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  "name": "In the Matter of the ADOPTION OF FRANCISCO A., Luis H., and Augustine V., and Concerning Rita VEST, Plaintiff-Appellee/CrossAppellant, v. STATE of New Mexico ex rel. NEW MEXICO HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Robert RUNYON and Judith G. Runyon, to adopt minors. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Rita VEST, to adopt minors",
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    "judges": [
      "MINZNER, C.J., and HARTZ, J., specially concur."
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    "parties": [
      "In the Matter of the ADOPTION OF FRANCISCO A., Luis H., and Augustine V., and Concerning Rita VEST, Plaintiff-Appellee/CrossAppellant, v. STATE of New Mexico ex rel. NEW MEXICO HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Robert RUNYON and Judith G. Runyon, to adopt minors. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Rita VEST, to adopt minors."
    ],
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      {
        "text": "OPINION\nAPODACA, Judge.\nThe parties\u2019 respective motions for rehearing having been granted, and oral argument having been scheduled and heard, the opinion filed on May 11, 1993 is withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted in its place.\nThese appeals arise from adoption proceedings involving three minor children. In a consolidated hearing, the children\u2019s court heard two conflicting petitions for adoption. The children\u2019s court granted the adoption petition of Judith and Robert Runyon (Runyons), but awarded visitation rights to Rita Vest (Vest), who was the other petitioner and the children\u2019s former foster parent. In their consolidated appeal, the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD) and the Runyons (collectively referred to as HSD) raise the following issues: whether the children\u2019s court had jurisdiction to (1) consider Vest\u2019s petition for adoption or (2) grant visitation rights to Vest. Vest, in her appeal, raises the issues of whether (1) the children\u2019s court had jurisdiction to grant the Runyons\u2019 petition before HSD had formally terminated Vest\u2019s foster-parent rights pursuant to statute, and (2) HSD and the children\u2019s court denied her due process in rejecting her adoption petition. Although we hold that the children\u2019s court had jurisdiction to consider Vest\u2019s petition and we therefore reject HSD\u2019s and the Runyons\u2019 challenge to the award of visitation rights to Vest on that basis, we hold that, on the record before us, the grant of visitation rights to Vest was not supported by sufficient evidence. We also hold that Vest was not denied due process and that the children\u2019s court properly granted the Runyons\u2019 adoption petition. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part.\nBACKGROUND\nHSD has had legal custody of the three children, Francisco A., Luis H., and Augustine V., since May 1985. Beginning at about that time, Vest and her spouse were the children\u2019s foster parents. In 1986, the Vests expressed an interest in adopting the children and began the necessary adoption procedure. An August 1986 report on the Vests\u2019 suitability as adoptive parents was favorable. However, HSD was unable to terminate the biological parents\u2019 rights until April 1988. Vest\u2019s spouse had died in March 1988, but Vest carried on the adoption proceedings in her own behalf. She also continued as the children\u2019s sole foster parent until December 1988, when HSD removed them from her home and placed them with the Runyons.\nBefore HSD removed the children from Vest\u2019s home, she filed an appeal with HSD challenging its decision to remove the children. She also sought review of HSD\u2019s determination not to proceed with her adoption of the children. Although HSD did not hold a hearing before removing the children, in June 1989 the agency affirmed its decision to remove the children and to deny Vest\u2019s adoption petition. Immediately afterwards, the Runyons filed a petition for adoption of the children in Sandoval County. Vest answered and HSD entered an appearance. The court allowed HSD to intervene and transferred the matter to the children\u2019s court in Santa Fe County. Meanwhile, Vest filed an action in Rio Arriba County requesting the children\u2019s court to review HSD\u2019s decision to deny her request to adopt the children. She also filed her own adoption petition in Rio Arriba County. The Runyons answered this petition. In December 1989 the parties filed a stipulated motion to consolidate these proceedings in Santa Fe County.\nThe court hearing commenced in October 1990. After the parties presented their cases, the children\u2019s court interviewed the children in camera. They expressed their desire to stay with the Runyons but also to visit with Vest. The court issued its intended decision in January 1991, but the parties filed pleadings contesting the decision. Final judgment was entered in July 1991.\nIn its decision and judgment, the children\u2019s court granted the Runyons\u2019 adoption petition. The court denied Vest\u2019s petition to adopt the children, but awarded her visitation rights. HSD appeals this decision, arguing that the children\u2019s court had no jurisdiction to consider Vest\u2019s petition or to award her visitation rights. Vest cross-appeals, arguing that the children\u2019s court had no jurisdiction to grant the Runyons\u2019 petition before HSD formally terminated Vest\u2019s foster-parent rights under the pertinent statute. She also argues that HSD and the children\u2019s court denied her due process in rejecting her petition for adoption.\nHSD\u2019S APPEAL\nA. Jurisdiction.\nIn arguing that the children\u2019s court had no jurisdiction to consider Vest\u2019s adoption petition, HSD relies on NMSA 1978, Section 40-7-34(A) (Repl.Pamp.1989). This statute provides that, except for certain circumstances that do not apply here, the court may award adoption only to a petitioner or petitioners with whom HSD or another licensed adoption agency has placed the children. Id. HSD argues that, because the agency placed the children with the Runyons, the court had only two options, either to deny or to grant the Runyons\u2019 adoption petition. Id.; see also NMSA 1978, \u00a7 40-7-30(N) (Repl.Pamp.1989) (defining placement as the process of selecting potential parents and physically transferring adoptee children to the potential parents).\nIn response, Vest contends that this jurisdictional argument is moot. She also argues that, while Section 40-7-34(A) dictates to whom the court may award adoption, nothing in that section dictates who may file a petition. HSD\u2019s reading of the statute, Vest claims, effectively means that HSD has absolute power over who may adopt children by having the power to place them with families. Finally, Vest argues that, no matter what the statutes provide, HSD\u2019s decision to prefer the Runyons as adoptive parents is reviewable for constitutional infirmity.\nWe agree that there is nothing in Section 40-7-34(A) suggesting a limitation on the children\u2019s court\u2019s jurisdiction. Section 40-7-34(A) is merely a statute that limits the court\u2019s power to grant a petition for adoption. If a party cannot prove the facts necessary, then the statute is of no value to that party. Specifically, unless Vest could plead and prove that HSD placed the children with her for adoption, she was not entitled to the right of adoption Section 40-7-34(A) provides. We need not determine whether the children were placed with Vest for adoption because Vest concedes that she could not have established placement for purposes of Section 40-7-34(A). Nevertheless, HSD\u2019s characterization of the children\u2019s court\u2019s consideration of Vest\u2019s petition as beyond the court\u2019s jurisdiction is without merit. See Sundance Mechanical & Util. Corp. v. Atlas, 109 N.M. 683, 687, 789 P.2d 1250, 1254 (1990). Vest merely failed to state a claim for adoption for which the court could grant relief. See SCRA 1986, 1-012(B)(6) (Repl.1992). Thus, the children\u2019s court had jurisdiction to consider the petition, even though the petition was dismissible on the merits.\nB. Visitation.\nIn support of its contention that Vest should not have visitation rights, HSD focuses on the policy that adoption starts a family anew with all the rights and responsibilities of a biological family. See In re Estate of Holt, 95 N.M. 412, 622 P.2d 1032 (1981). The Runyons\u2019 adoption of the three children created a new family. Thus, HSD argues, that family should have all the rights of any other family, including the right to determine who should and should not see the family\u2019s children regardless of claimed psychological ties with the children. Vest argues that the adoption statutes grant courts an inherent equitable power to award visitation, based on the statutory policy of protecting the best interests of adopted children.\nA review of the case law on adoption, custody, and visitation rights reveals eases that assist in disposing of the issue before us, although there appears to be little uniformity in the case law and there is support for both parties\u2019 positions. See Danny R. Veilleux, Annotation, Postadoption Visitation by Natural Parent, 78 AL.R. 4th 218 (1990); Annotation, Visitation Rights of Persons Other Than Natural Parents or Grandparents, 1 A.L.R. 4th 1270 (1980). There are various arguments against allowing third-party visitation following a child\u2019s adoption. Many courts have reasoned that adoption severs the ties of old relationships and granting visitation to third parties or enforcing such agreements would interfere with the new family. See, e.g., Ex parte Bronstein, 434 So.2d 780 (Ala.1983); In re Adoption of Hammer, 15 Ariz.App. 196, 487 P.2d 417 (1971); Sachs v. Walzer, 242 Ga. 742, 251 S.E.2d 302 (1978); Browning v. Tarwater, 215 Kan. 501, 524 P.2d 1135 (1974). Some courts have not allowed such visitation because they considered it against public policy, see Hill v. Moorman, 525 So.2d 681 (La.Ct.App.1988), or because it would deter adoptions, see People ex rel. Levine v. Rado, 54 Misc.2d 843, 283 N.Y.S.2d 483 (Sup.Ct.1967).\nHowever, it appears the trend has been to consider or allow visitation to other persons who have been important to a child in a variety of situations, if visitation would be in the best interests of the child. For example, the right of stepparents who are neither biologically nor legally related to their stepchildren to seek visitation with the children upon divorce from the children\u2019s natural parents has been recognized. See Carter v. Brodrick, 644 P.2d 850 (Alaska 1982); Bryan v. Bryan, 132 Ariz. 353, 645 P.2d 1267 (Ct.App.1982); Wills v. Wills, 399 So.2d 1130 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1981); Collins v. Gilbreath, 403 N.E.2d 921 (Ind.Ct.App.1980); Simpson v. Simpson, 586 S.W.2d 33 (Ky.1979); Looper v. McManus, 581 P.2d 487 (Okla.Ct.App.1978); Spells v. Spells, 250 Pa.Super. 168, 378 A2d 879 (1977); Gribble v. Gribble, 583 P.2d 64 (Utah 1978). Some courts have allowed grandparents to obtain visitation rights with their grandchildren following the children\u2019s adoption by stepparents. See, e.g., Reeves v. Bailey, 53 Cal.App.3d 1019, 126 Cal.Rptr. 51 (1975); Lingwall v. Hoener, 124 Ill.App.3d 986, 80 Ill.Dec. 265, 464 N.E.2d 1248 (1984), aff'd, 108 Ill.2d 206, 91 Ill.Dec. 166, 483 N.E.2d 512 (1985); Layton v. Foster, 61 N.Y.2d 747, 472 N.Y.S.2d 916, 460 N.E.2d 1351 (1984). Nevada has held that it is within a trial court\u2019s equitable powers to grant an adoption decree conditioned on a stepgrandparent\u2019s right to seek visitation following the child\u2019s adoption by third parties. Morse v. Daly, 101 Nev. 320, 704 P.2d 1087 (1985).\nWhen granting custody to a natural parent, some courts, having rejected the argument that the court may grant visitation rights only to persons specifically authorized by law to receive them, have granted visitation rights to nonparents. See Rogers v. Trent, 594 A.2d 32 (Del.1991); Recknagel v. Roberts, 465 So.2d 844 (La.Ct.App.), cert. denied, 468 So.2d 570, and cert. denied, 468 So.2d 579 (La.1985); Evans v. Evans, 302 Md. 334, 488 A2d 157 (1985); Seger v. Seger, 377 Pa.Super. 391, 547 A2d 424 (1988); In re Custody of D.M.M., 137 Wis.2d 375, 404 N.W.2d 530 (1987). Some courts have recognized that, in certain circumstances, it may be in the child\u2019s best interests to continue contact with his or her former family and have accordingly held that it is not against public policy to enforce agreements for post-adoption visitation rights even when the child was adopted by persons other than biological relatives or stepparents. See Michaud v. Wawruck, 209 Conn. 407, 551 A.2d 738 (1988). Massachusetts has recognized that, where parental rights are terminated without the parents\u2019 consent, lower courts could permit post-adoption visitation by the natural parents if it was in the child\u2019s best interests. See In re Petition ofDep\u2019t of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 392 Mass. 696, 467 N.E.2d 861, 866 (1984).\nIn New Mexico, there is a strong tradition of protecting a child\u2019s best interests in a variety of circumstances. For example, this court has ruled that, if custody with someone whose sexual orientation may not meet with mainstream approval serves a child\u2019s best interest, then awarding that person custody of the child is appropriate. In re Jacinta M., 107 N.M. 769, 772, 764 P.2d 1327, 1330 (Ct.App.1988). We have ruled similarly when custody was awarded to a mother who had remarried in a manner that violated the public policy of New Mexico. Leszinske v. Poole, 110 N.M. 663, 666-67, 798 P.2d 1049, 1052-53 (Ct.App.) (affirming award of custody to mother who married her maternal uncle), cert. denied, 110 N.M. 533, 797 P.2d 983 (1990). Even when the custodial parent did not reside with the child, we have affirmed a children\u2019s court ruling that granted that parent physical custody. See Brito v. Brito, 110 N.M. 276, 794 P.2d 1205 (Ct.App.1990) (affirming grant of custody to father although child resided with aunt). We have been no less cognizant of the overriding nature of children\u2019s best interests when visitation in the context of lifestyles that do not meet with mainstream approval was the issue. See AC. v. C.B., 113 N.M. 581, 829 P.2d 660 (Ct.App.) (agreement that psychological parent has a right to visit with child of biological parent not repugnant to public policy even though parents were formerly in a sexually nontraditional relationship), cert. denied, 113 N.M. 449, 827 P.2d 837 (1992).\nAdditionally, in Christian Placement Service, New Mexico Christian Children\u2019s Home v. Gordon, 102 N.M. 465, 697 P.2d 148 (Ct.App.1985), a case with circumstances analogous to this one, we held that the lower court properly denied a grandparent intervention as of right and permissive intervention in an adoption proceeding. She relied solely upon her status as biological grandmother to the child to demonstrate a tie to the child. We stated that this was insufficient for intervention, but recognized nonetheless that \u201c[t]here are situations where it might be in the best interests of the child to allow intervention.\u201d Id. at 472, 697 P.2d at 155. The grandmother in that case sought intervention to obtain custody of the child. That intervention was as intrusive on the adoption process as Vest\u2019s efforts to seek adoption or visitation rights. Gordon implies that the best interests of the child would have prevailed and the grandmother would have been allowed to intervene had there been facts to support her position.\n\u201cThe courts [in New Mexico] have consistently recognized that the state is parens patriae and the child\u2019s welfare and best interests are the paramount consideration for the court in custody cases.\u201d Rhinehart v. Nowlin, 111 N.M. 319, 325, 805 P.2d 88, 94 (Ct.App.1990). In that case, we recognized that, in certain situations, it may be in the child\u2019s best interest to allow visitation by a stepparent who had not adopted the child following divorce from the child\u2019s natural parent. Id. at 325, 805 P.2d at 94. As Vest points out, the adoption itself must be in the child\u2019s best interests. See NMSA 1978, \u00a7 40-7-51(0) (Repl.Pamp.1989).\nAdditionally, this Court has recognized that, when dealing with children, the district court is exercising its equitable powers. See In re Guardianship Petition of Lupe C., 112 N.M. 116, 119, 812 P.2d 365, 368 (Ct.App.1991) (stating that \u201cour supreme court has held that the district court sitting as a court of equity has inherent power concerning issues of custody of minors,\u201d and citing In re Santillanes, 47 N.M. 140, 138 P.2d 503 (1943)); In re Adoption of Doe, 101 N.M. 34, 37, 677 P.2d 1070, 1073 (Ct.App.), cert. denied, 101 N.M. 11, 677 P.2d 624 (1984) (although adoption is a special statutory proceeding, trial court retains some equitable powers); see also 4 John Norton Pomeroy, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence \u00a7 1305 (Spencer W. Symons ed., 5th ed. 1941) [Pomeroy]. The touchstone of equity is that it is flexible; \u201c \u2018the court of equity has the power of devising its remedy and shaping it so as to fit the changing circumstances of every case and the complex relations of all the parties.\u2019 \u201d Navajo Academy, Inc. v. Navajo United Methodist Mission Sch., Inc., 109 N.M. 324, 329, 785 P.2d 235, 240 (1990) (quoting 1 Pomeroy \u00a7 109).\n\u201c[T]he comprehensiveness of this equitable jurisdiction is not to be denied or limited in the absence of a clear and valid legislative command. Unless a statute in so many words, or by a necessary and inescapable inference, restricts the court\u2019s jurisdiction in equity, the full scope of that jurisdiction is to be recognized and applied. \u2018The great principles of equity, securing complete justice, should not be yielded to light inferences, or doubtful construction.\u2019 Brown v. Swann, 10 Pet. 497, 503 [9 L.Ed. 508].\u201d\nWeinberger v. Romero-Barcelo, 456 U.S. 305, 313, 102 S.Ct. 1798, 1804, 72 L.Ed.2d 91 (1982) (quoting Porter v. Warner Holding Co., 328 U.S. 395, 398, 66 S.Ct. 1086, 1089, 90 L.Ed. 1332 (1946)).\nThe Adoption Act, NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-7-29 to -65 (Repl.Pamp.1989), neither specifically authorizes nor specifically forbids an adoption decree incorporating visitation rights for nonrelatives. Section 40-7-52 does not limit the children\u2019s court\u2019s authority to fashion a decree that is in the child\u2019s best interests and that includes, if appropriate, visitation rights for third parties with whom the child has close ties. The primary purpose of that statute is to ensure that adopted children can inherit from their adoptive parents. See Hahn v. Sorgen, 50 N.M. 83, 171 P.2d 308 (1946) (discussing legislative history of predecessor to Section 40-7-52). The Adoption Act also does not contain a statement of factors that should be considered when determining the best interests of a child. However, NMSA 1978, Section 40-4-9 (Repl.Pamp.1989), directs a court, when determining custody of a child, to consider all relevant factors, including the child\u2019s wishes and the child\u2019s relationship with \u201cany other person who may significantly affect the child\u2019s best interest.\u201d Section 40-4-9(A)(3). There is no reason why a court may not consider similar factors when fashioning an adoption decree.\nAs one court has pointed out:\nTraditional models of the nuclear family have come, in recent years, to be replaced by various configurations of parents, stepparents, adoptive parents and grandparents. We are not prepared to assume that the welfare of children is best served by a narrow definition of those whom we permit to continue to manifest their deep concern for a child\u2019s growth and development.\nMichaud, 551 A2d at 742 (citations omitted). For this reason, it is important for the children\u2019s court to maintain maximum flexibility in fashioning a decree that is in the child\u2019s best interests so that the child may maintain contact with other persons who have filled a parental role in his or her life. See Looper, 581 P.2d at 488-89; Seger, 547 A2d at 427; see also Katharine T. Bartlett, Rethinking Parenthood as an Exclusive Status: The Need for Legal Alternatives When the Premise of the Nuclear Family Has Failed 70 Va.L.Rev. 879, 902-11 (1984).\nAlthough granting visitation to a nonparent does affect a parent\u2019s custody rights, this is not sufficient reason to apply a blanket rule against such decrees. It is well established in New Mexico that parents do not have absolute rights in their children; rather, parental rights are secondary to the best interests and welfare of the children. In re Samantha D., 106 N.M. 184, 186, 740 P.2d 1168, 1170 (Ct.App.1987). As one court has stated regarding visitation, \u201c[t]his flexible device, when properly utilized within an adoption decree, not only can promote the best interests of the child but need not unduly impinge on the adoptive parents.\u201d Morse, 704 P.2d at 1091. If at some time the visitation is no longer in the child\u2019s best interests, the court may reconsider it. See Rhinehart, 111 N.M. at 329, 805 P.2d at 98; Weinschel v. Strople, 56 Md.App. 252, 466 A2d 1301, 1306 (1983). However, because granting visitation rights does infringe on a parent\u2019s custody, it is appropriate to limit this decision to situations such as this where the party seeking visitation has acted in a custodial or parental capacity. See, e.g., Carter, 644 P.2d at 855 n. 5; Collins, 403 N.E.2d at 923-24. This will prevent visitation rights being granted to any person who happens to feel affection for a child.\nIn this case, the children\u2019s court believed that the Runyons, as well as Vest, would be fit parents. The difficulty, of course, was that the court could not award adoption to all three petitioners. Thus, the court did what it could to serve the children\u2019s best interests in considering their stated desire to spend time with Vest. However, as the parties agreed at oral argument, the only evidence supporting the visitation order was the children\u2019s preference. There is a much wider array of considerations the trial court must undertake in considering the grant of visitation rights. For example, the children\u2019s court must carefully consider how visitation will affect the adoption. See generally People ex rel. Wilder v. Spence-Chapin Servs. to Families & Children, 93 Misc.2d 617, 403 N.Y.S.2d 454, 455 (Sup.Ct.1978) (visitation denied because it would subject child to ongoing bitter dispute between party seeking visitation and adoptive parents); Reeves, 126 CaLRptr. at 56 (visitation allowed because party seeking visitation would not disrupt the adoptive child\u2019s new family relations).\nWhen the issue of visitation in connection with an adoption confronts a children\u2019s court, the court should undertake a careful study of all the parties involved and all the relevant circumstances. Vest stressed at oral argument that she tried to persuade the children\u2019s court to appoint an expert for a comparative study, but, although expert insight into the issue of visitation may be valuable, expert evidence on a visitation issue is not required. Cf. NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 32A-5-3(I) & 32A-5-14 (Repl.Pamp.1993) (requiring that adoption pre-placement study be done by investigator \u201ccertified\u201d to conduct such studies). It is evident that the children\u2019s court consideration of the children\u2019s wishes alone was the result of a misunderstanding of the necessary scope of the inquiry. For this reason, I agree that, on this record, insufficient evidence supports the award of visitation to Vest, and we must reverse.\nVEST\u2019S CROSS-APPEAL\nA. Failure to Properly Terminate Foster-Parent Rights.\nInitially, Vest argues that she had a constitutional or statutory expectation of continued foster care of the children. In this connection, she contends that HSD agreed to give her a hearing before taking the children away from her and that the law must recognize this expectation interest and protect it by not allowing other parties to adopt the children before the foster-parent relationship has been formally terminated. We assume for the sake of discussion that this expectation interest is legally significant. See Smith v. Organization of Foster Families for Equality & Reform, 431 U.S. 816, 847, 97 S.Ct. 2094, 2111, 53 L.Ed.2d 14 (1977) (assuming without deciding that foster parents have liberty interest in continued relations with foster children). From our reading of Vest\u2019s briefs, we view her argument to be that the hearing HSD provided (on the decision to remove the children) was inadequate and not timely.\nFirst, we find nothing in the brief in chief or reply brief on cross-appeal that directly supports the argument that HSD had to formally terminate Vest\u2019s rights as a foster parent before placing the children with other potential adoptive parents. Because Vest cites no authority, we assume there is none. See In re Adoption of Doe, 100 N.M. 764, 765, 676 P.2d 1329, 1330 (1984).\nSecond, regarding the allegation that HSD agreed to provide Vest with a hearing before removal of the children, prior to briefing nothing in the record supported the claim. By motion, Vest requested that we permit her to supplement the record with copies of the foster-care agreements that apparently were exhibits below. She filed the motion after HSD filed its answer brief on cross-appeal, much later than the time allowed under SCRA 1986, 12-212(A) (Repl.1992). But see SCRA 12-212(C) (allowing appellate court on motion of party and for good cause shown to order that additional exhibits be forwarded to appellate court). Vest contends that she did not designate the exhibit for appeal out of concerns for judicial economy. HSD responds that this is an attempt to excuse Vest\u2019s failure to assure a proper record for review. We agree that Vest\u2019s efforts are very late, but nevertheless we are confronted in this appeal with the question of what is in the best interests of the children. We assess those interests to be weightier than the minimal loss of judicial efficiency that allowing consideration of the exhibits might cause. Having concluded that there is \u201cgood cause\u201d to order inclusion of the exhibits into the record, we granted Vest\u2019s motion and directed that the exhibits be forwarded to this Court.\nHaving now reviewed these exhibits, we determine that they do indeed reveal that HSD was to provide a pre-termination hearing to Vest if she requested one. Vest did request such a hearing, and HSD did apparently review its decision, although not until after the children were removed from Vest\u2019s home. Nonetheless, even if the late review prejudiced Vest\u2019s opportunity to adopt the children by allowing them to bond with the Runyons, we do not see how HSD\u2019s failure to provide an adequate hearing compelled the children\u2019s court to deny the Runyon\u2019s petition and grant Vest\u2019s. Although HSD\u2019s failure to give Vest a timely hearing is a factor the children\u2019s court could consider in determining whether to grant or deny the competing adoption petitions, the overriding goal of the children\u2019s court was to determine whether the adoption was in the best interests of the children, see \u00a7 40-7-51(A)(7), not to correct HSD\u2019s mistakes. We thus decline to reverse the children\u2019s court\u2019s decision granting the Runyons\u2019 adoption petition on this basis.\nB. Denial of Due Process by HSD.\nVest argues that HSD denied her due process by failing to conduct the necessary studies of her suitability as an adoptive parent. Because of this failure, she argues, she never had an equal chance at being the adoptive parent. HSD counters, however, that the home study the statutes require is not HSD\u2019s responsibility, but rather the petitioner\u2019s responsibility. See \u00a7\u00a7 40-7-40, -42(M), -46. We find no request for a home study by Vest in the record. Thus, there are no facts to support the argument that HSD denied Vest her right to a suitability study.\nC. Denial of Due Process by the Children\u2019s Court.\nVest also argues the children\u2019s court denied her due process by not hearing the adoption petition until well after the children had time to bond with the Runyons. But for this bonding, she claims, the clear choice for the children\u2019s best interests would have been her adoption of them.\nWe will assume for the sake of argument that unreasonable delays in deciding an adoption petition could amount to a due process violation. Again, however, Vest cites no authority to support the notion that the children\u2019s court violated any time limitations. She refers to a sixty-day period after the child\u2019s placement within which a party must file a petition for adoption. See \u00a7 40-7-41. It appears, however, that Vest failed to raise in the children\u2019s court any contention that the petition for adoption was untimely. Therefore, we will not consider this argument. See SCRA 1986, 12-216(A) (Repl.1992). The remainder of the delays noted by Vest also do not suggest a violation of her rights. Some of the delay in bringing this case to final judgment was not attributable to the children\u2019s court or to the Runyons. Through misfortune, Vest was unable to testify on the date of the hearing. It took time for the court to meet with the children. There were also motions and discovery that preceded the hearing date, a reasonable expectation in a strongly contested case. After considering the record, we can discern no unreasonable delay in the court\u2019s reaching a difficult decision. If Vest had a due process right to a judgment on her adoption petition within a reasonable period of time, the children\u2019s court did not violate that right.\nD. Failure to Comply with Section 40-7-34.\nVest contends that the children\u2019s court lacked jurisdiction to grant the adoption because the requirements of Section 40-7-34 were not met. That section requires that an adoption petition not be granted unless the adoptee has been placed for the purpose of adoption in the home of the proposed adopting parents by HSD. That requirement was met in this case. The section also requires that an affidavit setting forth certain facts be filed with the petition. In this case, those facts were set forth in the petition itself, and the petition was verified by the Runyons. This constituted compliance with the statute. We therefore reject Vest\u2019s contentions predicated on Section 40-7-34.\nCONCLUSION\nBecause we hold that the children\u2019s court had jurisdiction to consider Vest\u2019s adoption petition, we reject HSD\u2019s challenge to the award of visitation rights to Vest on that basis. However, because the award of visitation rights was based solely on the children\u2019s preference, we determine that the record contains insufficient evidence to support the grant of visitation rights, and the children\u2019s court\u2019s order must therefore be reversed. We also conclude that Vest was not denied due process by either HSD or the children\u2019s court. We thus affirm the children\u2019s court\u2019s decision granting the Runyons\u2019 adoption petition but reverse that part of the order granting visitation rights to Vest. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal. See SCRA 1986, 12-403(A) (Repl.1992).\nIT IS SO ORDERED.\nMINZNER, C.J., and HARTZ, J., specially concur.\n. In her response to the respective motions for rehearing, the guardian ad litem referred us to the Biblical passage in 1 Kings 3:16 to 3:28. The quoted story recounts King Solomon's threat to cut a child in half with his sword in order to divide the child between two women who each claimed the child as her own. Responding to the threat, one woman pled with the king to spare the child and give it to the other woman, while the other woman insisted that the child be killed so that neither woman could have him. The use of such artifice to reveal the identity of the child\u2019s mother is said to have shown to others the wisdom emanating from God that Solomon possessed. This passage is cited by the guardian ad litem as \"precedent\u201d for denying Vest\u2019s visitation in this appeal. Considering the Runyons' statement in their own motion for rehearing that they would withdraw their adoption petition if this Court eventually affirmed the grant of visitation rights to Vest, I find the quoted passage to be possible support for granting Vest visitation rights, rather than for denying them.\n. My preference would be to remand to the children\u2019s court for further findings on the issue of visitation. See State ex rel. Human Servs. Dep't v. Coleman, 104 N.M. 500, 505, 723 P.2d 971, 976 (Ct.App.1986). As already noted, the children\u2019s court's inquiry into this issue was too limited in scope. Additionally, there has been a significant lapse of time since the children\u2019s court\u2019s determination. This appellate delay may have had a crucial effect on the issues before the children\u2019s court. See generally State ex rel. Juvenile Dep\u2019t v. Geist, 310 Or. 176, 796 P.2d 1193, 1200-01 (1990) (recognizing that protracted litigation regarding parental rights is detrimental to children). Because the paramount concern here is the children\u2019s best interests, I believe it would be prudent for the children's court to consider the present circumstances in determining if visitation with Vest and adoption by the Runyons would be in the best interests of the children. Because the other panel members do not agree with this remedy, however, the grant of visitation rights is reversed without remand.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "APODACA, Judge."
      },
      {
        "text": "MINZNER, Chief Judge\n(specially concurring).\nOn motions for rehearing and following oral argument on the motions, I withdraw my prior opinion and substitute the following.\nI concur in all of Judge Apodaca\u2019s opinion except the section entitled \u201cVisitation.\u201d On the issue discussed in that section, I agree with Judge Apodaca that the district court has some equitable power in adoption cases. Nevertheless, I do not think that the evidence supports an exercise of equitable power to award Vest visitation rights, and I agree with Judge Hartz that the portion of the district court\u2019s judgment ordering visitation with Rita Vest should be reversed. Under the circumstances of this ease, I do not think it is necessary to determine the scope of the district court\u2019s equitable power to grant visitation in an adoption proceeding. Therefore, I concur specially in the section entitled \u2018Visitation.\u201d\nI am not persuaded that the general principle expressed in NMSA 1978, Section 40-7-52 (Repl.Pamp.1989) is an absolute barrier to an award of visitation rights. The parties opposing visitation rights in Vest rely on language in Section 40-7-52 that \u201cthe child and the petitioner shall sustain the legal relation of parent and child as if the adoptee were the biological child of the petitioner.\u201d I am not as sure what this language means as the parties opposing the visitation rights awarded to Vest seem to be. I think Judge Apodaca is right to suggest that the legislature probably contemplated establishing rights of inheritance by, from, and through adoptive parents and eliminating such rights by, from, and through biological parents. See Hahn v. Sorgen, 50 N.M. 83, 171 P.2d 308 (1946). I do not find what else the legislature intended clear.\nIn enacting Section 40-7-52 the legislature may have had in mind the \u201cparental right\u201d doctrine. See Shorty v. Scott, 87 N.M. 490, 493, 535 P.2d 1341, 1344 (1975). \u201cThis rule creates a presumption that the welfare and best interests of the minor child will best be served in the custody of the natural parents and casts the burden of proving the contrary on the non-parent.\u201d Id. Under that doctrine or rule, parents have a right to custody, but the right is not absolute.\nAs a matter of constitutional law, parents have a fundamental right to custody. See In re Ronald A, 110 N.M. 454, 455, 797 P.2d 243, 244 (1990). Absent a finding of substantial harm, \u201cthe state lacks a sufficiently compelling justification for the infringement on the fundamental right of parents to raise their children as they see fit.\u201d Hawk v. Hawk, 855 S.W.2d 573, 577 (Tenn.1993) (decided under Tennessee constitution). The legislature might be viewed as having analogized the relationship of an adoptive parent and the adoptee to the relationship of a biological parent and child in order to protect the same constitutional right. Nevertheless, the right is not absolute. See id.\nFurther, in this case the question for the district court was whether to create the legal relationship. The legislature has directed that the court make that determination only after considering whether the adoption serves \u201cthe best interests of the adoptee.\u201d See NMSA 1978, \u00a7 40-7-51(A)(7) (Repl.Pamp.1989); see also \u00a7 40-7-51(C). In an exceptional case, adoption might serve the adoptee\u2019s best interests only if the status was conditioned on the adoptive parents\u2019 recognizing the adoptee\u2019s relationship with another person by agreeing to visitation rights in him or her. See, e.g., Morse v. Daly, 101 Nev. 320, 704 P.2d 1087 (1985).\nWe recognized in AC. v. C.B., 113 N.M. 581, 829 P.2d 660 (Ct.App.), cert. denied, 113 N.M. 449, 827 P.2d 837 (1992), a limitation on a biological parent\u2019s rights to custody of a child. We recognized in that case that an agreement to raise a child entered into between the child\u2019s biological mother and another woman was not per se unenforceable. Id. at 584-87, 829 P.2d at 663-66. Further, both the Adoption Act, NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-7-29 to -61 (Repl.Pamp.1989), and the Children\u2019s Code, NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 32-1-1 to -59 (Repl.Pamp.1989), seem to authorize limitations on a biological parent\u2019s rights to custody. See, e.g., \u00a7 40-7-49(D) (authorizing the court to determine \u201cin the best interests of the adoptee, the person who shall have custody,\u201d if a consent or relinquishment by the adoptee\u2019s mother or father is held invalid); see also \u00a7 40-7-51(0 (authorizing the court, after denying a petition for adoption, to determine \u201cin the best interests of the adoptee\u201d who shall have custody of the child); and \u00a7 32-1-58 (providing for permanent guardianship of a child when the likelihood of a child being adopted is remote or it is established that termination of parental rights is not in the child\u2019s best interests; permanent guardianship grants guardian all rights and responsibilities of a parent, subject to rights of a natural or adoptive parent, if any, set forth in decree of permanent guardianship).\nFor these reasons, I believe that Section 40-7-52 provides this Court with uncertain direction on the issues discussed under \u201cVisitation.\u201d Judge Hartz\u2019 analysis of the Grandparents Visitation Act. NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-9-1 to -4 (Repl.Pamp.1989), is harder to answer. However, the parties have argued a lack of jurisdiction or authority under the Adoption Act, see \u00a7 40-7-29, and Judge Apodaca makes a persuasive case that under our case law the district court retains some equitable powers in exercising its powers under the Adoption Act. See N.M. Const, art. VI, \u00a7 13 (district court has original jurisdiction in all matters); Durham v. Rasco, 30 N.M. 16, 227 P. 599 (1924) (original equity jurisdiction is in district courts). Although I agree with Judge Hartz that the legislature still has the last word, I am not sure he is right that the legislature has spoken on this issue. Had our legislature been as explicit as the Nevada legislature, which has now provided within its Adoption Act a provision that \u201c[t]he court may not grant a right to visit the child to any person other than as specified ...,\u201d see Nev.Rev.Stat.Ann. \u00a7 127.171(2) (Michie 1993), our task and that of the district court would have been easier. But the New Mexico legislature has not been that explicit.\nRather, in the Grandparents Visitation Act, the legislature has provided for visitation rights in grandparents and has also provided that those rights apply to certain statutory adoption proceedings. The legislature has provided clear authority for the district court to grant such rights in situations that lie within the terms of the statute. Thus, in the Grandparents Visitation Act, the legislature has provided grandparents a clear basis on which to petition and specific directions on how a district court is to review the petition. I am not persuaded that on particular facts, in a unique case, the legislature meant to foreclose a district court from determining that post-adoption visitation rights were appropriate in circumstances not specifically provided for in either the Grandparents Visitation Act or the Adoption Act. The Grandparents Visitation Act does not by its terms foreclose visitation rights in persons other than grandparents nor does it specifically provide, as does the Nevada statute, that there is no power or authority to grant visitation rights in statutory adoption proceedings other than those specifically mentioned. Judge Hartz concludes that the legislature\u2019s intent is clear. Although I agree that what the legislature intended to authorize is clearly stated, I am not convinced that the legislature intended to forbid a district court from proceeding in a child\u2019s best interests in an appropriate case. I do not believe that the difference between expressly precluding a court from acting and expressly authorizing a court to act is irrelevant, and I am reluctant to infer a restriction on a district court\u2019s jurisdiction or power to act in a child\u2019s best interests.\nThus, I agree with Judge Apodaca that the district court has some equitable power in adoption cases. Nevertheless, I do not think that the evidence adduced, as reflected by the record, supports an exercise of equitable power to award Vest visitation rights. In coming to this position, I am influenced by several factors.\nThe first factor is that there is little evidence to support a finding that a general order awarding reasonable visitation rights is in the children\u2019s best interests. See Judge Hartz\u2019 opinion, at 1188-1189 n. 2. In fact, the findings entered by the district court provide a much more limited view of what it was prepared to authorize than the final judgment suggests. The district court, for example, repeatedly emphasizes the boys\u2019 wishes and seems to me to limit what is being ordered to visitation rights as they wish. Cf. In re Adoption of Children by F., 170 N.J.Super. 419, 406 A.2d 986 (1979) (preserving visitation with natural father at daughters\u2019 election). Thus, I think we lack the kind of findings that would support a conclusion that this case was an appropriate exercise of any equitable powers that exist in a district court under the Adoption Act. I think what moved the district court was HSD\u2019s conduct in removing the boys from Vest when and as it did. I agree with the guardian ad litem that the children\u2019s best interests at the time the judgment of adoption was entered must be controlling. The findings do not clearly establish that visitation rights were in the boys\u2019 best interests at that time.\nThe second factor is that Vest never requested visitation, but rather sought adoptive parent status for herself. Competing petitions for adoption were filed, and as the guardian ad litem points out in her response to Vest\u2019s motion for rehearing, Vest continues to press the merits of her own petition for adoption. Thus, I am not certain how visitation rights will work. This situation seems potentially more disruptive than natural parents retaining visitation rights after termination of other rights or grandparents seeking visitation rights with a grandchild adopted by a stepparent, which are the more common situations in which other courts have acted without express statutory language.\nFinally, Vest seems to premise her right to visitation, as she does her right to adoptive status, on a status as \u201cpsychological parent.\u201d I find that argument very appealing. However, Vest offered findings to the effect that she had become a \u201cpsychological parent\u201d as a result of the bonding that occurred during foster care, which the district court rejected. I think this means that the court found against Vest and rejected her premise.\nAt oral argument on the motion for rehearing, Vest argued that the authority to grant the adoption petition she filed provided a basis for awarding her visitation rights, but as Judge Apodaca\u2019s opinion indicates, Vest failed to state a claim for adoption for which the court could grant relief. We cannot find authority to grant visitation rights solely from the court\u2019s jurisdiction to entertain the adoption petition. The statute specifically requires consideration of the child\u2019s best interests in awarding custody if an adoption petition is denied. See \u00a7 40-7-51(C). It would be illogical to require less of a showing to authorize visitation rights when a petition to adopt has been granted to another party.\nVest also argued at the oral argument on the motions for rehearing that the district court did not reject her findings regarding her status as a psychological parent. Her counsel referred us to the district court\u2019s decision letter. I respect counsel\u2019s advocacy, but I do not believe that the decision letter supports the argument.\nThe district court\u2019s letter indicates \u201c[t]he actions of the New Mexico Human Service Department in connection with this adoption have shocked the Court.\u201d The court expresses regret that in not giving the children to Vest it must \u201cdeprive her of the joy she should be entitled to for providing for these children when they needed it most.\u201d The court also states that \u201c[t]he best interests of the children are best served if the children\u2019s lives are not disrupted any further.\u201d I view the letter as supporting the decision to grant the Runyons\u2019 petition to adopt. It does not seem to me to support Vest\u2019s argument that she was a psychological parent.\nIn summary, I think the district court should be reversed, not for lack of jurisdiction or specific statutory authority, but for lack of findings to support the only basis Vest offered to support the award. We probably did not need to decide all of the more difficult issues raised under the heading \u201cVisitation,\u201d but in view of the importance of these issues, I do not think it is inappropriate to resolve those issues upon which two of us agree. Thus, I concur in all of Judge Apodaca\u2019s opinion except the section entitled \u201cVisitation.\u201d Because I agree with Judge Apodaca that the district court retains some equitable powers to award visitation under the Adoption Act, and because I agree that there is no basis in this record to affirm the district court\u2019s decision granting visitation rights to Vest, I specially concur.",
        "type": "concurrence",
        "author": "MINZNER, Chief Judge"
      },
      {
        "text": "HARTZ, Judge\n(specially concurring).\nI. INTRODUCTION\nI concur in the result and join in all of Judge Apodaca\u2019s lead opinion except the section entitled \u201cVisitation.\u201d In my view the district court had no authority to order visitation, regardless of the evidence relating to the best interests of the children.\nThe order granting visitation rights to Vest may well be unprecedented in the United States. The parties have not directed us to any published decision \u2014 nor have I found one \u2014 that imposes a visitation order on adoptive parents when an agency placed the child for adoption with strangers to the person seeking visitation and no contract committed the adoptive parents to permit post-adoption visitation. The overwhelming weight of authority from other jurisdictions supports reversal of the Vest visitation order.\nMore importantly, the district court\u2019s order is not authorized by any New Mexico statute and is contrary to clear legislative policy expressed in New Mexico adoption and visitation statutes. If there exists any inherent equitable power to order post-adoption visitation, which is highly doubtful, that power cannot prevail over contrary legislative intent.\nA. Policy Implications\nAlthough resolution of the present case does not require this Court to make any policy judgments regarding post-adoption visitation, a brief outline of the important policy considerations will facilitate discussion of the pertinent legal authority. If one ignores these policy considerations in analyzing court decisions and statutes pertaining to visitation, one can fail to distinguish distinguishable authorities and thereby acquire a quite distorted view regarding the impact of the authorities and what the trends are. The policy considerations are: (1) Is post-adoption visitation in the child\u2019s best interests? (2) Who should decide whether visitation is in the child\u2019s best interests \u2014 the state (through the judiciary) or the adoptive parents? and (3) Will adoption be discouraged if the state can order post-adoption visitation?\nAs for the first consideration, not all courts are as sanguine as the other members of this panel about the value of post-adoption visitation. The Ohio Supreme Court recently opined that \u201ceven where adoptive parents consent to visitation by biological relatives whom they do not know, such an arrangement is bound to be stressful for the child, particularly where the parties are not favorably disposed toward one another.\u201d In re Adoption of Ridenour, 61 Ohio St.3d 319, 574 N.E.2d 1055, 1063 (1991). A California appellate court has discussed the matter at greater length in a case not involving adoption.\nProviding parents a superior ability to influence the upbringing of their child is clearly in the interests of the child. By diminishing the likelihood of struggle between parents and others close to the child with whom the parents are at cross-purposes, the parental preference minimizes the likelihood the child will be exposed to hostility between those with whom he or she has a strong attachment, which can cause distress, create loyalty dilemmas and be disruptive of the child\u2019s socialization experiences. (Emery, Marriage, Divorce and Children (1988) at pp. 94-98, and other authorities there cited and discussed.) Recent empirical studies suggest that in many instances sustained exposure to ongoing conflict may cause children more psychological distress and adjustment difficulties than separation from an attachment figure involved in the conflict. (See Johnston, Kline & Tschann, On-Going PostDivorce Conflict: Effects on Children of Joint Custody and Frequent Access, 59 Am.J. of Orthopsychiatry 576 (1989).) Deference to parental autonomy not only minimizes conflict with others outside the immediate family, but encourages the development of a stronger and more reliable relationship between parent and child. \u201cA child develops best if he can have complete trust that the adults who are responsible for him are the arbiters of his care and control as he moves toward the full independence of adulthood and gradually comes to rely upon himself as his own caretaker.\u201d (Goldstein, Freud & Solnit, Beyond the Best Interests of the Child (1979) at pp. 117-118.)\nIn re Marriage of Gayden, 229 Cal.App.3d 1510, 280 Cal.Rptr. 862, 865 (1991) (footnote deleted) (denying visitation to divorced father\u2019s former girlfriend); see Bikos v. Nobliski, 88 Mich.App. 157, 276 N.W.2d 541, 545 n. 6 (1979); Petition of Dep\u2019t of Pub. Welfare to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 383 Mass. 376, 419 N.E.2d 285, 287 n. 5 (1981).\nI detect no consensus, even an emerging one, that court-ordered visitation may be in the best interests of a child after adoption by two strangers to the person seeking visitation (ordinarily a member of the child\u2019s biological family). It would be helpful to have scientific studies in this country specifically directed to this arrangement, but the absence of reported decisions indicates that it has been rare, if not unknown, for adoptive parents who are strangers to the two natural parents to be ordered by courts to permit visitation. As the other members of the panel concede, there is hardly compelling evidence in this case that visitation by Vest is in the best interests of the children.\nRegarding the second policy consideration implicated by the Vest visitation order, the lead opinion rejects the view that the new parents, rather than the state, should determine what is in the children\u2019s best interests. Again, I detect no judicial consensus in support of the majority\u2019s position. If anything, the consensus is against state interference when the new parents are strangers to the person seeking visitation. An Illinois appellate court has written:\nWe wonder, however, whether it is wise for courts of law to attempt to impose their own concepts of \u201cbest interests\u201d upon appropriate, competent and loving adoptive parents, who, themselves, have the best interests of the child at heart____ [Ajdoptive parents may allow anyone to have visitation, even if the persons seeking visitation are not entitled to have visitation rights enforced. Perhaps at some point we must trust in the adoptive parents to do what is in the best interest of the adopted child.\nIn re M.M., 226 Ill.App.3d 202, 168 Ill.Dec. 287, 295, 589 N.E.2d 687, 695 (1992), aff'd, 156 Ill.2d 53, 189 Ill.Dec. 1, 619 N.E.2d 702 (1993); see Huffman v. Grob, 172 Cal.App.3d 1153, 218 Cal.Rptr. 659, 661 (1985) (\u201cThe purpose of the laws severing old family ties after adoption is to permit the new, adoptive family ties to solidify and to confer upon the new parent(s) discretion to provide for the best interests of the adopted child without interference from the former relatives.\u201d); L.F.M. v. Department of Social Servs., 67 Md.App. 379, 507 A2d 1151, 1160 (1986) (\u201cThere must be a point, however, where adoptive parents are presumed, like natural parents, to be acting in their children\u2019s best interests without having to prove it in a court of law.\u201d); Aegerter v. Thompson, 610 S.W.2d 308, 310 (Mo.Ct.App.1980) (\u201cThe new parents are totally responsible for the child\u2019s welfare. They should also have the authority to determine what is best for the child.\u201d); Developments in the Law, the Constitution and the Family, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1156, 1214 (1980) [hereinafter Developments ] (there is a \u201cpresumption that parents are better qualified than the state to promote the child\u2019s best interests\u201d); cf. Lihs ex rel. Lihs v. Lihs, 504 N.W.2d 890, 892 (Iowa 1993) (government is ill-equipped to dictate details of interaction among family members, and ordering visitation coerces what should remain a moral obligation rather than a legal obligation). Indeed, constitutional concerns arise when a state orders fit parents to submit to visitation by third parties. See Hawk v. Hawk, 855 S.W.2d 573 (Tenn.1993) (Grandparents\u2019 Visitation Act invaded parental privacy rights protected by state constitution).\nThe lead opinion mentions, but does not discuss, the third policy consideration \u2014 the possibility that adoptions will be discouraged if adoptive parents may be subjected to visitation orders. In other words, even if visitation in the particular case may improve the child\u2019s welfare, perhaps that improvement cannot be justified if the possibility of court-ordered visitation deprives other children of adoptive parents. Underlying the lead opinion may be (1) the view that the policy favoring adoption of parentless children must yield to the need to advance the best interests of children who manage to get adopted or (2) the view that the possibility of deterring potential adoptive parents is remote. Other courts have rejected both views. The Illinois Supreme Court wrote:\n[Djifferent issues are involved in determining the best interest of the child in an adoption by strangers and in an adoption by a natural parent and a new spouse. In adoptions involving strangers, the primary policy concern has traditionally been with maximizing the pool of potential adoptive parents by guaranteeing, through the termination of the rights and responsibilities of the natural parents, that the adoptive parents will have \u201cthe opportunity to create a stable family relationship free from unnecessary intrusion.\u201d\nLingwall v. Hoener, 108 Ill.2d 206, 91 Ill.Dec. 166, 170, 483 N.E.2d 512, 516 (1985) (quoting In re Roger B., 84 Ill.2d 323, 49 Ill.Dec. 731, 418 N.E.2d 751 (1981)). The Ohio Supreme Court said:\n[Wje cannot hold that the state\u2019s interest in preserving the extended family [through grandparent visitation] overrides its interest in providing children, who would otherwise become wards of the state, with a permanent and stable home---- If preconditions are imposed on the adoptive parent-child relationship, or if adoptive parents are forced to agree to share parenting responsibilities with people whom they do not know, many potential adoptive parents will be deterred from adopting.\nIn re Adoption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1063; see In Interest of A.C., 428 N.W.2d 297, 302 (Iowa 1988); cf. In re M.M., 168 Ill.Dec. at 203, 589 N.E.2d at 688 n. 1 (potential adoptive parents stated their belief that visitation order could \u201cexpose them to a[n] on-going potential for litigation, which could drain their very limited financial resources\u201d). But cf. Carol Amadio & Stuart L. Deutseh, Open Adoption: Allowing Adopted Children to \u201cStay in Touch\u201d with Blood Relatives, 22 J.Fam.L. 59, 59-60 (1983-84) (suggesting that permitting agreements providing for post-adoption visitation could encourage adoptions).\nTo summarize, more is at stake here than simply one judge\u2019s courtroom view of what is in a particular ch\u00fcd\u2019s best interests. This case presents profound and difficult policy issues regarding the pros and cons of visitation; the power of the state to interfere with a fuUy functional, intact fam\u00fcy; and the need to find adoptive parents for many unfortunate children.\nRecognition of these poUcy issues can prevent an oversimplified analysis of this appeal. Distinctions must be made, and faUure to make them can lead the court astray. In my view the majority has ignored distinctions that are of great importance in light of the above-discussed pohcy issues.\nFor example, it is inappropriate to rely on cases involving visitation in the context of a divorce when one is considering visitation after an adoption by strangers to the original family. One reason is that the \u201cbest interests\u201d standard has a far different impact on parental rights in the context of a divorce than in the context of an adoption by strangers. In the divorce context, unlike the adoption context, application of the \u201cbest interests\u201d standard ordinarily does not require a judicial determination that the child\u2019s best interests prevail over parental rights. A divorce dispute generally arises between two parents with equal parental rights. Th\u00e9 divorce itself cuts in half the sum of the parental rights of the parents because only one parent at a time can exercise parental rights. Both parents\u2019 parental rights cannot be fully satisfied regardless of the court\u2019s decision on custody and visitation. The best interests of the child is an appropriate standard to decide between the desires of the two parents. Application of the \u201cbest interests\u201d standard does not itself reduce the sum of the parental rights of the divorced couple, nor does it imply that a judge\u2019s view of the child\u2019s best interests prevails over parental rights. In contrast, adoptive parents ordinarily constitute an intact family unit, and any visitation order cannot help but reduce the sum of the parental rights of the adoptive parents. When a court orders visitation by third parties as in the child\u2019s best interests, the court is necessarily deciding that its view of the child\u2019s best interests prevails over parental rights.\nA second reason to distinguish visitation in the divorce context from visitation in the adoption context is that only in the adoption context is there a need to consider how visitation will affect the prospects of the child\u2019s obtaining parents.\nB. Authority in Other States\nAs a result of the failure to distinguish between distinguishable circumstances, the lead opinion errs when it relies on its perception that \u201cthe trend has been to consider or allow visitation to other persons who have been important to a child in a variety of situations, if visitation would be in the best interests of the child.\u201d There is some truth in the statement quoted, but the statement is misleading insofar as it suggests any legal support for ordering visitation in favor of Mrs. Vest. The pertinent authority is authority that specifically addresses visitation similar to the visitation ordered here. Hence, although there has been a trend in broadening rights of visitation \u2014 primarily to grandparents \u2014 one must recognize that legislatures and courts have almost unanimously drawn the line short of permitting visitation in the circumstances of this case. In the absence of a visitation agreement no authoritative decision has approved a visitation order when an adopted child was placed for adoption with a stranger to the person seeking visitation.\nOther courts have observed that there is no precedent for a post-adoption order for grandparent visitation when the child has been placed for adoption with strangers. See L.F.M., 507 A.2d at 1159; In re Adoption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1062. That observation need not be restricted to visitation by grandparents. In particular, in jurisdictions that permit orders for post-adoption visitation by natural parents even in the absence of a prior visitation agreement, there appears to be no reported decision affirming such an order when the adoptive parents are strangers to the biological family. A number of courts have explicitly drawn the distinction between \u201ctraditional\u201d adoption (when visitation cannot be ordered) and adoption by a stepparent or other person known to the biological family (when visitation can be ordered). See Reeves v. Bailey, 53 Cal.App.3d 1019, 126 Cal.Rptr. 51, 56 (1975); Huffman, 218 Cal.Rptr. at 661-62; In re Marriage of Aragon, 764 P.2d 419, 421 (Colo.Ct.App.1988); Hicks v. Enlow, 764 S.W.2d 68, 73 (Ky.1989); Lingwall, 91 Ill.Dec. at 171, 483 N.E.2d at 517; In Interest of AC., 428 N.W.2d 297 (Iowa 1988); L.F.M., 507 A.2d at 1159; Preston v. Mercieri, 133 N.H. 36, 573 A.2d 128, 134 (1990); Mimkon v. Ford, 66 N.J. 426, 332 A.2d 199, 203 (1975); In re Adoption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1062; Suroviec v. Mitchell, 347 Pa.Super. 399, 500 A.2d 894, 896 (1985); Chavis v. Witt, 285 S.C. 77, 328 S.E.2d 74, 75 (1985). Evaluation of the policy concerns that I noted earlier\u2014 protecting the best interests of the child, recognizing the autonomy of adoptive parents, and encouraging people to adopt children \u2014 may differ substantially depending upon whether the adoptive parents are strangers to the natural parents or whether, say, the adoptive parent is married to a natural parent. For example, when a child needs to be placed for adoption, adoptive parents may find visitation by strangers to be a major intrusion on the autonomy of the adoptive family, and potential adoptive parents may be deterred from adoption because of the prospect of a visitation order, thus increasing the possibility that the child will not find a permanent home. In contrast, in a step-parent adoption, visitation by a former relative (such as an ex-spouse) is likely to be only a continuation of a prior intrusion, and the prospect of a visitation order will not affect the child\u2019s finding a permanent home because the child already has a permanent home with the custodial natural parent.\nStatutes in other states also reflect a policy choice against visitation orders like the one before us. Grandparents often can now obtain visitation orders after stepparent adoption. Yet, only one statute that expressly considers post-adoption visitation is broad enough to encompass the Vest visitation order. See L.F.M., 507 A.2d at 1159-60 (discussing grandparent visitation statutes); In re Adoption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1062 (same).\nThirty states other than New Mexico have statutes addressing post-adoption visitation. Twenty-four statutes do not contemplate visitation after an adoption by strangers. The statutes in these twenty-four states vary as to when, if ever, post-adoption visitation is authorized, but none appears to apply when the adoption is by someone other than a stepparent, grandparent, or other biological relative. Ala.Code \u00a7 26-10A-30 (1990); Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. \u00a7 25-337.01 (1992); Cal.Civ.Code \u00a7 197.5 (West 1982) (operative until Jan. 1, 1994); Cal.Fam.Code \u00a7 3102 (1993) (operative Jan. 1,1994); Colo.Rev.Stat. \u00a7 19-1-117 (1992); Fla.Stat.Ann. \u00a7\u00a7 752.01, 752.07 (Harrison 1991); Ga.Code Ann. \u00a7 19-7-3 (1992); 750 Ill.Comp.Stat. 5/607, 5/11-7.1 (1993); Ind.Code \u00a7 31-1-11.7-2 (1992); Iowa Code Ann. \u00a7 598.35 (West Cum.Supp.1993); Kan.Stat.Ann. \u00a7 38-129 (1991); Mass.Ann.Laws ch. 119, \u00a7 39D (Law.Coop.1992); Mich.Comp.Laws \u00a7 722.27b (1991); Minn.Stat. \u00a7 257.022 (1992); Miss.Code Ann. \u00a7 93-16-7 (1991); Mont.Code Ann. \u00a7 40-9-102 (1992); N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. \u00a7 458:17-d (1991); N.C.Gen.Stat. \u25a0\u00a7\u00a7 50-13.2, 50-13.2A (1987); N.D.Cent.Code \u00a7 14-09-05.1 (1991); 23 Pa.Con.Stat. \u00a7 5314 (1992); S.D.Codified Laws Ann. \u00a7 25-4-54 (1992); Tenn.Code Ann. \u00a7 36-6-301 (1991); Tex.Fam.Code Ann. \u00a7 14.03 (West 1986); Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 15, \u00a7 \u00cd016 (1989); Wyo.Stat. \u00a7 20-7-101 (1992).\nDelaware approves post-adoption grandparent visitation, but if the parents are cohabiting, visitation cannot be ordered over both parents\u2019 objection. Del.Code Ann. tit. 10, \u00a7 950 (1992). Three other states appear to contemplate visitation after any type of adoption, but only for grandparents. La.Children\u2019s Code arts. 1256, 1264 (1992); Mo.Rev.Stat. \u00a7 452.402 (1991); Okla.Stat. tit. 10, \u00a7\u00a7 5, 60.16 (Cum.Supp.1993). See Hill v. Moorman, 525 So.2d 681 (La.Ct.App.1988) (enforcement of agreement to permit post-adoption visitation by natural mother would violate public policy). Nevada\u2019s statute, which does not mention adoption, permits visitation after termination of parental rights but solely for parents, grandparents, and siblings. Nev.Rev.Stat.Ann. \u00a7 127.171 (Michie 1991). Alaska permits post-adoption visitation but for no one other than natural parents and other relatives. Alaska Stat. \u00a7 25.-23.130(c) (1991). Only Connecticut\u2019s visitation statute could be read to authorize the Vest visitation order, Conn.Gen.Stat. \u00a7 46b-59 (1986), yet no reported case has exercised such power. Cf. In re Jennifer P., 17 Conn.App. 427, 553 A.2d 196, cert. denied, 211 Conn. 801, 559 A2d 1136 (Conn.1989) (former foster parent may seek visitation with child in custody of department of children and youth services).\nThese authorities, judicial and legislative, from other states should engender doubt concerning the majority\u2019s apparent belief that the judiciary\u2019s case-by-case evaluation of the best interests of the child is the sole criterion in deciding matters of child custody and visitation. The discussion of these authorities is not intended, however, as a substitute for an analysis of the pertinent New Mexico law. After all, many of us are proud of the uniqueness of New Mexico in many respects; New Mexico could well be unique with respect to judicial authority to order post-adoption visitation. Nevertheless, on this issue New Mexico is in the great mainstream of American life. There was no authority to issue the Vest visitation order. Statutory language does not authorize the order, legislative policy forbids the order, and the courts have no inherent power to ignore the legislature on the matter. I shall begin with a discussion of the pertinent statutes.\nII. THE PERTINENT NEW MEXICO STATUTES\nA. The Adoption Act\nThe New Mexico Adoption Act, NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-7-29 to -61 (Repl.Pamp.1989), makes no provision for visitation after adoption. The majority opinion notes that the Act \u201cneither specifically authorizes nor specifically forbids an adoption decree incorporating visitation rights for nonrelatives.\u201d That observation might support the Vest visitation order if there were some independent source of authority for a district court to order visitation after adoption, a matter I will discuss later in this opinion; but at least one must conclude that the Adoption Act in itself is not authority for the order in this case. Although the majority opinion suggests that the authority for the Vest visitation order has a similar origin to judicial authority for visitation in a divorce proceeding, nothing in the Adoption Act parallels the section in the statute governing dissolution of marriage stating that the court \u201cmay make such an order for the guardianship, care, custody, maintenance and education of the minor children, ... as may seem just and proper.\u201d NMSA 1978, \u00a7 40-4-7(B)(4) (Repl.Pamp.1989); see NMSA 1978, \u00a7 40-4-9.1(L)(8) (Repl.Pamp.1989) (definition of \u201cvisitation\u201d in joint custody statute). The Adoption Act refers to the child\u2019s best interests solely to require that the decree of adoption be granted only if \u201cthe best interests of the adoptee are served by the adoption.\u201d Section 40-7-51(A)(7). The Act does not contemplate orders conditioning the adoption or restricting the adoptive parents after adoption.\nMoreover, there is evidence of legislative intent beyond simply the omission from the Adoption Act of any explicit authority to grant visitation after adoption. Section 40-7-52 in the Act states, \u201c[A]fter adoption, the child and the petitioner shall sustain the legal relation of parent and child as if the adoptee were the biological child of the petitioner!)]\u201d See In re Estate of Holt, 95 N.M. 412, 414, 622 P.2d 1032, 1034 (1981) (\u201cFrom the point of adoption on, the adopted child belongs to the adoptive parents as if he or she had been their natural child, with the same rights of a natural child, all to the exclusion of the natural parents.\u201d); In re Visitation of Menzie, 469 N.E.2d 1225 (Ind.Ct.App.1984).\nThe majority view Section 40-7-52 as limited to rights of inheritance, or at least as not clearly going any further. What cold fish the legislators must have been to contemplate the rights of inheritance as encompassing the entire \u201clegal relation of parent and child.\u201d The legislature could not have used broader language in Section 40-7-52. We should not be so intent on arrogating more power to the district courts that we refuse to recognize any obstacle in our path. The natural reading of the statutory language is that the district court has no greater authority to interfere with the parent-child relationship after adoption than it would have if the parent were the biological parent. Hahn v. Sorgen, 50 N.M. 83, 171 P.2d 308 (1946), is not to the contrary.\nBecause the district court has no authority to order visitation when a child is raised by his or her two natural parents, so long as the parents are alive and married and have not neglected or abused the child, see Hawk, 855 S.W.2d at 577 (\u201c[T]he trial court\u2019s interference with the united decision of admittedly good parents represents a virtually unprecedented intrusion into a protected sphere of family life.\u201d); id. at 579 (\u201c[Without a substantial danger of harm to the child, a court may not constitutionally impose its own subjective notions of the \u2018best interests of the child\u2019 when an intact, nuclear family with fit, married parents is involved.\u201d), the court has no such authority over adoptive parents either \u2014 at least absent some additional statutory provision. Looking at the Adoption Act alone, legislative policy and intent undoubtedly free fit adoptive parents from judicial interference with respect to visitation.\nB. The Grandparent Visitation Act\nFurther demonstration of legislative policy and intent appears in Article 9 of Chapter 40 (Repl.Pamp.1989) of the New Mexico statutes, which governs visitation by grandparents. I will refer to Article 9 as the Grandparent Visitation Act. The provisions of the Act are as follows:\n40-9-1. Dissolution of marriage or legal separation; parentage; judgment; visitation privileges.\nIn rendering a judgment of dissolution of marriage, legal separation or the existence of the parent and child relationship pursuant to the Uniform Parentage Act [NMSA 1978 \u00a7\u00a7 40-11-1 to 40-11-23] or at any time after the entry of such decree, the district court may grant reasonable visitation privileges to a grandparent of a minor child, not in conflict with the child\u2019s education or prior established visitation privileges.\n40-9-2. Children; visitation by grandparents.\nA. If one or both parents of a minor child are deceased, any grandparent of the minor may petition the district court for visitation privileges with respect to the minor.\nB. If a minor child has resided with a grandparent for a period of six months or more and is subsequently removed from the home by a parent, the grandparent may petition the district court for visitation privileges with respect to the child.\nC. An adoption of a minor child by a stepparent pursuant to the Adoption Act under which the rights of the natural parents are relinquished or terminated shall not act to preclude the biological grandparents of the minor child from receiving visitation rights.\n40-9-3. Visitation; restrictions.\nA. Under either Section 1 or 2 [\u00a7\u00a7 40-9-1 or 40-9-2] of this act, the court may grant reasonable visitation privileges to a grandparent if the court determines that it is in the best interests and welfare of the child, and may issue any necessary order to enforce the visitation privileges and may modify such privileges or order upon a showing of good cause by any interested person.\nB. Absent a showing of good cause, no grandparent may file a petition pursuant to this act more often than once a year.\nC. If a petition is denied pursuant to this act, the court may award court costs and a reasonable attorney fee against the petitioning party.\n40-9-4. Applicability.\nChapter 40, Article 9 NMSA 1978 shall apply to the statutory adoptions described in Paragraphs (2), (3), (4) and (5) of Subsection A of Section 40-7-34 NMSA 1978 [which relate to adoptions by a stepparent, a relative, a person named in a deceased person\u2019s will, or a godparent]. If the petition made under Chapter 40, Article 9 NMSA 1978 is made during the pendency of the adoption proceedings, the petition shall be filed as part of the adoption proceedings. Chapter 40, Article 9 NMSA 1978 shall have no application in the event of a relinquishment or termination of parental rights in cases of other statutory adoption proceedings.\nThe Grandparent Visitation Act is noteworthy in three respects. First, if the lead opinion is correct in its view that district courts have power to order visitation whenever it is in the best interests of the child, then the Act is unnecessary. See In re Marriage of Gayden, 280 Cal.Rptr. at 867 (if visitation rights could be granted to any non-parent upon finding that it was in child\u2019s best interests, then California\u2019s specific visitation statutes would be \u201cmeaningless\u201d). One can only assume that the New Mexico legislatures which have enacted and amended the Act did not share the view that district courts already possessed the power to order grandparent visitation after adoption.\nSecond, the legislature saw fit to provide for post-adoption visitation only by grandparents. No statutory provision expressly provides for post-adoption visitation by any other persons. The legislature has not granted judges the power to decide whether it is in the best interests of the child to order post-adoption visitation by persons who are not the child\u2019s grandparents.\nThird, and most importantly, the Grandparent Visitation Act draws a line in its authorization of post-adoption grandparent visitation. The Act provides for post-adoption visitation only when the adoption is by a stepparent (Section 40-7-34(A)(2)), a relative (Section 40-7-34(A)(3)), a \u201cperson named in a deceased parent\u2019s will to take care of that child\u201d (Section 40-7-34(A)(4)), or a godparent (Section 40-7-34(A)(5)). See \u00a7 40-9-4. These situations in which grandparent visitation can be ordered are also the only situations in which the Adoption Act permits court approval of a petition to adopt a child even though the child has not been placed for the purpose of adoption in the home of the proposed adopting parents. Section 40-7-34(A). The placement may be by HSD, HSD\u2019s counterpart in another state, a licensed agency, or the child\u2019s parent or grandparent. Id. Thus, a comparison of the Adoption Act and the Grandparent Visitation Act reveals that the Grandparent Visitation Act does not apply when the adopted child was placed for adoption.\nThe legislative intent is clear: A district court cannot order grandparent visitation after an adoption by placement even if the court finds visitation to be in the best interests of the child. The legislature must have based its decision on the ground that such court-ordered visitation will be too disruptive for the child, will improperly infringe on parental rights of the adoptive parents, will discourage people from becoming adoptive parents, or some combination of these reasons. The detailed statutory language describing when visitation is proper compels one to \u201cassume the legislature acted deliberately in limiting outside visitation privileges.\u201d In re Marriage of Freel, 448 N.W.2d 26, 28 (Iowa 1989). \u201c[L]egislative intent is expressed by omission as well as inclusion.\u201d Id. (quoting Barnes v. Iowa Department of Transp., 385 N.W.2d 260, 263 (Iowa 1986)). Given the imprimatur that the Act provides for grandparent visitation as a general rule, the unmistakable legislative signal is that district courts should not order visitation by anyone after a child is placed for adoption.\nIn short, the New Mexico Legislature has expressed (1) its understanding that post-adoption visitation cannot be ordered in the absence of statute and (2) its policy that (a) only grandparents are entitled to post-adoption visitation and (b) a judge should not order visitation of an adopted child who was placed for adoption, even if the judge finds such visitation to be in the child\u2019s best interests. There is no legislative authority for the visitation order in this ease. Perhaps that is bad policy, but it is the law.\nIII. INHERENT AUTHORITY\nThe majority suggests that there is a non-statutory source of authority for the district court order: the inherent equitable power of the courts in dealing with children. The lead opinion implicitly assumes that this inherent power can trump statutory law and public policy expressed by the legislature. This view misconceives the nature and extent of equitable power over children. The great weight of authority is to the contrary. I shall first note the few court opinions that could be considered as support for the existence of inherent authority, although none of the opinions states that this authority would prevail over an opposing legislative mandate.\nA. Case Law in Other Jurisdictions\nI am aware of authoritative opinions in only four jurisdictions that can be read to suggest an inherent judicial power to order post-adoption visitation: In re Adoption of Children by F., 170 N.J.Super. 419, 406 A2d 986 (Ch.Div.1979); Kattermann v. DiPiazza, 151 N.J.Super. 209, 376 A.2d 955 (App.Div.1977); Morse v. Daly, 101 Nev. 320, 704 P.2d 1087 (1985); Preston v. Mercieri, 133 N.H. 36, 573 A.2d 128 (1990); Petition of Dep\u2019t of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 392 Mass. 696, 467 N.E.2d 861 (1984); cf. In re Guardianship of Nemer, 419 N.W.2d 582 (Iowa 1988) (inherent right to order visitation in guardianship proceeding continues when guardians adopt child). Each provides only tenuous authority.\nAlthough one could read both New Jersey decisions \u2014 In re Adoption of Children by F., a one-judge opinion, and Kattermann, a two-to-one opinion \u2014 as relying on inherent authority, that view would seem inconsistent with the approach taken by New Jersey\u2019s highest court in Mimkon v. Ford, 66 N.J. 426, 332 A.2d 199 (1975), which treated the question of post-adoption grandparent visitation as a matter of statutory interpretation, reconciling the adoption statute and the statute authorizing visitation. I find it noteworthy that In re Guardianship of R.O.M.C., 243 N.J.Super. 631, 581 A.2d 113, 114 (App.Div.1990), described both In re Adoption of Children by F. and Kattermann as interpreting the adoption acts then in effect.\nMorse relies primarily on lower-court New York opinions. Those opinions have been undermined by a recent ruling of New York\u2019s highest court that only the legislature can authorize the judiciary to issue visitation orders when a child has been adopted into a new family. In re Gregory B., 74 N.Y.2d 77, 544 N.Y.S.2d 535, 542 N.E.2d 1052 (1989); see Alison D. v. Virginia M., 77 N.Y.2d 651, 569 N.Y.S.2d 586, 572 N.E.2d 27 (1991). The reliance by Morse on In re Adoption of Children by F. is also questionable, as discussed in the previous paragraph. The other opinions cited by Morse are founded on visitation statutes, not inherent equitable power.\nPreston, 573 A.2d at 132, invoked an inherent parens patriae power. The court relied on its prior decision in Roberts v. Ward, 126 N.H. 388, 493 A.2d 478 (1985), which, however, did not involve an adoption. The cases cited by Roberts as supporting a non-statutory basis for granting visitation, see id. at 482, did not involve adoption proceedings, except for Krieg v. Glassbum, 419 N.E.2d 1015 (Ind.Ct.App.1981), which stated that visitation rights are terminated by adoption, id. at 1021 n. 6.\nPetition ofDep\u2019t of Social Services did not actually affirm a post-adoption visitation order. It merely permitted consideration of the possibility. 467 N.E.2d at 866. In any event, it relied for its authority only on Petition of New Bedford Child & Family Service to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 385 Mass. 482, 432 N.E.2d 97 (1982), in which the court, affirming a refusal to terminate parental rights, had noted broad judicial authority to protect children; post-adoption visitation was not an issue.\nIn contrast to these four jurisdictions are the decisions in many other jurisdictions that have considered whether courts may order post-adoption visitation by persons other than natural parents in the absence of statutory language specifically addressing post-adoption visitation. A slight majority of these cases have denied post-adoption visitation. Ex parte Bronstein, 434 So.2d 780 (Ala.1983); In re WEG, 710 P.2d 410 (Alaska 1985); In re Marriage of Herreras, 159 Ariz. 511, 768 P.2d 673 (Ct.App.1989); Poe v. Case, 263 Ark. 488, 565 S.W.2d 612 (1978); Lee v. Kepler, 197 So.2d 570 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1967); In re Visitation of Menzie, 469 N.E.2d 1225 (Ind.Ct.App.1984); Browning v. Tarwater, 215 Kan. 501, 524 P.2d 1135 (1974); Smith v. Trosclair, 321 So.2d 514 (La.1975); L.F.M. v. Department of Social Servs., 67 Md.App. 379, 507 A.2d 1151 (1986); Bikos v. Nobliski 88 Mich.App. 157, 276 N.W.2d 541 (1979); Aegerter v. Thompson, 610 S.W.2d 308 (Mo.Ct.App.1980); Acker v. Barnes, 33 N.C.App. 750, 236 S.E.2d 715, cert. denied, 293 N.C. 360, 238 S.E.2d 149 (1977); In re Fox, 567 P.2d 985 (Okla.1977); State ex rel. Grant v. Keegan, 114 Or.App. 549, 836 P.2d 167, review denied, 314 Or. 728, 843 P.2d 455 (1992); Ex parte Pepper, 544 S.W.2d 836 (Tex.Civ.App.1976), writ dismissed, 548 S.W.2d 884 (Tex.1977); Kasper v. Nordfelt, 815 P.2d 747 (Utah Ct.App.1991); Bond v. Yount, 47 Wash.App. 181, 734 P.2d 39 (1987); In re Adaption of RDS, 787 P.2d 968 (Wyo.1990).\nOther jurisdictions have approved the practice in some circumstances. Reeves v. Bailey, 53 Cal.App.3d 1019, 126 Cal.Rptr. 51 (1975); In re Marriage of Aragon, 764 P.2d 419 (Colo.Ct.App.1988); Smith v. Finstad, 247 Ga. 603, 277 S.E.2d 736 (1981); Lingwall v. Hoener, 108 Ill.2d 206, 91 Ill.Dec. 166, 483 N.E.2d 512 (1985); Patterson v. Keleher, 365 N.W.2d 22 (Iowa 1985); Hicks v. Enlow, 764 S.W.2d 68 (Ky.1989); Mimkon v. Ford, 66 N.J. 426, 332 A.2d 199 (1975); Layton v. Foster, 61 N.Y.2d 747, 472 N.Y.S.2d 916, 460 N.E.2d 1351 (1984); Suroviec v. Mitchell, 347 Pa.Super. 399, 500 A.2d 894 (1985); Puleo v. Forgue, 610 A.2d 124 (R.I.1992); Chavis v. Witt, 285 S.C. 77, 328 S.E.2d 74 (1985); In re Petition of Nearhoof, 178 W.Va. 359, 359 S.E.2d 587 (1987); In re C.G.F., 168 Wis.2d 62, 483 N.W.2d 803, cert. denied, \u2014 U.S. -, 113 S.Ct. 408, 121 L.Ed.2d 333 (1992); see In re Adaption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1062 n. 6 (apparently approving Welsh v. Laffey, 16 Ohio App.3d 110, 474 N.E.2d 681 (1984)).\nRegardless of the result, all of these opinions treated the issue as one of statutory interpretation \u2014 how to reconcile statutes granting visitation rights with adoption statutes that give full authority to adoptive parents. Some opinions explicitly mention that the matter is for the legislature to decide, e.g., Poe, 565 S.W.2d at 613; Hicks, 764 S.W.2d at 71; In re Adaption of G.D.L., 747 P.2d 282, 284-85 (Okla.1987); In re Adaption of Ridenour, 574 N.E.2d at 1063; State ex rel. Grant, 836 P.2d at 169; In re Petition of Nearhoof, 359 S.E.2d at 589 n. 3. See also In re Adaption of Gardiner, 287 N.W.2d 555, 556 (Iowa 1980) (adoption was unknown at common law and is solely statutory); L.F.M., 507 A.2d at 1157 (same); Olson v. Flinn, 484 So.2d 1015, 1017 (Miss.1986) (no common-law right of grandparent visitation). In the other opinions that view is implicit in the approach the courts take in deciding the case. None of these decisions recognizes an inherent power to order visitation in the best interests of the child irrespective of legislative power or policy.\nThere are good reasons not to rely on an inherent judicial power to issue the Vest visitation order. First, the traditional power of courts to act in the best interests of the child does not extend to this context. Second, judicial power to care for children is subordinate to legislative authority.\nB. Traditional Authority\nEquity jurisdiction has never given the judiciary a roving commission to improve the welfare of children. Traditionally, equity has limited its role to controlling guardians and caring for children who have been abandoned, neglected, or abused.\nThe Court will not interfere with the father in the exercise of his paternal authority, except (1) where by his gross moral turpitude he forfeits his rights, or (2) where he has by his conduct abdicated his paternal authority, or (3) where he seeks to remove his children, being wards of court, out of the jurisdiction without the consent of the court.[]\n4 John N. Pomeroy, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence \u00a7 1307 n. 5 (Spencer W. Symons ed., 5th ed. 1941) [hereinafter Pomeroy]. More recently, the New Jersey Supreme Court wrote that \u201cthe State\u2019s parens patriae responsibility to protect the welfare of children ... is limited to situations in which the state has demonstrated that the child\u2019s parent or custodian is unfit [Developments, supra, at 1219] or the child has been neglected or harmed, see State v. Perricone, 37 N.J. 463, 181 A.2d 751, cert. denied, 371 U.S. 890, 83 S.Ct. 189, 9 L.Ed.2d 124 (1962) [blood transfusion].\u201d In re Guardianship of J.C., 129 N.J. 1, 608 A.2d 1312, 1316 (1992).\nNew Mexico law is not to the contrary. The lead opinion quotes the following from In re Guardianship Petition of Lupe C., 112 N.M. 116, 119, 812 P.2d 365, 368 (Ct.App.1991): \u201c[0]ur supreme court has held that the district court sitting as a court of equity has inherent power concerning issues of custody of minors.\u201d What is missing from the lead opinion are the next three sentences from the quoted opinion:\nThis power, however, is usually exercised when there is no other parent or individual to act for the child. See [Pomeroy, supra,] Ch. X, \u00a7 1306. While equity may have the power to take custody away from a parent, it will do so only in extreme circumstances. Id, \u00a7 1307. This inherent power is limited to situations where there is no other available or adequate remedy at law. See, e.g., In re Cabrera, 381 Pa.Super. 100, 552 A.2d 1114 (1989) (authorizing appointment of a guardian to give consent to medical treats ment when death may occur from refusal of treatment).\nIn re Guardianship Petition of Lupe C., 112 N.M. at 119, 812 P.2d at 368. These additional sentences suggest a far less expansive inherent power than was assumed by the district court in this case.\nIn particular, New Mexico decisions have recognized the limitations on inherent judicial power with respect to adoptions. Our Supreme Court has said that \u201c[a]doption proceedings are solely statutory.\u201d Mayer v. Department of Pub. Welfare, 75 N.M. 201, 203, 402 P.2d 942, 943 (1965). I realize that In re Adoption of Doe, 101 N.M. 34, 37, 677 P.2d 1070, 1073 (Ct.App.), cert. denied 101 N.M. 11, 677 P.2d 624 (1984), states that in adoption proceedings \u201cthe trial court is also invested with some equitable powers.\u201d That statement, however, does not refer to the adoption process itself but only to tasks traditionally performed by courts in determining whether natural parents should lose their parental rights. In support of the statement regarding equitable powers, Doe cited just two cases, both from Utah. Only one of those cases dealt with an adoption.In Wilson v. Pierce, 14 Utah 2d 317, 383 P.2d 925 (1963), the Utah Supreme Court apparently used equitable principles to determine that a child had been abandoned by the natural mother and therefore could be adopted. Likewise, the issue in Doe was whether the parental rights of the natural parents should be terminated when the actions of the person petitioning for adoption had caused the disintegration of the parent-child relationship between the natural parents and the children. The question that required the application of equitable principles was abandonment, a prerequisite to termination of parental rights and subsequent adoption. Neither Doe nor Wilson implies the power to issue the visitation order in this case. See Kasper, 815 P.2d at 749-51 (no grandparent visitation right in Utah after child placed for adoption).\nAs for Christian Placement Service, New Mexico Christian Children\u2019s Home v. Gordon, 102 N.M. 465, 697 P.2d 148 (Ct.App.1985), it supports reversal rather than affirmance of the Vest visitation order. That opinion stated that \u201cstatutory visitation rights do not apply in adoption proceedings after the termination of the natural parents\u2019 rights,\u201d id. at 470, 697 P.2d at 153, and cited with implicit approval the cases that have held that \u201ccourts are not free to intervene on behalf of relatives who seek visitation rights after an adoption decree which terminates parental rights.\u201d Id Nothing in Gordon suggests that a grandparent could obtain visitation rights after an adoption. On the contrary, this Court wrote, \u201c[B]ecause the parental rights of one parent had been terminated, and the other parent had relinquished her rights and consented to the adoption, the trial court was not authorized to grant visitation rights. Under these circumstances, [the grandmother] was not entitled to intervene as a matter of right.\u201d Id. at 472, 697 P.2d at 155. The opinion later suggested only that the grandmother might have a ground for permissive intervention if her participation in the proceeding could assist the court in determining the best interests of the child\u2014 that is, whether the petition for adoption should be granted. There is a great difference between (1) permitting a grandparent to participate in an adoption proceeding as a party to assist the court in determining whether to grant the petition for adoption and (2) permitting a grandparent to intervene in order to assert a right to post-adoption visitation. Although Gordon suggested that the first type of intervention may be permissible, it unequivocally stated that the second type of intervention was not.\nIn short, New Mexico follows the common-law tradition of exercising equitable power over children only in limited circumstances, which do not include adoption by fit parents.\nC. Legislative Supremacy\nThe above authorities cast grave doubt on any claim of non-statutory judicial power to order post-adoption visitation. In any event, even if such non-statutory authority existed, it would be subordinate to legislative power. As the United States Supreme Court stated in Late Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. United States, 136 U.S. 1, 56-57, 10 S.Ct. 792, 807-808, 34 L.Ed. 478 (1890), in the United States \u201cthe legislature is the parens patriae; and, unless restrained by constitutional limitations, possesses all the powers in this regard which the sovereign possesses in England.\u201d See id. at 56-58, 10 S.Ct. at 808. Although state legislatures may have delegated this power to courts of equity, see Developments, supra, at 1222, the legislature still has the last word. See Late Corporation, 136 U.S. at 62, 10 S.Ct. at 809-810. None of the opinions discussed in subsection 111(A) above as supporting a claim of inherent equitable power to order visitation went so far as to state that this inherent power prevailed over legislation.\nTo be sure, when there is a long-recognized tradition of judicial exercise of certain equitable powers \u2014 such as the power to fashion equitable remedies \u2014 courts may infer that the legislature implicitly continued that power in the absence of a clear contrary legislative command. See Weinberger v. Romero-Barcelo, 456 U.S. 305, 313, 102 S.Ct. 1798, 1804, 72 L.Ed.2d 91 (1982) (legislation did not limit court\u2019s equitable authority not to grant injunctive relief). Such an inference is a common-sense approach to determining legislative intent. Here, however, there is no long (or even short) equity tradition of ordering post-adoption visitation. The only pertinent case law, Gordon, denies authority for such an order.\nMoreover, the courts recognize that ordinarily the legislative branch possesses ultimate authority. See Weinberger, 456 U.S. at 313,102 S.Ct. at 1804. (The exceptional case would be when the legislature\u2019s action is unconstitutional, as when it violates separation-of-powers doctrine, an issue that is independent of the distinction between law and equity. See Cooper v. Otero, 38 N.M. 164, 29 P.2d 341 (1934) (statute requiring court to appoint bank examiner as receiver violates independence of judiciary by telling courts whom to select as officers of the court).) Thus, the New Mexico Supreme Court, while recognizing inherent equitable powers to appoint receivers of corporations, see Cooper, 38 N.M. at 167-69, 29 P.2d at 343-44, has followed statutory mandates governing particular types of receiverships, see Cooper v. Manning, 39 N.M. 206, 208-09, 43 P.2d 1055, 1056-57 (1935) (bank receivership). It has also recognized the replacement of inherent equitable jurisdiction by statutory proceedings providing for dependent and neglected children. Blanchard v. State ex rel. Wallace, 29 N.M. 584, 586-87, 224 P. 1047, 1048 (1924).\nIn addition, courts ordinarily should not exercise equitable power in disregard of public policy expressed by the legislature. An early treatise noted:\nIt is the duty of every court of justice, whether a court of law or of equity, to consult the intention of the legislature ... nor does it any where appear that, in the discharge of this duty, courts of equity are invested with a larger or more liberal discretion than courts of law.\n1 Henry Ballow & John Fonblanque, A Treatise of Equity ch. 1, \u00a7 3(h) (2d American ed. 1820). Blackstone and Story also advocated restraint:\n[T]he liberty of considering all cases in an equitable light must not be indulged too far; lest thereby we destroy all law; and leave the decision of every question entirely in the breast of the judge. And law, without equity, though hard and disagreeable, is much more desirable for the public good, than equity without law; which would make every judge a legislator, and introduce most infinite confusion; as there would then be almost as many different rules of action laid down in our courts, as there are differences of capacity and sentiment in the human mind.\n1 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, intro. \u00a7 2, \u00b6 62 (Chitty ed. 1827).\n[Discretion is a science, not to act arbitrarily, according to men\u2019s wills and private affections; so the discretion, which is executed here, is to be governed by the rules of law and equity, which are not to oppose, but each in its turn to be subservient to the other. This discretion, in some cases, follows the law implicitly; in others, assists it, and advances the remedy; in others again, it relieves against the abuse, or allays the rigor of it. But, in no case, does it contradict or overturn the grounds or principles thereof, as has been sometimes ignorantly imputed to the Court. That is a discretionary power, which neither this, nor any other Court, not even the highest, acting in a judicial capacity, is by the constitution entrusted with.\n1 Joseph Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence \u00a7 13 (photo, reprint 1972) (1836).\nAs I have already indicated, the New Mexico Adoption Act and Grandparent Visitation Act convey clear legislative policies: (1) after an adoption the only persons for whom visitation can be ordered are grandparents and (2) if the child has been adopted after a placement for adoption, visitation cannot be ordered on behalf of anyone. These legislative policies prevail over any asserted inherent judicial power to order post-adoption visitation. There is no reason to require the legislature to be any more explicit in expressing these policies than it was in the Adoption Act and the Grandparent Visitation Act.\nD. Summary\nThe district court had no inherent equitable power to enter the Vest visitation order. Traditional equitable power over children does not apply when the child\u2019s parents are fit and earing for the child\u2019s health and safety. Even if there were a tradition supporting power to enter a post-adoption visitation order, it would have to yield to the clear statutory policy of New Mexico.\nIV. CONCLUSION\nAlthough the intentions of the district court may have been admirable, the court had no authority to order visitation for Rita Vest. I respectfully dissent from the majority view that the court had authority to order visitation if visitation was in the best interests of the child regardless of the fitness and conduct of the adoptive parents.\n. There would, however, be significant value in studying what happens when a court enforces a pre-adoption agreement to permit post-adoption visitation, as in Michaud v. Wawruck, 209 Conn. 407, 551 A.2d 738 (1988).\n. The record reflects the following: In an in camera interview with the trial judge, the children answered yes to the questions (1) \u201cIf I set it up, would you like to go visit with Mrs. Vest?\u201d (2) \u201cWould you like to see her and see how she\u2019s doing?\u201d and (3) \"Would you guys like to go to Kansas and visit with her for a couple of days?\u201d The guardian ad litem said that she would not object to visitation, that she believed that visitation would \"do the children no harm,\u201d and that such visits may be in the children's interests. There was no testimony by social workers or other experts regarding whether visitation with Vest would be in the children\u2019s best interests. On the contrary, the social worker who had handled the case longer than anyone else said that the children had adjusted well to the initial separation from Vest and that he was concerned about Vest's ability as a foster parent even before the children were removed. The Runyons' attorney represented to the court that the psychologist for one of the children thought that visitation would not be in that child's best interests and that he did not believe that visitation would work. Apparently a letter by the judge indicating that he would order visitation caused the Runyons to consider withdrawing their petition for adoption. In court, however, Mrs. Runyon said that she and her husband were not opposed to having Vest visit the boys but that \"We do feel that we would like to do that as total parents of these children, working it out [with Vest] rather than under a court order.\u201d At a later proceeding Mrs. Runyon responded that the visitation issue \"seems to be getting out of hand\u201d and the Runyons' attorney stated that the children had been receiving inappropriate letters from Vest. Mrs. Runyon brought to court one letter from Vest which was addressed to \"My Precious Sons\u201d and told the boys that she was their \"true mom.\u201d The Runyons and the guardian ad litem also noted that Vest was sending religious material to the children. The judge responded that all future correspondence should be subject to his inspection and that any visitation would have to be court-supervised, although such restrictions do not appear in any court order in the record.\n. See footnote 7.\n. Indeed, even the majority does not embrace that position completely. The lead opinion, in something of an afterthought, restricts the granting of visitation rights to situations in which \"the party seeking visitation has acted in a custodial or parental capacity.\u201d Yet, the opinion provides no rationale for this limitation and fails to reconcile its conclusion with the New Mexico statute on grandparent visitation, which authorizes grandparent visitation orders even when the grandparents have never exercised custody. See NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-9-1 to -4.\n. After trial of this case the Act was superseded by the Grandparent\u2019s Visitation Privileges Act. NMSA 1978, \u00a7\u00a7 40-9-1 to -4 (Cum.Supp.1993). The changes in the language of the article do not appear to be pertinent to the discussion in this opinion.\n. If anything, that legislative policy became clearer this year. The 1993 legislature has added a new section of the Adoption Act entitled \"Open Adoptions.\u201d NMSA 1978, \u00a7 32-5-35 (1993 N.M.Laws, ch. 77, \u00a7 162). The new provision permits contact between the adopted child and the natural parents or their relatives, but only with the consent of the adoptive parents.\n. For cases on postadoption visitation by natural parents, see Danny R. Veilleux, Annotation, Postadoption Visitation by Natural Parent, 78 A.L.R.4th 218 (1990). The annotation lists seven jurisdictions \u2014 Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, and Utah \u2014 as having cases indicating that courts may issue such visitation orders despite the absence of an agreement for visitation. Id. \u00a7 11, at 240. These cases add no material weight to the cases I have previously mentioned as providing some authority for an inherent judicial power to order post-adoption visitation. I have already discussed the cases from Massachusetts, Nevada, and New Jersey, and noted the present law in New York. The Maryland case, Spencer v. Franks, 173 Md. 73, 195 A. 306 (1937), contains only a brief, vague dictum, id. at 311-12, which was ignored in L.F.M. v. Department of Social Services, 67 Md.App. 379, 507 A.2d 1151 (1986). The Missouri case, Kambitch v. Ederle, 642 S.W.2d 690, 693-94 (Mo.Ct.App.1982), similarly contains only the barest dictum. The mention of open adoption in the Utah case, In re Adoption of Halloway, 732 P.2d 962, 972 n. 11 (Utah 1986), does not even rise to the level of dictum; the opinion does not suggest that Utah law allows orders for postadoption visitation by natural parents. The annotation lists twelve jurisdictions as holding that adoption precludes visitation by a natural parent absent a visitation agreement, id. \u00a7 10, and lists five more as forbidding enforcement of agreements for post-adoption visitation, id. \u00a7 5.\n. In this context common-law authority encompasses the powers of courts of equity. See Mertens v. Hewitt Assocs., \u2014 U.S. -, -, 113 S.Ct. 2063, 2069, 124 L.Ed.2d 161 (1993) (discussing powers of \"common-law court of equity\u201d).\n. For this proposition Pomeroy cites Agar-Ellis v. Lascelles, 24 Ch.Div. 317 (1878). In Agar-Ellis, the father had voluntarily made his children wards of the court, while retaining legal custody of the children, as the result of a disagreement with his estranged wife over the children\u2019s religious upbringing. The justices declined to interfere with the father's wishes regarding visitation with the mother, because none of the reasons for overriding the father\u2019s wishes existed.",
        "type": "concurrence",
        "author": "HARTZ, Judge"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Lorenzo Atencio, Familia Legal Services, Espa\u00f1ola, for plaintiff-appellee, cross-appellant.",
      "Richard A. Griseom, Gen. Counsel, Judith A. Ferrell, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Human Services Dept., Santa Fe, for defendant-appellant, cross-appellee.",
      "Thomas J. Cruse, Los Alamos, for Runyons.",
      "Judith Mellow, Santa Fe, guardian ad litem."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "866 P.2d 1175\nIn the Matter of the ADOPTION OF FRANCISCO A., Luis H., and Augustine V., and Concerning Rita VEST, Plaintiff-Appellee/CrossAppellant, v. STATE of New Mexico ex rel. NEW MEXICO HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Robert RUNYON and Judith G. Runyon, to adopt minors. In the Matter of the ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS OF Rita VEST, to adopt minors.\nNo. 13358.\nCourt of Appeals of New Mexico.\nNov. 29, 1993.\nLorenzo Atencio, Familia Legal Services, Espa\u00f1ola, for plaintiff-appellee, cross-appellant.\nRichard A. Griseom, Gen. Counsel, Judith A. Ferrell, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Human Services Dept., Santa Fe, for defendant-appellant, cross-appellee.\nThomas J. Cruse, Los Alamos, for Runyons.\nJudith Mellow, Santa Fe, guardian ad litem."
  },
  "file_name": "0708-01",
  "first_page_order": 742,
  "last_page_order": 767
}
