(Cite
as: 118 Wash.2d 561, 825 P.2d 305)
Supreme
Court of Washington,
En
Banc.
In
the Matter of the ADOPTION of Infant Boy CREWS, a minor.
Tammy
Lee CREWS, Petitioner,
v.
HOPE
SERVICES, Prospective Adoptive Parents, Charles Bertiaux, biological
father,
Respondents.
No.
57975-0.
March 5, 1992.
**306 *562
Goodwin, Grutz & Scott, Daniel R. Fjelstad, Seattle, for petitioner
Crews.
Mary Parks, Seattle,
for petitioner Choctaw Nation.
McGavick, Graves, Beale
& McNerthney, Edward R. Lindstrom, Tacoma, Andrew L. Benjamin, Dubuar,
Lirhus & Engel, Albert G. Lirhus, Seattle, for respondents.
*563
Michele Hinz, Auburn, for guardian ad litem.
Richard M. Kilmer, Edmonds,
on behalf of Northwest Intertribal Court System, amicus curiae for petitioners.
Kenneth O. Eikenberry,
Atty. Gen., Lee Ann Miller, Senior Counsel, Seattle, amicus curiae for
petitioners.
DOLLIVER, Justice.
Tammy Crews (Crews) began
dating Charles Bertiaux in May 1986 and learned she was pregnant in August
1988. At that time, Crews was single, 22 years old and living with her
parents, Weldon and Arlene Crews, in Seattle, Washington, where she grew
up. In considering the possible adoption of the baby, Crews contacted
Hope Services, a private adoption agency, in September 1988.
During the following
months, Crews received counseling from Mary Struck, a Hope Services counselor.
After much consideration, including reading literature, talking with other
birth mothers, and consulting her parents, Bertiaux's parents, friends,
a clergyman, and various relatives, Crews elected to place her baby for
adoption. Crews and Bertiaux then selected the adoptive parents, Rick
and Sharon Shaffer, met with them on several occasions, and made assurances
to the Shaffers that they were resolute in their decision to place the
baby for adoption.
In preparation for the
adoption, Struck asked Crews and Bertiaux whether either **307
of them had any Indian ancestry. There is a dispute in the record regarding
the content of the conversations between Crews and Struck relating to
information about the baby's Indian ancestry.
Crews submitted an affidavit alleging that Struck asked her if she had
any Indian blood. Crews alleges she told Struck that she did have Indian
blood, "but ... didn't know how much." In her affidavit, Struck
stated:
The
issue of ethnic heritage was discussed and it was clear to me [Mary Struck]
that the Indian Child Welfare Act did not apply. [Crews] was not a member
of a tribe and in fact could not name any Indian tribes in her heritage.
*564
Bertiaux submitted an affidavit alleging that Crews stated "she was
not sure if she had any Indian blood or how much" and " 'even
if there is some [Indian blood on her mother's side], it isn't enough
to make a difference.' " Bertiaux also alleges that Crews stated,
"her father's heritage is 'mainly all German' " and "that
is why the paperwork says N/A for the mother's side and German for her
father's side." There is no allegation that Crews or Bertiaux had
or conveyed to Struck any information as to their membership or affiliation
with any specific tribe.
The adoption proceeded
according to Washington voluntary relinquishment and adoption law and
on May 1, 1989, approximately 2 weeks before the baby was due, Crews signed
a "Consent To Termination/Adoption and Waiver of Right To Receive
Notice of All Proceedings". This form provides that the Indian Child
Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) (25 U.S.C. § 1901 et
seq.) was not
applicable to the proceedings. The form also states the consent would
not be effective until approved by the court which could occur no earlier
than 48 hours after Crews signed
the form or the baby was born, whichever was later. Once the consent was
approved by the court, the consent could not be revoked except for fraud,
duress or lack of mental competency.
Baby boy B. was born
at 1:15 p.m. on May 22, 1989. On May 24, 1989, the "Order Approving
Relinquishment, Terminating Parent-Child Relationship and Granting Temporary
Custody" was filed, Crews was discharged, and the Shaffers took B.
home.
Thereafter, Crews contacted
Struck requesting the return of her baby. There is a dispute as to whether
this conversation took place on May 26 or May 30. Despite the request,
B. remained with the Shaffers. Crews continued her attempt to reinstate
her parental rights, and in late June 1989, she contacted the Department
of Social and Health Services. Crews also sent a letter to the Bureau
of Indian Affairs in Portland to obtain an outline of her family's Indian
ancestry. On July 28, 1989, DSHS informed Crews that she "may have
a claim" that B. was of Indian *565
descent. CP, at 70. DSHS advised that the adoption not be finalized until
the Cherokee Nations of North Carolina and Oklahoma and the Choctaw and
Umatilla Bands/Tribes had been contacted by Hope Services and Crews.
Hope Services contacted
the tribes. The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma responded, by letter dated
July 11, 1989, that no "Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood"
(CDIB) had been issued to Crews. Apparently, no responses were received
from the Umatilla Tribe or the Cherokee Nations.
On August 9, 1989, the
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma responded to Weldon Crews' claim that he was
a lineal descendant of one of the original enrollees of the tribe. The
Director of the Indian Child Welfare Program for the Choctaw Nation confirmed
Weldon Crews' ancestry and concluded:
[B.]
is eligible for enrollment with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma therefore
the Indian Child Welfare Act will apply to this child.
On August 30, 1989, Crews
filed a petition to vacate the order terminating her parental rights and
to provide for visitation or a return of custody. Crews attempted to revoke
her consent alleging it was obtained in violation of ICWA and/or the result
of fraud, duress, or lack of mental competency. The claims for fraud,
duress, and lack of mental competency were subsequently**308
dismissed with prejudice by stipulation of counsel.
On September 20, 1989,
Brenda Hampton, the Director of Tribal Membership for the Choctaw Nation,
notified the attorney for Hope Services that a CDIB was issued to Crews
as of September 19, 1989.
On October 25, 1989,
Crews testified in a deposition that she was unaware of her Choctaw blood
until after B. was born and had only researched her heritage in order
to reinstate her parental rights. Crews also testified that her family
does not regularly participate in any Indian practices or events. On November
13, 1989, the trial court granted summary judgment to Hope Services and
dismissed Crews' *566
petition to invalidate the termination of her parental rights. The court
held ICWA was inapplicable to invalidate the May 24 termination order
because B. was not an "Indian child" under ICWA until September
19 when the CDIB was issued. The court rejected Crews' further contention
that application of the state termination/adoption procedures deprived
her of due process of law. Crews appealed.
On December 19, 1989,
the adoption of B. by the Shaffers became final.
On March 28, 1990, the
Court of Appeals granted the Choctaw Nation's motion to intervene. The
Choctaw Nation contends that both Crews and B. have been members of the
Choctaw Nation since birth based upon article 2, section 1 of the Choctaw
Constitution, which provides:
The
Choctaw Nation shall consist of all Choctaw Indians by blood whose names
appear on the final rolls of the Choctaw Nation approved pursuant to Section
2 of the Act of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. 136) and their lineal descendants.
The Court of Appeals
affirmed the trial court and held that B. did not become an Indian child
under ICWA until September 19, 1989, and therefore ICWA was not applicable
on May 24, 1989, when the court approved the termination of Crews' parental
rights. See
In re Adoption of Crews,
60 Wash.App. 202, 209-10, 803 P.2d 24 (1991).
Crews and the Choctaw
Nation petitioned for review. The Northwest Intertribal Court System and
the Attorney General on behalf of DSHS filed amicus
curiae briefs supporting Crews' position. Crews' parents were denied permission
to intervene on appeal and to file an amicus curiae brief. The Shaffers,
Hope Services and Bertiaux oppose the petition. We affirm.
This is the first opportunity
the court has had to address the application of the Indian Child Welfare
Act of 1978, 25 U.S.C. § 1901 et
seq. We undertake
this task with a profound understanding of the immediate and long-lasting
consequences of our decision, not only for B., but for all the parties
in this case.
*567
The issue is whether
ICWA applies to invalidate a final decree terminating parental rights
properly entered under state law. The parties and the Court of Appeals
have focused upon the date at which B. met the definition of "Indian
child" under ICWA as determinative. Thus, the arguments before this
court centered upon when B. became a member or was eligible for membership
in an Indian tribe. See
25 U.S.C. § 1903(4). We do not believe, however, that this is the
decisive issue. Regardless of B.'s tribal membership or lack thereof,
after careful consideration of ICWA and its legislative history, we are
convinced that ICWA was not intended to apply in the situation presented
by the specific facts of this case.
ICWA was enacted to counteract
the large scale separations of Indian children from their families, tribes,
and culture through adoption or foster care placement, generally in non-Indian
homes. See Mississippi
Band of Choctaw Indians
v. Holyfield,
490 U.S. 30, 32, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 1599, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 (1989). Surveys
conducted in 1969 and 1974 by the Association on American Indian Affairs
showed that 25 to 30 percent of Indian children were being separated from
their families and that fully 85 to 90 percent of these children were
being placed in non-Indian foster care, adoptive homes, or institutions.
H.R.Rep. No. 95-1386, 95th Cong., 2d Sess., at 9 (1978), reprinted
in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N.
**309
7530, 7531. These separations and placements were found to be largely
unwarranted resulting from a failure by child welfare services to understand
the cultural differences in Indian child rearing practices and other social
and economic factors of Indian life. H.R.Rep. No. 95-1386, at 10-12, 1978
U.S.C.C.A.N. 7532-7535.
These separations not
only affected Indian children and their parents, but also the various
Indian tribes.
"Culturally,
the chances of Indian survival are significantly reduced if our children,
the only real means for the transmission of the tribal heritage, are to
be raised in non-Indian homes and denied exposure to the ways of their
People...."
Holyfield,
490 U.S. at 34, 109 S.Ct. at 1600-01 (quoting Hearings on S. 1214 before
the Subcommittee on Indian Affairs and Public Lands of *568
the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, 95th Cong., 2d Sess.,
at 193 (1978)).
In enacting ICWA, Congress expressly found:
that
an alarmingly high percentage of Indian families are broken up by the
removal, often unwarranted, of their children from them by nontribal public
and private agencies and that an alarmingly high percentage of such children
are placed in non-Indian foster and adoptive homes and institutions; and
that
the States, exercising their recognized jurisdiction over Indian child
custody proceedings through administrative and judicial bodies, have often
failed to recognize the essential tribal relations of Indian people and
the cultural and social standards prevailing in Indian communities and
families.
25 U.S.C. § 1901(4)-(5). Congress declared the policy of ICWA was
to
protect
the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and
security of Indian tribes and families by the establishment of minimum
Federal standards for the removal of Indian children from their families
and the placement of such children in foster or adoptive homes which will
reflect the unique values of Indian culture, and by providing for assistance
to Indian tribes in the operation of child and family service programs.
25 U.S.C. § 1902.
ICWA implemented these
policy goals by providing for exclusive tribal jurisdiction over custody
proceedings involving Indian children who were domiciled or residing within
a tribal reservation and concurrent, but presumptively, tribal jurisdiction
in other cases. 25 U.S.C. § 1911(a), (b).
For Indian child custody proceedings taking place in state court, ICWA
provides substantive and procedural safeguards to ensure alleviation of
these unwarranted separations of Indian children from their Indian families
and culture. See
25 U.S.C. § 1901 et
seq. For example,
section 1912(d) requires that active efforts be made to "prevent
the breakup of the Indian family" and section 1915(b) mandates that
preferences be given to Indian environments in foster care and preadoptive
placements.
The
ICWA thus, in the words of the House Report accompanying it, "seeks
to protect the rights of the Indian child as *569
an Indian and the rights of the Indian community and tribe in retaining
its children in its society." It does so by establishing "a
Federal policy that, where possible, an Indian child should remain in
the Indian community," and by making sure that Indian child welfare
determinations are not based on "a white, middle-class standard which,
in many cases, forecloses placement with [an] Indian family."
(Citations omitted.) Holyfield,
490 U.S. at 37, 109 S.Ct. at 1602 (quoting H.R.Rep. No. 95-1386, at 23-24,
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7545-7547). It has been stated and we agree that
the
underlying thread that runs throughout the entire Act [is] to the effect
that the Act is concerned with the removal of Indian children from an
existing Indian family unit and the resultant breakup of the Indian family.
In re Adoption
of Baby Boy L.,
231 Kan. 199, 206, 643 P.2d 168 (1982).
**310
In this case, however, Crews and the Choctaw Nation ask this court to
apply ICWA when B. has never been a part of an existing Indian family
unit or any other Indian community. Neither Crews nor her family has ever
lived on the Choctaw reservation in Oklahoma and there are no plans to
relocate the family from Seattle to Oklahoma. Bertiaux, B.'s father, has
no ties to any Indian tribe or community and opposes B.'s removal from
his adoptive parents. Moreover, there is no allegation by Crews or the
Choctaw Nation that, if custody were returned to Crews, B. would grow
up in an Indian environment. To the contrary, Crews has shown no substantive
interest in her Indian heritage in the past and has given no indication
this will change in the future.
While B. may be an "Indian
child" based on the Choctaw Constitution, we do not find an existing
Indian family unit or environment from which B. was removed or to which
he would be returned. To apply ICWA in this specific situation would not
further the policies and purposes of ICWA. Consequently, we hold ICWA
does not apply to invalidate Crews' voluntary termination of her parental
rights and consent to adoption.
Other courts have held
ICWA inapplicable when Indian children were not being removed from existing
Indian *570
environments. The reasons given were (1) there was no existing Indian
environment where the mother was non-Indian and the Indian father failed
to establish paternity until during or after the custody proceedings,
and (2) the mothers voluntarily consented to the adoptions in
non-Indian environments. See
In re Adoption of T.R.M.,
525 N.E.2d 298 (Ind.1988), cert.
denied sub nom., J.Q. v. D.R.L.,
490 U.S. 1069, 109 S.Ct. 2072, 104 L.Ed.2d 636 (1989); Claymore
v. Serr, 405
N.W.2d 650 (S.D.1987); In
re S.A.M.,
703 S.W.2d 603, 608 (Mo.Ct.App.1986); In
re Adoption of Baby Boy D,
742 P.2d 1059, 1063-64 (Okla.1985), cert.
denied sub nom., Harjo v. Duello,
484 U.S. 1072, 108 S.Ct. 1042, 98 L.Ed.2d 1005 (1988); In
re Baby Boy L.,
231 Kan. at 205-06, 643 P.2d 168. But
see In re Adoption of Baade,
462 N.W.2d 485, 490 (S.D.1990); In
re Adoption of Child of Indian Heritage,
111 N.J. 155, 169-70, 543 A.2d 925 (1988); In
re S.B.R.,
43 Wash.App. 622, 719 P.2d 154 (1986); In
re Adoption of Lindsay C.,
229 Cal.App.3d 404, 280 Cal.Rptr. 194 (1991).
The most recent Supreme
Court decision relative to the application of ICWA is Mississippi
Band of Choctaw Indians v. Holyfield,
490 U.S. 30, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 (1989). In Holyfield,
illegitimate twins were born to parents who were enrolled members of the
Choctaw tribe and residents of the Choctaw reservation in Mississippi.
The parents consented to the twins' adoption by a non-Indian couple. After
the adoption decree was entered in a county court, the tribe moved to
vacate the adoption decree on the grounds that the tribal court had exclusive
jurisdiction over the proceeding. The court denied the motion and the
Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed, emphasizing that the twins had never
been physically present on the reservation, were voluntarily
surrendered, and the parents went to some effort to place the twins in
a non-Indian environment.
The United States Supreme
Court reversed holding the tribe had exclusive jurisdiction because the
twins assumed the domiciliary of the mother. The Court stated the application
of ICWA could not be defeated by the actions of the *571
parents. In so holding, however, the court made clear that the purpose
of ICWA was to avoid the
"[r]emoval
of Indian children from their cultural setting [because such removal]
seriously impacts a long-term tribal survival and has damaging social
and psychological impact on many individual Indian children."
Holyfield,
490 U.S. at 50, 109 S.Ct. at 1609 (quoting S.Rep. No. 95- 597, 95th Cong.,
1st Sess., at 52 (1977)). Thus, Holyfield
supports our conviction that ICWA is not applicable when an Indian child
is not being removed from an Indian cultural setting, the natural parents
have no substantive ties to a specific tribe, and neither the parents
nor their families have resided or plan to reside within a tribal reservation.
**311
In such a situation, whether or when a child meets the definition of "Indian
child" under ICWA is not controlling.
We are not unmindful
that prior abusive child welfare practices may have cut off large numbers
of persons from their Indian heritage. See
Holyfield,
490 U.S. at 37, 50 n. 24, 109 S.Ct. at 1602, 1609 n. 24. Furthermore,
there may
be instances where the application of ICWA would result in the placement
of an Indian child back into an Indian environment. This is not the case
before us. It is within the narrow circumstances presented by the specific
facts of this case that we find ICWA not applicable.
However, even if ICWA were applicable to this case, its provisions would
not invalidate the termination of Crews' parental rights.
Courts cut off a parent's
right to withdraw consent once a final decree of termination is entered
even if the adoption is not yet final. See
In re Kiogima,
189 Mich.App. 6, 9-13, 472 N.W.2d 13, 14-16 (1991); B.R.T.
v. Executive Director,
391 N.W.2d 594, 599 (N.D.1986); In
re J.R.S.,
690 P.2d 10, 12-13 (Alaska 1984). The holdings in these cases are based
upon section 103(c) of ICWA, which provides:
In
any voluntary proceeding for termination of parental rights to, or adoptive
placement of, an Indian child, the consent of the parent may be withdrawn
for any reason at any time prior to the entry of a final decree of termination
or adoption, as the case may be, and the child shall be returned to the
parent.
*572
We concur with the interpretation of this section adopted by the Kiogima,
B.R.T., and
J.R.S.
courts:
The
consent [1913(c) ] refers to may be one of two kinds: a consent to termination
of parental rights or a consent to adoptive placement. A consent to
termination may be withdrawn at any time before a final decree of termination
is entered; a consent to adoption at any time before a final decree of
adoption. If
Congress had intended consents to termination to be revocable at any time
prior to entry of a final decree of adoption, the words, "as the
case may be" would not appear in the statute.
Kiogima,
189 Mich.App. at 12, 472 N.W.2d 13 (quoting J.R.S.,
690 P.2d at 14); B.R.T.,
391 N.W.2d at 599 (quoting J.R.S.,
690 P.2d at 14).
Crews and the Choctaw
Nation argue, however, that B.'s actual Indian ancestry was not known
until after the court approved the termination of Crews' parental rights
because either Hope Services or the court breached its duty to investigate
Crews' Indian ancestry.
WAC 388-73-044(7) provides:
When
foster care or adoptive placement of a nonenrolled Indian child is planned,
agencies shall compile the Portland area office of the bureau of Indian
affairs' form "family ancestry chart," or appropriate equivalent.
Agencies shall take appropriate steps to enroll eligible children in their
respective tribes.
"Indian child"
is not defined in the Washington Administrative Code; instead "Indian"
is more broadly defined as:
(a)
An enrolled Indian:
(i)
Any person who is enrolled or eligible for enrollment in a recognized
tribe.
. . . . .
(c)
An unenrolled Indian: A person considered to be an Indian by a federally
or nonfederally recognized Indian tribe or urban Indian/Alaskan native
community organization.
WAC 388-73-044(2). The Bureau of Indian Affairs guidelines obligate state
courts to "seek verification of the child's status from either the
Bureau of Indian Affairs or the child's tribe" if the court "has
reason to believe a child involved in a child custody proceeding is an
Indian". From the context *573
of the guideline, this duty attaches in voluntary as well as involuntary
proceedings. A court has such a "reason to believe" when:
Any
public or state-licensed agency involved in child protection services
or family support has discovered information which suggests that the child
is an Indian child.
**312
Guidelines for
State Courts; Indian Child Custody Proceedings,
44 Fed.Reg. 67,584, 67,586 (1979).
The one court which has
addressed this issue has stated in dicta that if Indian child status is
not known due to a failure to disclose information regarding the child's
ancestry and the petitioner is prejudiced thereby, even an adoption decree
may be challenged. See
In re Adoption of Child of Indian Heritage,
111 N.J. 155, 187-89, 543 A.2d 925 (1988).
In this case, however, neither Hope Services nor the court had a duty
to investigate Crews' Indian ancestry based upon the sparse information
Crews and Bertiaux provided to Struck.
The affidavits of Crews,
Struck, and Bertiaux differ in their account of the conversation regarding
the parents' Indian ancestry. However, what is not disputed is that Crews
told Struck that she had Indian blood but did not know how much. As stated
by the Court of Appeals:
[T]he
information imparted to Struck by Crews did not suggest that B. was eligible
for enrollment in a recognized tribe. Crews' statements failed to suggest
any relationship with an identifiable tribe and gave her no positive leads
to enable her to discover any tribal affiliation....
Crews,
60 Wash.App. at 214, 803 P.2d 24. This is insufficient to trigger the
investigative duties placed on Hope Services and the court.
Lastly, Crews contends
that the termination of her parental rights was obtained in violation
of due process. Crews argues her consent to the relinquishment of her
parental rights cannot be presumed to be voluntary and that there must
be a judicial analysis of whether this State's statutory scheme for voluntary
relinquishments of parental rights comports with due process. Crews cites
In re L.S.,
14 Kan.App.2d 261, 788 P.2d 875 (1990) and In
re H.R., 581
A.2d *574
1141 (D.C.1990) for the proposition that voluntary terminations are subject
to due process.
However, L.S.
involved a natural mother who had consented to the adoption, but not to
the termination of her parental rights. A hearing was held to terminate
her rights but the mother was not provided with the proper notice required
under the statute. The court held this was a violation of the mother's
due process rights. L.S.,
14 Kan.App.2d at 262-65, 788 P.2d 875. H.R.
involved a due process challenge by a father whose parental rights were
terminated when the natural mother relinquished her rights. H.R.,
581 A.2d at 1163. The court held that a state agency's actions in seeking
the termination of the father's rights before the baby was born and placing
the baby with the adoptive parents without his consent constituted state
action.
In this case, this State's
procedures for voluntary terminations were followed and Crews, herself,
consented to the termination of her parental rights. In such a situation
there is no state action and due process is not implicated. See
In re Adoption of Hernandez,
25 Wash.App. 447, 607 P.2d 879 (1980).
We affirm the Court of
Appeals decision upholding the trial court's grant of summary judgment
in favor of the Shaffers and dismissing Crews' petition to revoke her
consent to the termination of her parental rights.
UTTER, SMITH, GUY and
JOHNSON, JJ., concur.
ANDERSEN, Justice (concurring).
I agree with the majority
opinion that the Court of Appeals decision is correct and should be affirmed.
I disagree, however, with the majority's conclusion that the Indian Child
Welfare Act of 1978 (the Act) applies only in those cases in which a state
court determines that the cultural awareness, tribal affiliation, or lifestyle
of the birth family meets some judicially fashioned level of "Indian-ness."
*575
I read the Act as applying in all relinquishment cases in which an "Indian
child" (as defined by the Act) is involved, regardless of the child's
previous exposure to tribal culture and traditions. This is because the
Act itself clearly and explicitly defines "Indian child" as
a minor who
**313
is either (a) a
member of an
Indian tribe or (b) is eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and
is the biological child of a member of an Indian tribe[.]
25 U.S.C. § 1903(4).
If Infant B, with whom
this case is concerned, had met this definition of the Act at the time
the relinquishment order was entered, then to my view the court should
have had no option but to apply the provisions of the Act. However, at
that time, Infant B was not
an "Indian child" as defined by the Act.
The Act does not apply
to children who are merely of Indian descent or who
have some Indian heritage. Rather, it is the child's membership in or
relationship with a tribe--a political entity whose sovereignty is recognized
by our federal government--that triggers application of the Act.
If Infant B was a member
of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma at the time of the relinquishment hearing,
or if he was eligible for membership and
if his birth mother was a member
of the tribe at the time of the relinquishment, then he was an "Indian
child" and the Act should have been applied. I agree with the trial
court and the Court of Appeals, that the child involved in this case was
not an "Indian child" at the time of the relinquishment and,
therefore, the Indian child welfare provisions of the Act and the state
adoption statute did not apply to this proceeding.
The Choctaw Constitution
states:
The
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma shall consist of all Choctaw Indians by blood
whose names appear on the final rolls of the Choctaw Nation approved pursuant
to Section 2 of the Act of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. 136) and their lineal
descendants.
At the trial court level
the tribe, apparently interpreting this constitutional section, provided
evidence that although Infant B was not a member of the tribe, he was
eligible
for *576
membership at the time of the relinquishment hearing.
"Eligibility" alone is simply not sufficient to meet the definition
of "Indian child"; the child must be both eligible for membership
and the biological child of a member
of the tribe. Although the tribe's counsel argues on appeal that the Choctaw
constitutional section quoted above means that the child was a member
of the tribe since birth, that position is inconsistent with the interpretation
given the provision by the tribe itself. For example, the Director of
the Tribal Membership Department, who is responsible for overseeing and
managing the membership rolls and who has custody of the membership rolls
of the Choctaw Nation, stated in an affidavit presented to the trial court
that the birth mother, Tammy Crews, was
admitted
to tribal membership based upon her proof of direct blood lineage from
an original enrollee of the Choctaw Nation. Her child [Infant B] will
be admitted to membership
upon the processing of necessary paperwork.
(Italics mine.) Clerk's Papers, at 16-17. The affidavit goes on to state
that both Tammy Crews and Infant B were "eligible for membership
in the Choctaw Nation" since birth. Clerk's Papers, at 17. A letter
from the Choctaw Nation Child Welfare Program Director states that Infant
B was "eligible for enrollment." Clerk's Papers, at 74. Another
letter states that on September 19, 1989, the tribe issued a Certificate
of Degree of Indian Blood card, showing that Tammy Crews is a member of
the Choctaw Tribe. Ms. Crews has argued
that she became a member of the tribe on September 19, 1989. It was on
that date that Infant B was both eligible for membership and
the biological child of a tribal member. Thus it was not until September
19, 1989, nearly
4 months after
the legal relationship between Ms. Crews and the child came to an end,
that Infant B for the first time met the statutory definition of "Indian
child".
I would further hold
that public policy requires the determination as to whether the Act applies
to the relinquishment and adoption of a particular child to be made before
or at the time the relinquishment order is entered. The *577
mother's change of status after her parental rights are terminated should
have no effect on the infant whom she had previously relinquished voluntarily.
**314
Thus I would also add to the majority opinion by holding that the revocation
provision set forth in RCW 26.33.160(4)(g)
[FN1] (allowing the consent to adoption of an Indian child to be revoked
at any time before the final decree of adoption) applies only in those
cases where the child is an "Indian child" at the time the consent
to adoption is approved.
FN1.
RCW 26.33.160 was amended by the Laws of 1991, ch. 136, § 2. The
section referring to the consent to adoption of an Indian child was not
changed but has been recodified and is now RCW 26.33.160(4)(h).
It is for these reasons that I concur separately.
BRACHTENBACH and DURHAM,
JJ., concur.
118 Wash.2d 561, 825
P.2d 305
|