State Ex Rel. Thompson v. District Court

242 P. 959, 75 Mont. 147, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 13
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1926
DocketNo. 5,871.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 242 P. 959 (State Ex Rel. Thompson v. District Court) 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. Thompson v. District Court, 242 P. 959, 75 Mont. 147, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 13 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 2, 1924, W. A. Bruekert and Ella Bruckert filed in the district court of Carbon county their joint application for the adoption of James Reed Thompson, a *149 minor. The application recites that W. A. and Ella Bruckert are husband and wife, residents of Carbon county, each over the age of twenty-one years; that James Reed Thompson is of the age of six years and five months, of the same race as the petitioners, and for more than a year has been in the custody of the petitioners with the approval of his father, who consents to the adoption; that Maggie Thompson, the mother of the child, resides at Portland, Oregon, and “has abandoned the said minor child for more than one year.”

The petitioners, the minor child, and Thomas J. Thompson appeared in court. Thomas J. Thompson, who designates himself father of the child, gave his consent, in writing to the adoption, and the petitioners executed and filed the agreement required by section 5861, Revised Codes of 1921. Thereupon the court made and caused to be entered an order of adoption, which, among other things, provides that the minor child shall assume the name James Reed Thompson Bruckert.

The present proceeding was instituted by Maggie Thompson to secure a writ of review, and by that means an annulment of the order .of adoption. The writ was issued, and in response thereto the clerk of the district court has certified to us the complete record of the adoption proceeding. This record does not include the consent of the mother of the child, and since such consent, if given, must have been in writing and would have constituted a part of the record, its absence is conclusive evidence that it was not obtained — indeed, it is conceded that the mother did not give her consent. The record also fails to disclose that any notice of the pendency of the adoption proceeding was ever given; on the contrary, it appears affirmatively that notice could not have been given, for the application, consent and agreement referred to were filed and the order of adoption was made on the same day.

It is the contention of the mother that, since she did not consent to the adoption and did not have any notice of the *150 pendency of the proceeding, the court acted without jurisdiction in making the order.

So much of section 5859, Revised Codes, as is material here, reads as follows: “A legitimate child cannot be adopted without the consent of its parents, if living; nor an illegitimate child without the consent of its mother, if living; except that consent is not necessary from a father or mother deprived of civil rights, or adjudged guilty of adultery or of cruelty, and for either cause divorced, or adjudged to be an habitual drunkard, or who has been judicially deprived of the custody of the child on account of cruelty or neglect, or who has, in this or any other state, willfully abandoned a child, or caused the same to be maintained in any public orphans’ asylum for one year without contributing to the support of said child; neither is the consent of anyone necessary in the case of an abandoned child,” etc.

Section 5861 provides that every person whose consent is necessary, if within or a resident of this state, must appear in court and give consent in writing, or, if such person is not within or a resident of this state, then the consent in writing, duly proved or acknowledged, must be filed in court at the time the application for adoption is made.

From these provisions it follows that the consent of the . mother was indispensable, unless she comes within one of the exceptions mentioned in section 5859. The only attempt made to bring her within any of those exceptions, and thereby obviate the necessity of securing her consent, is found in the allegation of the application that she had abandoned the child. If this allegation be true, her consent was not necessary; but before a valid order of adoption could be made without her consent, the court must have determined that she had abandoned the child, and to adjudicate that she had abandoned her own offspring, without notice to her or an opportunity to appear and defend against the charge, is a doctrine that will not be countenanced.

*151 In Schlitz v. Roenitz, 86 Wis. 31, 39 Am. St. Rep. 873, 21 L. R. A. 483, 56 N. W. 194, the court said: “The contention that the county court could, without notice to the plaintiff or opportunity to him to defend against the charge of abandonment, grant 'an order depriving the plaintiff of his most sacred natural rights in respect to his child, so jealously guarded and protected by the laws, offends against all our ideas respecting the administration of justice, and is opposed to the principles which lie at the foundation of all judicial systems not essentially despotic in their character and methods of procedure.”

It is an elementary and fundamental principle of law that notice to a party whose rights are to be affected by a judicial proceeding is an essential element of due process. (12 C. J. 1228.) In Windsor v. McVeigh, 93 U. S. 274, 277, 23 L. Ed. 914, the court, speaking to this question, said: “Whenever one is assailed in his person or his property, there he may defend, for the liability and the right are inseparable. This is a principle of natural justice, recognized as such by the common intelligence and conscience of all nations. A sentence of a court pronounced against a party without hearing him, or giving him an opportunity to be heard, is not a judicial determination of his rights, and is not entitled to respect in any other tribunal. * * * Until notice is given, the court has no jurisdiction in any case to proceed to judgment, whatever its authority may be, by the law of its organization, over the subject matter.”

It follows that notice to the mother was indispensable, and, unless she had notice, the order of adoption is void. (State ex rel. Sheedy v. District Court, 66 Mont. 427, 213 Pac. 802.) The decided cases sustaining this rule are too numerous to be cited here. They will be found collected in a note to 24 A. L. R. 416, 422.

In the order of adoption the court recited: “That the said petitioners and all persons whose presence is *152 necessary have been present at this hearing,” etc. From this recital defendants insist that the presumption must be indulged that the mother was "present in court when the hearing was in progress, and hence had actual notice of the •pendency of the proceeding. 'Whether the recital above would be sufficient to withstand a direct attack upon the order if the court had been' exercising its general jurisdiction is a question we need not stop to consider.

The legal adoption by one person of the offspring of another was unknown to the common law. In this state, and in the states of the Union generally, it is the creature of statute, and, though the proceeding here is had in our district courts, the jurisdiction is conferred by the statute, is exercised in a special manner and not according to the course of the common law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 959, 75 Mont. 147, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-v-district-court-mont-1926.