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Consent to Adoption
What is
Consent
Consent refers to the agreement by a
parent, or a person or agency acting in place of a parent, to relinquish
the child for adoption and to release all rights and duties with respect
to that child. In most States, the consent must be in writing and either
witnessed and notarized or executed before a judge or other designated
official. State legislatures have developed a range of provisions designed
to ensure protection for those individuals involved, including:
- Children (to prevent unnecessary and
traumatic separations from their adult caretakers)
- Birth parents (to prevent uninformed,
hurried, or coerced decisions)
- Adoptive parents (to prevent anxiety
about the legality of the adoption process)
Who Must
Consent
In all States, the birth mother and the
birth father (if he has properly established paternity) hold the primary
right of consent to adoption of their child. Either one or both parents
may have these rights terminated for a variety of possible reasons,
including abandonment, failure to support the child, mental incompetence,
or a finding of parental unfitness due to abuse or neglect. When neither
birth parent is available to give consent, the responsibility can fall to
other legal entities, such as:
- An agency that has custody of the child
- Any person who has been given custody
- A guardian or guardian ad litem
- The court having jurisdiction over the
child
- A close relative of the child
- A "next friend" of the child, who is a
responsible adult appointed by the court
Consent of
Minors
Nearly all States, the District of
Columbia, and the U.S. Territories require that older children give
consent to their adoption. Approximately 24 States, the District of
Columbia, and the Virgin Islands set the age of consent at 14 years; 18
States, American Samoa, and Guam at 12 years; and 7 States, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and Puerto Rico require consent of children age 10 years
and above. In some States, the requirement can be dispensed with if the
child lacks the mental capacity to consent, or the court finds it in the
best interest of the child to dispense with consent. Colorado requires
that the child be provided with counseling prior to giving consent.
When
Consent Can Be Executed
Approximately 46 States and the District of
Columbia specify in statute when a birth parent may execute consent to
adoption. Fifteen States and the Northern Mariana Islands allow birth
parents to consent at any time after the birth of the child, while 29
States require a waiting period before consent can be executed.
Approximately 12 States and the Northern Mariana Islands allow an alleged
birth father to execute consent at anytime before or after the child's
birth.
The shortest waiting periods are 12 and 24
hours, and the longest are 10 and 15 days. The most common waiting period,
required in 14 States and the District of Columbia, is 72 hours, or 3
days. Only two States (Alabama and Hawaii) allow the birth mother to
consent before the birth of her child; however, the decision to consent
must be reaffirmed after the child's birth.
How Consent
Must Be Executed
The manner in which consent can be executed
varies considerably from State to State. In many States, the District of
Columbia, and the U.S. territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands, consent may be
executed by a written statement witnessed and/or notarized by a notary
public. Other States may require an appearance before a judge or the
filing of a petition of relinquishment. Some States require that the
parent be provided with counseling, have his or her rights and the legal
effect of relinquishment explained to him or her, or be provided with
legal counsel prior to consent. In cases in which custody has previously
been placed with an agency, the head of the agency may sign an affidavit
of consent.
In most States, a birth parent who is a
minor is treated no differently than other birth parents. However, in some
States, the minor parent must be provided with separate counsel prior to
execution of consent, or a guardian ad litem must be appointed to either
review or execute the consent. In six States, Guam, and Puerto Rico, the
consent of the minor's parents must be obtained.
Revocation
of Consent
Adoption is meant to create a permanent and
stable home for a child; therefore, a validly executed relinquishment and
consent to adopt is intended to be final and irrevocable. As a result, the
right of a birth parent to revoke consent is strictly limited.
Mississippi, Nebraska, American Samoa, and the Virgin Islands make no
provisions in statute for revocation of consent, and Massachusetts and
Utah specifically require that all consents are irrevocable.
In most States, the law provides that
consent may be revoked prior to the entry of the final adoption decree
under specific circumstances or within specified time limits. The
circumstances under which withdrawal of consent may be permitted by a
State can include:
- Consent was obtained by fraud, duress,
or coercion.
- The birth parent is allowed to withdraw
consent within a specified period of time, after which consent becomes
irrevocable.
- The birth parent is allowed to withdraw
consent within a specified period of time, after which consent becomes
irrevocable unless there is evidence of fraud or duress.
- The birth parent is allowed to withdraw
consent within a specified period of time, after which consent becomes
irrevocable unless it can be shown that revocation is in the best
interests of child.
- There is a finding that withdrawal of
consent is in the best interests of the child.
- The birth parents and adoptive parents
mutually agree to the withdrawal of consent.
- An adoptive placement is not finalized
with a specific family or within a specified period of time.
Consent becomes final and irrevocable once
the court issues a final decree of adoption.
To see how your State addresses this issue,
visit the
State Statutes Search.
1 In those States where there is a putative
father registry, a birth father who fails to register in the prescribed
manner and within the proper time period, may lose the right to consent.
Other jurisdictions require unwed fathers to file a notice of their
paternity claim within a certain period of time. See the Clearinghouse
publication,
The Rights of Presumed (Putative) Fathers,
for detailed, State-by-State information.
2 Louisiana does not currently address in statute the issue of consent by
the minor adopted person.
3 The word approximately is used to stress the fact that States frequently
amend their laws, so this information is current only through November
2004.
4 Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine,
Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wyoming
5 Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky,
Massachusetts, Montana, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, and Wisconsin
6 Alaska, Arkansas, Hawaii, Maryland, New Jersey, New Mexico, and North
Dakota
7 In 10 States: Alabama, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, New
Jersey, New Mexico, South Carolina, and Utah
8 In 14 States, Alaska, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, New
Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont,
Virginia, and West Virginia, and the Northern Mariana Islands
9 Idaho, Maryland, New York, Oregon, and the territories of American
Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands do not currently provide
in statute for a specific time period for executing consent.
10 Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii,
Indiana, Maine, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Wisconsin, and Wyoming
11 Alabama, Delaware, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Nevada, New Jersey,
North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Utah
12 Kansas imposes a 12-hour waiting period. Utah imposes a 24-hour waiting
period.
13 Virginia and Washington impose a 10-day waiting period. Rhode Island
imposes a 15-day waiting period.
14 Arizona, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana,
Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and West
Virginia
15 Waiting periods in other States are 36 hours (Vermont), 48 hours
(Connecticut, Florida, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Texas, and
Washington), 4 days (Massachusetts), and 5 days (Louisiana and South
Dakota).
16 In 28 States: Alabama (except for the mother, who must appear before
the court), Arizona, California, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa
(except for minor parents), Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, and Wyoming
17 Alabama (for the birth mother), Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado,
Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa (if the birth parent is a
minor), Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio,
Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia,
Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin
18 In Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, and New Mexico
19 In California, Louisiana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina,
South Carolina, and South Dakota
20 In Kansas, Maryland, and Montana
21 Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Kentucky, and Rhode Island
22 Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island
23 Arizona, Colorado (the claim must be filed within 90 days), Florida (in
private placements), Illinois (the claim must be filed within 12 months),
Kansas, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, South Dakota (the claim
must be filed within 2 years), Washington (the claim must be filed within
1 year, or within 2 years for an Indian child), West Virginia, Wisconsin,
Wyoming, and Puerto Rico
24 Arkansas (10 days), Delaware (60 days), Georgia (10 days), Kentucky (20
days), Louisiana (when consent is given prior to the 5th day after the
child's birth), Maryland (30 days), Minnesota (10 days), and the District
of Columbia (10 days)
25 Alabama (5 days), Florida (3 days if an agency placement), Iowa (96
hours), Maine (3 days), New York (45 days for extrajudicial consents),
North Carolina (7 days; 5 days in a direct placement), Oklahoma (15 days
for extrajudicial consents), Pennsylvania (30 days), Tennessee (10 days),
Texas (10 days), Vermont (21 days), and Virginia (15 days)
26 Alabama (14 days), Alaska (10 days), Indiana (30 days), and Rhode
Island (180 days)
27 Connecticut, Hawaii, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Guam, and the
Northern Mariana Islands
28 Montana, Oklahoma, Vermont (request must be made within 21 days),
Virginia (request must be made within 15 days), and West Virginia
29 California (if the placement is not made within 30 days), Maine,
Oklahoma (if the placement is not made within 90 days), and Nevada (if the
prospective adoptive family is found to be unsuitable, or no petition for
adoption is filed within 2 years)
This publication is a product of the State
Statutes Series prepared by the National Adoption Information
Clearinghouse (NAIC). While every attempt has been made to be as complete
as possible, additional information on these topics may be in other
sections of a State's code as well as agency regulations, case law, and
informal practices and procedures. |