Administration for Children's Services v. Silvia S.

18 Misc. 3d 326
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Misc. 3d 326 (Administration for Children's Services v. Silvia S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Administration for Children's Services v. Silvia S., 18 Misc. 3d 326 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edwina G. Richardson-Mendelson, J.

The petitioner, the Administration for Children’s Services (hereinafter ACS), moves this court under this “Z” docket for an order requiring the production of psychological, psychiatric and medical records of the respondent. No petition alleging child neglect or abuse has been filed. The respondent is the mother of subject child Daniel C. Daniel C. was born in March 2007 according to the intake report of the Office of Children and Family Services. The child’s father, Samuel C., is not a respondent.

According to memorandum of law submitted to the court by ACS, the respondent, on June 24, 2007, had an argument with the staff of a homeless shelter in which she was residing. The argument centered on the shelter’s refusal to permit the nonrespondent father to stay at the shelter with the respondent mother and the child. The respondent claims that the argument caused her to have a seizure and she was taken by ambulance to Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx, where she was admitted. The respondent has a history of seizure disorder. On the same day, a social worker at Lincoln Hospital submitted a report to the New York Statewide Central Register of Child Abuse and Maltreatment alleging that the child and his father, prior to the respondent mother’s hospitalization, were homeless and sleeping on trains and outdoors. The report also alleged that the respondent mother “had no plans for where the non-respondent father and the subject child were to stay while respondent-mother was hospitalized.”

On June 24, 2007, the day she was admitted to the hospital, the respondent mother reportedly contacted the maternal grandmother to ascertain whether the maternal grandmother would be willing to care for the child until the respondent mother was released from the hospital. On the same day, the respondent mother placed the child in the care of a maternal aunt and maternal great-aunt.

Also on June 24, 2007, while still medically unstable, the respondent mother signed herself out of Lincoln Hospital. Accord[328]*328ing to ACS, the respondent mother’s treating physician recommended additional tests and did not recommend that the respondent mother leave the hospital when she did. On the next day, June 25, 2007, the respondent mother admitted herself to New York Presbyterian Hospital for treatment of seizure disorder. She was released the following day and, at an unstated date, she and the nonrespondent father were placed by “PATH-EAU” at an adult shelter.

On or about June 28, 2007, the nonrespondent father filed a motion in Bronx Family Court under Family Court Act § 1028 seeking the return of the child. The motion was granted on June 28, 2007. The memoranda received by the court from ACS and the respondent do not indicate why a motion under section 1028 was necessary in a circumstance in which ACS apparently never removed the child from the family’s care.

On or about July 6, 2007, the respondent mother and the child were placed by “PATH-EAU” in a shelter in Jamaica, New York. On the same date, the respondent mother stated that she was diagnosed with postpartum depression after the birth of the subject child. The respondent mother also told a case worker that “she had not been compliant with taking her prescription medication in April 2007, which resulted in two episodes of seizures in June 2007.”

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Related

Matter of Administration for Children's Servs. v. Silvia S.
2007 NY Slip Op 27456 (Queens Family Court, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Misc. 3d 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/administration-for-childrens-services-v-silvia-s-nycfamct-2007.