Under Georgia law no adoption of a child born in wedlock is
permitted without the consent of each living parent (including
divorced or separated parents) who has not voluntarily surrendered
rights in the child or been adjudicated an unfit parent. In
contrast, §§ 74-403(3) and 74-203 of the Georgia Code
provide that only the mother's consent is required for the adoption
of an illegitimate child. However, the father may acquire veto
authority over the adoption if he has legitimated the child
pursuant to § 74-103 of the Code. These provisions were
applied to deny appellant, the father of an illegitimate child,
authority to prevent the adoption of the child by the husband of
the child's mother. Until the adoption petition was filed,
appellant had not attempted to legitimate the child, who had always
been in the mother's custody and was then living with the mother
and her husband, appellees. In opposing the adoption, appellant,
seeking to legitimate the child but not to secure custody, claimed
that §§ 74-203 and 74-403(3), as applied to his case,
violated the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The trial court, granting the adoption on the
ground that it was in the "best interests of the child" and that
legitimation by appellant was not, rejected appellant's
constitutional claims, and the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed.
Held:
1. Under the circumstances, appellant's substantive rights under
the Due Process Clause were not violated by application of a "best
interests of the child" standard. This is not a case in which the
unwed father at any time had, or sought, custody of his child, or
in which the proposed adoption would place the child with a new set
of parents with whom the child had never lived. Rather, the result
of adoption here is to give full recognition to an existing family
unit. Pp.
434 U. S.
254-255.
2. Equal protection principles do not require that appellant's
authority to veto an adoption be measured by the same standard as
is applied to a divorced father, from whose interests appellant's
interests are readily distinguishable. The State was not foreclosed
from recognizing the difference in the extent of commitment to a
child's welfare between that of appellant., an unwed father who has
never shouldered any significant responsibility for the child's
rearing, and that of a divorced father who
Page 434 U. S. 247
at least will have borne full responsibility for his child's
rearing during the period of marriage. Pp.
434 U. S.
255-256.
238 Ga. 230, 232 S.E.2d 246, affirmed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
MR JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue in this case is the constitutionality of Georgia's
adoption laws as applied to deny an unwed father authority to
prevent adoption of his illegitimate child. The child was born in
December, 1964, and has been in the custody and control of his
mother, appellee Ardell Williams Walcott, for his entire life. The
mother and the child's natural father, appellant Leon Webster
Quilloin, never married each other or established a home together,
and in September, 1967, the mother married appellee Randall
Walcott. [
Footnote 1] In March,
1976, she consented to adoption of the child by her husband, who
immediately filed a petition for adoption. Appellant attempted to
block the adoption and to secure visitation rights, but he did not
seek custody or object to the child's continuing to live with
appellees. Although appellant was not found to be an unfit parent,
the adoption was granted over his objection.
In
Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.
S. 645 (1972), this Court held that the State of
Illinois was barred, as a matter of both due process and equal
protection, from taking custody of the children of an unwed father,
absent a hearing and a particularized
Page 434 U. S. 248
finding that the father was an unfit parent. The Court
concluded, on the one hand, that a father's interest in the
"companionship, care, custody, and management" of his children is
"cognizable and substantial,"
id. at
405 U. S.
651-652, and, on the other hand, that the State's
interest in caring for the children is "
de minimis" if the
father is in fact a fit parent,
id. at
405 U. S.
657-658.
Stanley left unresolved the degree of
protection a State must afford to the rights of an unwed father in
a situation, such as that presented here, in which the
countervailing interests are more substantial.
I
Generally speaking, under Georgia law, a child born in wedlock
cannot be adopted without the consent of each living parent who has
not voluntarily surrendered rights in the child or been adjudicated
an unfit parent. [
Footnote 2]
Even where the child's parents are divorced or separated at the
time of the adoption proceedings, either parent may veto the
adoption. In contrast, only the consent of the mother is required
for adoption of an illegitimate child. Ga.Code § 74-403(3)
(1975). [
Footnote 3] To
Page 434 U. S. 249
acquire the same veto authority possessed by other parents, the
father of a child born out of wedlock must legitimate his
offspring, either by marrying the mother and acknowledging the
child as his own, § 74-101, or by obtaining a court order
declaring the child legitimate and capable of inheriting from the
father, § 74-103. [
Footnote
4] But unless and until the child is legitimated, the mother is
the only recognized parent and is given exclusive authority to
exercise all parental prerogatives, § 74-203, [
Footnote 5] including the power to veto
adoption of the child.
Appellant did not petition for legitimation of his child at any
time during the 11 years between the child's birth and the filing
of Randall Walcott's adoption petition. [
Footnote 6] However, in
Page 434 U. S. 250
response to Walcott's petition, appellant filed an application
for a writ of habeas corpus seeking visitation rights, a petition
for legitimation, and an objection to the adoption. [
Footnote 7] Shortly thereafter, appellant
amended his pleadings by adding the claim that §§ 7203
and 7403(3) were unconstitutional as applied to his case, insofar
as they denied him the rights granted to married parents, and
presumed unwed fathers to be unfit as a matter of law.
The petitions for adoption, legitimation, and writ of habeas
corpus were consolidated for trial in the Superior Court of Fulton
County, Ga. The court expressly stated that these matters were
being tried on the basis of a consolidated record to allow
"the biological father . . . a right to be heard with respect to
any issue or other thing upon which he desire[s] to be heard,
including his fitness as a parent. [
Footnote 8] After receiving extensive testimony from the
parties and other witnesses,
Page 434 U. S. 251
the trial court found that, although the child had never been
abandoned or deprived, appellant had provided support only on an
irregular basis. [
Footnote 9]
Moreover, while the child previously had visited with appellant on
'many occasions,' and had been given toys and gifts by appellant
'from time to time,' the mother had recently concluded that these
contacts were having a disruptive effect on the child and on
appellees' entire family. [
Footnote 10] The child himself expressed a desire to be
adopted by Randall Walcott and to take on Walcott's name, [
Footnote 11] and the court found
Walcott to be a fit and proper person to adopt the child."
On the basis of these findings, as well as findings relating to
appellees' marriage and the mother's custody of the child for all
of the child's life, the trial court determined that the proposed
adoption was in the "best interests of [the] child." The court
concluded, further, that granting either the legitimation or the
visitation rights requested by appellant would not be in the "best
interests of the child," and that both should consequently be
denied. The court then applied §§ 74-203 and 74-403(3) to
the situation at hand, and, since appellant had failed to obtain a
court order granting legitimation, he was found to lack standing to
object to the adoption.
Page 434 U. S. 252
Ruling that appellant's constitutional claims were without
merit, the court granted the adoption petition and denied the
legitimation and visitation petitions.
Appellant took an appeal to the Supreme Court of Georgia,
claiming that §§ 74-203 and 74-403(3), as applied by the
trial court to his case, violated the Equal Protection and Due
Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. In particular,
appellant contended that he was entitled to the same power to veto
an adoption as is provided under Georgia law to married or divorced
parents and to unwed mothers, and, since the trial court did not
make a finding of abandonment or other unfitness on the part of
appellant,
see n 2,
supra, the adoption of his child should not have been
allowed.
Over a dissent which urged that § 74-403(3) was invalid
under
Stanley v. Illinois, the Georgia Supreme Court
affirmed the decision of the trial court. 238 Ga. 230, 232 S.E.2d
246 (1977). [
Footnote 12]
The majority relied generally on the strong state policy of rearing
children in a family setting, a policy which, in the court's view,
might be thwarted if unwed fathers were required to consent to
adoptions. The court also emphasized the special force of this
policy under the facts of this case, pointing out that the adoption
was sought by the child's stepfather, who was part of the family
unit in which the child was
Page 434 U. S. 253
in fact living, and that the child's natural father had not
taken steps to support or legitimate the child over a period of
more than 11 years. The court noted in addition that, unlike the
father in
Stanley, appellant had never been a
de
facto member of the child's family unit.
Appellant brought this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1257(2), continuing to challenge the constitutionality of
§§ 74-203 and 74-403(3) as applied to his case, and
claiming that he was entitled as a matter of due process and equal
protection to an absolute veto over adoption of his child, absent a
finding of his unfitness as a parent. In contrast to appellant's
somewhat broader statement of the issue in the Georgia Supreme
Court, on this appeal, he focused his equal protection claim solely
on the disparate statutory treatment of his case and that of a
married father. [
Footnote
13] We noted probable jurisdiction, 431 U.S. 937 (1977), and we
now affirm.
II
At the outset, we observe that appellant does not challenge the
sufficiency of the notice he received with respect to the adoption
proceeding,
see n 7,
supra, nor can he claim that he was deprived of a right to
a hearing on his individualized interests in his child, prior to
entry of the order of adoption. Although the trial court's ultimate
conclusion was that appellant lacked standing to object to the
adoption, this conclusion was reached only after appellant had been
afforded a full hearing on his legitimation petition, at which he
was given the opportunity to offer evidence on any matter he
thought relevant, including his fitness as a parent. Had the trial
court
Page 434 U. S. 254
granted legitimation, appellant would have acquired the veto
authority he is now seeking.
The fact that appellant was provided with a hearing on his
legitimation petition is not, however, a complete answer to his
attack on the constitutionality of §§ 74-203 and
74-403(3). The trial court denied appellant's petition, and thereby
precluded him from gaining veto authority, on the ground that
legitimation was not in the "best interests of the child";
appellant contends that he was entitled to recognition and
preservation of his parental rights absent a showing of his
"unfitness." Thus, the underlying issue is whether, in the
circumstances of this case and in light of the authority granted by
Georgia law to married fathers, appellant's interests were
adequately protected by a "best interests of the child" standard.
We examine this issue first under the Due Process Clause and then
under the Equal Protection Clause.
A
Appellees suggest that due process was not violated, regardless
of the standard applied by the trial court, since any
constitutionally protected interest appellant might have had was
lost by his failure to petition for legitimation during the 11
years prior to filing of Randall Walcott's adoption petition. We
would hesitate to rest decision on this ground, in light of the
evidence in the record that appellant was not aware of the
legitimation procedure until after the adoption petition was filed.
[
Footnote 14] But, in any
event, we need not go that far, since, under the circumstances of
this case, appellant's substantive rights were not violated by
application of a "best interests of the child" standard.
Page 434 U. S. 255
We have recognized on numerous occasions that the relationship
between parent and child is constitutionally protected.
See,
e.g., Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U. S. 205,
406 U. S.
231-233 (1972);
Stanley v. Illinois, supra; Meyer v.
Nebraska, 262 U. S. 390,
262 U. S.
399-401 (1923).
"It is cardinal with us that the custody, care and nurture of
the child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and
freedom include preparation for obligations the state can neither
supply nor hinder."
Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.
S. 158,
321 U. S. 166
(1944). And it is now firmly established that "freedom of personal
choice in matters of . . . family life is one of the liberties
protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."
Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur, 414 U.
S. 632,
414 U. S.
639-640 (1974).
We have little doubt that the Due Process Clause would be
offended
"[i]f a State were to attempt to force the breakup of a natural
family, over the objections of the parents and their children,
without some showing of unfitness and for the sole reason that to
do so was thought to be in the children's best interest."
Smith v. Organization of Foster Families, 431 U.
S. 816,
431 U. S.
862-863 (1977) (STEWART, J., concurring in judgment).
But this is not a case in which the unwed father at any time had,
or sought, actual or legal custody of his child. Nor is this a case
in which the proposed adoption would place the child with a new set
of parents with whom the child had never before lived. Rather, the
result of the adoption in this case is to give full recognition to
a family unit already in existence, a result desired by all
concerned, except appellant. Whatever might be required in other
situations, we cannot say that the State was required in this
situation to find anything more than that the adoption, and denial
of legitimation, were in the "best interests of the child."
B
Appellant contends that, even if he is not entitled to prevail
as a matter of due process, principles of equal protection require
that his authority to veto an adoption be measured by
Page 434 U. S. 256
the same standard that would have been applied to a married
father. In particular, appellant asserts that his interests are
indistinguishable from those of a married father who is separated
or divorced from the mother and is no longer living with his child,
and therefore the State acted impermissibly in treating his case
differently. We think appellant's interests are readily
distinguishable from those of a separated or divorced father, and
accordingly believe that the State could permissibly give appellant
less veto authority than it provides to a married father.
Although appellant was subject, for the years prior to these
proceedings, to essentially the same child support obligation as a
married father would have had,
compare § 74-202
with § 74-105 and § 30-301, he has never
exercised actual or legal custody over his child, and thus has
never shouldered any significant responsibility with respect to the
daily supervision, education, protection, or care of the child.
Appellant does not complain of his exemption from these
responsibilities and, indeed, he does not even now seek custody of
his child. In contrast, legal custody of children is, of course, a
central aspect of the marital relationship, and even a father whose
marriage has broken apart will have borne full responsibility for
the rearing of his children during the period of the marriage.
Under any standard of review, the State was not foreclosed from
recognizing this difference in the extent of commitment to the
welfare of the child.
For these reasons, we conclude that §§ 74-203 and
74-403(3), as applied in this case, did not deprive appellant of
his asserted rights under the Due Process and Equal Protection
Clauses. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia is,
accordingly,
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The child lived with his maternal grandmother for the initial
period of the marriage, but moved in with appellees in 1969 and
lived with them thereafter.
[
Footnote 2]
See Ga.Code §§ 74-403(1), (2) (1975). Section
74-403(1) sets forth the general rule that "no adoption shall be
permitted except with the written consent of the living parents of
a child." Section 74-403(2) provides that consent is not required
from a parent who (1) has surrendered rights in the child to a
child-placing agency or to the adoption court; (2) is found by the
adoption court to have abandoned the child, or to have willfully
failed for a year or longer to comply with a court-imposed support
order with respect to the child; (3) has had his or her parental
rights terminated by court order,
see Ga.Code §
24A-3201; (4) is insane or otherwise incapacitated from giving
consent; or (5) cannot be found after a diligent search has been
made.
[
Footnote 3]
Section 74-403(3), which operates as an exception to the rule
stated in § 74-403(1),
see n 2,
supra, provides:
"Illegitimate children. -- If the child be illegitimate, the
consent of the mother alone shall suffice. Such consent, however,
shall not be required if the mother has surrendered all of her
rights to said child to a licensed child-placing agency, or to the
State Department of Family and Children Services."
Sections of Ga.Code (1975) will hereinafter be referred to
merely by their numbers.
[
Footnote 4]
Section 74-103 provides in full:
"A father of an illegitimate child may render the same
legitimate by petitioning the superior court of the county of his
residence, setting forth the name, age, and sex of such child, and
also the name of the mother; and if he desires the name changed,
stating the new name, and praying the legitimation of such child.
Of this application the mother, if alive, shall have notice. Upon
such application, presented and filed, the court may pass an order
declaring said child to be legitimate, and capable of inheriting
from the father in the same manner as if born in lawful wedlock,
and the name by which he or she shall be known."
[
Footnote 5]
Section 74-203 states:
"The mother of an illegitimate child shall be entitled to the
possession of the child, unless the father shall legitimate him as
before provided. Being the only recognized parent, she may exercise
all the paternal power."
In its opinion in this case, the Georgia Supreme Court indicated
that the word "paternal" in the second sentence of this provision
is the result of a misprint, and was instead intended to read
"parental."
See 238 Ga. 230, 231, 232 S.E.2d 246, 247
(1977).
[
Footnote 6]
It does appear that appellant consented to entry of his name on
the child's birth certificate.
See § 88-1709(d)(2).
The adoption petition gave the name of the child as "Darrell
Webster Quilloin," and appellant alleges in his brief that the
child has always been known by that name,
see Brief for
Appellant 11.
[
Footnote 7]
Appellant had been notified by the State's Department of Human
Resources that an adoption petition had been filed.
[
Footnote 8]
In re: Application of Randall Walcott for Adoption of
Child, Adoption Case No. 8466 (Ga.Super.Ct., July 12, 1976),
App. 70.
Sections 74-103, 74-203, and 74-403(3) are silent as to the
appropriate procedure in the event that a petition for legitimation
is filed after an adoption proceeding has already been initiated.
Prior to this Court's decision in
Stanley v. Illinois,
405 U. S. 645
(1972), and without consideration of potential constitutional
problems, the Georgia Supreme Court had concluded that an unwed
father could not petition for legitimation after the mother had
consented to an adoption.
Smith v. Smith, 224 Ga. 442,
445-446,
162 S.E.2d
379, 383-384 (1968).
But cf. Clark v. Buttry, 226 Ga.
687,
177 S.E.2d 89
(1970),
aff'g 121 Ga.App. 492,
174 S.E.2d
356. However, the Georgia Supreme Court had not had occasion to
reconsider this conclusion in light of
Stanley, and, in
the face of appellant's constitutional challenge to §§ 74
203, 74-403(3), the trial court evidently concluded that concurrent
consideration of the legitimation and adoption petitions was
consistent with the statutory provisions.
See also Tr. of
Hearing before Superior Court, App. 34, 51; n. 12,
infra.
[
Footnote 9]
Under § 74-202, appellant had a duty to support his child,
but, for reasons not appearing in the record, the mother never
brought an action to enforce this duty. Since no court ever ordered
appellant to support his child, denial of veto authority over the
adoption could not have been justified on the ground of willful
failure to comply with a support order.
See n 2,
supra.
[
Footnote 10]
In addition to Darrell, appellees' family included a son born
several years after appellees were married. The mother testified
that Darrell's visits with appellant were having unhealthy effects
on both children.
[
Footnote 11]
The child also expressed a desire to continue to visit with
appellant on occasion after the adoption. The child's desire to be
adopted, however, could not be given effect under Georgia law
without divesting appellant of any parental rights he might
otherwise have or acquire, including visitation rights.
See § 74-414.
[
Footnote 12]
The Supreme Court addressed itself only to the constitutionality
of the statutes as applied by the trial court and thus, at least
for purposes of this case, accepted the trial court's construction
of §§ 74-203 and 74-403(3) as allowing concurrent
consideration of the adoption and legitimation petitions.
See n 8,
supra.
Subsequent to the Supreme Court's decision in this case, the
Georgia Legislature enacted a comprehensive revision of the State's
adoption laws, which became effective January 1, 1978. 1977 Ga.Laws
201. The new law expressly gives an unwed father the right to
petition for legitimation subsequent to the filing of an adoption
petition concerning his child.
See Ga.Code § 74-406
(1977 Supp.). The revision also leaves intact §§ 74-103
and 74-203, and carries forward the substance of § 74-403(3),
and thus appellant would not have received any greater protection
under the new law than he was actually afforded by the trial
court.
[
Footnote 13]
In the last paragraph of his brief, appellant raises the claim
that the statutes make gender-based distinctions that violate the
Equal Protection Clause. Since this claim was not presented in
appellant's jurisdictional statement, we do not consider it. This
Court's Rule 15(1)(c);
see, e.g., Phillips Chem. Co. v. Dumas
School Dist., 361 U. S. 376,
361 U. S. 386,
and n. 12 (1960).
[
Footnote 14]
At the hearing in the trial court, the following colloquy took
place between appellees' counsel and appellant:
"Q Had you made any effort prior to this time [prior to the
instant proceedings], during the eleven years of Darrell's life to
legitimate him?"
"A . . . I didn't know that was process even you went through
[
sic]."
App. 58.