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Thu, Nov 26 2009 

Published: October 24, 2009 08:14 pm    print this story  

Challenge of dying grandfather’s adoption tossed

AP

JACKSON The Mississippi Appeals Court said this week that Illinois Central Railroad Co. had no legal standing to challenge the adoption of three children by a dying former employee who was suing the company.

Court records show John Foster Jr. filed an asbestos lawsuit in Warren County against Illinois Central in October 2005, months after a lung tumor was found.

In 2006, Foster adopted three of his own grandchildren in Jefferson County in southwestern Mississippi. Records show he did so with the blessing of their birth parents, Virginia and DeWayne Smith. Virginia Smith was Foster’s daughter.

Records show a chancery judge approved the adoptions on June 28, 2006, and entered the orders into court documents two days later.

Foster refused treatment and died 37 days after the adoption was completed, according to court documents.

His grandchildren were allowed to join in the lawsuit as heirs and to receive monthly payments from his Illinois Central pension.

On June 26, 2007, the railroad company asked the Jefferson County Chancery Court to set aside the adoptions of the children. The company said the adoptions were fraudulent and shouldn’t have been approved because Foster was too ill to take care of the children.

The chancery court judge ruled against the railroad, saying the challenge was not filed on time. State law says any court action to set aside an adoption must be filed within six months. The Appeals Court agreed that the challenge by Illinois Central came too late.

The Appeals Court also wrote that under Mississippi law, only a natural parent has a legal right to object to the adoption of a child by someone else.

“Illinois Central has a substantial financial interest in the adoption by Foster. However, this interest is purely economic,” Appeals Court Judge William Myers wrote this week.

Court documents say the three adopted children are receiving about $1,932 a month from Foster’s retirement with Illinois Central, and they wouldn’t have received that money without the adoption.

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