In re Barbara P., Dominic P., & Abby P.

71 Misc. 2d 965
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 71 Misc. 2d 965 (In re Barbara P., Dominic P., & Abby P.) 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
In re Barbara P., Dominic P., & Abby P., 71 Misc. 2d 965 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Justine Wise Polier, J.

An increasing number of guardianship petitions and actions to terminate parental rights so as to freenhildren in foster care for adoption are being brought to the Family Court. When contested, they present a clash between the assertion of parental rights as traditionally maintained and the assertion of the rights of children in terms of what is set forth as in their best interest. In the contested actions the parents have failed or are alleged to have failed to function as parents, but have not renounced what they regard as their parental right to have their child returned to their custody in the future when, or if, they request such return.

Frequently parents have shown little or no active interest in a child for long periods of time, or, indeed, until they receive notice of the action to terminate parental rights and free the child for adoptive placement. The parent may never have provided a home, may have maintained no real contact with the child, and may have no plans for making a home for the child. Still, the possible termination of parental rights comes as a jolt and is seen as punishment, forfeiture of what is theirs, and as a threat to self-esteem which must be fought.

A set of English decisions was recently cited to illustrate the current tensions in law in England as well as in the United States concerning the rights of children in relation to the rights of competing adult claimants.1 In an adoption proceeding initiated by foster parents who had had a child since birth and for whom the mother had requested adoption, the mother sought to withdraw consent when the child was one year old. The English act allows dispensing with consent only if the court is satisfied that the parent (a) abandoned, neglected or ill-treated the infant, or (b) is withholding consent unreasonably.

The Judge in the court of first instance dispensed with consent to adoption holding that it was unreasonable for the biological mother to fail to take into account the child’s welfare, since removal from the only home the child had known would dis[967]*967turb the child emotionally and might cause a psychological disturbance. This decision was described by Professor Goldstein as changing the spirit of the statute and reversing the paramount consideration that had traditionally been accorded to the biological parent and had failed to take into account the child’s welfare.

The decision and order of adoption was unanimously reversed by the Lords of Justice of the Court of Appeals in 1970, but was subsequently reinstated by the House of Lords in April 1971. [Re W. (an infant) [1970] 3 ALL E.R. 990 6 [1971] 2 ALL ER 49.]

In recent years the Legislature in New York, as in other States, has begun to look more closely at the consequences for children of public policies and laws which fail to safeguard the welfare of children. Laws to protect children against neglect and abuse have been strengthened. The Social Services Law was amended 1969 so as to authorize the institution of adoptive proceedings on the basis of abandonment for six months instead of a year.2

The first permanent neglect statute (Family Ct. Act, art. 6) in New York was enacted in 1959 in order to make possible the termination of parental rights and the adoption of children, when parents, though physically and financially able, did not maintain meaningful contacts with children in foster care and plan for their return home. (Family Ct. Act, § 614, subd. [d], § 622.) It was only in 1971 that the statute was amended to relieve an authorized agency from pleading and proving efforts to strengthen the parental relationship when it pleaded and proved [968]*968that such efforts ‘ ‘ would be detrimental to the moral and temporal welfare of the child.”3

Growing concern for the hurts suffered by children who are placed ajid who are left in foster care year after year with diminishing hope of ever returning to their natural parents or being adopted has been expressed in the literature and studies throughout the field of child care.

A recent study by the Bureau of Child Welfare of all New York City children in foster care who had had no contact with either parent during the preceding six months revealed the extent to which children are still left in a state of uncertainty by being legally chained to parents who give little hope of ever acting as parents. Unfreed from such chains they remain in foster home care without any claim to permanent status year after year. Although parental contact was defined liberally to include telephone calls, letters, cards and gifts as. well ¿as visits to a child, nearly one third or 6,487 children had had no contact in over six months. Of this group nearly 60% had been in placement for more than four years. The study noted that few were legally freed for adoption even though many probably had no realistic possibilities for returning home and a large number had been in placement for a long period of time, some for their entire lives. Concern was expressed that most of the children in the study would grow up in foster homes, and would neither be returned to their parents nor adopted.4

In the hope of preventing such children from becoming “ lost ” children, legislation authorizing periodic review by the Family Court of all children in foster care for a continuous period of 24 months wag. enacted in 1971.5 In 1972 the filing of petitions for such review was made mandatory in regard to the authorized agency charged with the care, custody or guardianship of a child. In addition, the legislation authorized filing of petitions for review by another authorized agency having supervision of such foster care or by the foster parents or

[969]*969parents in whose home the child resides or has resided during the 24 months. The Family Court is required on the proof adduced to enter an order of disposition in accordance with “ the best interest of the child ’ ’. Such order may direct continuance of foster care, the return of the child, the initiation of a proceeding to legally free such child for adoption, or that the child be placed for adoption in the foster family where he resides or with other person or persons. Such cases must now be reviewed at least every 24 months where children continue in foster care.6

The Legislature has thus expressed its intent to assure to children judicial review so that they will not be left without homes and will, where possible, be given the opportunity to grow up in homes where they will receive good care together with the sense of belonging and being loved that is essential to healthy development.

Each step taken toward this end by the Legislature and the courts creates rights of children which in turn deprive parents of traditional immunities from custodial consequences for failure to fulfill their duties as parents. Increasingly the correlative rights of children and the duties of parents are thus becoming articulated. The task of implementation still lies' ahead.

While the legislation can provide guidelines for adjudicating the question of permanent neglect and can provide safeguards to assure due process, there can be no single or final definition that will encompass the myriad variations in the social histories, parental attitudes or actions, the conditions of the parents and the life prospects for the child.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Misc. 2d 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-barbara-p-dominic-p-abby-p-nycfamct-1972.