Carter v. Bane

159 Misc. 2d 786
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 Misc. 2d 786 (Carter v. Bane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Bane, 159 Misc. 2d 786 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Phylus Gangel-Jacob, J.

Pursuant to CPLR article 78, petitioner Shirley Carter, paternal grandmother of the minor child Javette Alexander (Javette), seeks a judgment vacating the April 3, 1992 determination of the Commissioner of the New York State Department of Social Services (NYS-DSS) to the extent it disallowed foster care payments to petitioner for Javette from May 2, 1986 and forward. After a fair hearing payments were found required for the period April 3, 1984 through May 1, 1986 and the New York City Department of Social Services (NYC-DSS) was directed to comply immediately. The petitioner seeks a directive from this court ordering respondents to issue a grant of foster care payments from May 2, 1986 to the present as well as attorney’s fees, costs and disbursements. NYS-DSS has answered the petition denying its merit and has annexed a copy of the transcript, exhibits and decision of the fair hearing.

Javette is the daughter of Eileen Alexander and Larry Daniel Carter, petitioner’s son. It appears that these two persons were never married to each other. Both were chronic intravenous drug users and alcoholics. Javette was born drug addicted on May 17, 1981. At the time of her birth petitioner, who is Javette’s grandmother, contacted the Child Welfare Administration, a component of respondent NYC-DSS and a caseworker (Ms. White) had petitioner, Eileen Alexander and Larry Carter sign "a letter”. No copy of the letter is offered and no account of its contents is furnished. Apparently pursuant to this letter, Ms. White called the social worker at the hospital where Javette was born and told her to release the child to petitioner. Petitioner has cared for Javette from that time to the present. Angel Guardian, a private foster care agency, visited petitioner’s home approximately once a month until 1986.

Javette’s sister Yolanda was born to the same parents on February 28, 1984, also addicted to drugs. At that time, [788]*788respondent NYC-DSS brought a neglect petition on behalf of both children against both parents, pursuant to article 10 of the Family Court Act. In that petition, it was stated that the children resided with Eileen Alexander and that she was legally responsible for them. In fact, not only was Javette then living with her grandmother, but Yolanda had been placed at birth by respondent NYC-DSS with her cousin Lola Marcus. The Family Court Act article 10 petition was granted and custody was awarded to the Commissioner of Social Services for a period of 18 months which expired May 1, 1986.

Both children remained in their respective relatives’ homes. On October 1, 1985 during the period of NYC-DSS’s custody of her children, Eileen Alexander died as a consequence of chronic intravenous drug use. When the custody period had elapsed, no further action was taken by NYC-DSS. No petition to extend the period was filed and no effort was made to appoint a guardian of the children. Lola Marcus had been certified as a foster home and she received foster care payments on Yolanda’s account for the period of NYC-DSS’s custody and thereafter until Yolanda died on February 19, 1987 of meningitis, a result of her congenital drug impairment. Larry Carter, the children’s father, died on May 30, 1988 of cryptococcal meningitis also as a result of drug addiction.

Petitioner has continued to care for Javette in a household that includes petitioner’s other son Warren, a minor, and her daughter, together with the daughter’s three minor children. Petitioner lives on public assistance. Javette has received Social Security payments since the death of her mother. Petitioner claims that she does not receive public assistance for Javette, although on the fair hearing questionnaire it is stated that she does. This is borne out to some degree by a copy of a letter from the New York City Human Resources Administration, dated February 14, 1985 which attempts to explain the custody situation of Javette to petitioner’s Income Maintenance Center. She never received foster care payments On account of Javette.

In 1991, petitioner requested a fair hearing from respondent NYS-DSS to protest NYC-DSS’s refusal to pay her foster care payments. On April 3, 1992, NYS-DSS determined that petitioner was entitled to foster care payments from April 13, 1984 through May 1, 1986. Reasoning that with the lapse of the Family Court placement order petitioner’s foster parent [789]*789status had also lapsed, respondent denied payments for any period thereafter.

Pursuant to the Social Services Law, the Commissioner of NYC-DSS may obtain custody or guardianship of a child by means of (1) a voluntary surrender of the child by written instrument (Social Services Law § 384), (2) a voluntary transfer of the care and custody of the child (Social Services Law § 384-a), or (3) a court order pursuant to the abuse or neglect proceeding provisions of Family Court Act article 10 (Social Services Law § 384-b). Where custody of a child is transferred to the Commissioner pursuant to a court order adjudicating neglect, the local district has authority to place the child in a foster home and provide foster care payments for the care of the child (Social Services Law § 374).

Such foster care home may be that of a relative of the child who may offer to serve for free or who may take advantage of the simplified kinship foster parent certification program of 18 NYCRR 444.8 (Family Ct Act § 1017). Such person, on complying with this program, would be entitled to foster care payments. Family Court Act § 1017 was added by Laws of 1989 (ch 744, § 1). While this section was not in effect at the time of the Family Court order herein, it appears to have formalized NYC-DSS’s then working placement policy (see, Besharov, 1989 Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 1055, 1993 Pocket Part, at 188).

A court order remanding a child to the care and custody of the Commissioner of NYC-DSS has an initial duration of 12 months (Family Ct Act § 1055 [b] [i]).

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Related

Matter of Rodriguez v. Johnson
2004 NY Slip Op 50130(U) (New York Supreme Court, New York County, 2004)
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226 A.D.2d 291 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 Misc. 2d 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-bane-nysupct-1993.