If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
In re BABY BOY DOE, Minor.
PETER KRUITHOFF, FOR PUBLICATION
November 10, 2022
Petitioner-Appellant,
v No. 353796
Kalamazoo Circuit Court
Family Division
CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF WEST MICHIGAN, LC No. 2018-006540-NB
Respondent-Appellee,
and
ADOPTIVE PARENT NUMBER 1 and
ADOPTIVE PARENT NUMBER 2,
Appellees.
ON REMAND
Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and CAVANAGH and BOONSTRA, JJ.
BOONSTRA, J. (dissenting).
I dissent. Today, our system of justice should be hanging its head in shame. It has woefully
failed in the most fundamental of ways.
Petitioner—the presumed father of Baby Boy Doe—lost his parental rights to his newborn
child essentially because he did not see a legal notice that ran for one day in a newspaper published
in a city in which he did not live. Petitioner was never adjudicated to be an unfit parent; he was
never even given notice of the proceedings or an opportunity to correct any conditions that may
have been a basis for an adjudication of his parental rights. Nor was the termination of his parental
rights determined to be in Baby Boy Doe’s best interests. Nonetheless, the majority simply tells
petitioner that his “window of opportunity has long since closed.” From this record, it appears that
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petitioner’s only hope would have been to have daily examined every newspaper in Michigan and
to have followed up on every notice of a surrendered newborn; either that or, as Justice WELCH
has suggested, to have filed a “notice of intent to claim paternity” of Baby Boy Doe before Baby
Boy Doe was born, despite the fact that Baby Boy Doe was born in wedlock and his paternity was
therefore otherwise presumed under the law, see In re KH, 469 Mich 621, 630; 677 NW2d 800
(2004); see also MCR 3.903(7)(a), and despite the fact that petitioner did, in fact, seek custody of
Baby Boy Doe even before he was born. Given the extraordinary nature of either of those
alternatives, petitioner would properly be forgiven if he were to perceive and take exception to the
“well, if only you had done more” sentiment expressed in the majority opinion issued in this case.
But what of the responsibility of the child placing agency under the Safe Delivery of Newborns
Law (SDNL), MCL 712.1 et seq., or more importantly, what of the responsibility of the state to
provide constitutionally sound safeguards before commandeering parental rights (or, to use the
majority’s hyperbolic lexicon, before ripping the child from his father’s arms)—without process,
due or otherwise?1
Little over eight years ago, our Supreme Court reaffirmed, at some length, the “vital interest
in preventing the irretrievable destruction of their family life” that parents possess. See In re
1
I acknowledge that, theoretically, petitioner could have filed a petition for custody of Baby Boy
Doe under the SDNL—even without seeing the legal notice—in Ottawa circuit court (petitioner
being located in Ottawa County). See MCL 712.10(1)(c). This would have obligated the trial
court to locate and contact the court that, unbeknownst to petitioner, issued the order placing Baby
Boy Doe with adoptive parents. MCL 712.10(2). However, I do not fault petitioner for failing to
take this anticipatory action. First, petitioner did in fact take action to seek custody of Baby Boy
Doe in Ottawa circuit court; he simply did so as part of his divorce action (which this Court held
to be proper, only to be reversed in that respect by our Supreme Court). Indeed, petitioner
successfully obtained an Ottawa circuit court order—which noted that it was suspected that Baby
Boy Doe had been surrendered under the SDNL—granting petitioner temporary custody of Baby
Boy Doe even before petitioner became aware of the separate proceeding in which his parental
rights were terminated. Petitioner reasonably could have expected that the Ottawa circuit court
was therefore obligated to “locate and contact the court [placing the newborn].” MCL 712.10(2).
Second, the record shows that petitioner was searching for his soon-to-be ex-wife and child, but
did not locate Baby Boy Doe’s mother until long after the 28-day deadline provided in
MCL 712.10(1) had passed. In other words, petitioner did not even know that (or when) Baby
Boy Doe had been born or surrendered until long after the relevant time period had expired.
According to our Supreme Court, a petition for custody under the SDNL would have been invalid
if it was filed before Baby Boy Doe’s birth. See In re Doe, ___ Mich ___; ___; 975 NW2d 486,
488-490 (2022). Petitioner therefore would have had to thread a narrow (and unknowable) needle
to have filed a valid petition for custody under the SDNL under these circumstances, without notice
of either the date or location of Baby Boy Doe’s birth. I would not lay the blame on petitioner for
the fact that, with the benefit of full information, hindsight, and time to reflect, we can think of
something else petitioner could have done to preserve his parental rights. As I will elaborate on,
those rights should have been better-protected by the legal system, particularly given the
fundamental nature of the parental rights at stake, and that system’s failures far outstrip any failures
arising out of petitioner’s inability to anticipate and prepare for every contingency.
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Sanders, 495 Mich 394, 415; 852 NW2d 524 (2014), quoting Santosky v Kramer, 455 US 745,
753; 102 S Ct 1388; 71 L Ed 2d 599 (1982). In Sanders, the Court repeatedly emphasized the
“importance of the private interest at stake” when the state seeks to terminate a parent’s rights to
his child, noting that it is a “core liberty interest” that “cannot be overstated,” a right “essential to
the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men” and “so deeply rooted that the fundamental liberty
interest of natural parents in the care, custody, and management of their child does not evaporate
simply because they have not been model parents.” Id. at 409, 410, 415 (quotation marks and
citations omitted). The Court also noted the presumption that fit parents act in the best interests
of their children, and that, simply put, “all parents are constitutionally entitled to a hearing on their
fitness before their children are removed from their custody.” Id. at 412 (quotation marks and
citation omitted). Yet in this case, petitioner (who had acted to obtain a court order—shortly before
the child’s mother surrendered him—enjoining any actions toward the adoption of Baby Boy Doe)
received no such hearing, because, alas, he missed a small printed notice published in the faraway
Grand Rapids Press on August 16, 2018, and did not act to file a new custody action under the
SDNL—notwithstanding his earlier request for custody in his complaint for divorce.
The issue in Sanders was, essentially, whether one parent could act unilaterally in a way
that allowed the state to interfere with, and potentially terminate, the other parent’s parental rights
without that parent ever having been judged unfit. Although raised in the context of a child
protective proceeding under the juvenile code, see MCL 712A.1 et seq., the Sanders Court held
that one parent’s admissions during the adjudication phase could not bind the other, because it
allowed the interference with and even termination of a parent’s rights without a prior
determination of unfitness. Sanders, 495 Mich at 420-422. The Sanders Court’s conclusion was
clear: “due process requires a specific adjudication of a parent’s unfitness before the state can
infringe the constitutionally protected parent-child relationship.” Id. at 422 (emphasis added).
Yet, no such adjudication was made in this case because petitioner missed a legal notice in a distant
newspaper. Instead, Baby Boy Doe’s mother acted unilaterally to terminate not only her own
parental rights, but to surreptitiously engineer the termination of petitioner’s fundamental parental
rights as well, aided by respondent’s de minimis efforts at providing notice by publication.
In my judgment, the minimal efforts made to provide notice in this case were unreasonable
under the SDNL; alternatively, the SDNL itself is unconstitutional as applied to a nonsurrendering
parent. But this Court, and our Supreme Court, have danced around the constitutional questions
in this case. See generally In re Doe, ___ Mich App ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2021) (Docket No,
353796) (Doe I), In re Doe, ___ Mich ___; ___; 975 NW2d 486, 488-490 (2022) (Doe II). In
doing so, the legal system has refused to unravel the mess that it created, and in the process it has
divested petitioner of his fundamental right to parent his own child—without so much as the most
minimal due process.
We did not address the constitutional issues in Doe I because they were not raised on appeal
at that time and, in any event, we had already determined that petitioner’s parental rights had been
improperly terminated. However, we noted that “petitioner has argued at various points in the
proceedings that the efforts undertaken by respondent to identify and locate him, in order to
provide him with notice of Baby Boy Doe’s surrender, were not reasonable, and that his motion to
unseal the records in this case was part of his effort to challenge the reasonableness of those
efforts.” Doe I, ___ Mich at ___, slip op at 10. Although we did not go so far as to hold that
respondent had not satisfied the notice requirements of the SDNL, we did note our disagreement
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with the Kalamazoo Circuit Court’s apparent interpretation of MCL 712.72 as providing that
publication of a notice, for one day, which merely generically states the newborn’s date of delivery
and hospital location, in a newspaper published in a county in which neither parent resides,
constitutes “reasonable efforts to identify, locate, and provide notice of the surrender of the
newborn to the nonsurrendering parent.” MCL 712.7(f). Id., quoting MCL 712.7(f). We also
noted that, although petitioner’s counsel had attempted—in the trial court—to raise the issue of
the constitutionality of the SDNL, the trial court made clear that it would not address that argument,
informing counsel that he was “barking up the wrong tree for an unconstitutional statute.”
Consequently, the trial court never ruled on the constitutionality of the statute in the first instance.
I continue to believe that our interpretation of MCL 712.7 was correct. Our Supreme Court
in Doe II did not address that aspect of our reasoning. In a footnote to the majority opinion in Doe
II, however, the Supreme Court noted that it had asked the parties to brief the issue “whether the
application of the SDNL violates the due process rights of an undisclosed father.” Doe II, ___
Mich at ___ n 6; 975 NW2d 486, 489 n 6 (citation omitted). However, the Court ultimately did
not address the issue, stating:
We generally do not reach issues that were not raised and briefed in the lower
courts. See Walters v Nadell, 481 Mich 377, 387; 751 NW2d 431 (2008)
(“Although this Court has inherent power to review an issue not raised in the trial
court to prevent a miscarriage of justice, generally a ‘failure to timely raise an issue
waives review of that issue on appeal.’ ”) (citations omitted); Booth Newspapers,
Inc v Univ of Mich Bd of Regents, 444 Mich 211, 234 n 23; 507 NW2d 422 (1993)
(“This Court has repeatedly declined to consider arguments not presented at a lower
level, including those relating to constitutional claims. We have only deviated from
that rule in the face of exceptional circumstances.”) (citations omitted). This course
of action is particularly suited to this issue because it raises a constitutional question
of first impression not only for this state, but also for other states across the country.
Justice ZAHRA considers it “debatable” whether this issue was preserved in the trial
court. But aside from a single line by petitioner’s counsel at a hearing, petitioner
2
MCL 712.7 provides that a child placing agency shall:
(f) Within 28 days, make reasonable efforts to identify, locate, and provide notice
of the surrender of the newborn to the nonsurrendering parent. The child placing
agency shall file a written report with the court that issued the order placing the
child. The report shall state the efforts the child placing agency made in attempting
to identify and locate the nonsurrendering parent and the results of those efforts. If
the identity and address of the nonsurrendering parent are unknown, the child
placing agency shall provide notice of the surrender of the newborn by publication
in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the newborn was
surrendered.
Although the trial court arguably made a determination in this regard as an implicit part of its
original ruling, the issue would have been most amenable to appellate review if the trial court had
made its findings explicit.
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never raised or addressed the constitutionality of the statute throughout this
litigation, at least not until prompted by this Court. The constitutional issue,
therefore, has not been properly preserved or even presented to the Court. [Id.]
Chief Justice MCCORMACK, while agreeing with the result reached by the majority, also
expressed via a separate opinion her concerns regarding the constitutionality of the notice
requirements of the SDNL. See Doe II, ___ Mich at ___; 975 NW2d at 490 (MCCORMACK, C.J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“I write separately to express my deep reservations about
whether the statute’s notice-by-publication provision sufficiently protects the due-process rights
of nonsurrendering parents.”). And Justice ZAHRA, in a separate opinion joined by Chief Justice
MCCORMACK, noted that the SDNL provides “a dubious method of providing notice before
terminating a legal parent’s parental rights” and that “the SDNL is a highly flawed law because of
significant constitutional concerns that this Court should not sweep under the rug,” and concluded
that “the SDNL is unconstitutional as applied to legal parents.” Doe II, ___ Mich at ___; 975
NW2d at 492-493 (ZAHRA, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
Over and over again, the courts, while recognizing the serious constitutional issues in this
case, have declined to squarely address them; the appellate courts have hidden behind the issue-
preservation doctrine, noting that the prior court had not had an opportunity to address these issues,
and therefore it would be improper for us to do so. Issue preservation requirements are important;
litigants have a duty to give the trial court an opportunity to correct its alleged error. Smith v
Musgrove, 372 Mich 329, 339; 125 NW2d 869 (1964). But these requirements are not fundamental
constitutional principles, nor are they rigidly inflexible. Courts have stated, for example, that a
party should not be penalized by a lower court’s failure to address or decide an issue that was
properly before it. See Peterman v Dep’t of Natural Resources, 446 Mich 177, 183; 521 NW2d
499 (1994); see also Loutts v Loutts, 298 Mich App 21, 23-24; 826 NW2d 152 (2012). More
generally, courts have recognized that issue preservation requirements may give way to avoiding
the entry of an unconscionable decree, Kratze v Indep Order of Oddfellows, Garden City Lodge
No. 11, 442 Mich 136, 142; 500 NW2d 115 (1993), or to prevent manifest injustice. Smith v
Foerster-Bolser Constr, Inc, 269 Mich App 424, 427; 711 NW2d 421 (2006); see also Duffy v
Dep't of Natural Resources, 490 Mich 198, 209 n 3; 805 NW2d 399 (2011). And in this case,
petitioner did attempt to raise the issue in the trial court, but was promptly shut down.
The time has come to address the constitutional issues that the trial court previously
declined to address (and that this Court and our Supreme Court have consequently ducked).
Petitioner’s arguments concerning the adoption file and the Kalamazoo Circuit Court’s rulings
depended upon whether his parental rights were properly terminated under the law. And that
question in turn hinges on the constitutionality of the SDNL as applied to him. I would either
determine the constitutional issue now in this Court or, particularly in light of our Supreme Court’s
stated concern with addressing issues that were not argued and decided in the trial court (and
despite the lengthening of the overall proceedings), remand the matter to the trial court with
instructions to consider two questions, after allowing the parties an opportunity to brief and argue
them. First, whether respondent’s efforts to provide notice to petitioner indeed satisfied the
requirements of MCL 712.7(f). Second, if so, whether petitioner’s right to the due process of law
under the Michigan and United States Constitutions was violated by the application of the SDNL
to him as a nonsurrendering legal parent. To do other than to allow a full, on-the-merits resolution
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of these issues serves only to uphold—indeed, to cement into law—the constitutional violation
that I believe has occurred.
I note also that the majority contends that there would be no real point in reinstating
petitioner’s parental rights and permitting him to petition for custody, because it posits that there
is no way that the best interests of Baby Boy Doe would be served by returning him to the custody
of his father. The majority makes no mention of the general presumption that a fit parent acts in
the best interests of his child, or of our Supreme Court’s clear statement that the state must
adjudicate a parent’s unfitness before terminating his parental rights. Sanders, 495 Mich at 420-
422. There is a reason that the best-interest phase of a child protective proceeding follows the
adjudicative phase and a finding that statutory grounds for termination have been proven; a court
is not permitted to skip to the end and wave away the procedural protections of a fundamental right
because the outcome appears to have become a fait accompli. The Sanders court rejected a similar
argument from the Department of Health and Human Services. See id. at 420 (“The possibility of
a fix at the back end is not sufficient to justify a lack of process on the front end. Rather, the state
must adjudicate a parent’s fitness before interfering with his or her parental rights.”). More
generally, courts are not in the habit of declining to hold a trial because it appears obvious that a
defendant is guilty, or skipping the adjudication and dispositional phases because a parent appears
so clearly unfit that we need not waste the time and energy. When dealing with fundamental rights
and due process concerns, it is more than a bit cavalier for a reviewing court to toss off a blithe
“well, you’d never be able to win at the hearing anyway.” And it must be especially galling for a
litigant to hear this from a legal system that created the complex tangle of laws, deadlines, and
precedents that resulted in him losing his child because he missed a needle-in-a-haystack notice in
an isolated newspaper to which he had no reason to subscribe. By contrast, the legal system has
often bent over backwards to allow parents the chance to retain their parental rights, even in the
face of significant evidence of parental unfitness, in child protective proceedings following a
petition to terminate parental rights under MCL 712A. See, e.g., In re HRC, 286 Mich App 444,
449; 781 NW2d 105 (2009) (vacating the trial court’s best-interest determination and remanding
for further proceedings regarding whether termination of the respondents’ parental rights was
warranted, despite affirming the trial court’s finding that the children had been sexually abused);
In re Frey, 297 Mich App 242, 245-248; 842 NW2d 569 (2012) (noting that the respondents had
been provided numerous services for 22 months prior to termination, and that the inciting incident
that led to these proceedings involved an automobile accident with the minor child in the car; the
respondent-father had been driving over 100 miles per hour while possessing a blood alcohol level
of 0.24 grams per 100 milliliters, the respondent-mother had taken narcotics immediately before
the accident and was aware that the respondent-father was inebriated before entering the car with
the child, and the accident had resulted in the respondent-father’s fifth drunk driving conviction in
the past two years). In fact, it is an essential feature of child protective proceedings that, absent
certain extreme aggravating factors, the state is obligated to make reasonable efforts to reunify a
child with his parents before even seeking termination of those rights; these efforts include the
creation of a comprehensive service plan that outlines steps that the state, as well as the parents,
will take to “rectify the issues that led to court involvement and achieve reunification.” In re
Hicks/Brown, 500 Mich 79, 86; 893 NW2d 637 (2017). See also MCL 712A.18f(3)(b) and (c);
MCL 17A.19a(2). Yet in this case, despite the fact that petitioner’s fitness as a parent was never
even challenged, the termination of his parental rights proceeded with merciless swiftness and with
a marked lack of concern for his right to parent his own child. Simply shrugging our shoulders
and saying “well that’s a different statute” is, in my view, entirely inadequate. Fundamental rights
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are fundamental; they cannot be stripped away merely by the passage of a statute that effectively
deems them not to be so fundamental after all.
Further, the majority is, in my view, incorrect about the actions the trial court could take
if, in the course of adjudicating a custody petition under the SDNL, it were to determine that it
would be in Baby Boy Doe’s best interests to remain with his adoptive parents. To the extent that
MCL 712.14 allows termination of parental rights without a prior adjudication of parental
unfitness, it is clearly constitutionally infirm. See Sanders, 495 Mich at 422. However, in my
view, MCL 712.15 states quite clearly what the trial court may do following a best-interest hearing
under the SDNL:
Based on the court’s finding under [MCL 712.14], the court may issue an order that
does 1 of the following:
(a) Grants legal or physical custody, or both, of the newborn to the parent and either
retains or relinquishes jurisdiction.
(b) Determines that the best interests of the newborn are not served by granting
custody to the petitioner parent and orders the child placing agency to petition the
court for jurisdiction under [MCL 712A.2].
(c) Dismisses the petition.
MCL 712.15(b) thus explicitly pairs a determination that the best interests of the child are not
served by granting custody to a petitioning parent with an order that the child placing agency begin
a child protective proceeding via petition. In other words, the child placing agency would file a
petition alleging parental unfitness, and the case would proceed through the usual adjudicative,
dispositional, and if necessary, best-interest phases.3 Reading the statute as the majority impliedly
does merely loops us back to the same constitutional problem we’ve had all along: the termination
of parental rights without a prior determination of unfitness.
The majority also makes much of the fact that Baby Boy Doe has been with his adoptive
family for his entire life, and indeed has never met his father. That, of course, is the very injury
that petitioner alleges was done to his family by the child placing agency and a complicit court
system; yet, it is now deployed against him as a reason why he must simply walk away from his
child as it is ripped from his outstretched arms. It seems unlikely to me that, had petitioner taken
Baby Boy Doe from the hospital while his mother slept after giving birth, driven to another city
and surrendered him, and the case otherwise unfolded the same as it has in this case, that the
majority would so easily reach the same conclusion. In any event, by describing a parent’s efforts
to reunite himself with his child as the equivalent of treating the child “as a piece of chattel subject
to a claim for replevin,” the majority engages in a level of hyperbole that is nothing short of callous
3
While MCL 712.15(c) does allow for the dismissal of a petition, dismissal is not prescribed as
the action that follows an unfavorable best-interest determination. That circumstance is instead
addressed by MCL 712.15(b); it is reasonable to conclude that MCL 712.15(c) refers to the trial
court’s power to dismiss the petition for other defects.
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and cruel. Over and over again in our society, in our movies, novels, and books, we are told,
consistent with accepted societal norms, that a good parent would move heaven and earth to reunite
himself with his child, that he would never give up, and that he would brave impossible odds and
fight any battle to have his child back in his arms. Yet here the majority deigns to treat petitioner’s
efforts as somehow vaguely distasteful, suggesting that he should really consider how, given the
passage of time, Baby Boy Doe is probably pretty settled with his new family and that maybe
petitioner is just being selfish. I could not endorse that sentiment or that language even if I agreed
with the majority’s legal analysis. Again, while the best interests of the child are indeed paramount
in child protective proceedings, we presume, absent evidence to the contrary, that a fit parent acts
in those interests. Id. at 420-422.
Given the refusal of our Supreme Court and this newly-comprised panel of this Court4 to
address the serious constitutional issues presented, I am left to wonder what Baby Boy Doe will
make of all of this as an adult—assuming that these proceedings are not forever kept from him.
Will he have grown up thinking that both of his parents chose to abandon him and give him up for
adoption, only to learn that his father in fact tried for years to be his parent, only to ultimately fail
because he didn’t see legal notice in a newspaper? What will he think of the adoptive parents that
persisted in their adoption despite knowing that his father did not want to give him up, or of the
child placement agency that refused to make any effort to identify and locate his father other than
running a small notice in a distant newspaper on a single day? What will he think of the legal
system that allowed a procedural tangle and issue preservation requirements to defeat his father’s
attempts to find him and unite together as a family? I fear that he might not think much of any of
us. The legal system has failed several people in this case, including the adoptive parents,
petitioner, and Baby Boy Doe himself. All I can hope for is that, going forward, we can make the
changes necessary to prevent this from ever happening again, and that possibly, at some later time,
Baby Boy Doe’s adoptive parents and his birth father might come to a solution outside the court
system that provides everyone a measure of peace. I must admit that my hope for the latter is slim
at best, but a solution apparently cannot be found from within the court system that has so utterly
and miserably failed everyone.
For these reasons, I dissent.
/s/ Mark T. Boonstra
4
Judge BECKERING, who joined the majority opinion of this Court in Doe I, now serves on the
United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan.
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