Adult Adoptions

Adult Adoptions are allowed in South Carolina under Section 63-9-1120 of its Code of Laws, as amended. "An adult person may be adopted by another adult person with the consent of the person to be adopted or his guardian and with the consent of the spouse, if any, of a sole adoptive parent, filed in writing with the court...A petition for the adoption must be filed with the family court in the county where the adoptive parents reside."

The Law Office of David H. Baum out of California answers a few of the questions you may have about adult adoptions at  http://www.adoptlaw.com/faqadult.html. They questions and answers are general and substantially conform to South Carolina law. If you have any further questions, you can contact me via e-mail or phone. My e-mail address is lawyerhall@russellslawoffice.com and my phone number is 843-267-0906.

Yes, my office does handle adult adoptions.

John Doe RIP: Responsible Father Registry is Law 1 Januarly 2010

Is John Doe dead?  Jenny Horne, a co-sponsor, of the new Responsible Father Registry law says yes in an article she wrote in The Summerville Journal Scene:

The Responsible Birthfather Registry Act will require fathers who wish to be notified of a termination of parental rights proceeding to take the affirmative step of registering with a confidential state database. This registry can then be checked by DSS [or the adoptive parents' lawyer in private adoptions] during the termination of parental rights (“TPR”) proceedings before a child is adopted into a permanent and loving home. This new registry does away with the antiquated practice of placing Joe Doe notices in the local newspapers.

If the mother of a child who is being placed for adoption is unmarried, the courts generally require the adoptive parents to serve any potential unknown father by adding John Doe as a defendant and serving John Doe via a newspaper in the county in which the child was conceived. This method of terminating the rights of a potential unknown father is fraught with legal uncertainty and a potential challenge by the father as illustrated in Brown v. Malloy; this case is a fact intensive case in which the father challenged the termination of his rights and the adoption of his child. All four issues raised by the father in the case concern the John Doe notice. 

The Responsible Father Registry should be in place on 1 January 2010 and will require a potential father to register with the Registry to ensure he preserves his parental rights; eliminating the need for John Doe notices.

The Responsible Father Registry law makes clear the only notice that the father is required  to receive concerning the mother's pregnancy is the sexual intercourse itself; his "sexual intercourse or his consent to artificial insemination with the biological mother is deemed to be notice to the unmarried biological father of the biological mother's pregnancy." In essence, if a man has sex with a woman and wants to preserve his parental rights to a child that may have been conceived from that intercourse, he must register with the Registry. This will eliminate any legal uncertainty concerning the father's rights and places the responsibility for preserving his rights squarely on his own shoulders. John Doe is dead.

 

 

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