M.S.A. § 259.57
Minnesota Statutes Annotated Currentness
Public Welfare and Related Activities (Ch. 245-267)
Chapter 259. Change of Name, Adoption
Adoption
259.57.
Hearing, decree
Subdivision
1. Findings; orders. Upon the hearing,
(a)
if the court finds that it is
in the best interests of the person to be adopted that the petition be
granted, a decree of adoption shall be made and recorded in the office
of the court administrator, ordering that henceforth the person to be
adopted shall be the child of the petitioner.
In the decree the court may change the name of the adopted person if
desired. After the decree is granted for an adopted person who is:
(1) under the guardianship of the
commissioner or a licensed child-placing agency
according to section 260C.201, subdivision 11, or 260C.317;
(2)
placed by the commissioner, commissioner's
agent, or licensed child-placing agency after a consent to adopt
according to section 259.24 or under an agreement conferring authority
to place for adoption according to section 259.25; or
(3) adopted after a direct adoptive
placement ordered by the district court under section 259.47,
the court administrator shall immediately mail a copy of the recorded decree to the commissioner of human services;
(b)
if the court is not satisfied
that the proposed adoption is in the best interests of the person to be
adopted, the court shall deny the petition, and in the case of a child
shall order the child returned to the custody of the
person
or agency legally vested with
permanent custody or certify the case for appropriate action and
disposition to the court having jurisdiction to determine the custody
and guardianship of the child.
Subd.
2. Protection of child's best interests.
(a) The policy of the state of Minnesota is to ensure that the best
interests of children are met by requiring an individualized
determination of the needs of the child and how the adoptive placement
will serve the needs of the child.
(b)
Among the factors the court shall
consider in determining the needs of the child are those specified
under section 260C.193, subdivision 3, paragraph (b). Consistent with
section 245C.33 and Public Law 109-248,
[FN1] a complete background study is required
before the approval of an adoptive placement in a home.
(c) In reviewing adoptive placement
and in determining appropriate adoption, the court shall consider placement, consistent with the child's best interests
and
in the following order, with
(1) a relative or relatives of the child, or (2) an important friend
with whom the child has resided or had significant
contact. Placement of a child cannot be delayed or denied
based on race, color, or national origin of the adoptive parent or the
child.
Whenever possible, siblings should be placed together unless it is
determined not to be in the best interests of a sibling.
(d)
If the child's birth parent or
parents explicitly request that relatives and important friends not be
considered, the court shall honor that request consistent with the best
interests of the child.
If
the child's birth parent or parents express a preference for placing
the child in an adoptive home of the same or a similar religious
background to that of the birth parent
or parents, the court shall place the child with a family that also
meets the birth parent's religious preference. Only if no family is
available as described in paragraph (a) or (b) may the court give
preference to a family described in paragraph (c) that
meets the parent's religious preference.
(e)
This subdivision does not affect the Indian Child Welfare Act, United
States Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923, and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act, sections 260.751 to 260.835.
Subd.
3. Compliance with Indian Child Welfare Act.
The provisions of this chapter must be construed consistently with the Indian Child Welfare
Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1963.
CREDIT(S)
Amended
by Laws 1997, c. 86, § 10, eff. May 7,
1997; Laws 1999, c. 139, art. 4, § 2; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 1, § 4,
eff. July 1, 2007; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 3, § 28, eff. July 1, 2007;
Laws
2008, c. 361, art. 6, § 10, eff. Aug. 1,
2008.
[FN1] 42 U.S.C.A. § 16901 et seq.
HISTORICAL
AND STATUTORY NOTES
2007 Main Volume
Derivation:
Laws 1994, c. 631, § 31.
St.1993 Supp., § 259.28.
Laws 1993, c. 291, §§ 12, 13.
Laws 1992, c. 557, § 5.
Laws 1986, 1st Sp., c. 3, art. 1, § 82.
Laws 1984, c. 654, art. 5, § 58.
Laws 1983, c. 278, § 10.
Laws 1959, c. 685, § 49.
Laws 1951, C. 508, § 8.
Laws
1993, c. 291, §§ 12 and 13, in subd. 2 inserted ", not sole," preceding
"consideration of a child's race or ethnic heritage"; and added subd. 3
requiring that the chapter
comply with the Indian Child Welfare Act.
Laws 1994, c. 631, § 31(a), in par. (a), instructed the revisor of statutes to
substitute
"birth parent" for "natural
parent" and "genetic parent", and in par. (c), instructed the revisor
of statutes to renumber chapter 259 in order to eliminate seven-digit
section numbers and make room for future sections. The revisor was also
instructed to make appropriate cross-reference
changes to reflect the new section numbers in chapter 259.
The 1997 amendment rewrote subd. 2, which previously read:
"The
policy of the state of Minnesota is to ensure that the best interests
of children are met by requiring due, not sole, consideration of the
child's race or ethnic heritage
in adoption placements. For purposes of intercountry adoptions, due
consideration is deemed to have occurred if the appropriate authority in
the child's country of birth has approved the placement of the child.
"In
reviewing adoptive placement, the court shall consider preference, and
in determining appropriate adoption, the court shall give preference, in
the absence of good cause
to the contrary, to (a) a relative or relatives of the child, or, if
that would be detrimental to the child or a relative is not available,
to (b) a family with the same racial or ethnic heritage as the child, or
if that is not feasible, to (c) a family of
different racial or ethnic heritage
from the child that is knowledgeable and appreciative of the child's racial or ethnic heritage.
"If
the child's birth parent or parents explicitly request that the
preference described in clause (a) or in clauses (a) and (b) not be
followed, the court shall honor that
request consistent with the best interests of the child.
"If
the child's birth parent or parents express a preference for placing
the child in an adoptive home of the same or a similar religious
background to that of the birth
parent or parents, in following the preferences in clause (a) or (b),
the court shall place the child with a family that also meets the birth
parent's religious preference. Only if no family is available as
described in clause (a) or (b) may the court give
preference to a family described in clause (c) that meets the parent's
religious preference."
Laws
1999, c. 139, art. 4, § 2, par. (b), in part directed the revisor of
statutes to correct cross references in Minnesota Statutes to sections
that were repealed and recodified
by Laws 1999, c. 139.
2010
Electronic
Update
2007 Legislation
Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 1, § 4, in subd. 1, rewrote par. (a), which formerly read:
"(a)
if the court finds that it is in the best interests of the child that
the petition be granted, a decree of adoption shall be made and recorded
in the office of the court
administrator, ordering that henceforth the child shall be the child of
the petitioner. In the decree the court may change the name of the
child if desired. After the decree is granted the court administrator
shall immediately mail a copy of the recorded decree
to the commissioner of human services;"
Laws
2007, c. 147, art. 3, § 28, in subd. 2, par. (b), added the second
sentence, relating to completion of a background study before approval
of placement.
2008 Legislation
Laws
2008, c. 361, art. 6, § 10, in subd.
1, substituted references to the person to be adopted for references to
the child throughout the subdivision, and in par. (b), inserted "in the
case of a child" following "petition, and".
M. S. A. § 259.57, MN ST § 259.57
Current with laws of the 2010 Regular
and First Special
Sessions effective through June 30,
2010