Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LAXMI KANT PANDEY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/12/1986
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1987 AIR 232 1987 SCR (1) 383
1987 SCC (1) 66 JT 1986 950
1986 SCALE (2)913
ACT:
Children--Adoption by Indian/Foreign parents--Guide-
lines/directions given to the Scrutinising Agencies with
regard to its services and remuneration.
Foster Care Homes & Recognised Placement Agencies--Duty
to exchange with one another information regarding Indian
Parents wishing to adopt Indian children.
Abandoned/destitute children--Duty of Hospitals/Nursing
Homes to inform Social Welfare Department/Collector regard-
ing discovery or find of such children.
Hindu Adoptions & Maintenance Act, 1956, s.9(4)--Adop-
tion of children--Notice of application--Publication
of--Notice need not be published.
Juvenile Courts--Abandoned/destitute children--Decla-
ration of--Release order--Juvenile Court to complete inquiry
within one month & pass the order--High Court to supervise
proper vigilance over Juvenile Courts--Release Order--When
can be dispensed with.
Recognised placement agencies--Duty of Government to
publish lists every year--Recognised placement Agencies
entitled to recover its costs incurred in processing the
application from the foreigner.
HEADNOTE:
The Supreme Court in the judgment of Laxmi Kant Pandey
v. Union of India dated 6th February, 1984 and the supple-
mental judgment dated 27th September, 1985 had formulated
the normative and procedural safeguards to be followed in
giving an Indian child in adoption to foreign parents. Since
there were certain difficulties in implementing the afore-
said norms and principles, the petitioners moved the present
criminal miscellaneous petitions for seeking
clarification/further directions in the matter.
Disposing of the petitions,
384
HELD: 1. When the court makes an order appointing a
foreign parent as guardian of a child with a view to its
eventual adoption in the foreign country, the court will
provide that such amount shall be paid to the scrutinising
agency for its services as the court thinks reasonable
having regard to the nature of the case and the extent and
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volume of the services rendered by the scrutinising agency.
In case of an application for appointment of a foreign
parent as guardian of a child the Court would be justified
in directing payment of any reasonable amount varying be-
tween Rs.450 and Rs.500 but in appropriate cases where the
courts so think fit. such amount may even exceed Rs.500.
This amount shall be directed to be paid to the scrutinising
agency by the recognised placement agency and such placement
agency shall have the right to recover such amount from the
foreign parent whose application for guardianship it has
processed. This direction will also apply mutaris mutandis
in cases where an Indian parent makes an application for
appointing himself or herself as guardian of a child or a
Hindu parent applies for permission to adopt a child under
s.9 sub-s.(4) of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act,
1956 and the case is referred to a scrutinising agency by
the Court, but in such cases the amount to be fixed by the
Court for meeting the expenses of the scrutinising agency
shall not exceed Rs.150. [387G -- 388C]
2.1 All nursing homes and hospitals which come across
abandoned or destitute children or find such children aban-
doned in their precincts or otherwise shall immediately give
information in regard to the discovery or find of such
children to the Social Welfare Department of the concerned
Government where such nursing homes or hospitals are situate
in the capital of the State and in other cases to the Col-
lector of the District and copies of such intimation will
also be sent to the Foster Care Home where there is such a
home run by the Government as also to the recognised place-
ment agencies functioning in the city or town where such
nursing homes or hospitals are situate. [388F -- G]
2.2 Each Indian parent who is registered with the Foster
Care Home or a recognised placement agency as a prospective
parent wishing to take a child in adoption and who has been
informed by the recognised placement agency that a child is
available for adoption will be entitled to information about
all the children available for adoption in the group speci-
fied by him, according to the consolidated list maintained
by the recognised placement agency. [389B]
3. The Supreme Court had directed in paragraph 22 of the
main judgment that the notice of the application for guard-
ianship in cases of adoption by foreign parents should not
be published in any newspaper because otherwise the biologi-
cal parents would come to know as to who are the parents
taking the child in adoption. This.direction must also cover
the cases where
385
Hindu Parents make an application under s.9 sub-s.(4) of the
Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956. [389D -- E]
4. No recognised placement agency shall make and process
an application for appointment of a foreigner as guardian of
a child with a view to its eventual adoption, unless the
child has been in the custody of the recognised placement
agency for a period of at least one month before the making
of the application and it shall not be permitted to act
merely as a post office or conduit pipe for the benefit of
an unrecognised agency. [390D -- E]
5. Whenever a child is produced before the Juvenile
Court by a recognised placement agency for a release order
declaring that the child is abandoned or destitute so as to
be legally free for adoption, the Juvenile Court must in all
such cases complete the inquiry within one month from the
date of the application and proper vigilance should be
exercised by the High Court. High Courts should call for
monthly reports from the Juvenile Courts stating as to how
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many applications for release orders, that is, for declaring
children abandoned or destitute, are pending before each
Juvenile Court, when they were filed and if they have not
been disposed of within one month, what is the reason for
the delay. Where the Juvenile Court is not in existence,
application for release order is required to be made to the
Social Welfare Department in the capital of the State or to
the Collector of the District in other places. The Social
Welfare Department or the Collector, as the case may be,
will dispose of such application within one month of its
making. [391B -- D, F]
6. The Court entertaining an application for appointment
of a foreigner as guardian of a child should not require the
representative,of the recognised placement agency processing
the application to join the application as a co-petitioner
nor should the court insist on appointing such representa-
tive as joint guardian of the child alongwith the foreigner.
[392C]
7. Where a child is relinquished by its biological
parents or by an unwed mother under a Deed of Relinquishment
executed by the biological parents or the unwed mother it
should not be necessary to go through the Juvenile Court or
the Social Welfare Department or the Collector to obtain a
release order declaring the child free for adoption but it
would be enough to produce the Deed of Relinquishment before
the court which considered the application for appointment
of a foreigner as guardian of the child. [393B]
8.1 Where an abandoned or destitute child is found by a
recognised placement agency or is brought to it by another
social or child welfare agency or individual it should be
open to such recognised placement agency to transfer the
child to its branch in another State after the completion of
the inquiry by the
386
juvenile court or Social Welfare Department or the Collec-
tor, as the case may be. Where such recognised placement
agency has an associate social or child welfare agency in
another State, it should be open to the recognised placement
agency to transfer the child to such associate social or
child welfare agency in the other State, provided firstly,
that the inquiry is complete by the juvenile court or the
Social Welfare Department or the Collector and a release
order is passed, and secondly, the associate social or child
welfare agency has been notified by the recognised placement
agency as its associate to the Government of the State where
the recognised placement agency is functioning as also to
the Government of the State where the associate social or
child welfare agency is operating. If, for any compelling
reason, it becomes necessary for the recognised placement
agency to transfer a child either to its own branch or to an
associate social or child welfare agency before completion
of the inquiry by the juvenile court or the Social Welfare
Department or the Collector, as the case may be, the recog-
nised placement agency shall be allowed to do so after
obtaining permission of the juvenile court or the Social
Welfare Department or the Collector in that behalf. [394E --
395A]
8.2 The Government of India is directed (i) to publish
at least once in a year a list of recognised placement
agencies and all their associate social or child welfare
agencies operating in each State in two leading newspapers;
and (ii) to send to the District Courts in each State
through the High Court a list of the recognised placement
agencies functioning within the State together with the
names and particulars of their associate social or child
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welfare agencies. Such list must be supplied to the District
Judges at least Once in a year and whenever any changes or
modifications are made in the list, such change or modifica-
tions most be intimated to the District JUdges through the
High Court. [395 B -- C]
9. The recognised placement agency processing the appli-
cation of a foreigner for being appointed guardian of a
child with a view to its eventual adoption, should be enti-
tled to recover from the foreigner, cost incurred in prepar-
ing and filing the application and prosecuting it in court
including legal expenses, administrative expenses prepara-
tion of child study report, preparation of medical and I.Q.
Reports, passport and visa expenses and conveyance expenses
and that such expenses may be fixed by the court at a figure
not exceeding Rs.6000. [395F]
10. In case of a foreigner who has been living in India
for one year or more, the home-study report and other con-
nected documents may be allowed to the prepared by the
recognised placement agency which is processing the applica-
tion of such foreigner for guardianship of a child with a
view to its eventual adoption and that in such a case the
court should not insist on sponsoring of such foreigner by a
social or child welfare agency based in the
387
country to which such foreigner belongs nor should a home-
study report in respect of such foreigner be required to be
obtained from any such foreign social or child welfare
agency. [396B]
11. The court entertaining an application on behalf of a
foreigner for being appointed guardian of a child with a
view to its eventual adoption need not insist on security or
cash deposit or bank guarantee and it should be enough if a
bond is taken from the recognised placement agency which is
processing the application and such recognised placement
agency may in its turn take a corresponding bond from the
sponsoring social or child welfare agency in the foreign
country. [396D -- F]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Criminal Misc. Petition No. 6693
of 1986 etc. in Writ Petition (Crl) No. 1171 of 1982.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
Petitioner-in-person.
B. Datta, Additional Solicitor General, Jagdeep Kishore,
T.V.S.N. Chari, Ms. K. Jaiswal, D.N. Mishra, B.M. Bagaria,
P.H. Parekh, M.K.D. Namboodri, Kailash Vasdev, H.K. Puri,
R.K. Mehta, S. Kaushal and C.V.S. Rao for the
Respondent/Applicant.
The Judgment of the ’Court was delivered by
Crl. M.P. No. 3141/86
BHAGWATI, C J: This application has been filed by the
Indian Council for Child Welfare for obtaining a direction
that when it is required to act as a scrutinising agency by
the Court, a certain amount should be directed to be paid to
it for the scrutinising services rendered by it, since the
scrutinising services would require employment of staff and
other necessary expenditure. Though this application is made
only by the Indian Council for Child Welfare, we apprehend
that all other scrutinising agencies must also be facing the
same difficulty. We would therefore direct that when the
Court makes an order appointing a foreign parent as guardian
of a child with a view to its eventual adoption in the
foreign country, the Court will provide that such amount
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shall be paid to the scrutinising agency for its services as
the Court thinks reasonable, having regard to the nature of
the case and the extent and volume of the services rendered
by the scrutinising agency. We think that in the case of an
application for appointment of a foreign parent as guardian
of a child the Court would be justified in directing payment
of any reasonable amount varying between
388
Rs.450 and Rs.500 but in appropriate cases where the Court
so thinks fit, such amount may even exceed Rs.500. This
amount shall be directed to be paid to the scrutinising
agency by the recognised placement agency which has proc-
essed the application of the foreign parent for being ap-
pointed guardian of the child with a view to its eventual
adoption and the such placement agency shall have the right
to recover such amount from the foreign parent whose appli-
cation for guardianship it has processed. This direction
will also apply mutatis mutandis in cases where an, Indian
parent makes an application for appointing himself or her-
self as guardian of a child or a Hindu parent applies for
permission to adopt a child under section 9 sub-section (4)
of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 and the
case is referred to a scrutinising agency by the Court, but
in such cases the amount to be fixed by the Court for meet-
ing the expenses of the scrutinising agency shall not exceed
Rs.150. Both in the case of an application on behalf of a
foreign parents as also in the case of an application on
behalf of an Indian or Hindu parent, a copy of the order
made by the Court appointing the scrutinising agency shall
be supplied to the scrutinising agency immediately after the
order is made, together with the papers and documents sub-
mitted to the Court in support of the application for ap-
pointment of guardian or for permission to adopt.
Crl M.P. No. 3142/86
This application has been made by the petitioner since
according to the petitioner there have been instances of
illegal sales of babies. We may point out that by its very
nature it is not possible to devise a fool-proof formula
which will in all cases prevent illegal sales of babies but
a procedure can and must be formulated which will definitely
reduce the possibility of such illegal sales. With this end
in view, we would direct that all nursing homes and hospi-
tals which come across abandoned or destitute children or
find such children abandoned in their pre points or other-
wise shall immediately give information in regard to the
discovery or find of such children to the Social Welfare
Department of the concerned Government where such nursing
homes or hospitals are situate in the capital of the State
and in other cases to the collector of the District and
copies of such intimation will also be sent to the Foster
Care Home where there is such a home run by the Government
as also to the recognised placement agencies functioning in
the city or town where such nursing homes or hospitals are
situate. The Social Welfare Department has also the Collec-
tor of the District will take care to ensure that this
direction given by us is followed by the nursing homes and
hospitals within their jurisdiction and if necessary intima-
tion in regard to the discovery or find of abandoned or
destitute children, if not sent by any particular nursing
homes or hospitals to the Foster Care Home and the recog-
nised placement agencies shall be forwarded to them by the
Social Welfare Department and the Collector of the District.
389
The Foster Care Home run by the Government as also the
recognised placement agencies in the capital of the State or
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in the District will also exchange with one another informa-
tion regarding Indian parents who wish to take children in
adoption so that the Foster Care Home as also each recog-
nised placement agency will have a consolidated list of such
Indian parents. Each Indian parent who is registered with
the Foster Care Home or a recognised placement agency as a
prospective parent wishing to take a child in adoption and
who has been informed by the recognised placement agency
that a child is available for adoption will be entitled to
information about all the children available for adoption in
the group specified by him, according to the consolidated
list maintained by the recognised placement agency.
CrL M.P. No. 4455/86
This Court directed in paragraph 22 of the main judgment
dated 6th February 1984 that the notice of the application
for guardianship should not be published in any newspaper
and this was reiterated in the Supplementary Judgment dated
27th September, 1985, because otherwise the biological
parents would come to know as to who are the parents taking
the child in adoption. The question raised in the present
application is as to whether this direction should be con-
fined only to cases of adoption by foreign parents or it
should be extended to cover cases where Hindu parents seek
to take a child in adoption and make an application to the
Court for that purpose. We are of the view that having
regard to the object and purpose for which this direction
has been given, it cannot be confined to the case of adop-
tion by foreign parents. It must also cover the cases where
Hindu Parents make an application under section 9 sub-sec-
tion (4) of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956.
We would, therefore, clarify the direction given by us and
direct that notice of an application under Section 9 sub-
section (4) of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956
will also not be published in any newspaper. The present
application will stand disposed of accordingly.
Crt M.P. 4064/86
This application has been filed by the Karnataka State
Council for Child Welfare complaining that the object and
purpose for which various directions were given by this
Court in its main Judgment dated 6th February, 1984 and the
supplemental Judgment dated 27th September, 1985 is being
defeated by the practice which has been adopted in some
places in the State of Karnataka where unrecognised agencies
are using recognised placement agencies as post offices for
processing cases in respect of children which are in the
custody of the unrecognised agencies and with which the
recognised placement agencies have nothing to do. The result
of this practice is that the recognised placement
390
agencies merely act as conduit pipes for making and process-
ing applications for appointment of a foreigner as guardian
of a child, even though the child is not with them at all
and they are not even in contact with the foreign sponsoring
agency or the foreigner wishing to take the child in adop-
tion. This practice, if it is prevalent in any part of the
State of Karnataka or for that matter, in the country, must
meet with our disapprobation. It is the recognised placement
agency which has to prepare the child study report including
the medical report for submission to the Court alongwith the
application for appointment of the foreigner as guardian of
the child and this obviously cannot be done unless the child
is with the recognised placement agency, because the recog-
nised placement agency has to observe the child and gather
full information about it in order to be able to make the
report for submission to the Court. The recognised placement
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agency must therefore necessarily have the custody of the
child for a period of at least one month before it can
prepare d really genuine and satisfactory child study report
alongwith the medical report. If we permit the recognised
placement agency to act merely as post office or conduit
pipe for making and processing an application for guardian-
ship on behalf of an unrecognised agency, it would lead to
manifold evils which it has been our endeavour to eliminate.
We would therefore direct that no recognised placement
agency shall make and process an application for appointment
of a foreigner as guardian of a child with a view to its
eventual adoption, unless the child has been in the custody
of the recognised placement agency for a period of at least
one month before the making of the application and it shall
not be permitted to act merely as a post office or conduit
pipe for the benefit of an unrecognised agency.
Crl. M.P. No. 4065/86
This application of the Delhi Council for Child Welfare
seeks clarification in respect of certain observations made
by this Court in paragraph 6 of the supplemental judgment
dated 27th September 1985. This Court, while providing that
children who are found abandoned should not be assumed to be
free for adoption but they must be produced before the
Juvenile Court so that further inquiries can be made and
their parents or guardians can be traced, directed the
Juvenile Courts "that when children are selected for adop-
tion, release order should be passed by them expeditiously
and without delay and proper vigilance in this behalf must
be exercised by the High Court". The Delhi Council for Child
Welfare has pointed out in this application made by it for
clarification that the Juvenile Courts are construing this
observation literally and mechanically and are taking the
view that release orders in respect of the children produced
before them are to be passed "expeditiously and without
delay" only in cases where it can be said that the children
"are selected for adoption" and since no child can possibly
be offered in adoption unless it is
391
declared legally free for adoption by the Juvenile Court,
this direction given by the court for expeditious passing of
release orders in cases where "children are selected for
adoption" has become meaningless and futile and the Court
should suitably modify it. This contention raised on behalf
of the Delhi Council for Child Welfare is well-founded,
because obviously no child can be offered for adoption
unless the release order is passed in respect of it and it
would therefore be futile to provide that release order
shall be passed expeditiously and without delay in case of
children selected for adoption. We would therefore modify
this direction given by us in paragraph 6 of the supplemen-
tal Judgment dated 27th September 1985 by providing that
whenever a child is produced before the Juvenile Court by a
recognised placement agency for a release order declaring
that the child is abandoned or destitute so as to be legally
free for adoption, the Juvenile Court must in all such cases
complete the inquiry within one month from the date of the
application and proper vigilance should be exercised by the
High Court for the purpose of ensuring that this new direc-
tion given by us is complied with by the Juvenile Courts. We
would ask the High Courts to all for monthly reports from
the Juvenile Courts stating as to how many applications for
release orders, that is, for declaring children abandoned or
destitute, are pending before each Juvenile Court, when they
were filed and if they have not been disposed of within one
month, what is the reason for the delay. We are very anxious
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that in respect of abandoned or destitute children, there
should be no undue delay in offering them for adoption to
Indian parents and, failing Indian parents, to foreign
parents, because it is absolutely essential that such chil-
dren should be able to secure love and affection of adoptive
parents at the earliest. Indeed, nothing can take the place
of love and affection of parents and every effort must
therefore be made to see that no procedural delays hold up
the process of such children being taken in adoption. This
new direction given by us will also be applicable in cases
where, the Juvenile Court not being in existence, applica-
tion for release order is required to be made to the Social
Welfare Department in the capital of the State or to the
Collector of the District in other places. The Social Wel-
fare Department or the Collector, as the case may be, will
dispose of such application within one month of its making.
Crl. M.P. No. 6693/85
There were several points raised in this application
filed on behalf of Church of North India, Holy Cross Social
Service Centre, Missionaries of Charity and Delhi Council
for Child Welfare. The first point related to a practice
which is being followed in Delhi in regard to making of an
application. for appointment of a foreigner as guardian of a
child with a view to its eventual adoption. The practice
which is followed in Delhi is that the application for
appointment of a foreigner as guardian is required to be
signed by the representative of the recognised placement
agency not only as Attorney of the
392
foreigner but also in his personal capacity, so that the
application becomes an application for appointment of the
foreigner as well as the representative of the recognised
placement agency as joint guardians of the child. The Court
granting the application also appoints the foreigner as well
as the representative of the recognised placement agency as
joint guardians and both continue as joint guardians until
the child is adopted by the foreigner in his own country.
This procedure entails a continued obligation on the part of
the recognised placement agency which is totally unnecessary
and in fact, such procedure is not followed in any other
part of the country. It would in our opinion be sufficient
to ensure the eventual adoption of the child and its proper
care and welfare in the meantime, if a bond is taken from
the recognised placement agency to secure performance of the
obligations and conditions laid down by the Court. We would
therefore direct that the court entertaining an application
for appointment of a foreigner as guardian of a child should
not require the representative of the recognised placement
agency processing the application to join the application as
a co-petitioner nor should the court insist on appointing
such representative as joint guardian of the child alongwith
the foreigner. Where a representative of the recognised
placement agency has already been appointed joint guardian
prior to the making of this Order, he or she will stand
discharged on the child being adopted by the foreign par-
ents.
The second point raised on behalf of the applicants was
in regard to the delay which is at present occurring in the
procedure forgiving a child in adoption to a foreigner in
view of the time schedule fixed by the court in the main
judgment dated 6th February, 1984 and the supplemental
judgment dated 27th September 1985. The applicants contended
that the entire process laid down by the court is a long-
drawn out process running into a period of about 8 to 9
months and that would defeat the object of expedition in
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giving a child in adoption. The applicants pointed out that
under our judgments, where there is a child surrendered by
the biological parents, a minimum period of three months is
allowed to the biological parents to reconsider their deci-
sion and in case of an abandoned or destitute child, a
period of three months is provided for the Juvenile Court,
Social Welfare Department or the Collector to clear the
child and declare it free for adoption and after the child
is declared free for adoption, a maximum period of two
months is provided to find an Indian family for the
child--which period is now curtailed to three to four
weeks--and thereafter it takes another four weeks in mail
for sending the child study and medical reports to the
sponsoring agency abroad for being handed over to the for-
eigner for his approval and awaiting the receipt of approval
and then a further period of two months is allowed for the
court to process the case and thereafter on an average it
takes another month or more to get the passport and visa
formalities completed. It thus takes about 8 to 9 months
after the abandonment of the child before the child is able
to join its adoptive parents.
393
This is, according to the applicants, too long a period and
the directions given by us should be modified with a view to
curtailing this period. We agree that the point raised on
behalf of the applicants deserves serious consideration. We
would therefore direct that in cases where a child is relin-
quished by its biological parents or by an unwed mother
under a Deed of Relinquishment executed by the biological
parents or the unwed mother it should not be necessary to go
through the Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department
of the Collector to obtain a release order declaring the
child free for adoption but it would be enough to produce
the Deed of Relinquishment before the court which consider
the application for appointment of a foreigner as guardian
of the child. It is only where a child is found abandoned or
is picked up as a destitute that the procedure of going
through the Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department
or the Collector would have to be adopted. As soon as aban-
doned or destitute child is found by a social or child
welfare agency, a report should be immediately lodged with
the local police station along with a photograph of the
child. The Inspector General of Police or the Commissioner
of Police, as the case may be, should instruct every police
station within his jurisdiction to immediately undertake an
inquiry for the purpose of ascertaining and tracing the
parents of the child in respect of which the report is made
and such inquiry must be completed within one month of the
report being lodged with the police station. Meanwhile, the
social or child welfare agency which has found the abandoned
or destitute child may make an application to the Juvenile
Court or to the Social Welfare Department or the Collector,
as the case may be, for a release order declaring that the
child is legally free for adoption and since the report the
inquiry to be made by the police has under this direction to
be completed within one month, it should be possible for the
Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department or the
Collector to make a release order declaring the child legal-
ly free for adoption within a period of five weeks from the
date of making the application. If, as a result of the
inquiry by the police the biological parents are traced, the
Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department or the
Collector, as the case may be, will issue a notice to the
biological parents and give them an opportunity to reconsid-
er their decision after explaining the implications of the
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child being declared legally free for adoption. But, this
opportunity shall be availed of by the biological parents
within a period of one week and no more. This procedure will
considerably reduce the time taken up in giving an opportu-
nity to the biological parents to reconsider their decision
as also in getting the child cleared for adoption by the
Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department or the
Collector. Whilst the application for a release order is
pending before the Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare
Department or the Collector, the recognised placement agency
which has found the child or to which the child is trans-
ferred by the social or child welfare agency finding the
child, may proceed to explore the possibility of offering
the child in adoption and the child may be offered simulta-
neously to Indian parents as well as foreign
394
parents, subject to the clearance of the child for adoption
by the Juvenile Court or the Social Welfare Department or
the Collector; The recognised placement agency need not wait
until the release order is made by the Juvenile Court or the
Social Welfare ’Department or the Collector, before offering
the child in adoption, because otherwise even with the
reduced time limit which we have now provided, it would take
at least six weeks before the child can be offered in adop-
tion. This time-lag of six weeks can be eliminated if the
child is allowed to be offered in adoption even while the
application for release order is pending and this would also
eliminate the delay of about two months which would occur if
the child is not allowed to be offered in adoption to the
foreign parents until after the effort to find an Indian
parent for the child has failed. If this procedure is fol-
lowed, it should be possible to find an Indian parent or,
failing that, a foreign parent to take the child in adoption
within a period, of about 6 to 8 weeks from the time when
the abandoned or destitute child is formed by the concerned
social or child welfare agency. We are informed that this
procedure is already being followed in Bombay and, in our
view, it should be adopted in all jurisdictions.
We then turn to the third point raised on behalf of the
applicants and that relates to transfer of children from one
State to another for the purpose of being given in adoption.
We have already dealt with this subject in paragraph 7 of
the supplemental judgment dated 27th September 1985 and we
do not propose to depart from what we have said in that
paragraph of the judgment. But we should like to make it
dear that where an abandoned or destitute child is found by
a recognised placement agency or is brought to it by another
social or child welfare agency or individual, it should be
open to such recognised placement agency to transfer the
child to its branch in another State after the completion of
the inquiry by the Juvenile Court or Social Welfare Depart-
ment or the Collector, as the case may be. Where such recog-
nised placement agency has an associate social or child
welfare agency in another State, it should be open to the
recognised placement agency to transfer the child to such
associate social or child welfare agency in the other State,
provided firstly, that the inquiry is complete by the Juve-
nile Court or the Social Welfare Department or the Collector
and a release order is passed, and secondly, the associate
social or child welfare agency has been notified by the
recognised placement agency as its associate to the Govern-
ment of the State where the recognised placement agency is
functioning as also to the Government of the State where the
associate social or child welfare agency is operating. If,
for any compelling reason, it becomes necessary for the
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recognised placement agency to transfer a child either to
its own branch or ’to an associate social or child welfare
agency before completion of the inquiry by the Juvenile
COurt or the Social Welfare Department or the Collector, as
the case may be, the recognised placement agency shall be
allowed to do so after obtaining permission of the Juvenile
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Court or the Social Welfare Department or the Collector in
that behalf.
We would also direct the Government of India to publish
at least once in a year a list of recognised placement
agencies and their associate social or child welfare agen-
cies operating in each State in two leading newspapers
having wide circulation in that State, one in the English
language and the other in the regional language of that
State, so that the people may know which are the recognised
placement agencies and their associates which are function-
ing in that State. We would also direct the Government of
India to send to the District Courts in each State through
the High Court a list of the recognised placement agencies
functioning within the State together with the names and
particulars of their associate social or child welfare
agencies. Such list must be supplied to the District Judges
at least once in a year and whenever any charges or modifi-
cations are made in the list, such changes/or modifications
must be intimated to the District Judges through the High
Court.
One other point raised on behalf of the applicants was
that the outer limit of Rs.4,000 fixed by the Court in the
supplemental judgment dated 27th September 1985 for reim-
bursement of expenses including legal expenses, administra-
tive expenses, preparation of child study report, prepara-
tion of medical and I.Q. Reports, passport and visa expenses
and conveyance expenses, was inadequate, particularly having
regard to the high fees charged by lawyers and increase in
the visa charges for United States and some other countries
and that this outer limit should, therefore, be raised from
Rs.4,000 to Rs.6,000. There is force in this submission made
on behalf of the applicants, because there is no doubt that
the fees of lawyer have gone up quite high and the visa
expenses have also more than doubled in recent times. We,
therefore, agree that the recognised placement agency proc-
essing the application of a foreigner for being appointed
guardian of a child with a view to its eventual adoption,
should be entitled to recover from the foreigner, cost
incurred in preparing and filing the application and prose-
cuting it in court including legal expenses, administrative
expenses, preparation of child study report, preparation of
medical and I.Q. reports, passport and visa expenses and
conveyance expenses and that such expenses may be fixed by
the court at a figure not exceeding Rs.6000.
The applicants also drew our attention to the case of
foreigners living in India for one or more years and
stressed the difficulty involved in requiring their cases to
be sponsored by a foreign social or child welfare agency and
the homestudy report in their cases to be prepared by such
sponsoring foreign agency. This difficulty is a genuine
difficulty. It would be quite impracticable to ask a for-
eigner living in India and wishing to take an Indian child
in adoption to obtain a home-study report from an agency
base in his home country. It would
396
be impossible for any foreign social or child welfare agency
to sponsor the case of such foreigner who is living in India
and it would equally be impossible for any such social or
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child welfare agency to prepare a home,study report in
respect of such foreigner. We would, therefore, direct that
in case of a foreigner who has been living in India for one
year or more, the home-study report and other connected
documents may be allowed to be prepared by the recognised
placement agency which is processing the application of such
foreigner for guardianship of a child with a view to its
eventual adoption and that in such a case the court should
not insist on sponsoring of such foreigner by a social or
child welfare agency based in the country to which such
foreigner belongs nor should a home-study report in respect
of such foreigner be required to be obtained from any such
foreign social or child welfare agency. The home-study
report and other connected documents prepared by the recog-
nised placement agency should be regarded as sufficient.
The last point raised on behalf of the applicants arises
out of paragraph 12 of the supplemental judgment dated 27th
September 1985. We pointed out in that paragraph of the
supplemental judgment that ordinarily the court entertaining
an application on behalf of a foreigner for being appointed
guardian of a child with a view to its eventual adoption
should not insist on making of deposit by the foreigner as
and by way of security for due performance of the obliga-
tions undertaken by him, but in an appropriate case, the
court exceptionally pass an order requiring him to make such
deposit. We observed that the execution of a bond would
ordinarily be sufficient: and we made two alternative sug-
gestions which may be implemented in regard to the execution
of such bond. We have considered this question once again in
view of the plea raised on behalf of the applicants and we
are of the view that the court need not insist on security
or cash deposit or hank guarantee and it should be enough if
a bond is taken from the recognised placement agency which
is processing the application and such recognised placement
agency may in its turn take a corresponding bond from the
sponsoring social or child welfare agency in the foreign
country. Ordinarily, the sponsoring social or child welfare
agency in the foreign country would honour the bond in case
the condition of the bond is broken, because, obviously: if
it fails to do so, no recognised placement agency in India
would in future deal with it and moreover the name of such
foreign social or child welfare agency would be liable to be
deleted from the list of foreign social or child welfare
agencies which are recognised as sponsoring agencies for the
purpose of adoption.
These were the only points raised for our consideration
in the applications made on behalf of various social and
child welfare agencies. We have dealt with these points in
some detail and we hope and trust that the
397
clarifications given by us will go a long way towards reduc-
ing the delay in the procedure to be followed in giving a
child in adoption to a foreigner and will also at the same
time protect and safeguard the interest of the child by
preventing any possibility of abuse.
M.L.A.
398