In re Denlow

87 Misc. 2d 410
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 87 Misc. 2d 410 (In re Denlow) 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 Denlow, 87 Misc. 2d 410 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Joseph A. Doran, J.

This is a proceeding brought by the Orphan Asylum of the City of Brooklyn (hereinafter called "Brookwood” or the "agency”) to obtain the commitment, [411]*411custody and guardianship of a 12-year-old boy for purposes of adoption (Social Services Law, § 384),. and for termination of parental rights in said child (Family Ct Act, § 611 et seq.)

This child — Derek—was born to his mother out of wedlock on October 2, 1963 — the youngest of six children at the time of birth. The agency assumed responsibility for his care on December 17, 1965, when he was transferred to Brookwood by the Commissioner of Social Services of the City of New York. He was placed in a foster home selected by the agency, and has continued to remain there.

The respondent is the mother of the child in question, who refuses to relinquish her natural rights in favor of strangers.1 However, it is claimed that she has forfeited her rights to the child by reason of "abandonment” as the term is used in the statute (Social Services Law, § 384), and also on grounds of "permanent neglect” in that she has failed to maintain substantial and continuous or repeated contact with the child in accordance with the requirements of law and plan for his future, although physically and financially able to do so, notwithstanding the agency’s diligent efforts to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship, so as to require, therefore, a termination of parental rights in the moral and temporal interests of the child (Family Ct Act, § 614).2

At the outset the court takes judicial notice of its own records that relate to the proceeding before it. (See United States v California Canneries, 279 US 553, 555; Dimmick v Tompkins, 194 US 540, 548; Matter of Ordway, 196 NY 95, 97; Vose v Yulee, 64 NY 449, 452; Devine v Melton, 170 App Div [412]*412280, 282; Silverstein v Brown, 153 App Div 677, 680; O’Grady v State of New York, 118 Misc 693, 696.) It appears that the Commissioner of Social Services of the City of New York filed a petition verified June 1, 1973, for review of the foster care status of the child under section 392 of the Social Services Law. It stated that the said child had been in foster care since December 17, 1965, under agency auspices. The petition also alleged as follows: "3. Petitioner is charged with the care, custody and guardianship of said child, in that the child came into the Commissioner’s care through the Commissioner exercising his mandated responsibility on February 11, 1965. No commitment was signed by the mother. * * * 6. That it would be in the best interest of the child to continue in foster care because it would be contrary to the welfare of the child to return to his home.” (Emphasis supplied.) The court by order (undated) directed that notice of the presentation of the petition and hearing thereon be given to the mother (respondent herein) by "service of written notice” 10 days before the date of hearing without prescribing any particular manner of service of such notice (see Social Services Law, § 392). It was served by mail on November 28, 1973, pursuant to the usual practice and procedure in such cases, and returned by the Post Office for "addressee unknown”. On December 6, 1973, an order was made ex parte in the section 392 review that the "foster care of named child be continued in the care and custody of the Commissioner of Social Services of the City of New York”, and that Brookwood "continue to proceed on behalf of the child, if legal grounds exist, to legally free said child for adoption.” (Emphasis supplied.)3 A copy of the said order mailed to the same address given for the mother was also returned by the postal authorities as undeliverable.4

[413]*413The stage was thus set for the instant proceeding. Now for the ñrst time the respondent has been given the opportunity for hearing in any court after her son was taken 10 years ago at the age of 16 months under somewhat questionable circumstances. In February, 1965, the mother and six children (including Derek) were living on public assistance in a so-called "welfare hotel” with a dole of $42 semi-monthly for food. The children of school age were kept home for lack of proper clothing. One day — as the respondent explains it — a Department of Social Services caseworker came with a check for school clothes. The mother was told that she could leave the children alone while she went shopping — just as she did when she went to pick up her "welfare” check. On her return the children were gone, and Derek has never been given back to his mother. It appears that a criminal charge was dismissed at a later date. The removal of the children in the mother’s absence is said to have been effected under the "emergency removal powers” of the Commissioner of Social Services at the time (see Family Ct Act, former § 324, now § 1024).5

However, there has never been any judicial proceeding to authorize or confirm the legal propriety of such removal that has separated mother and child for a decade as aforesaid. Indeed, none is claimed — anymore than a written consent or surrender of the child is claimed to justify the action. Shortly put, the "separation” over the years has been without legal sanction and in plain violation of law (Matter of Daniel C, 47 AD2d 160, 163; People ex rel. Johnson v Michael, 39 Misc 2d 365).6 This circumvention of law is tolerable only because the child has always continued in foster care with the mother’s [414]*414consent. All parties in interest have been accepting of the arrangement.

The child in this case is said to have neurological and perceptual problems stemming from minimal brain damage and poor vision. He also has learning disabilities that require special schooling. The record is silent as to the precise nature and extent or depth of his difficulties.7 The agency has always taken the position that the mother is unable to provide for his needs, which are being better served in foster care. The respondent recognized Derek’s problems, and has acquiesced in the agency’s appraisal of her inability to cope with them. Accordingly, she made no plans for bringing the boy home until these were corrected — burdened as she was (and still is) with the other children and now grandchildren in the family. Brookwood left it to the mother’s decision as to when she would be ready.

The agency stopped home visits for the child when he complained to a caseworker in or about December, 1968, that they made him unhappy. Derek, is supposed to have said that he was not properly fed, received no attention, and felt lost with a whole lot of children in his mother’s home. Whatever he meant, the agency was quick to lend a ready ear to a five-year-old boy with Derek’s limitations at the time. Derek also did not like the discipline at home. It was apparently stricter than the routine to which he had become accustomed in foster care. The court further notes — if trivia be deserving of notice —that the agency caseworker would fault the respondent for paying little or no attention to the child on the occasion of a picnic in August, 1971. It is said that he was left by his mother to do only what comes naturally: "Derek was just playing with his siblings”.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Misc. 2d 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-denlow-nycfamct-1976.