Page:Schenck v. Knight.pdf/12

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Schenck v. Knight
[255

whelmed by the problems she already has, including her own marital problems past and present and, is totally unprepared mentally, physically and financially to take on the additional responsibility of properly caring for an infant child in her present surroundings. None of the social workers who have been involved in this case recommended awarding custody of the child to its mother and they all testified emphatically that it would be to the best interest of the child, and to the best interest of all parties concerned, that the custody of the infant not be awarded to the mother in this case. They all agreed that Donna Marie appears to have the normal intelligence of a 14 year old child but they all agree that she is less mature than the average child of her age, and is thoroughly incompetent to properly mother an infant child in her present circumstances and surroundings.

The chancellor's final order from whence comes this appeal recites as follows:

"Now on this 5th day of January, 1973, the Chancery Court of Garland County having received the depositions of Dr. John Peters and Miss Cleo Goolsby of the University of Arkansas Medical Center, Division of Child-Adolescent Psychiatry, and having given the depositions due consideration, and the Court having taken under advisement the evidence in this case and considering the evidence of Nancy L. Winburn, Richard Dietz, Mary Jane Moix, Bryan Cordell, Darla Byers, Mary Jane Madigan, Bobbie Smith, Estelene Duke, Mrs. Blake Browning, Donna Marie Schenck, Mary Ann Brown, Mr. Julian Nabholz, and other matters and things, this Court finds as follows:

  1. The actual issue to be decided by this Court is the determination of ultimate custody, based upon the best interests of the child.
  2. From the testimony and the Court's personal observations of the witnesses, the Court is of the opinion that Donna Marie Schenck is completely immature and unable to care for her child properly.
  3. The court is of the opinion that Donna Marie Schenck would not in any way have objected to adop-