T.E.B. and D.K.G. v. C.A. (Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court: 2022-A0019).

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 26, 2024
DocketCL-2023-0572
StatusPublished

This text of T.E.B. and D.K.G. v. C.A. (Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court: 2022-A0019). (T.E.B. and D.K.G. v. C.A. (Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court: 2022-A0019).) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.E.B. and D.K.G. v. C.A. (Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court: 2022-A0019)., (Ala. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Rel: April 26, 2024

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2023-2024 _________________________

CL-2023-0572 _________________________

T.E.B. and D.K.G.

v.

C.A.

Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court (2022-A0019)

EDWARDS, Judge.

This is the second time these parties have appeared before this

court to seek review of the actions or inaction of the Montgomery Probate

Court ("the probate court") relating to the petition filed by T.E.B. and

D.K.G. ("the prospective adoptive parents") seeking to adopt B.B.A. ("the CL-2023-0572

child"), the son of C.A. ("the biological mother"). See Ex parte T.E.B.,

[Ms. CL-2023-0261, July 7, 2023] ___ So. 3d ___ (Ala. Civ. App. 2023). We

explained the circumstances giving rise to the adoption petition and the

initial procedural history of the adoption action in Ex parte T.E.B.:

"In July 2022, the biological mother, who was then pregnant with the child, met with Sarah Strength, a licensed independent clinical social worker, regarding the biological mother's potential intent to place the child for adoption with the prospective adoptive parents. Strength does not work for a particular adoption agency but is instead engaged by adoption agencies to perform birth-mother interviews. Strength explained the adoption process to the biological mother and reviewed with her the provisions of the [former] Alabama Adoption Code, Ala. Code 1975, [former] § 26-10A-1 et seq.,[1] regarding consent to adoption and the withdrawal of that consent. See Ala. Code 1975, [former] § 26-10A-13 (providing that a consent executed by parent may be withdrawn within five days of the birth of the child or the execution of the consent, whichever comes last, and that a consent executed by a parent may be withdrawn within 14 days of the birth of the child or the execution of the consent, whichever occurs last, 'if the court finds that the withdrawal

1In 2023, the legislature enacted the Alabama Minor Adoption Code, which is codified at Ala. Code 1975, § 26-10E-1 et seq., and which repealed the former Alabama Adoption Code, which was codified at former § 26-10A-1 et seq., effective January 1, 2024. Because the adoption petition at issue in this appeal was filed in 2022, it is governed by the provisions of the former Alabama Adoption Code. See Ala. Code 1975, § 26-10E-37(b) ("This chapter shall apply to all proceedings related to minor adoptions that have not been commenced as of December 31, 2023.").

2 CL-2023-0572

is reasonable under the circumstances and consistent with the best interest of the child'). During the interview, which took about one and a half hours, Strength also accumulated information relating to the biological mother's health history. …

"On August 12, 2022, the biological mother gave birth to the child at a hospital in Birmingham. On that same date, and only a few hours after the child's birth, the biological mother contacted Strength regarding her decision to place the child for adoption. According to Strength, the biological mother requested that Strength come to the hospital so that the biological mother could complete the consent form and leave the hospital to go home to attend to her 16-year-old son …. Strength testified that the biological mother was upset when she arrived at the hospital, which Strength indicated was a typical reaction of a birth mother who was considering executing a consent to adoption, and that Strength communicated to the biological mother that she could take all the time she desired to execute the consent and that, if she decided she was not ready to execute the consent form, Strength would leave. Strength explained that she consulted with the biological mother's nurse and inquired whether the biological mother had been administered narcotic pain medication within the previous four hours; Strength said that the nurse confirmed that the biological mother had not been provided narcotic pain medication within the previous four hours. Although the biological mother did not immediately execute the consent upon Strength's arrival, she did execute the consent that same evening. The biological mother then left the hospital against medical advice. In addition, on or about August 16, 2022, the biological mother returned to the hospital at the request of the hospital staff to execute a document permitting the prospective adoptive parents to take the child home from the hospital. See Ala. Code 1975, [former] § 26-10A-15(a) (explaining that a health-care facility may not release a child into the custody of any person other than 3 CL-2023-0572

specified entities or a 'parent, relative by blood or marriage, or person having legal custody, unless such surrender is authorized in a writing executed after the birth of the adoptee by one of the adoptee's parents or agency or the person having legal custody of the adoptee').

"On or about August 18, 2022, the biological mother sent a message to Strength, indicating that she was having second thoughts about giving the child up for adoption. According to Strength, she reminded the biological mother that she had until 14 days after the child's birth to file a motion with the probate court seeking to withdraw her consent to the adoption. In fact, Strength testified that she had sent the biological mother a photograph of [former] § 26-10A-13 to confirm the periods the biological mother had to file a petition to withdraw her consent.

"On August 19, 2022, Amy Osborne, the attorney for the prospective adoptive parents, mailed to the probate court a petition to adopt the child and the necessary supporting documents. The probate court docketed the adoption petition on August 23, 2022. The probate court did not immediately enter an interlocutory order of adoption. See [Ala. Code 1975, former] § 26-10A-18 [(providing, in pertinent part, that, '[o]nce a petitioner has received the adoptee into his or her home for the purposes of adoption and a petition for adoption has been filed, an interlocutory [order] shall be entered')].

"On August 24, 2022, the biological mother filed with the probate court a letter and a withdrawal-of-consent form that she had executed on August 22, 2022. In response to the biological mother's filing, which the probate court properly treated as a petition to withdraw her consent, the probate court, on September 19, 2022, set a hearing for October 12, 2022. The probate court did not enter an interlocutory order of adoption at any time before the date of the October 12, 2022, hearing." 4 CL-2023-0572

___ So. 3d at ___ (footnotes omitted).

As we explained in Ex parte T.E.B., after the October 12, 2022,

hearing, the probate court did not enter any order addressing whether

the biological mother could withdraw her consent. On October 14, 2022,

the probate court held a hearing at which it addressed its concern that

Amy Osborne, the prospective adoptive parents' attorney, had made a

misrepresentation regarding the Jefferson County Department of

Human Resources ("the Jefferson County DHR") having issued a pickup

order relating to the child based on the results of the testing of his

meconium. That hearing did not address the issue of the biological

mother's petition to withdraw her consent to the adoption. The probate

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T.E.B. and D.K.G. v. C.A. (Appeal from Montgomery Probate Court: 2022-A0019)., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teb-and-dkg-v-ca-appeal-from-montgomery-probate-court-alacivapp-2024.