AN ACT
RELATING TO ADOPTIONS; ESTABLISHING PROCEDURES FOR ADOPTIONS
ENTERED INTO PURSUANT TO THE FEDERAL INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION ACT; PROVIDING FOR
BACKGROUND CHECKS ON PERSONS WHO PETITION TO ADOPT A CHILD; PROVIDING A
PENALTY; AMENDING AND ENACTING SECTIONS OF THE ADOPTION ACT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 32A-5-1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 128) is amended to read:
"32A-5-1. SHORT TITLE.--Chapter 32A, Article 5 NMSA
1978 may be cited as the "Adoption Act"."
Section 2. Section 32A-5-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 130, as amended) is amended to read:
"32A-5-3. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Adoption Act:
A. "accrediting entity" means an
entity that has entered into an agreement with the United States secretary of
state pursuant to the federal Intercountry Adoption Act and regulations adopted
by the United States secretary of state pursuant to that act, to accredit
agencies and approve persons who provide adoption services related to
convention adoptions;
B. "adoptee" means a person who is the
subject of an adoption petition;
C. "adoption service" means:
(1) identifying a child for adoption and
arranging the adoption of the child;
(2) securing termination of parental rights to a
child or consent to adoption of the child;
(3) performing a background study on a child and
reporting on the study;
(4) performing a home study on a prospective
adoptive parent and reporting on the study;
(5) making determinations regarding the best
interests of a child and the appropriateness of an adoptive placement for the
child;
(6) performing post-placement monitoring of a
child until an adoption is final; and
(7) when there is a disruption before an adoption
of a child is final, assuming custody of the child and providing or
facilitating the provision of child care or other social services for the child
pending an alternative placement of the child;
D. "agency" means a person certified,
licensed or otherwise specially empowered by law to place a child in a home in
this or any other state for the purpose of adoption;
E. "agency adoption" means an adoption
when the adoptee is in the custody of an agency prior to placement;
F. "acknowledged father" means a
father who:
(1) acknowledges paternity of the adoptee
pursuant to the putative father registry, as provided for in Section 32A-5-20
NMSA 1978;
(2) is named, with his consent, as the adoptee's
father on the adoptee's birth certificate;
(3) is obligated to support the adoptee under a
written voluntary promise or pursuant to a court order; or
(4) has openly held out the adoptee as his own
child by establishing a custodial, personal or financial relationship with the
adoptee as follows:
(a) for an adoptee under six months old at the
time of placement: 1) has initiated an
action to establish paternity; 2) is living with the adoptee at the time the
adoption petition is filed; 3) has lived with the mother a minimum of ninety
days during the two-hundred-eighty-day-period prior to the birth or placement
of the adoptee; 4) has lived with the adoptee within the ninety days
immediately preceding the adoptive placement; 5) has provided reasonable and
fair financial support to the mother during the pregnancy and in connection
with the adoptee's birth in accordance with his means and when not prevented
from doing so by the person or authorized agency having lawful custody of the
adoptee or the adoptee's mother; 6) has continuously paid child support to the
mother since the adoptee's birth in an amount at least equal to the amount
provided in Section 40-4-11.1 NMSA 1978, or has brought current any delinquent
child support payments; or 7) any other factor the court deems necessary to
establish a custodial, personal or financial relationship with the adoptee; or
(b) for an adoptee over six months old at the
time of placement: 1) has initiated an
action to establish paternity; 2) has lived with the adoptee within the ninety
days immediately preceding the adoptive placement; 3) has continuously paid
child support to the mother since the adoptee's birth in an amount at least
equal to the amount provided in Section 40-4-11.1 NMSA 1978, or is making
reasonable efforts to bring delinquent child support payments current; 4) has
contact with the adoptee on a monthly basis when physically and financially
able and when not prevented by the person or authorized agency having lawful
custody of the adoptee; or 5) has regular communication with the adoptee, or
with the person or agency having the care or custody of the adoptee, when
physically and financially unable to visit the adoptee and when not prevented
from doing so by the person or authorized agency having lawful custody of the
adoptee;
G. "alleged father" means an
individual whom the biological mother has identified as the biological father,
but the individual has not acknowledged paternity or registered with the
putative father registry as provided for in Section 32A-5-20 NMSA 1978;
H. "consent" means a document:
(1) signed by a biological parent whereby the
parent grants consent to the adoption of the parent's child by another; or
(2) whereby the department or an agency grants
its consent to the adoption of a child in its custody;
I. "convention adoption" means:
(1) an adoption by a United States resident of a
child who is a resident of a foreign country that is a party to the Hague
Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of
Intercountry Adoption; or
(2) an adoption by a resident of a foreign
country that is a party to the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and
Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption of a child who is a resident
of the United States;
J. "counselor" means a person certified
by the department to conduct adoption counseling in independent adoptions;
K. "department adoption" means an
adoption when the child is in the custody of the department;
L. "former parent" means a parent
whose parental rights have been terminated or relinquished;
M. "full disclosure" means mandatory
and continuous disclosure by the investigator, agency, department or petitioner
throughout the adoption proceeding and after finalization of the adoption of
all known, nonidentifying information regarding the adoptee, including:
(1) health history;
(2) psychological history;
(3) mental history;
(4) hospital history;
(5) medication history;
(6) genetic history;
(7) physical descriptions;
(8) social history;
(9) placement history; and
(10) education;
N. "independent adoption" means an
adoption when the child is not in the custody of the department or an agency;
O. "investigator" means an individual
certified by the department to conduct pre-placement studies and post-placement
reports;
P. "office" means a place for the
regular transaction of business or performance of particular services;
Q. "parental rights" means all rights
of a parent with reference to a child, including parental right to control, to
withhold consent to an adoption or to receive notice of a hearing on a petition
for adoption;
R. "placement" means the selection of
a family for an adoptee or matching of a family with an adoptee and physical
transfer of the adoptee to the family in all adoption proceedings, except in
adoptions filed pursuant to Paragraphs (1) and (2) of Subsection C of Section
32A-5-12 NMSA 1978, in which case placement occurs when the parents consent to
the adoption, parental rights are terminated or parental consent is implied;
S. "post-placement report" means a
written evaluation of the adoptive family and the adoptee after the adoptee is
placed for adoption;
T. "pre-placement study" means a
written evaluation of the adoptive family, the adoptee's biological family and
the adoptee;
U. "presumed father" means:
(1) the husband of the biological mother at the time
the adoptee was born;
(2) an individual who was married to the mother
and either the adoptee was born during the term of the marriage or the adoptee
was born within three hundred days after the marriage was terminated by death,
annulment, declaration of invalidity or divorce; or
(3) before the adoptee's birth, an individual who
attempted to marry the adoptee's biological mother by a marriage solemnized in
apparent compliance with law, although the attempted marriage is or could be
declared invalid and if the attempted marriage:
(a) could be declared invalid only by a court,
the adoptee was born during the attempted marriage or within three hundred days
after its termination by death, annulment, declaration of invalidity or
divorce; or
(b) is invalid without a court order, the adoptee
was born within three hundred days after the termination of cohabitation;
V. "record" means any petition,
affidavit, consent or relinquishment form, transcript or notes of testimony,
deposition, power of attorney, report, decree, order, judgment, correspondence,
document, photograph, invoice, receipt, certificate or other printed, written,
videotaped or tape-recorded material pertaining to an adoption proceeding;
W. "relinquishment" means the document
by which a parent relinquishes parental rights to the department or an agency
to enable placement of the parent's child for adoption;
X. "resident" means a person who,
prior to filing an adoption petition, has lived in the state for at least six
months immediately preceding filing of the petition for adoption or a person
who has become domiciled in the state by establishing legal residence with the
intention of maintaining the residency indefinitely; and
Y. "stepparent adoption" means an
adoption of the adoptee by the adoptee's stepparent when the adoptee has lived
with the stepparent for at least one year following the marriage of the
stepparent to the custodial parent."
Section 3. Section 32A-5-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 133, as amended) is amended to read:
"32A-5-6. AUTHORITY OF THE DEPARTMENT.--
A. The department may adopt and promulgate
necessary rules and forms for the administration of the Adoption Act, including
rules for the assessment of fees. The
rules shall not conflict with the provisions of the Adoption Act.
B. The department has the authority to provide
or request additional information from an investigator or an attorney
representing any person involved in any action filed pursuant to the provisions
of the Adoption Act.
C. The department has the authority to intervene
in any action filed pursuant to the provisions of the Adoption Act. The intervention shall be effected when legal
counsel for the department files a motion for an entry of appearance and an
appropriate response.
D. The department shall be served by mail by the
attorney for the petitioner with copies of all pleadings filed in any action
pursuant to the provisions of the Adoption Act, except for copies of the
petition for adoption, the request for placement and the decree of adoption,
which shall be served as provided in Section 32A-5-7 NMSA 1978.
E. The department is authorized to act as an
accrediting entity on behalf of the state.
F. The department may assess fees for the cost
of accrediting an agency or approving a person in matters related to convention
adoptions. The department shall
establish the amount of the fees by rule and the fees shall be subject to
approval by the United States secretary of state. The amount of the fees shall not exceed the
cost of similar services provided by the department."
Section 4. Section 32A-5-26 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 153, as amended) is amended to read:
"32A-5-26. PETITION--CONTENT.--A petition for adoption
shall be filed and verified by the petitioner and shall allege:
A. the full name, age and place and duration of
residence of the petitioner and, if married, the place and date of marriage;
the date and place of any prior marriage, separation or divorce; and the name
of any present or prior spouse;
B. the date and place of birth of the adoptee,
if known;
C. the places where the adoptee has lived within
the past three years and the names and addresses of the persons with whom the
adoptee has lived, unless the adoptee is in the custody of an agency or the
department, in which case the petitioner shall state the name and address of
the agency or the department's county office from which the child was placed;
D. the birth name of the adoptee, any other
names by which the adoptee has been known and the adoptee's proposed new name;
provided that in the case of an agency adoption, if the petitioner and the
biological parents have not agreed to the release of the adoptee's identity to
the other person, the birth name and any other names by which the adoptee has
been known shall be filed with the court as separate documents at the time the
petition is filed;
E. where the adoptee is residing at the time of
the filing of the petition and, if the adoptee is not living with the
petitioner, when the adoptee will commence living with the petitioner;
F. that the petitioner desires to establish a
parent and child relationship with the adoptee and that the petitioner is a fit
and proper person able to care and provide for the adoptee's welfare;
G. the existence of any court orders, including
placement orders, that are known to the petitioner and that regulate custody,
visitation or access to the adoptee, copies of which shall accompany and be
attached to the petition as exhibits;
H. the relationship, if any, of the petitioner
to the adoptee;
I. the name and address of the placing agency,
if any;
J. the names and addresses of all persons from
whom consents or relinquishments are required, attaching copies of those
obtained and alleging the facts that excuse or imply the consents or
relinquishments of the others; provided that if the petitioner has not agreed
to the release of his identity to the parent or if the parent has not agreed to
the release of his identity to the petitioner, the names and addresses of all
persons from whom consents or relinquishments are required shall be filed with
the court as separate documents at the time the petition for adoption is filed;
K. whether the adoption will be an open
adoption, pursuant to the provisions of Section 32A-5-35 NMSA 1978;
L. when consent of the child's father is alleged
to be unnecessary, the results of a search of the putative father registry;
M. whether the adoptee is an Indian child and,
if so, the petition shall allege:
(1) the tribal affiliation of the adoptee's
parents;
(2) what specific actions have been taken and by
whom to notify the parents' tribe and the results of the contact, including the
names, addresses, titles and telephone numbers of the persons contacted. Copies of any correspondence with the Indian
tribe shall be attached as exhibits to the petition; and
(3) what specific efforts were made to comply
with the placement preferences set forth in the federal Indian Child Welfare
Act of 1978 or the placement preferences of the appropriate Indian tribe;
N. whether the adoption is subject to the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children and, if so, a copy of the
interstate compact form indicating approval shall be attached as an exhibit to
the petition;
O. whether the adoptee is foreign-born and, if
so, copies of the child's passport and United States visa and of all documents
demonstrating that the adoptee is legally free for adoption, including a
certificate from the United States secretary of state that certifies that the
adoption is a convention adoption;
P. whether the adoption is a convention adoption
and, if so, the petition shall allege:
(1) that the country in which the child has been
residing is a party to the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and
Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption;
(2) that the agency or person who is providing
the adoption service has been approved as an accrediting entity; and
(3) that the certificate issued by the United
States secretary of state that certifies the adoption as a convention adoption
has been filed with the court; and
Q. the name, address and telephone number of the
agency or individual who has agreed to conduct the post-placement report in
accordance with Section 32A-5-31 NMSA 1978, if different than the agency or
individual who prepared the pre-placement study in accordance with Section
32A-5-13 NMSA 1978."
Section 5. Section 32A-5-36 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 163, as amended) is amended to read:
"32A-5-36. ADJUDICATION--DISPOSITION--DECREE OF
ADOPTION.--
A. The court shall conduct hearings on the
petition for adoption so as to determine the rights of the parties in a manner
that protects confidentiality. The
petitioner and the adoptee shall attend the hearing unless the court for good
cause waives a party's appearance. Good
cause may include burdensome travel requirements.
B. The petitioner shall file all documents
required pursuant to the Adoption Act and serve the department with copies of
the documents simultaneously with the request for hearing on the petition for
adoption.
C. If any person who claims to be the biological
father of the adoptee has appeared before the court and filed a written
petition or response seeking custody and assuming financial responsibility of
the adoptee, the court shall hear evidence as to the merits of the petition. If the court determines by a preponderance of
the evidence that the person is not the biological father of the adoptee or
that the child was conceived through an act of rape or incest, the petition
shall be dismissed and the person shall no longer be a party to the adoption. If the court determines that the person is
the biological father of the adoptee, the court shall further determine whether
the person qualifies as a presumed or acknowledged father whose consent is
necessary for adoption, pursuant to Section 32A-5-17 NMSA 1978. If the court determines that the person is
the biological father, but does not qualify as a presumed or acknowledged
father, the court shall adjudicate the person's rights pursuant to the
provisions of the Adoption Act.
D. If the mother or father of the adoptee has
appeared before the court and filed a written petition that alleges the
invalidity of the mother's or father's own consent or relinquishment for
adoption previously filed in the adoption proceeding, the court shall hear
evidence as to the merits of the petition.
If the court determines that the allegations have not been proved by a
preponderance of the evidence, the petition shall be dismissed. If the court determines that the allegations
of the petition are true, the consent or relinquishment for adoption shall be
held invalid, and the court shall determine, in the best interests of the
adoptee, the person who shall have custody of the child.
E. The petitioner shall present and prove each
allegation set forth in the petition for adoption by clear and convincing
evidence.
F. The court shall grant a decree of adoption if
it finds that the petitioner has proved by clear and convincing evidence that:
(1) the court has jurisdiction to enter a decree
of adoption affecting the adoptee;
(2) the adoptee has been placed with the
petitioner for a period of ninety days if the adoptee is under the age of one
year at the time of placement or for a period of one hundred eighty days if the
adoptee is one year of age or older at the time of placement, unless, for good
cause shown, the requirement is waived by the court;
(3) all necessary consents, relinquishments,
terminations or waivers have been obtained;
(4) the post-placement report required by Section
32A-5-31 NMSA 1978 has been filed with the court;
(5) service of the petition for adoption has been
made or dispensed with as to all persons entitled to notice pursuant to
provisions of Section 32A-5-27 NMSA 1978;
(6) at least ninety days have passed since the
filing of the petition for adoption, except the court may shorten or waive this
period of time in cases in which the child is being adopted by a stepparent, a
relative or a person named in the child's deceased parent's will pursuant to
provisions of Section 32A-5-12 NMSA 1978;
(7) the petitioner is a suitable adoptive parent
and the best interests of the adoptee are served by the adoption;
(8) if visitation between the biological family
and the adoptee is contemplated, that the visitation is in the child's best
interests;
(9) if the adoptee is foreign-born, the child is
legally free for adoption and a certificate issued by the United States
secretary of state that certifies the adoption as a convention adoption has
been filed with the court;
(10) the results of the criminal records check
required pursuant to provisions of the Adoption Act have been received and
considered;
(11) if the adoptee is an Indian child, the
requirements set forth in the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 have
been met;
(12) when the child is an Indian child, the
placement preferences set forth in the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978
or the placement preferences of the appropriate Indian tribes have been
followed or, if not followed, good cause for noncompliance has been clearly
stated and supported, as required by the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of
1978 and provision has been made to ensure that the Indian child's cultural
ties to the Indian child's tribe are protected and fostered; and
(13) if the adoption involves the interstate
placement of the adoptee, the requirements of the Interstate Compact on the
Placement of Children have been met.
G. In addition to the findings required by
Subsection F of this section, the court in any decree of adoption shall make
findings with respect to each allegation of the petition.
H. If the court determines that any of the
requirements for a decree of adoption pursuant to provisions of Subsections E
and F of this section have not been met or that the adoption is not in the best
interests of the adoptee, the court shall deny the petition and determine, in the
best interests of the adoptee, the person who shall have custody of the child.
I. The decree of adoption shall include the new
name of the adoptee and shall not include any other name by which the adoptee
has been known or the names of the former parents. The decree of adoption shall order that from
the date of the decree, the adoptee shall be the child of the petitioner and
accorded the status set forth in Section 32A‑5-37 NMSA 1978.
J. A decree of adoption shall be entered within
six months of the filing of the petition if the adoptee is under the age of one
year at the time of placement or twelve months if the adoptee is one year of
age or older at the time of placement, except that the time may be extended by
the court upon request of any of the parties or upon the court's own motion for
good cause shown.
K. A decree of adoption may not be attacked upon
the expiration of one year from the entry of the decree; provided, however,
that in any adoption involving an Indian child, the Indian child's parent or
Indian custodian may petition the court pursuant to the provisions of the
federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 to invalidate the adoption.
L. In any adoption involving an Indian child,
the clerk of the court shall provide the secretary of the interior with a copy
of any decree of adoption or adoptive placement order and other information as
required by the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978."
Section 6. Section 32A-5-39 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 77, Section 166) is amended to read:
"32A-5-39. RECOGNITION OF FOREIGN DECREES.--
A. Every judgment terminating the parent-child
relationship or establishing the relationship of parent and child by adoption
issued pursuant to due process of law by the tribunals of any other
jurisdiction within or without the United States shall be recognized in this
state, so that the rights and obligations of the parties as to matters within
the jurisdiction of this state shall be determined as though the judgment were
issued by the courts of this state.
B. A convention adoption in a foreign country
that is certified by the United States secretary of state shall be recognized
as a final adoption in this state."
Section 7. A new section of the Adoption Act is enacted
to read:
"APPLICATION OF THE
FEDERAL INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION ACT.--The protections and requirements set forth in
the federal Intercountry Adoption Act apply to all proceedings involving a
convention adoption."
Section 8. A new section of the Adoption Act is enacted
to read:
"CRIMINAL HISTORY RECORDS
CHECK--BACKGROUND CHECKS.--
A. A nationwide criminal history records check
shall be conducted on every person who files a petition to adopt a child. A person who files a petition to adopt a
child shall provide the department with a set of fingerprints. The department is authorized to use the set
of fingerprints to conduct a background check of the petitioner by submitting
the fingerprints to the department of public safety and the federal bureau of
investigation.
B. Criminal history records obtained by the
department pursuant to the provisions of this section are confidential. Criminal history records obtained pursuant to
the provisions of this section shall not be used for any purpose other than
conducting background checks. Criminal
history records obtained pursuant to the provisions of this section and the
information contained in those records shall not be released or disclosed to
any other person or agency, except pursuant to a court order or with the
written consent of the person who is the subject of the records.
C. A person who releases or discloses criminal
history records or information contained in those records in violation of the
provisions of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be sentenced
pursuant to the provisions of Section 31-19-1 NMSA 1978."
Section 9. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date of the
provisions of this act is July 1, 2003.