Commissioner of Social Services v. William C.

147 Misc. 2d 974, 559 N.Y.S.2d 88, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 317
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJune 14, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 Misc. 2d 974 (Commissioner of Social Services v. William C.) 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
Commissioner of Social Services v. William C., 147 Misc. 2d 974, 559 N.Y.S.2d 88, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 317 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bruce M. Kaplan, J.

When William C., an off-duty New York City police officer, [975]*975was murdered the tribulations of his grief stricken family were far from over.

Their time of mourning and bereavement was shattered by the revelation that Mr. C. was the respondent in a paternity proceeding brought by the Commissioner of Social Services (C.S.S.). Its gravamen was that he was the father of Pamela C. born September 26, 1988. The child’s mother, Deneen C., claimed that she became pregnant when Mr. C. raped her at gunpoint on January 7, 1988.

C.S.S. moved to amend the petition to substitute the administrator of the C. estate for Mr. C.

Counsel for the C. family resisted, and cross-moved to dismiss pursuant to Family Court Act § 519. After reading the papers submitted, which included petitioner’s counsel’s carefully crafted memorandum, the motion to substitute is denied and the cross motion to dismiss is granted.

This matter, one of apparent first impression, is governed by Family Court Act § 519 which was added to the Family Court Act by Laws of 1987 (ch 434).

It is instructive to review the state of the law not only prior to the 1987 amendment but also prior to 1983. The Legislature has amended the Family Court Act twice in order to deal with the recurring problem of under what circumstances the death of a mother, or a putative father should cause a paternity petition to abate.

Section 518 of the Family Court Act, prior to 1983, provided that the death of a mother would not cause a petition to abate if it occurred after the petition was filed. It precluded the bringing of a petition if the mother died prior to the petition being filed and foreclosed the right to commence a paternity proceeding.

When the statute was amended in 1983, with respect to the effect of a mother dying prior to the commencement of a proceeding, it constituted the first modification of an original text derived from section 125 of the Domestic Relations Law enacted in 1925.

The impetus for amending section 518 may well have been a response to such decisions as Matter of Henry v Rodd (95 Misc 2d 996 [Fam Ct, Queens County 1978]) and Matter of James J. v Valerie M. (98 Misc 2d 785 [Fam Ct, NY County 1979]).

It was apparent that Family Court Judges, and Surrogates in their "parens patriae” capacity were searching for a vehicle [976]*976with which to permit the granting of orders of filiation in paternity proceedings brought subsequent to a mother’s death.

The effect of the 1983 amendment was to allow such suits to be commenced or continued. Among the purposes served would be, (a) the protection of the public purse, (b) establish entitlement for the children to Social Security benefits, New York workers’ compensation benefits, Veterans’ benefits, Servicemen’s Life Insurance Proceeds, military allowance and support rights. (See, Matter of Kordek v Wood, 90 AD2d 209 [4th Dept 1982].)

There were two other factors which contributed to this amendment. The first was a recognition that frequently the families of the deceased mother and the putative father were wholly desirous of obtaining "de jure” recognition of a reality which they had personally treated as fully established. The second was that the utilization of sophisticated white blood cell and red blood cell testing facilitated determinations of whether a man could be excluded as being the father of a child, or establish whether there was a substantial probability of his paternity.

While the 1983 amendment to Family Court Act § 518 dealt with the situation of a mother’s dying prior to the commencement of a proceeding, it was silent with respect to the death of a putative father prior to the commencement of a proceeding, irrespective of whether the putative father was the petitioner or the respondent.

Decisional law attempted to rectify that silence. (See, Matter of Joseph A. v Gina L., 126 Misc 2d 63 [Fam Ct, Westchester County 1984]; Matter of Joselyn D. v Oscar O., 132 Misc 2d 964 [Fam Ct, NY County 1986].)

Both cases noted that a gender-based classification that afforded certain remedies to mothers, but not to fathers, ran afoul of the Equal Protection Clause. That portion of the Fourteenth Amendment mandates that gender-based classifications are subject to intermediate scrutiny to see whether there is an exceedingly persuasive justification for the classification. (Mississippi Univ. for Women v Hogan, 458 US 718; Mills v Habluetzel, 456 US 91.)

It was against that background that the Legislature enacted section 519 of the Family Court Act by Laws of 1987 (ch 434).

This statute clearly states that when a putative father dies anytime before or after a petition is filed, neither the proceeding nor the right to commence it shall necessarily abate if any [977]*977one of the four specified circumstances are present. These conditions precedent are: (a) the putative father was the petitioner in the paternity proceeding; or (b) the putative father acknowledged paternity of the child in open court; or (c) a blood genetic marker test had been administered to the putative father prior to his death; or (d) the putative father has openly and notoriously acknowledged the child as his own.

Petitioner urges that the statute be given a broad reading to preclude the abatement of this petition. It urges that substitution be permitted even though the putative father was neither the petitioner, nor had he acknowledged paternity in open court, nor had there been administered a blood genetic marker test, nor had the putative father openly and notoriously acknowledged the child.

Under those circumstances the argument that the statute should be given a broad reading so that the petition would not abate is an oxymoron. There simply is no articulable act of the putative father that is alleged to exist that could be subsumed under the conduct requisite to defeat abatement.

The only way to have this petition not be subject to abatement would be to hold the statute unconstitutional. Not only did petitioner not make such a request, but also no notice pursuant to Executive Law § 71, and CPLR 1012 was given to the Attorney-General.

Nonetheless, the court is obliged to construe the constitutionality of Family Court Act § 519.

The validity of this gender-based enactment is subject to intermediate scrutiny as to whether there is an exceedingly persuasive justification for its gender basis. (Clark v Jeter, 486 US 456.) The inquiry is undertaken employing such familiar principles of statutory construction as the strong presumption of constitutionality attaches to legislative enactments,1 and that a trial court should refrain from declaring statutes unconstitutional.2

A determination of the constitutionality of Family Court Act § 518, a statute which is applicable to one gender while remaining conspicuously silent with respect to the other, is far different than when dealing with Family Court Act § 519. The [978]*978latter statute was subsequently enacted, and is applicable to the other gender but in a more circumscribed manner.

The purpose of Family Court Act § 519 is to overrule the common-law rule that a purely personal action abates when one of the parties dies.

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Related

Nadine O. v. Irene B.
170 Misc. 2d 52 (NYC Family Court, 1996)
Commissioner of Social Services ex rel. Queisser v. Abizeid
168 Misc. 2d 1005 (NYC Family Court, 1996)
O'Neill v. D.J.J.
167 Misc. 2d 287 (NYC Family Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
147 Misc. 2d 974, 559 N.Y.S.2d 88, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-social-services-v-william-c-nycfamct-1990.