State Ex Rel. Frederick v. District Court of Fourteenth Judicial Dist.

173 P.2d 626, 119 Mont. 143, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 62
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1946
Docket8666
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 626 (State Ex Rel. Frederick v. District Court of Fourteenth Judicial Dist.) 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
State Ex Rel. Frederick v. District Court of Fourteenth Judicial Dist., 173 P.2d 626, 119 Mont. 143, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 62 (Mo. 1946).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petition for writ of mandamus or other supervisory writ.

The petition in this matter alleges that on November 13, 1942, the district court in and for Meagher county made and entered an order adjudging the four minor children of Pat G. and Frances B. Woods dependent and neglected and awarded the care and custody of such children to the “division of Child Welfare Service of the Department of Public Welfare of the State of Montana.” This state institution will, for the sake of brevity, .be hereinafter referred to as the Welfare Department. It appears from the record that in the proceeding by which the children mentioned were found to be dependent and neglected, all interested parties were brought within the jurisdiction of the district court by appropriate service. In the order awarding the custody' and care of the children to the Welfare Department, that department, or its legal representative, was “authorized to appear in any court, where adoption proceedings are pending, and assent to the adoption of the said children. ’ ’

Thereafter on the 20th day of August, 1943, the district judge in and for Meagher county, after hearing, at which all interested parties were present or were represented, the judge, with the consent of the Welfare Department, made and entered an order authorizing the four children be adopted by the petitioners. Thereafter on December 31, 1943, the petitioners filed a *145 motion praying that the order of adoption made and entered August 20, 1943, be vacated. Judge W. C. Husband of the fourteenth judicial district having disqualified himself, called in Judge George W. Padbury of the first judicial district to hear and decide the motion. After hearing, Judge Padbury made and entered an order vacating and annulling the order of adoption, incorporating in such order a provision that the “status of said-children be the same as their status was immediately prior to August 20th, 1943.” The 20th of August, 1943, it will be noted, was the date of the order approving the adoption to the petitioners, and in restoring the status of the children to their status immediately prior to that date was in effect to re-award their custody to the Welfare Department. Thus far in this proceeding all interested parties agree as to the facts enumerated above. It is further alleged in the petition now before us that after the order of adoption was vacated as above mentioned the petitioners again petitioned the district court in and for Meagher county praying that they be permitted to re-adopt the two youngest Wood children, Thomas Russell and Jerry Calvin. It was alleged in that petition that the Fredericks at all times herein mentioned had desired to keep these two youngest children, but were advised that the adoption order would have to be vacated in full if at all. September 10, 1945, the Fredericks filed their petition praying the court for an order declaring the two youngest Wood children to be the adopted children of the petitioners. In that petition it is alleged that the mother’s consent to the adoption had been obtained in writing, but the father’s consent had not by reason of the inability of the petitioners to obtain his address.

When the petition to re-adopt the two youngest Wood children came on for hearing October 9, 1945, the Welfare Department appeared by a representative accompanied by counsel and moved the court to dismiss the petition, on the ground first, that the Welfare Department had withheld its consent to the adoption, and the court was without jurisdiction to proceed without such consent, and on the further jurisdictional ground *146 predicated upon the petitioners not being residents of Montana. The court indicated that it thought best to hear the testimony and defer ruling on the motion, and that was the course taken. After the evidence was all in the court requested counsel to submit briefs, and thereafter granted the motion to dismiss, and the proceeding followed.

The only question we have to determine is as to whether the consent of the Welfare Department was necessary before the court could proceed in the matter.

Section 5859, Revised Codes, as amended by Chapter 115 of the 1941 Session Laws, provides in part that “ A legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of the parents, if living * *

By analogy we think that when a child is found by a court decree, such as the children involved here, to be dependent and neglected, and their care and custody are awarded to a state agency by the court, such children are as free from parental supervision as when placed in the custody of adopted parents. There are certain exceptions to that proposition enumerated in section 5859, as amended, which render it unnecessary to have the consent of one or both of the parents, such as drunkenness, deprivation of civil rights, adjudged guilt of adultery or cruelty, when the parents have been deprived by a court order of the custody of the children on account of parental neglect, or abandonment, caused the child to be maintained in some state agency for more than a year without contributing to its care, or if the parents have been cited to show cause why they should not consent to the adoption of a child and default as to such order. In such circumstances the adoption proceedings may be proceeded with without parental consent. Section 5864, Revised Codes, provides, “The parents of an adopted child are, from the time of the adoption, relieved of all parental duties towards, and all responsibilty for, the child so adopted, and have no right over it.” An amendment by Chapter 116 of the 1943 Session Laws has no application here. When the court by its decree declared the minors involved here were dependent and *147 neglected children, and the parents consented in writing that their children should be so declared, and where the parents were divorced for cruelty, and later consented that the children might be adopted by the Fredericks, it is futile to contend that the parents retained any right to say what the state of Montana should do with the children. Their rights as the natural guardians of the children were all foreclosed under section 5864, supra, when the court decree awarded the custody and care of the minors to the Welfare Department and expressly gave that department authority to consent to their adoption. The care and custody of the children was entirely in the hands of the Welfare Department and_ that department alone is responsible to the state and to the law for the proper care of the minors.

We think the provisions of the Welfare. Act, Chapter 82 of the 1937 Session Laws, impels the foregoing conclusions. Section I of Part II of the Act provides, “The state department and county departments of public welfare are hereby authorized and charged with the administration and supervision of general relief under the powers, duties and functions as prescribed in Part I of this act.” By paragraph (b) of Section VII, Part I, the state department of public welfare is charged to “Administer or supervise all child welfare activities * * *; the care of dependent and neglected * * * children in foster family homes, especially children placed for adoption * *. *.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 626, 119 Mont. 143, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-frederick-v-district-court-of-fourteenth-judicial-dist-mont-1946.