A transcript of the 1926 Act to
make provision for the adoption of infants
An Act to make provision for the adoption of
infants. [
Be it enacted by the King’s most Excellent
Majesty, and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal,
and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority, of the
same, as follows
1.-(1) Upon an application in the prescribed
manner by any person desirous of being authorised to adopt an infant who has
never been married, the Court may, subject to the provisions of this Act, make
an order (in this Act referred to as "an adoption order") authorising
the applicant to adopt that infant.
(2) A person so authorised to adopt the
infant and an infant authorised to be adopted are in this Act referred to as an
"adopter" and an "adopted child" respectively, and
"infant" means a person under the age of twenty-one.
(3) Where an application for an adoption
order is made by two spouses jointly, the Court may make the order authorising
the two spouses jointly to adopt, but save as aforesaid no adoption order shall
be made authorising more than one person to adopt an infant.
2.-(1) An adoption order shall not be made in
any case where-
(a) the applicant is under the age of twenty-five years, or
(b) the applicant is less than twenty-one years older than the infant in
respect of whom the application is made:
Provided that, where the applicant and the infant are within the prohibited
degrees of consanguinity, it shall be lawful for the court, if it thinks fit,
to make the order notwithstanding that the applicant is less than twenty-one
years older than the infant.
(2) An adoption order shall not be made in
any case where the sole applicant is a male and the infant in respect of whom
the application is made is a female unless the Court is satisfied that there
are special circumstances which justify as an exceptional measure the making of
an adoption order.
(3) An adoption order shall not be made
except with the consent of every person or body who is a parent or guardian of
the infant in respect of whom the application is made or who has the actual
custody of the infant or who is liable to contribute to the support of the
infant:
Provided that the Court may dispense with any consent required by this
subsection if satisfied that the person whose consent is to be dispensed with
has abandoned or deserted the infant or cannot be found or is incapable of
giving such consent or, being a person liable to contribute to the support of
the infant, either has persistently neglected or refused to contribute to such
support or is a person whose consent ought, in the opinion of the court and in
all the circumstances of the case, to be dispensed with.
(4) An adoption order shall not be made upon
the application of one of two spouses without the consent of the other of them:
Provided that the court may dispense with any consent required by this
subsection if satisfied that the person whose consent is to be dispensed with
cannot be found or is incapable of giving such consent or that the spouses have
separated and are living apart and that the separation is likely to be
permanent.
(5) An adoption order shall not be made in
favour of any applicant who is not resident and domiciled in England or Wales
or in respect of any infant who (s not a British subject and so resident.
3. The Court before making an adoption order
shall be satisfied-
(a) that every person whose consent is necessary under this Act and whose
consent is not dispensed with has consented to and understands the nature and
effect of the adoption order for which application is made, and in particular
in the case of any parent understands that the effect of the adoption order
will be permanently to deprive him or her of his or her parental rights; and
(b) that the order if made will be for the welfare of the infant, due
consideration being for this purpose given to the wishes of the infant, having
regard to the age and understanding of the infant; and
(c) that the applicant has not received or agreed to receive, and that no
person has made or given, or agreed to make or give to the applicant, any
payment or other reward in consideration of the adoption except such as the
court may sanction.
4. The Court in an adoption order may impose
such terms and conditions as the Court may think fit and in particular may
require the adopter by bond or otherwise
to make for the adopted child such provision
(if any) as in the opinion of the Court is just and expedient.
5.-(1) Upon an adoption order being made, all
rights, duties, obligations and liabilities of the parent or parents, guardian
or guardians of the adopted child, in relation to the future custody,
maintenance and education of the adopted child, including all rights to appoint
a guardian or to consent or give notice of dissent to marriage shall be
extinguished, and all such rights, duties, obligations and liabilities shall
vest in and be exercisable by and enforceable against the adopter as though the
adopted child was a child born to the adopter in lawful wedlock, and in respect
of the same matters and in respect of the liability of a child to maintain its
parents the adopted child shall stand to the adopter exclusively in the
position of a child born to the adopter in lawful wedlock:
Provided that, in any case where two spouses are the adopters, such spouses
shall in respect of the matters aforesaid and for the purpose of the
jurisdiction of any court to make orders as to the custody and maintenance of
and right of access to children stand to each other and to the adopted child in
the same relation as they would have stood if they had been the lawful father
and mother of the adopted child, and the adopted child shall stand to them
respectively in the same relation as a child would have stood to a lawful
father and mother respectively.
(2) An adoption order shall not deprive the adopted child of any right to or
interest in property to which, but for the order, the child would have been
entitled under any intestacy or disposition, whether occurring or made before
or after the making of the adoption order, or confer on the adopted child any
right to or interest in property as a child of the adopter, and the expressions
"child," "children" and "issue" where used in any
disposition whether made before or after the making of an adoption order, shall
not, unless the contrary intention appears, include an adopted child or
children or the issue of an adopted child.
(3) Where an adopted child or the spouse or issue of an adopted child takes any
interest in real or persona] property under a disposition by the adopter, or
where an adopter takes any interest in real or personal property under a
disposition by an adopted child or the spouse or issue of an adopted child, any
succession, legacy or other duty which becomes leviable in respect thereof
shall be payable at the same rate as if the adopted child had been a child born
to the adopter in lawful wedlock.
(4) For the purposes of this section "disposition" means an assurance
of any interest in property by any instrument whether inter vivos or by will
including codicil.
(5) For the purposes of the enactments relating to friendly societies,
collecting societies and industrial assurance companies, which enable such societies
and companies to insure money to be paid for funeral expenses, and which
restrict the persons to whom money may be paid on the death of a child under
the age of ten, the adopter shall be deemed to be the parent of the child; and
where before the adoption order was made any such insurance had been effected
by the natural parent of the child, the rights and liabilities under the policy
shall by virtue of the adoption order be transferred to the adopter, and the
adopter shall, for the purposes of the said enactments, be treated as the
person who took out the policy.
6.-(1) Upon any application for an adoption
order, the Court may postpone the determination of the application and may make
an interim order (which shall not be an adoption order for the purposes of this
Act) giving the custody of the infant to the applicant for a period not
exceeding two years by way of a probationary period upon such terms as regards
provision for the maintenance and education and supervision of the welfare of
the infant and otherwise as the Court may think fit.
(2) All such consents as are required to an
adoption order shall be necessary to an interim order hut subject to a like
power on the part of the Court to dispense with any such consent.
7. An adoption order or an interim order may
be made in respect of an infant who has already been the subject of an adoption
order, and, upon any application for such further adoption order, the adopter
or adopters under the adoption order last previously made shall, if living, be
deemed to be the parent or parents of the infant for all the purposes of this
Act.
8.-(1) The Court having jurisdiction to make
adoption orders under this Act shall be the High Court or, at the option of the
applicant, but subject to any rules under this section, any county court or any
Court of summary jurisdiction within the jurisdiction of which either the
applicant or the infant resides at the date of the application for the adoption
order.
(2) Rules in regard to any matter to be
prescribed under this Act and directing the manner in which applications to the
Court are to be made and dealing generally with all matters of procedure and
incidental matters arising out of this Act and for carrying this Act into
effect shall be made by the Lord Chancellor.
Such rules may provide for applications for
adoption orders being heard and determined otherwise than in open Court, and
where the application is made to a court of summary jurisdiction, for the
hearing and determination thereof in a juvenile court as defined by the
Children Act, 1908.
(3) For the purpose of any application under
this Act and subject to any rules under this section, the Court shall appoint
some person or body to act as guardian ad litem of the infant upon the hearing
of the application with the duty of safeguarding the interests of the infant
before the Court, and where the body so appointed is a local authority the
Court may authorise the authority to incur any necessary expenditure, and may
direct out of which fund or rate such expenditure is to be defrayed, but
nothing in this section shall be deemed to authorise the Court to appoint a
local authority to act as guardian ad litem of an infant except with the
consent of that authority.
9. It shall not be lawful for any adopter or
for any parent or guardian except with the sanction of the Court to receive any
payment or other reward in consideration of the adoption of any infant under
this Act or for any person to make or give or agree to make or give to any
adopter or to any parent or guardian any such payment or reward.
10. Where at the date of the commencement of
this Act any infant is in the custody of, and being brought up, maintained and
educated by any person or two spouses jointly as his, her or their own child
under any de facto adoption, and has for a period of not less than two years
before such commencement been in such custody, and been so brought up,
maintained and educated, the Court may, upon the application of such person or
spouses, and notwithstanding that the applicant is a male and the infant a
female, make an adoption order authorising him, her or them to adopt the infant
without requiring the consent of any parent or guardian of the infant to be
obtained, upon being satisfied that in all the circumstances of the case it is
just and equitable and for the welfare of the infant that no such consent
should be required and that an adoption order should be made.
11.-( 1) The Registrar-General shall
establish and maintain at the General Register Office a register to be called
the Adopted Children Register, in which shall be made such entries as may be
directed to be made therein by adoption orders, but no other entries.
(2) Every adoption order shall contain a
direction to the Registrar-General to make in the Adopted Children Register an
entry recording the adoption in the form set out in the Schedule hereto.
(3) If upon any application for an adoption
order there is proved to the satisfaction of the Court-
the date of the birth of the infant; and
the identity of the infant with a child to which
any entry or entries in the Registers of Births relates;
the adoption order shall contain a further
direction to the Registrar-General to cause such birth, entry or entries in the
Registers of Birth, to be marked with the word "Adopted," and to
include in the entry in the adoption register recording the adoption the date
stated in the order of the adopted child’s birth in the manner indicated in the
Schedule hereto.
(4) The prescribed officer of the Court shall
cause every adoption order to be communicated in the prescribed manner to the
Registrar-General, and upon receipt of such communication the Registrar-General
shall cause compliance to be made with the directions contained in such order
in regard both to marking any entry in the Registers of Birth with the word
"Adopted," and in regard to making the appropriate entry in the
Adopted Children Register.
(5) A certified copy of any entry in the
Adopted Children Register if purporting to be sealed or stamped with the seal
of the General Register Office shall, without any further or other proof of
such entry-
(a) where the entry does not contain any
record of the date of the birth of the adopted child be received as evidence of
the adoption to which the same relates; and
(b) where the entry contains a record of the
date of the birth of the adopted child shall be received not only as evidence
of the adoption to which the same relates but also as evidence of the date of
the birth of the adopted child to which the same relates in all respects as
though the same were a certified copy of an entry in the Registers of Births.
(6) The Registrar-General shall cause an
index of the Adopted Children Register to be made and kept in the General
Register Office, and every person shall be entitled to search such index and to
have a certified copy of any entry in the Adopted Children Register in all
respects upon, and subject to the same terms, conditions and regulations as to
payment of fees and otherwise as are applicable under the Births and Deaths
Registration Acts, 1836 to 1901, in respect of searches in other indexes kept
in the General Register Office, and in respect of the supply from such office
of certified copies of entries in the certified copies of the Registers of
Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(7) The Registrar-General shall, in addition
to the Adopted Children Register and the index thereof, keep such other
registers and books, and make such entries therein as may be necessary, to
record and make traceable the connexion between any entry in the register of births
which has been marked "Adopted" pursuant to this Act and any
corresponding entry in the Adopted Children Register, but such last-mentioned
registers and books shall not be nor shall any index thereof be open to public
inspection or search, nor, except under an order of a court of competent
jurisdiction, shall the Registrar-General furnish any person with any
information contained in or with any copy or extract from any such registers or
books.
(8) Regulations made by the Registrar-General
under the Births and Deaths Registration Acts, 1836 to 1901, may make provision
as to the duties to be performed by Superintendent Registrars and Registrars of
Births and Deaths in the execution of this Act.
12.-(1.) This Act may be cited as the
Adoption of Children Act, 1926.
(2) This Act shall come into operation on the
first day of January, nineteen hundred and twenty-seven.
(3) This Act shall not apply to
SCHEDULE. |
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No.
of |
Date
of |
Name
of Adopted |
Sex
of |
Name
and Surname, Address |
Date
of Birth |
Date
of |
Signature
of Officer |
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Guy Etchells © 2002 All rights reserved. Permission is granted for all free personal and
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