Anonymous G. v. Anonymous G.

132 A.D.2d 459, 517 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 49024
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 9, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 A.D.2d 459 (Anonymous G. v. Anonymous G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anonymous G. v. Anonymous G., 132 A.D.2d 459, 517 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 49024 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Alfred M. Ascione, J.), entered on or about March 2, 1987, which granted defendant-respondent's motion to confirm the report of Special Referee Alex Colgan, recommending that respondent be granted increased, unsupervised visitation with the parties’ minor children, and which granted plaintiff-appellant’s cross motion to vacate the report of the Special Referee to the extent of vacating the recommendation that respondent not be obligated to pay arrears due and owing for child support, and which further directed that the expanded visitation not take place until such time as defendant commences [460]*460and makes continuous payment of his $75 weekly child support obligation and satisfies all arrears due and owing for child support, modified, on the law, the facts, and in the exercise of discretion, to allow the respondent supervised visitation only, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.

This case presents a very disturbing picture of two young children who have become pawns in a destructive and debilitating battle waged by their father, respondent herein, who has been found by two Justices of the Supreme Court and the New York State Department of Social Services to have engaged his minor daughter in inappropriate and exploitative sexual conduct. Justice Richard Wallach, at the conclusion of an eight-day hearing in Supreme Court in 1983, found that the daughter and her brother were "primary weapons” used by respondent against his former wife and in-laws; that his "fury * * * against those people has overcome every rational consideration” causing respondent "to behave in a way which is totally detrimental, and if not arrested, ruinous to the welfare of these children.”

The parties were divorced in 1980 and appellant was granted custody of the children. Respondent was granted supervised visitation and ordered to pay $75 per week for child support. In March 1981 an order was entered enjoining respondent from harassing appellant and the children. In April 1983, appellant’s mother filed a report of suspected child abuse with the Westchester County Department of Social Services, alleging that respondent was sexually exploiting his daughter. This report was under investigation when the hearing before Justice Wallach began in June 1983.

It was established during those proceedings that the daughter, at the age of 3Vi, had been diagnosed as "dangerously and sexually overstimulated”. However, instead of trying to help the child overcome this problem, Justice Wallach found that respondent permitted and indeed encouraged the child to play "games” involving genital touching and "exaggerated nudity, which he [respondent] thinks is perfectly healthy”. Respondent had also repeatedly harassed appellant and her family and denigrated them, using profane and obscene language in the presence of the children. Justice Wallach characterized respondent as "a person whose own ego and whose own compulsive requirements overwhelm him so that the real impact of what he is doing [to] these children is utterly lost”. To protect the daughter, who was "hysterical at the thought that she would face her father”, and to protect her brother, the court terminated respondent’s right to overnight visitation [461]*461and further limited respondent to 2 or 3 mealtime visits in the children’s home area in Westchester County.

Three months later, when respondent sought modification of the court’s order, Justice Wallach stated, after reading respondent’s papers, that "one might suppose that he has been triumphantly vindicated in all his past conduct, and the only task remaining for the court is to ratify the details of his exoneration, and perhaps place his name in nomination as father of the year.” In August 1983, the local child protective service had determined that there was credible evidence supporting the report of respondent’s sexual abuse of the daughter. The Westchester County police officer and the social worker who had investigated the report gave testimony which, Justice Wallach noted, suggested criminal liability under Penal Law § 130.65.

The court pointed out respondent’s defiance of previous orders requiring him to pay child support and his "systematic course of harassing conduct”, the net effect of which was "to terrorize his children and seriously impair their ability to live a normal life.” Respondent’s motion was denied in all respects. Justice Wallach ordered that the restrictions on respondent’s visitation continue until such time as Dr. Christine Masters, who was treating the daughter in psychotherapy, certified to the court that it would be in the child’s best interest for respondent to have more extended visitation. Dr. Masters, a developmental psychologist with the Rockland County Community Mental Health Center, first evaluated her in April 1983, at the request of the local child protective service as part of their investigation into the report of suspected sexual abuse by respondent. She has been the daughter’s psychotherapist since that time.

In early 1984, this matter was again before the Supreme Court upon a motion by appellant to suspend respondent’s visitation pending a report from Dr. Masters that the children would be able to adjust to their father’s behavior. After Justice Wallach recused himself, hearings were held before Justice Shea.

Justice Shea found that since the proceedings before Justice Wallach, respondent had "continued to act in violent, hostile and inappropriate ways to the grave detriment of his children.” Respondent had continued to "overstimulate [the daughter] sexually” by permitting the children to draw on his body below his bathing trunks while at the beach, by playing a "game” in which the children were permitted to remove his belt and unzip his pants in a public restaurant, by forcing his [462]*462daughter to accept a "wet kiss” in which respondent inserted his tongue in her mouth, and by sending the children a postcard with a message referring to "wet kisses”. The court also found that respondent’s behavior was "wild and angry” based on testimony that respondent assaulted appellant and tried to take control of her car as she was driving away with the children who were in the back seat. On more than one occasion respondent used profanity in front of the children, referring to their mother using obscene anatomical terms. Respondent told the daughter that Dr. Masters was "a liar” and otherwise attempted to undermine the therapeutic relationship that the doctor had established with this child.

Dr. Masters testified that the daughter was anxious, depressed and withdrawn and that these symptoms became worse when respondent’s visitation was increased. The child has also exhibited "suicidal ideation”. Respondent’s testimony, that the child once said that she wanted to climb over a 50-foot fence and jump down, corroborated this. There was also testimony from another psychiatrist, who had evaluated both children, that the son had been seriously traumatized emotionally by the violence and threats of violence he had observed in the interactions between his parents, and that as a result he had retreated into a fantasy world. The son, who was then four years old, was not fully toilet trained and the doctor attributed this to his fears and insecurity. Respondent called Dr. Joel Feiner, a psychiatrist. Justice Shea, however, rejected Dr. Feiner’s conclusion that the daughter was somewhat anxious but not in substantial distress, as contrary to the "overwhelming weight of the evidence”.

Respondent also called five witnesses who testified to the warm relationship which they had observed between respondent and the children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 A.D.2d 459, 517 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 49024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anonymous-g-v-anonymous-g-nyappdiv-1987.