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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 13 September 2005
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION: Application of A & B and
the Adoption Act 2000 [2005] NSWSC 916
CURRENT JURISDICTION:
Equity Division Adoptions List
FILE NUMBER(S): 80091/05
HEARING
DATE{S):
JUDGMENT DATE: 09/09/2005
PARTIES:
Application of
A & B and the Adoption Act 2000
JUDGMENT OF: White J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION: Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE
NUMBER(S): Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER: Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
SOLICITORS:
CATCHWORDS:
FAMILY LAW - Adoption - Application for adoption by biological mother and
stepfather - Consent of biological father to commencement
of adoption
proceedings but not adoption order - Where child is of sufficient age and
maturity to give sole consent under s 54(2) - Adoption Act 2000 (NSW) ss 28(3),
54(1)(b), (c), (2), 56(2), 95(3), 101(4) - Held that an adoption order can be
made in favour of a birth parent - Order made as sought in summons.
ACTS
CITED:
Adoption Act 2000 (NSW)
DECISION:
Make orders in
accordance with the summons.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
EQUITY
DIVISION
ADOPTIONS LIST
WHITE
J
Friday, 9 September 2005
80091/05 Application
of A & B and the Adoption Act 2000
JUDGMENT
1 HIS HONOUR: This is an application
for an order for the adoption of a 15 year-old child by the applicants jointly.
The applicants are the
biological mother of the child and her husband. The
applicants were married in 1996. The child has been living with her mother
all
her life, and with both her mother and her stepfather for the last ten years.
She has consented to the adoption.
2 In 2002, the child’s
biological father consented to the commencement of adoption proceedings. A
consent to the commencement
of the adoption proceedings is not the same thing as
consent to the making of an adoption order. It is clear from the report of
an
officer of the Department of Community Services that the father supports the
adoption. He advised that he understood that he
had completed the necessary
paperwork earlier. However, no consent complying with the requirements of ss 58
to 63 of the Adoption Act from the child’s father has been filed.
3 However, the effect of s 54(1)(c) and (2) is that his consent is not
required if the child gives “sole consent” under subs 54(2), and the
Director-General
has given reasonable notice of the application for the adoption
order to him. Under subs 54(2) a child who is twelve or more years
of age and
of sufficient maturity to understand the effect of giving consent may give sole
consent to his or her adoption by a proposed
adoptive parent or parents, if the
child has been in the care of the proposed adoptive parent or parents for at
least five years.
4 I am satisfied that the child is of sufficient
maturity to understand the effect of the giving of her consent and that the
Director-General
has given reasonable notice of the application for adoption to
the child’s father. As the child has been living with the proposed
adoptive parents for 10 years, the consent of the child’s father is not
required.
5 The applicants’ solicitor has pointed to a possible
issue under s 56 of the Act. Whilst the section is applicable, it has not been
shown that the Director-General has failed to comply with s 56(2).
6 I
am satisfied that it is in the best interests of the child that an adoption
order be made.
7 The child’s mother applies for an order that she
and her husband both be the adoptive parents of the child. It is somewhat
odd
that the child’s mother should be one of the adoptive parents. As the
child’s mother and stepfather are living together,
if the application were
made by the child’s stepfather alone, the making of an order that he be an
adoptive parent would not
mean that the child’s mother ceased to be
regarded in law as the child’s parent. (s 95(3)). Nonetheless, it is
clear from ss 28(3) and 54(1)(b) that an adoption order can be made in favour of
a birth parent. It seems to me that the making of the adoption order sought
will have no effect on the legal relationship between the child’s mother
and the child. However, it should avoid any dispute
which might otherwise arise
in the future, perhaps many years into the future, if an order for adoption were
made in favour of the
stepfather only. It might not then be easy to establish
whether at the time the order was made, the stepfather and the child’s
mother were living together.
8 The child has consented to the change of
her surname as required by s 101(4). I am satisfied from the social
worker’s report that she has a full appreciation of the effect of the
orders sought.
9 For these reasons, I make orders in accordance with
the summons.
******
LAST UPDATED: 13/09/2005
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