In re Dutchess County Department of Social Services ex rel. Anthony S.

187 Misc. 2d 348
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 Misc. 2d 348 (In re Dutchess County Department of Social Services ex rel. Anthony S.) 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 Dutchess County Department of Social Services ex rel. Anthony S., 187 Misc. 2d 348 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Damian J. Amodeo, J.

These child protective proceedings bring up for review the adequacy of fees authorized for services performed by attorneys acting as assigned counsel and Law Guardians in Family Court. In each of these cases assigned counsel has requested compensation at the rate of $75 per hour for all work performed. This is considerably above the $40 per hour rate set for in-court work and $25 per hour rate set for out-of-court work provided in County Law § 722-b.1

Prior to accepting the assignment in each case, counsel indicated an unwillingness to do so unless the court would at least consider his request for compensation at an enhanced hourly rate. In making its determination of counsel’s request in these cases the court will not address the specific facts of either case, but will review the issue of counsel fees in a somewhat broader manner. The court does note that it was only as a result of the experience and expertise of the attorney involved that each of these difficult matters was resolved with relative dispatch.

The court has selected these cases because each involves an attorney whose situation is typical of others in this County who have a long and dedicated history of serving this court as Law Guardians and assigned counsel. Samuel P. Brooke, Esq., is the senior member of a very active and well-respected three-person law firm. He and another member of that firm are certified to act as Law Guardians (Family Ct Act § 243 [b]; § 244 [b]; Judiciary Law § 35 [7]) and each regularly accepted cases in that capacity and all members of the firm had regularly accepted work on an assigned counsel basis. Within the last year, each attorney requested that his name be removed from both the assigned counsel and Law Guardian lists. Each cited financial reasons, relating to the low fees paid for these assignments, as the primary reason for his decision. It was only at this court’s personal urging and even pleading that Mr. Brooke agreed to remain an active Law Guardian.

[350]*350For years the need for increasing the compensation paid to attorneys for performing assigned work has been a topic of much discussion and concern. Judges and others have long expressed alarm at the consequences of failing to overcome the long-standing stalemate in addressing the need for a substantial increase in the fees paid to the attorneys willing to accept assigned work.

Virtually everyone in the executive, legislative and judicial branches of government has expressed understanding and sympathy for the plight of attorneys being asked to perform professional services at rates which have not been increased in more than 15 years. Clearly, the cost for these attorneys to maintain their professional and personal lives has increased substantially during the last 15 years. Regrettably, expressions of understanding and sympathy do not readily convert into the dollars necessary for these attorneys to pay office rent; purchase law books, computers or supplies; compensate their paralegal or secretarial staffs; or to pay their home mortgage, auto lease or college tuition.

To fully appreciate the scope of the crisis which has developed as a result of the woefully inadequate compensation being paid to these attorneys, the problem must be viewed in the proper context. In a substantial number of cases coming before this court an attorney is assigned to represent one or more of the adult litigants. In virtually every case involving a child an attorney is assigned to represent that child. As a result, the impact of the crisis created by the inadequate fee structure is felt in some way in almost every case that comes before the Family Courts throughout the State. The matters handled by these attorneys regularly involve some of the most critical issues facing families — which of two loving and able parents should have custody of a child; whether a child should be placed in an institution for inappropriate conduct; whether a parent’s rights to care for and raise a child should be terminated; or how issues of domestic violence should be addressed.

It has become increasingly difficult and time-consuming for the court to find attorneys willing to handle cases. It has also become more common for the court to assign counsel in a particular matter and mail copies of all material to the attorney, only to have the attorney reject the assignment, citing his or her unwillingness or inability to handle the matter due to an already overburdened inventory of assigned cases. In such instances the court staff is required to seek out an attorney willing to take the matter and duplicate the entire effort of prepar[351]*351ing a new assignment order and copying and transmitting necessary documents to the newly assigned attorney. The court often does not receive notification of the unavailability of counsel in sufficient time to make a new assignment to meet a scheduled court appearance or in sufficient time for the newly assigned attorney to effectively communicate with his or her client prior to a scheduled appearance. Adjournments, delays, inconvenience and additional costs to the court system and to the parties through loss of wages, extra childcare expenses, or absence from school, are common consequences of the State’s failure to act on the counsel fee issue.

It is a fundamental obligation of the State to provide adequate counsel for those unable to afford an attorney (see e.g. Gideon v Wainwright, 372 US 335; In re Gault, 387 US 1; Matter of Orlando F., 40 NY2d 103; see also Family Ct Act §§ 241, 249, 262). At the same time, it has always been acknowledged that attorneys undertaking the representation of indigents and children understand that their fees will necessarily be lower and that some financial sacrifice will be involved (see e.g. People v Perry, 27 AD2d 154; Matter of Werfel v Agresta, 36 NY2d 624). However, long-standing inaction by and even resistance from legislative and executive offices concerning enhanced counsel fees has had the practical effect of shifting the burden of providing legal services from the State to those attorneys still willing to take these assignments.

The overhead of a typical attorney is often nearly equal to or exceeds the amount which an attorney can expect to receive from assigned cases. Trained and experienced attorneys should not be compelled to work at rates which are far less than those established for other professionals who provide services to the court. Nor should these attorneys be compelled to work for a net wage which is less than they pay their own secretarial or paralegal staffs or for a net amount, which, in some instances, is below the minimum wage. The attorneys who continue to accept assignments out of a sense of obligation to the public should not be subsidizing the State’s obligation to provide adequate legal representation to those who cannot afford to do so.

The crisis in the court system which this inaction has caused must be addressed in some manner to insure that those who typically have no one to lobby on their behalf in the legislative or executive halls will continue to receive adequate and effective representation.

Courts have long expressed great reluctance to decide an issue in a manner which might be viewed as acting in a legisla[352]*352tive capacity. To avoid encroaching on the prerogatives of the Legislature courts have long practiced the exercise of examining existing legislation in an effort to craft a creative solution to a problem in the context of that legislation.

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Related

People v. Toms
191 Misc. 2d 585 (New York County Courts, 2002)
In re Turner
189 Misc. 2d 55 (New York Supreme Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 Misc. 2d 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dutchess-county-department-of-social-services-ex-rel-anthony-s-nycfamct-2001.