In Re Cope
This text of 255 A.2d 798 (In Re Cope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF DARQUITTA COPE AND BETTINA COPE.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*339 Before Judges GAULKIN, COLLESTER and LABRECQUE.
Mr. Richard S. Semel argued the cause for appellant Betty Cope (Mr. Ronald B. Atlas, on the brief).
Mr. Eugene T. Urbaniak, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for New Jersey Bureau of Children's Services (Mr. Arthur J. Sills, Attorney General, attorney).
The opinion of the court was delivered by GAULKIN, S.J.A.D.
This case is here on appeal by Betty Cope from a judgment of the Essex County Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court awarding guardianship, care, custody and control of her two daughters, Bettina and Darquitta, to the New Jersey State Bureau of Children's Services (Bureau). The order terminates all parental rights between the children and their mother and grants the Bureau full power over the person and property of the children, but "without authority to consent to adoption." The mother contends that the competent evidence adduced at trial fails to support this award. We agree.
The Bureau proceeds here under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15, which provides in pertinent part that a petition for guardianship may be filed whenever "it appears that the best interests of any child under the care or custody of the Bureau *340 of Childrens Services require that he be placed under guardianship." N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15(c). While literally the statutory test is "the best interests of the child," this does not mean that the Bureau need show no more than that the Bureau's care has proved more beneficial to the child than that of its parents. All sections of N.J.S.A. 30:4C, including N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15(c), are "to be administered strictly in accordance with [the following] general principles * * * which are declared to be the public policy of this State:
"(a) that the preservation and strengthening of family life is a matter of public concern as being in the interests of the general welfare;
(b) that the prevention and correction of dependency and delinquency among children should be accomplished so far as practicable through welfare services which will seek to continue the living of such children in their homes;
* * * * * * * *"
As we have said in the analogous context of adoption proceedings, the rights of the child's natural parents are essential factors for judicial consideration.
"The parental relationship is an integral part of the `best interests' test [N.J.S.A. 9:3-27 subd. C]; otherwise any person could adopt a child if he were potentially a better parent than the child's natural mother or father. The welfare of the child is inextricably bound up with the rights of the parent." In re N, 96 N.J. Super. 415, 423 (App. Div. 1967).
Although the Bureau insists that it will return the children to their mother as soon as she is able to care for them, and the order of the court below forbids adoption apparently with this result in mind, the award of guardianship nonetheless terminates parental rights "for all purposes" and vests full and complete control in the Bureau. Any decision to return the children to their mother appears to be completely within the Bureau's discretion.
It is, therefore, incumbent upon the Bureau, or other petitioner for guardianship, to show more than that it will *341 provide a better home for the child. It must demonstrate affirmatively that the child's "best interests" will be substantially prejudiced if he is permitted to remain with his parent e.g., that his health and development have been or probably will be impaired and that the parent is unlikely or unwilling to change, or that the parent is in some way incapable of caring for the child or unwilling to do so.
The Bureau's petitions for guardianship allege that "it is in the best interests" of the Cope children that they be placed under the Bureau's guardianship because "a potentially dangerous situation of abuse would exist should [Bettina] be returned to Miss Cope at present" and "a potentially dangerous condition of abuse and neglect would exist should Miss Cope request premature removal of Darquitta from placement."
The evidence revealed that in June 1967 Miss Cope consented to the placement of her two young daughters (then ages 3 and 4) in the temporary custody of the Bureau, which housed them at the Youth Consultation Service in Newark. Although this was the only time the Bureau took custody of the children, it had previously exercised supervisory care over Darquitta after Miss Cope had placed her in a foundling home, and, in June 1965, Miss Cope had agreed to in-home supervision by the Bureau. In late 1965 Miss Cope placed the children in the Bureau's day care center while she worked. Miss Cope visited the children in September 1967 and apparently removed Bettina from the Bureau. Custody of the child was apparently reasserted by the Bureau after about a month. Miss Cope testified that she had intended the commitment to be temporary only and that she had intended to take the children back when she was rested.
The evidence supporting the Bureau's petition for guardianship fell into two general categories: testimony concerning the condition of the children after they were placed with the Bureau in June 1967, and testimony tending to show conditions in the Cope home. In both cases, almost all of the evidence adduced was hearsay testimony. *342 Staff members from the Bureau were permitted to testify, over repeated objections by counsel for Miss Cope, to reports of the physical and mental condition of the children while in the Bureau's custody, as well as to reports that Miss Cope mistreated the children when they were at home.
Taken together, this evidence showed nothing more than that the children were in poor physical and mental condition when the Bureau first received them; that they flourished while in the Bureau's care, and that they retrograded when the mother visited them and when she kept Bettina with her. There is very little in the competent evidence to establish the potentiality for abuse and neglect alleged by the Bureau in their petitions. Aside from the hearsay "reports" of mistreatment in the Cope home, the only competent evidence in this regard was the testimony of an Englewood police officer that, in response to a call from an unidentified resident, he appeared at the Cope apartment and found Miss Cope holding an ironing cord and one of the children "in hysterics." The officer found no evidence of physical abuse of the child and was unable to ascertain the cause of the child's crying. Miss Cope told him it was none of his business and she would discipline her children as she saw fit. The officer stated that the apartment was "untidy."
As for the period in September 1967 during which Miss Cope "snatched" Bettina from the Bureau, there was no showing that the mother injured or otherwise mistreated the child. Although it was testified that the purpose of the commitment was "to permit the children to have the kind of services that would benefit them and also to permit the mother to undertake some care and treatment for herself," we are not informed as to what, if any, treatment was needed by Miss Cope. In particular, there was no showing in the record that she was in any way incapable of caring for her children.
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255 A.2d 798, 106 N.J. Super. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cope-njsuperctappdiv-1969.