DCPP VS. J.Y., IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T. (FL-09-0156-10, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 4, 2021
DocketA-1406-19
StatusPublished

This text of DCPP VS. J.Y., IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T. (FL-09-0156-10, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) (DCPP VS. J.Y., IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T. (FL-09-0156-10, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DCPP VS. J.Y., IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T. (FL-09-0156-10, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RECORD IMPOUNDED

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1406-19

NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION Plaintiff-Respondent, May 4, 2021

v. APPELLATE DIVISION

J.Y.,

Defendant-Appellant, ___________________________

IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T., a Minor. ___________________________

Submitted March 9, 2021 – Decided May 4, 2021

Before Judges Fisher, Moynihan and Gummer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Hudson County, Docket No. FL-09-0156-10.

Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for appellant (Mark E. Kleiman, Designated Counsel, on the briefs).

Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for respondent (Jane C. Schuster, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Amanda D. Barba, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief). Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, Law Guardian, attorney for minor (Meredith Alexis Pollock, Deputy Public Defender, of counsel; Louise M. Cho, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MOYNIHAN, J.A.D.

Defendant J.Y. appeals from the trial court's order denying in part his

motion to change a previously-established, court-ordered parenting

time/visitation schedule with his daughter, J.T. (Jada), 1 and to vacate a kinship

legal guardianship (KLG) judgment entered on June 15, 2010, appointing J.J.-

C. (Jessye), a maternal relative, as Jada's KLG guardian. 2 On appeal,

defendant argues:

POINT I

BECAUSE THE COURT FAILED TO FOLLOW THE PROCEDURES MANDATED BY TITLES 9 AND 30, ITS ORDER LIMITING [DEFENDANT'S] CONTACT WITH HIS DAUGHTER [JADA] WAS IMPROPER AS A MATTER OF LAW AND VIOLATED HIS FUNDAMENTAL PARENTAL RIGHTS AS WELL AS HIS RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS, AND MUST THEREFORE BE VACATED.

1 We use pseudonyms for the parties and the child to protect their privacy, preserve the confidentiality of the proceedings and for the reader's convenience. 2 Jada had been placed with Jessye in June 2009.

A-1406-19 2 POINT II

[DEFENDANT] WAS NOT A PARTY TO THE KLG PROCEEDINGS AND IS NOT BOUND BY THE KLG ORDER, AND THEREFORE THE COURT'S USE OF THAT ORDER AS RES JUDICATA SUPPORTING PREEMPTION OF [DEFENDANT'S] RIGHT TO VISITATION WAS IMPROPER AS A MATTER OF LAW.

We reverse and remand.

The only thing clear from the record of the last hearing, before the order

under review was entered, is the confusion regarding the applications before

the trial court partly engendered by the procedural history of this case.

Defendant was not a specified party to the KLG action that was

instituted after the Division removed Jada under the Dodd Act 3 shortly after

her birth in February 2007, because her mother's disabilities rendered her

unable to care for her daughter. Although the Division asked Jada's mother,

S.T. (Sasha), who had fathered Jada, she said she knew the man only as "Jay";

she did not know his surname or how long their relationship had lasted. A

Division caseworker testified at the KLG hearing that Jada's father was

"unknown" in that Sasha was unable to provide his name.

3 N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21 to -8.82.

A-1406-19 3 After a DNA test confirmed his paternity, defendant's first application

for custody or visitation was denied as unsupported in 2016. Although

defendant knew Sasha was pregnant, he was incarcerated until Jada was eight

or nine years old. He made a second application for visitation in September

2018. The trial court denied that request but amended the KLG judgment to

allow defendant to "make [one] phone call to [Jada] either on Friday after

[4:00 p.m.] or on Saturday"; and, if Jada felt "comfortable," to begin

correspondence with her. The November 2018 order also provided: "Any

contact with [defendant] shall be only if [Jada] wishes."

Seven months later, while still imprisoned, defendant sought a video -

conference visit with Jada through a parole board office, prompting Jessye to

testify at the June 13, 2019 motion hearing that defendant had violated the

court's prior order by calling Jada more than once per week and at varied

hours, and that defendant had provided Jessye's phone number to his family

members who called or texted. Jada's law guardian told the court Jada said

that speaking with defendant had become easier, but she was still

uncomfortable—even afraid—when they spoke, and that she did not want to

visit her father in prison or participate in the video conference. The trial court

dismissed defendant's application in light of Jada's refusal, reasoning:

The . . . law involving kinship legal guardianship is that it's really the kinship legal guardian that makes

A-1406-19 4 the decisions. While parents can apply for visitation, [having] been informed by the [l]aw [g]uardian and the kinship legal guardian that this [twelve-year-old] child does not want to go to a prison to see her father and does not want to participate in a video conference with her father. She is willing to exchange letters, which I think is the best way for you to go about communicating with her, because sometimes it's easier through letters than on the phone. Phone calls can be awkward, I would think, when you're calling from a prison, when she may be in the middle of an activity, doing her homework, having a friend over. I want to stress . . . one phone conversation a week, assuming she's willing. And if you are notified in writing by the [l]aw [g]uardian . . . that she no longer wants phone calls, you're going to have to respect that, because parents have many rights, but the rights of children always are more important. This court is here to address the best interests of the child. This is a young girl who had a bumpy road in her life, because . . . in the beginning, she had no father. Her mother was unable to care for her. She's very fortunate to get a loving kinship legal guardian who has taken very good care of her, by all indications. And the [c]ourt's job is to protect her from being upset, from being emotionally traumatized by a man she never knew coming into her life, being in prison, and that I'm sure is not an easy situation for her. I think you're fortunate that she's willing to have a phone conversation occasionally and to correspond.

In August 2019, Jessye moved to end defendant's telephone visitation

alleging he was having his nephew request Jada's photograph despite the trial

court's prior prohibition and making false accusations to the Division about

Jessye's interference with his telephone visitation and her care of Jada. At the

August 22, 2019 hearing, defendant's transportation from prison could not be

A-1406-19 5 completed. The trial court rescheduled the hearing and arranged to send

defendant an application for a public defender. The court, nevertheless, took

testimony from Jessye and issued an order, in anticipation of defendant's

imminent release from prison, prohibiting: defendant from going within one

mile of Jada's school or home; conveyance of Jada's photograph to defendant;

and family members other than the previously approved nephew from calling

or texting Jessye's home. The judge also scheduled an in-camera interview

with Jada.

Three weeks later defendant filed the motion that occasioned the order

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DCPP VS. J.Y., IN THE KINSHIP MATTER OF J.T. (FL-09-0156-10, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dcpp-vs-jy-in-the-kinship-matter-of-jt-fl-09-0156-10-hudson-county-njsuperctappdiv-2021.