In re Carl N.

91 Misc. 2d 738, 398 N.Y.S.2d 613, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2406
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 Misc. 2d 738 (In re Carl N.) 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 Carl N., 91 Misc. 2d 738, 398 N.Y.S.2d 613, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2406 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

Howard A. Levine, J.

In May, 1975, the two children who are the subject of the instant proceedings were adjudicated as neglected children and placed in the custody of the petitioner, Department of Social Services, for a period of 18 months. The respondents, parents of the children, were directed to co-operate and fully participate in a plan of rehabilitation involving various services set forth in a written letter to the court, dated May 13, 1975. This plan included attendance at a parent rehabilitation and enrichment program on a weekly basis and mental health counseling.

The instant proceedings were brought by the Department of Social Services to terminate the parental rights of the respondents on the ground of permanent neglect. The petitions allege that for a period of more than one year respondents have failed substantially, continuously and repeatedly to maintain contact with the children and have also so failed to plan for their children’s future, although financially and physically able to do so. The petitions further allege that the parents have continuously and repeatedly failed to co-operate with the petitioner in attempts to strengthen the parental relationship with the children and to follow the rehabilitative plan previously ordered by the court.

Respondents have moved to dismiss the petitions on the grounds that New York’s permanent neglect statute is unconstitutional for vagueness and infringement of respondents’ First Amendment rights of privacy and denies them equal protection of the laws.

[740]*740With respect to respondents’ attack on the facial validity of the statute for vagueness, the specific portion objected to is that which permits termination of parental rights on grounds of permanent neglect for respondents’ "failure to plan for the future of the child”. They point out that prior to the 1973 amendment to the statute (L 1973, ch 870), an adjudication of permanent neglect could not be made unless the petitioner proved a failure of the parents both to "keep in contact” and "plan” for the future of the child; that parental rights were safeguarded by reason of the definiteness of the "keep in contact” requirement which afforded sufficient notice of their obligations to avoid termination of parental rights. However, the 1973 amendment to the statute substituted "or” for "and” and this change from the conjunctive to the disjunctive, as interpreted by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Orlando F. (40 NY2d 103) permits an adjudication of permanent neglect solely on the basis of failure to plan, irrespective of the qualitative and quantitative substantiality of continued contacts with the child by the parents. It is respondents’ argument that the requirement to "plan” is fatally indefinite in failing to give parents adequate notice of what they must do to avoid losing parental rights and permitting arbitrary, capricious and discriminatory application by courts and social agencies.

The phrase in issue, "failure to plan for the future of the child”, was incorporated in the original enactment of New York’s permanent neglect statute in 1959. The purpose of the legislation clearly appears from the legislative history (see Governor’s memorandum of approval, NY Legis Ann, 1959, pp 415-416) and is extensively discussed in Gordon, Terminal Placements of Children and Permanent Termination of Parental Rights: the New York Permanent Neglect Statute (46 St. John’s L Rev 215). Until 1959, literally thousands of New York children remained in the limbo of foster care, neither restored to a permanent stable home with their biological parents nor freed for adoption, because their parents were unable or unwilling adequately to care for them and would not consent to their permanent placement in an adoptive home. Parental consent generally could only be dispensed with by proof of total abandonment. The strictness of the abandonment concept applied by the New York courts meant that parents who were unable or unwilling meaningfully to exercise parental rights could nevertheless forestall the per[741]*741manent placement of their child in a stable adoptive home. (See discussion, 46 St. John’s L Rev, p 230 et seq.) The deleterious effects of protracted foster care, in failing to satisfy basic developmental needs of children and burdening the State with the enormous cost of maintaining them has been well documented. (See id., pp 218-220.) The purpose of the original statute thus was to provide a means for freeing such children for adoption without the consent of their parents who insisted upon retaining formal ties to the child but were unwilling meaningfully to perform the obligations of parenthood through substantial and continual contact and planning for the child’s future. The purpose behind the 1973 amendment to the statute, permitting an adjudication of permanent neglect on the basis of either the failure to keep in contact or the failure to plan, is equally clear. The evils of protracted foster care are not avoided merely through substantial contacts with the child by the parents when they are unwilling to take the necessary steps within their power and ability to restore the child to their home. See the statement of the sponsor of the amendment, State Senator Joseph R. Pisani, Chairman of the Temporary State Commission on Child Welfare, quoted in Matter of Orlando F. (40 NY2d 103, 111, supra). Thus the duty to plan was made a separate and distinct obligation.

Applying the foregoing legislative history, the New York courts have had an opportunity to construe and apply the meaning of the "failure to plan” ground. It is a well-settled principle of constitutional law that an authoritative construction of a State statute by its courts must be considered and is binding in any attack on the statute for vagueness. (See Wainwright v Stone, 414 US 21; Broadrick v Oklahoma, 413 US 601; and Law Students Research Council v Wadmond, 401 US 154.) As so construed, the requirement of the parent to substantially plan means not only to formulate, but also to accomplish, a feasible and realistic plan to restore the child to a permanent, stable home with its parent. (See Matter of Stephen B., 60 Misc 2d 662; Matter of Orzo, 84 Misc 2d 482 and Matter of Orlando F., supra.) As stated in Orlando F. (40 NY2d at p 110) "to be sure, the mother has evinced a 'burning desire’ to regain custody of the child, but it is undisputed that in the three years preceding this litigation she failed to take the affirmative steps necessary to insure that Orlando would [742]*742be the rightful beneficiary of an adequate home life if returned to her.”1

As so construed, the statutory phrase in question more than adequately satisfies the constitutional requirement for definiteness under the due process clause. To make the "plan” provision as definite as the "keep in contact” one, which respondents suggest is necessary, would require a detailed recital of every conceivable program of personal, economic, residential and social rehabilitation that might tend to accomplish the goal of restoration of children to a wholesome, permanent home environment with their parents. Such a recital, if not impossible to accomplish, at the least would produce a statute of such complexity and prolixity that it would defeat the purposes of both practical implementation and fair notice to those affected.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Misc. 2d 738, 398 N.Y.S.2d 613, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carl-n-nyfamct-1977.