is provided in chapter 1 of title 36.
[689]*689“ (2) All cases to appoint a guardian of the person of a child in accordance with sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
311 S.W.2d 336, 43 Tenn. App. 683, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-peters-orphan-asylum-assn-v-riley-tennctapp-1957.