Brooks v. Willie

117 Misc. 2d 640, 458 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3198
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 117 Misc. 2d 640 (Brooks v. Willie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Willie, 117 Misc. 2d 640, 458 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3198 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John J. Dunn, J.

Both parties to this litigation have filed petitions seeking a filiation order for the sole child born of this union on February 16, 1981. The natural mother filed on July 27, 1982 and the natural father, the following day, namely, July 28, 1982.

Prior to trial, counsel for the litigants stipulated to the entry of such an order including the rights of each party as to custody, visitation and child support. The issue left for the court’s determination was that of the infant’s surname. The child’s birth certificate presently lists his surname as that of the mother. The father wishes to have the certificate and the child bear his surname, while the mother feels otherwise and is resisting his efforts to a name change.

Mother and father, referred to herein as petitioner and respondent, respectively, have been known to each other some 13 years and commenced living together in May, 1979, continuing this relationship up to the birth of their [641]*641child in February, 1981. Following the youngster’s birth, the petitioner left the home of the respondent and took up residence in an apartment shared only by her and her newborn son. This lasted some six weeks whereupon the petitioner resumed living with respondent and the infant, Sean. All three parties continued living together for approximately 14 months only to again separate, which is the present status of the relationship. The costs of the household and the offspring had been shared equally but at present, the respondent pays $45 weekly for the care of his son. Both litigants have testified to their love and devotion to their infant son and the court is impressed with their sincerity and dedication. Testimony indicates that both parties have shared in such chores as child bathing, diaper changing, feeding, baby-sitting and entertainment or play with young Sean. Both petitioner and respondent are relatively young, earning respectable salaries and can be expected to share and participate in the growth, care and nurturing of their offspring. If the past is any barometer or prognostication of the future, the child will not be deprived of parental love and guidance. The court takes particular note of the concern both parents displayed in the baptism of the child and applauds the petitioner for alerting the father of the impending ceremony at her parents’ home in New Mexico and likewise lauds the father for his plane flight to such a distant site in order to participate in the church-sponsored sacrament. The baptismal certificate, unlike the birth certificate in New York, has the respondent recited as the father of the child, as well it should. This State does not request of the father what name, if any, the child should bear, such designation being the sole propriety of the mother. In the case at bar, the father’s name has been completely omitted although he visited with his newborn son on his date of birth.

The respondent father wishes to have his son bear his surname, of which he feels proud: He has impressed this court with his intentions of being a most dedicated parent who will fulfill hid role and responsibility to the youngster. The petitioner herself characterized the respondent as a “good father”. Conversely, the mother opines that since the boy lives with her most of the time and since she has [642]*642changed her life-style and job hours for the betterment of young Sean, the boy should bear only her name. She has informed the court that “there are a lot of children that have either the mother or the father’s name”. Such are the salient facts.

The issues to be resolved are twofold: (1) does the Family Court have the power in an article 5 filiation proceeding (Family Ct Act, art 5) to determine the surname of the child, and assuming it does, (2) will the child’s interests be best served by his bearing the surname of the adjudicated father? Notwithstanding the willingness of both sides to have this court determine the boy’s name, the mother now asserts that the court lacks jurisdiction to determine surname “status” in a paternity proceeding, relying upon a recent New York County Family Court decision, Dana A. v Harry M. N. (113 Misc 2d 635). The father, however, maintains that a proper construction of section 543 of the Family Court Act together with the emerging judicial trend towards establishment of equal rights for putative fathers, provides a sound rationale for a grant of power to this court to determine the matter raised.

It is axiomatic that the Family Court is a creature of legislative enactment and thus may act only pursuant to an enabling statute. (Clune v Clune, 57 AD2d 256; Matter of Borkowski v Borkowski, 38 AD2d 752; Da Via v St. Denis, 107 Misc 2d 750.) Nevertheless, and despite this apparent mandate of limited jurisdiction and precise construction of the law, the court is obligated to protect the welfare of children and to ensure that their best interests be served. (Matter of Orlando F., 40 NY2d 103; People ex rel. Ruppert v Dinin, 49 Misc 2d 585; People v Keller, 37 Misc 2d 122.) Indeed, the court was established “as a ‘special agency for the care and protection of the young and for the preservation of the family.’ (* * * Joint Legislative Committee on Court Reorganization, Report II, the Family Court Act, p 2.) It was meant to be the one judicial forum in which almost all problems of the family could be heard and hopefully settled.” (Matter of Fusco v Roth, 100 Misc 2d 288, 293; emphasis added.)

An analysis of the Family Court Act as a whole, giving proper weight to the intentions of the Legislature in con[643]*643struing the various provisions of the act, reveals a grant of jurisdiction to the Family Court that often belies the ostensible narrowness of the specific statutory scheme set forth. Indeed, in addition to the precise exclusive jurisdictional grants listed in section 115, the court possesses “such other jurisdiction as is provided by law.” (Family Ct Act, § 115, subd [d].) Indeed, a significant portion of the caseload of the court consists of actions and proceedings which are not recited in the Family Court Act (e.g., adoptions, foster care review, consents to marry, termination of parental rights, USDL [Uniform Support of Dependents Law, Domestic Relations Law, art 3-A] proceedings, etc.). It would thus be sheer folly to believe that the court’s power is limited exclusively to matters that are specifically enumerated in the Family Court Act itself. Indeed, the Legislature surely intended that the court do such other “nonenumerated” acts that would otherwise serve the purposes stated in Matter of Fusco v Roth (supra). As one of the early planners of the Family Court states: “[Despite strict construction] the Court does have such [other] collateral jurisdiction as is necessary to implement and fulfill the purposes of its expressly provided, primary jurisdiction.” (Besharov, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act, § 115, p 22.)

With respect to the instant proceeding, it can be said that the “expressly provided, primary jurisdiction” of article 5 of the Family Court Act is to enter an order of filiation and child support. Nevertheless, there are other collateral powers expressly or impliedly found in article 5 that can otherwise serve to satisfy the “protection of the child” purpose of paternity proceedings. (See, e.g., Matter of J. [Anonymous], 50 AD2d 890; Matter of Geraldine K. v Elliot B.,

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Bluebook (online)
117 Misc. 2d 640, 458 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-willie-nyfamct-1983.