In re Bologna

199 Misc. 705, 102 N.Y.S.2d 420, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2411
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedJune 5, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 Misc. 705 (In re Bologna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 Bologna, 199 Misc. 705, 102 N.Y.S.2d 420, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2411 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Sicher, J.

No decision by any court can restore this broken home or give these children what they need and have a right to — the care and protection of two dutiful parents. No court welcomes such problems, or feels at ease in deciding them.” (Bunim v. Bunim, 298 N. Y. 391, 394.)

These words, written in an opinion on the issue of custody in a divorce action, are unfortunately apposite to the analogous problem here presented, namely, how best can be mitigated for the two young children who are the subject of this court’s neglected child ” jurisdiction the handicaps of the situation which caused them to be so adjudicated.

It is the law of the case ” that they are “ neglected children ” within the meaning of subdivision 17 of section 2 of the Domestic Relations Court Act of the City of New York, an adjudication to that effect having been made by Justice Bolin on February 24, 1950, no appeal having been taken, and the time to appeal having expired.

At the point when the matter first came before me, as the Justice sitting on April 20, 1950, in the New York County Children’s Court Division, Part II, the sole question open for determination, and then raised, was whether the welfare of these two children called for their continuing to live in the father’s home under the care of a succession of hired housekeepers or whether they should be placed in an institution or [707]*707a "boarding home or whether they should be tried out in the mother’s custody subject to the continued supervision of the court. That restricted scope of my power and duty to exercise at this stage this court’s jurisdiction “ to determine the question of the rightful custody of such children if their custody is subject to controversy and such custody or controversy relates to their immediate care ” (N. Y. City Dom. Rel. Ct. Act, § 61, subd. 1) is frankly conceded in the brief submitted by the father’s able attorney, as will appear from the following excerpts: “It is not the purpose of the writer to have this Court act as an Appellate Tribunal insofar as the finding of ‘ neglect ’ by Justice Bolin * * *. While the writer there-

fore must start out with a finding that the children were neglected children ’, because of the finding by Justice Bolin, and therefore the father would be an improper guardian, * # *. Because of such a finding it is not the intention of the writer to discuss the facts adduced before the Court so as to determine where the fault lies in this unfortunate matter. We are concerned only with the welfare of these two small children, and it is only with that phase of this petition that the writer will refer to * * * Because of the finding of neglect ’ the children undoubtedly are to be sent to the mother and be placed in her custody although admitting she left her home and her children in May of 1949 with no concern as to who would take care of them. Under the circumstances we have a right to ask if custody is to go to the mother where are they to be housed? * * * We therefore respectfully urge that the children remain in the custody of the father until such time as the mother is able to obtain an apartment of her own so that she can devote her full time and attention to the welfare of these children. They should not be placed in an institution because they would not be happy in such place. The children have already had the experience of boarding for a short time in a Catholic boarding school and the father had to take them out because they were unhappy there.”

No useful purpose would be served by a detailed narrative of the facts developed on two hearings before me, which included talks with each of the children in chambers. Suffice it to mention only a few salient facts and inferences therefrom and to state that all of the evidence, including the demeanor of the parties and of the witnesses, has been earnestly considered in arriving at this decision.

[708]*708The children are the products of a marriage which was never harmonious but marked by several separations and much tension, between two neurotic parents. The mother candidly admits that she married the father in the hope of improving her own not too happy lot and of establishing a home for herself. But very soon she discovered her mistake, and respondent’s sadism finally drove her to the point where she had to move out of the home in June, 1949, to avoid a complete breakdown.

Her anxiety seems to have lessened since she is no longer exposed to the stresses of living with the father. And from the content and manner of the parents’ testimony I have reached the same conclusions as those expressed in the February 15, 1950, reports made by one of the psychiatrists of this court’s bureau of clinical services with respect to his examination of the parents: “It is the examiner’s impression that she” (the mother) “ has a more stable personality than her husband. She is a very anxious individual and it is felt that she would improve with therapy and would be better able to control her children. Diagnosis: Anxiety reaction and, as to the father: “ Diagnosis: Inadequate personality. Schizoid trends.”

The maternal care so vital to children of tender years the father attempted to furnish by a succession of hired housekeepers, the latest of whom is a young widow who recently lost her husband and two children in an automobile accident and who manifested on the stand a belligerent partisanship, her own tragic instability, and the liklihood that she would actively seek to come between these children and their mother.

There can be no doubt that these children wish to live with the mother, in the maternal grandmother’s home until other quarters are available, in preference to their present environment; and they were disappointed and upset that they were not permitted by me to go from the court with their mother at the conclusion of the last hearing.

If the father really cares for his children as deeply and genuinely as he professes, and does not regard them primarily as pawns in the battle with the mother, he will voluntarily contribute to their support while they are residing with the mother in the maternal grandmother’s home and assist the mother to set up a separate apartment; and he will then contribute to the maintenance of that apartment a sum sufficient to enable the mother to cease work so as to stay home and take care of the children.

[709]*709For the foregoing reasons, especially the tender age of the children, their immediate care is hereby entrusted to the mother, subject to the continued supervision of a probation officer and further orders of this court; and they are hereby paroled to the mother under such supervision.

The father is therefore hereby directed to deliver the children to the mother no later than noon on June 10, 1950.

And if, by June 15, 1950, the parents have not agreed upon financial arrangements, the matter should be forthwith referred to the Family Court for appropriate support order proceedings.

Notice shall be given pursuant to the subjoined direction. -

(Supplemental opinion, January 26, 1951.)

Angelo E. Nigro and Benjamin Lebenbaum for mother.

Kaufman, Ascione <& Kaufman for father.

The father filed notice of appeal to the

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56 Misc. 2d 427 (NYC Family Court, 1968)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 Misc. 705, 102 N.Y.S.2d 420, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bologna-nyfamct-1950.