In re Curtis H

112 Misc. 2d 460, 446 N.Y.S.2d 986, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3147
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 2d 460 (In re Curtis H) 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 Curtis H, 112 Misc. 2d 460, 446 N.Y.S.2d 986, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3147 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Nanette Dembitz, J.

These consolidated petitions, filed by the Commissioner of Social Services of New York City under section 358-a of the Social Services Law, involve the effect of the child welfare and public assistance systems on relatives who have on their own volition, without government intervention, taken over the care of children under the age of 18 from their parents.1 In accordance with the policy adopted several years ago by the Department of Social Services (hereinafter the Department), the petitions ask the court to approve its grant to such relatives of foster parent status, and their consequent receipt of public funds at the so-called [461]*461foster care rate, which is more than double the rate of public assistance an indigent parent receives for his children (under the Aid to Dependent Children program, herein ADC). The Department’s grant of foster parent status to the relative also results in payments to the private agencies with which the Department contracts for foster care services, of amounts varying between $12 and $24 a day per child.

In the cases at bar the children had been in the care of relatives, mostly grandparents, from 2 to 12 years before the relatives applied for foster care status and the instant petitions were filed, the timing depending on the fortuity of when the relative happened to hear of the availability of the foster care rate. The court concludes for the reasons stated below that grant of these petitions and all others like them is beyond its authority under section 358-a of the Social Services Law. Such petitions must therefore be dismissed (despite the fact that their approval by this court is necessary for Federal reimbursement of the State and city expenditures for foster care).

While the court has no jurisdiction to prohibit the Department’s continued implementation on its own of its policy, it may be noted that a candid submission of the problem to the Legislature seems appropriate. For, despite the network of State and Federal child welfare and public assistance laws, none, as will be shown below, authorize the Department’s practice; nor do section 358-a petitions in cases of the instant type disclose their true circumstances;2 nor in common understanding would relatives who on their own initiative assume care of children, be deemed foster parents.3

[462]*462I. NO JUDICIAL AUTHORITY UNDER SECTION 358-A OF THE SOCIAL SERVICES LAW

Under section 358-a, a social services official can petition for Family Court approval of a voluntary placement agreement — that is, an agreement by a parent or some other guardian to a child’s placement in foster care under the auspices of the Department of Social Services. The agreement can be approved, together with transfer of the child’s “custody and guardianship” to the social services official, only upon specified judicial findings. Besides a finding that “the parent, parents, or guardian executed” the agreement because of an inability to provide for the child at home, the Judge must further “find and determine that the best interest and welfare, of the child would be promoted by removal of the child from such home, and that it would be contrary to the welfare of such child for him to continue in such home” (Social Services Law, § 358-a, subd [3]).

In the instant section 358-a cases there is no factual basis for the required findings that the child’s interest “would be promoted by removal” from the parent or guardian’s home, or that he would be harmed by continuance there, for the child has been moved years before to the home of the relative, who is now being designated by the social services official as the foster parent. Indeed, in cases where the parent has become unavailable during the child’s residence with the relative, the signator of the “voluntary placement agreement” providing for “removal” from the parent’s home to foster care, is the relative with whom the child has been living and who is to .be given foster care status as a result of the agreement and the section 358-a petition.

The commissioner argues that the term “removal” in section 358-a should not be construed literally but should instead be construed to mean a change in the child’s status from that of a relative to that of a foster child in the foster care system. However, the issue here is more than semantics, for section 358-a in its entirety demonstrates that it was intended to apply to removals from the parent or [463]*463custodian by a social services official. Thus, to protect the parent and child against possible overreaching by the official, section 358-a mandates a judicial finding that the agreement for placement was “knowingly and voluntarily” made (see § 358-a, subd [3]), and authorizes the appointment of a Law Guardian for the child (§ 358-a, subd [6]), while the Family Court Act mandates the appointment of an attorney for the parent or custodian (Family Ct Act, § 262, subd [a], par [iv]). Clearly, section 358-a of the Social Services Law was not intended for the ratification of past private arrangements between relatives.

Legislative History

The legislative history confirms the conclusion that the findings provision of section 358-a must be read literally.4 The section was enacted in response to a Federal law (now US Code, tit 42, § 672, subd [e]) for Federal reimbursement of “amounts expended by any State as foster care maintenance payments * * * in the case of any child who was removed from his or her home pursuant to a voluntary placement agreement” provided there is “a judicial determination * * * that such placement is in the best interests of the child.”5

Letters to the Governor by section 358-a’s supporters, stress the need to implement the Federal statute by requiring “a court determination that removal from the child’s home is in his best interest” (letter of Mayor Lindsay); and that section 358-a would not only result in fiscal benefit but would protect “the parent-child relationship * * * by extending the scrutiny of the courts over attempted placements which may be unnecessary or not in the child’s best interest” (letter from major sponsor of the bill in the State Senate, Senator Pisani).6

[464]*464Thus, all aspects of the statutory history demonstrate that section 358-a was intended to relate only to removals from the home of a parent or guardian pursuant to his agreement with a social services official.

The commissioner argues that this court should depart from the language of section 358-a because of general declarations as to the value of family life in various State and Federal statutes. However, the cited statutes relate to payments of two types, which are both irrelevant here. On the one hand are laws authorizing payments to relatives of the same public assistance allowances for the care of children (ADC) that are made to indigent parents.7 Grants of this type, which do not implicate section 358-a, undoubtedly are available to the relatives here involved and were in fact received by many of them prior to the Department’s grant of their applications for foster care status and funds.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Misc. 2d 460, 446 N.Y.S.2d 986, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-curtis-h-nycfamct-1982.