Hope B. v. Avery G.

51 Misc. 3d 425, 26 N.Y.S.3d 670
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Misc. 3d 425 (Hope B. v. Avery G.) 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
Hope B. v. Avery G., 51 Misc. 3d 425, 26 N.Y.S.3d 670 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Carol Goldstein, J.

The parents of a child, now about one year old, jointly sought an order of custody to the mother, with whom the child is living, and the voluntary surrender and the termination of the father’s parental rights. The father has never seen the child and he claims that he has fulfilled his financial obligation to the child by his prepayment of $150,000 of child support. After an analysis of the relevant statutes and case law, the court finds that the Family Court has no authority to grant termination of parental rights in this type of private litigation and the court therefore denies this relief. On consent, the court grants the mother sole legal and physical custody of the subject child.

Background

On June 26, 2015, petitioner mother Hope B. and respondent father Avery G. jointly filed a petition in New York County Family Court seeking that an order of custody be entered in favor of the mother to their son Paul B., born in 2015. The petition further sought to “voluntarily surrender and terminate the parental rights” of the father. The petition stated that for the “purposes of this proceeding,” Mr. G. is the “biologically and legally established father of the child.”2 The petition alleged that Paul has resided with his mother in New York State from the time of his birth through the date of the filing of the petition, and that the father resides in Texas.

Before ruling on the unusual application to terminate the father’s parental rights, the court requested that the parents relay to the court by affidavit their personal history, their motivation for seeking this extraordinary relief and a summary of their educational background and employment history. The father submitted an affidavit dated July 30, 2015, and the mother submitted an affidavit dated August 2, 2015. The court also requested that the parties submit a memorandum of law demonstrating that the Family Court has the authority to [427]*427grant termination of parental rights under the circumstances presented. The attorneys submitted a joint memorandum of law dated July 23, 2015.

The parties, who were never married, met while they were both students at Dartmouth College and began dating in the spring of their junior year. After graduation in June 2013, the mother accepted a job as director of marketing for a company in New York City, while the father accepted a research position in Austin, Texas. The parties maintained a long-distance relationship until September 2014, when the mother advised the father that she was 23 weeks pregnant. At this point, the relationship between the parties went into a downward spiral.

According to the mother, she was unaware of her pregnancy prior to this date and when she told the father, he and his family blamed her “for the entire situation.” The father encouraged the mother to seek a late term abortion or to place the child for adoption. Both of these options were rejected by the mother.

According to the father, upon learning of the late term pregnancy, he suffered from extreme emotional distress, which manifested itself in physical and emotional symptoms. He developed stress related shingles, his weight fluctuated drastically and he “was unable to sleep without anti-depression and anti-anxiety medication.” The father asserted that the mother subjected him to “continued harassment, threats, defamation and intimidation,” and that she intentionally interfered with his business and personal relationships.

The father claimed that after Paul was born, the mother demanded that he surrender and terminate his parental rights. On March 9, 2015, the mother’s attorney sent a letter to the father’s attorney “strongly recommending” that the father terminate his parental rights to Paul. In the letter, the mother’s counsel reminded the father’s counsel that absent termination of parental rights, the matter of child support “will continue for 18 years and can potentially endure multiple motions for modification as [the father’s] income increases and his son’s needs substantially change.”

In Texas, following genetic testing which determined that the father has a 99.9999999% probability of paternity, the parties entered into an agreement entitled “Irrevocable Informal Settlement Agreement.” The agreement, signed on May 27, 2015, provides that the mother is to file a petition to terminate the father’s parental rights in New York and that the father is to deposit $150,000 in a trust account. According to the father, [428]*428this amount “exceeds on its face the lifetime amount and present value of properly calculated child support.” While the termination proceedings are pending, the mother is to receive a monthly sum of $832.33 ($698.78 basic support and $133.55 health insurance) from the trust account for child support.3 Upon entry of an order terminating the father’s parental rights, the mother is to receive the balance of the $150,000 held in trust. The agreement provides that the father’s parental rights be irrevocably terminated and that all claims for child support be thereafter waived.4 The agreement further provides that if a New York court does not grant termination of parental rights, the amount the mother already received is to be credited towards the father’s support obligation and the remainder of the money held in trust is to be returned to the father.

The agreement was submitted to the Texas District Court on May 27, 2015. On December 5, 2015, the Texas court issued an order of parentage declaring Mr. G. to be Paul’s legal father.

With respect to their reasons for seeking termination of the father’s parental rights, the mother asserted that it is in Paul’s best interests because the father and his family expressed a desire not to have any contact with Paul now or in the future. She emphasized that the father has never seen Paul.

The father asserted that his parental rights should be terminated because as a father, he would be “relegated to a marginalized denigrated interference.” According to the father, [429]*429a surrender and termination of his rights will spare Paul “irrevocable conflict and negative consequences.” It would also eliminate impediments to any future adoption of Paul by a spouse or intimate partner of the mother. The father also believes that he “cannot regain [his] footing unless free from the damaging influence” of the mother.

According to the father, there is a Texas statute that permits the relinquishment of parental rights that is “routinely used.”5 The parties, however, acknowledge that New York is the proper jurisdiction to entertain this application under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA).6

The parents reported that they are both employed at their first jobs since graduating college. The mother currently earns $85,000 a year, while the father earns $57,000 a year.

Arguments of the Parties

In the memorandum of law, submitted in support of their joint petition to voluntarily surrender and terminate the father’s parental rights, the parties acknowledged that usually a voluntary surrender or termination of parental rights occurs where the child is in foster care or a state agency is a party. Nonetheless, the parties argued that the family court is “equitably empowered” to consider and grant the instant petition.

[430]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Misc. 3d 425, 26 N.Y.S.3d 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-b-v-avery-g-nycfamct-2016.