H.W. v. J.F.

2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Rockland County
DecidedMay 24, 2007
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U) (H.W. v. J.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Rockland County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.W. v. J.F., 2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

H.W. v J.F. (2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U)) [*1]
H.W. v J.F.
2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U) [15 Misc 3d 1142(A)]
Decided on May 24, 2007
Family Court, Rockland County
Warren, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on May 24, 2007
Family Court, Rockland County


H.W., Petitioner,

against

J.F., Respondent.




14732

LEONARD SPERBER, ESQ.

Attorney for Petitioner

100 Garden City Plaza

Suite 205

Garden City, New York 11530

ERIC OLE THORSEN, ESQ.

Attorney for Respondent

5 South Little Tor Road

New City, New York 10956

Veronica Young, Esq.

Law Guardian

2 Congers Road

New City, New York 10956

William P. Warren, J.

On October 20, 2006, this court signed an order to show cause directing the respondent, J.F. to show cause before the court why an order should not be issued granting petitioner an order adjudging the respondent in willful contempt and granting the petitioner an order of commitment and directing the respondent, pursuant to FCA §454, to pay to the petitioner reasonable counsel fees in a sum to be determined at trial.

The petition alleged that an order was issued by this court dated July 1, 2005 which order provided for visitation between the respondent and his son, D. It claimed that in contravention of the order the respondent wrongfully and unlawfully withheld the child from the custody of the petitioner until August 31, 2006. The application states that it is brought for criminal and civil contempt pursuant to Judiciary Law §§750 and 753, CPLR 5104 and FCA §§453, 454 and 455. The respondent denied the allegations of a violation and a hearing was conducted.

H.W. testified that she is the mother of D. and J. Respondent, J.F., is the father of these children. In June of 2006, J.F. had brought an application before this court seeking permission to take D. to Israel during the summer of 2006. On July 18, 2006, the parties appeared in court at which time the issue of visitation during the summer of 2006 was discussed. Introduced into evidence was the transcript of the proceeding held on July 18, 2006. The court took judicial notice of the order of July 1, 2005 which was entered by the clerk on July 5, 2005. The July 1, 2005 order contained the following pertinent language:

The visitation of the father with the children, J.F. . . . and D. F. . . . shall be at the [*2]children's discretion including but not limited to weekend, holiday, summer and school recess visitation; and it is further
ORDERED that the father's summer vacation visitation shall be modified such that the summer visitation of the father in any year that the children attend summer camp shall be at the discretion of the children and shall include those days occurring between the close of the school year and the commencement of summer camp and two weeks in August;...

...

The transcript of the July 18, 2006 hearing contained some colloquy pertinent to the instant application. During that appearance the respondent claimed that it was his understanding that the use of the phrase "at the discretion of the children" meant that the children could come and go as they wish in the summer, without regard to the visitation time frames set forth in the order. The following colloquy occurred:

The Court:Can I say what I think (I need) (should be you mean).

Mr. F.:Yes.

The Court:There will be no set visitation scheduled at all. It will be totally up to the children when they want to see you, whenthey don't want to see you. Is that it?

Mr. F.:Correct and that's the way it was except for August.

Further on during the appearance of July 18, 2006, the following colloquy occurred:

The Court:Let me stop you one second, Mr. Sperber. The discretion goes with

the set times, so your understanding is that there are set times, now, whether they be every other weekend, whether they be holidays or whatever, and that those times, Mr. F. is entitled to visit with the

child, if the child agrees.

Mr. Sperber:Absolutely.

The Court:Beyond those times, there is no entitlement to visitation and Ms. W. retains the right to say no, you don't go; you know, this is not a scheduled visitation time. She retains that right.

Mr. Sperber:My understanding exactly, your Honor.

.... [*3]

Several letters were sent by the respondent to the petitioner's counsel in June of 2005 in connection with the settlement of the order of July 1, 2005. Those letters objected to the proposed order submitted by the petitioner's counsel because the respondent claimed that the order should indicate that all visitation should be at the children's discretion and that "... the children can have visitation even during the mother's time..." (see, Law Guardian's Exhibit 6, letter of June 1, 2005 from J.F. to Leonard Sperber). The order which the court signed was that submitted by the petitioner's counsel, not the counter-order of the respondent.

The petitioner testified that at the end of the 2005/2006 school year, D. had a trip to Washington, D.C. and it was arranged to pick him up at school in Livingston, New Jersey at the end of the trip. She picked him up and he came home and stayed until June 19. On that date, he went to visit his father. Thereafter, he went to summer camp on June 26 or 27th.

The petitioner said she was unable to have any contact with D. from June 19 until he went to camp even though she attempted numerous times to do so. While he was at camp, she had regular contact with him without difficulty. She next saw him on August 31, 2006. It was on July 27, 2006 when D. was on a bus on his way home from camp that Ms. W. last spoke to him before August 31, 2006.

During the period of time that D. was not in contact with her (the month of August) a scheduled bar mitzvah involving another child occurred during the weekend of August 26 and 27th. These plans had been made in December of 2005. D. knew of the bar mitzvah and he had a close relationship with the boy who was being bar mitzvahed, his step-brother JW.

From July 27th on Mrs. W. claimed she made numerous attempts to contact D. but always ended up with voicemail. She would contact Mr. F.'s telephone number and would leave a message but never got a return call. On August 21, she went to the Town of Ramapo Police Station and filed a complaint.

J.F. testified that although he received the application to hold him in contempt, the copy which he was given was not complete. The document was introduced into evidence as respondent's Exhibit A. The statutory warnings in bold print on the document apparently had been cut off in the copying and, therefore, several letters were not included. For example, the first line of the warnings read: "the purpose of this hearing is to punish y". Apparently, the letters "ou" were cut off. In the second line, the language read: "the accused, for contempt of court an' " but apparently the letter "d" was left off. There were one or two other letters left off from the warnings.

Mr. F.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 NY Slip Op 51116(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hw-v-jf-nyfamctrockl-2007.