In re Clear

58 Misc. 2d 699, 296 N.Y.S.2d 184, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1875
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 58 Misc. 2d 699 (In re Clear) 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 Clear, 58 Misc. 2d 699, 296 N.Y.S.2d 184, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1875 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Justice Wise Power, J.

This is a proceeding brought under article 6 of the Family Court Act by the Jewish Child Care Association, an authorized agency, to permanently terminate custody of the mother and award custody of her child to the petitioner.

The history of article 6 is rooted in the concern for children who have been placed in authorized agencies voluntarily or by court order. Studies have shown that the longer a child is left in care the less likely is his return to his natural family. Self-examination by agencies of children in care has shown a substantial number who after placement are rarely visited and become lost children for whom no plans are made by their families. Occasional visits, a Christmas gift, or a birthday card, or nothing, become the tenuous contact between these children and their natural families. Institutionalized at public expense year after year, they grow up with a sense of not belonging to anyone or with unrealistic fantasies about homes that will never be.

The purpose of article 6 and the preceding statute was twofold. First, it sought to place an obligation on authorized agencies having custody of children to work with parents toward strengthening their ability and sense of responsibility for re-establishing homes for children in placement. Second, when such efforts failed for a period of over a year the statute gives authority to the authorized agency to petition for the [701]*701termination of parental rights, thus freeing a child for adoptive placement when it is in the best interest of the child. In keeping with these two purposes, the law requires that certain facts be alleged including the efforts of the agency to work with the parents and the response of the parents. Such requirements provide safeguards to parents, since they obligate the authorized agencies having temporary custody of children to exert effort to re-establish the natural home prior to filing a petition for termination of parental rights.

The petition in the instant case prays that the infant, born on May 22,1964 and committed to its care one week later, shall be adjudicated a permanently neglected child, that the mother shall be deprived permanently of said child’s custody, and that custody shall be awarded to the agency. The petition alleges facts in accordance with the statutory requirements for such a proceeding under section 614 of the Family Court Act:

“ (a) the child is a person under eighteen years of age;

“ (b) the child has been placed in the care of an authorized agency, either in an institution or in a foster home;

“(c) the authorized agency has made diligent efforts to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship and specifying the efforts made;

“(d) the parent or custodian, notwithstanding the agency’s efforts, has failed for a period of more than one year following the placement or commitment of such child in the care of an authorized agency substantially and continuously or repeatedly to maintain contact with and plan for the future of the child although physically and financially able to do so; and

“(e) the moral and temporal interests of the child require that the parents’ or other custodian’s custody of the child be terminated permanently.”

At the fact-finding hearing, counsel for the petitioner, counsel for the Department of Social Services, and counsel for the mother stipulated that the child had been in placement on a voluntary commitment since she was seven days old, that the mother had provided no home and no support during the period of over four years, but that the mother had visited the child from time to time.

Counsel for the petitioner called as its first witness a supervisor of the authorized agency in whose care the child has been and offered the record kept in the regular course of business. Counsel for the mother contended that, since the supervisor was a certified social worker, all communications between her and the mother and/or professional observations relating to the mother, and all communications with or observations by [702]*702the supervisor’s subordinates, were privileged communications and, therefore, might not be disclosed without authorization of the mother under CPLB 4508.

This court, like counsel for both parties, has examined the contention of counsel for the mother in the light of the fundamental conditions set forth as necessary to the establishment of a privilege against disclosure between persons standing in given relationships as stated in Wigmore, Evidence (vol. 8 [3d ed.], p. 531, •§ 2285):

1. Communications must originate in the confidence that they will not be disclosed;

2. The element of confidentiality must be essential to the maintenance of the relationship between the parties;

3. The relation is one which in the opinion of the community ought to be fostered;

4. The injury that would inure to the relationship as a result of disclosure must be greater than the benefit gained in regard to the correct disposal of litigation. The burden of establishing the conditions is on the party alleging the privilege. There is no evidence before this court that the communications between the mother and the certified social worker originated in the confidence that they would not be disclosed. Indeed, there is reason to hold that the primary responsibility and relationship of the authorized agency ran to the child committed to its care by the Department of Social Services and not to the child’s mother. There is even reason to question whether this mother can be regarded as a 11 client ’ ’ of the agency. In regard to the second condition there is no evidence as to the essentiality of confidentiality between the social worker and the mother, and no evidence has been submitted as to the character or the extent of the relationship between the social worker and the mother.

In regard to the third condition, where a child has been entrusted to an authorized agency for care, good social-work practice today requires that the agency seek to strengthen the family ties and prepare the family for the return of the child where possible. That the agency must allege such efforts under section 614 and establish them by a fair preponderance of the evidence under section 622 reflects the importance attached to such efforts by the Legislature. However, neither the requirements of good practice nor the objectives sought provide a basis for holding that an authorized agency shall place the relationship with a parent in a category which would require [703]*703absolute confidentiality to the detriment of the child entrusted to its care.1

In regard to the fourth condition required to establish confidentiality, this court is satisfied that the disclosure of evidence relevant to a correct determination of whether the mother of an infant should be permanently deprived of its custody must be regarded as of far greater importance than any injury that might inure to the relationship between the social worker and the mother.2

The motion to exclude must be denied, since to grant it would require the suppression of evidence material to a proper judicial determination of the future life of a child with the possible result that the merits of the claims of the mother and the basic question in issue as to the best interests of the child might never be reached.3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Misc. 2d 699, 296 N.Y.S.2d 184, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clear-nycfamct-1969.