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.
State News
Challenge of dying grandfather’s adoption tossed
- State News
-
-
MHP on patrol for holiday
Even though there has been a remarkable reduction in the number of fatalities in Mississippi over the past seven years, last year’s Memorial Day Weekend was particularly deadly.
-
Forecasters: 9 to 15 storms this hurricane season
U.S. forecasters predicted Thursday that this year’s Atlantic hurricane season would produce a normal number of about nine to 15 tropical storms.
As many as four to eight of those storms could strengthen into hurricanes, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s initial outlook for the six-month storm season that officially begins June 1. One to three of those could become major hurricanes with top winds of 111 mph or higher. -
Miss. court sets execution dates for 2 of 3 men
Mississippi will not execute three men on three consecutive days in June, after the state Supreme Court set execution dates a week apart for two men and declined to set a date for a third.
-
New, old law makers tout legislative successes
Four state law makers held a legislative review for members of the Greater Picayune Area Chamber of Commerce at the newly opened Southern Char restaurant Tuesday night to share with business owners information about new bills and laws that have been passed.
-
Prosecutors: Delay sentencing in hate crime case
Federal prosecutors want to delay the sentencing of three white men who pleaded guilty to hate crime charges stemming from a months-long pattern of harassing blacks that culminated in the fatal rundown of James Craig Anderson.
-
Bryant signs laws affecting students and veterans
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant signed a bill Wednesday that requires kindergarteners or first-graders to be tested for dyslexia, a reading disorder that can sometimes go undiagnosed for years and leave children struggling to learn.
-
Losing bidder sues over revised bid at state port
A contract dispute has put on hold elevation work at the state port in Gulfport.
The port’s West Pier is being expanded, elevated and updated to house a modern containerized cargo operation. When completed, the pier will include 180 acres elevated for storm-surge protection by 15 feet, to 25 feet above sea level. -
Mom of man in sisters abduction gets new charge
Prosecutors have increased the severity of charges against the mother of a man who abducted two young Tennessee girls after he killed their mother and oldest sister.
-
Sheriff: Gang started prison riot in Mississippi
A gang fight in a prison for illegal immigrants quickly escalated into a riot involving as many as 300 inmates, some lashing out with sticks or homemade knives as the uprising spread through the sprawling prison, a sheriff said.
-
Miss. voter ID bill signed, awaits feds’ scrutiny
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant on Thursday signed a bill requiring voters to show photo identification at the polls, but it’s unclear whether it will become law.
- More State News Headlines
-
MHP on patrol for holiday



