In re Enrique R.

126 A.D.2d 169, 512 N.Y.S.2d 837, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 41141
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 126 A.D.2d 169 (In re Enrique R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Enrique R., 126 A.D.2d 169, 512 N.Y.S.2d 837, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 41141 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kassal, J.

May the Family Court, within the statutory power conferred by Family Court Act § 255 ("Cooperation of officials and organizations”), direct the Commissioner of Social Services (Commissioner) to commence a CPLR article 78 proceeding against the New York City Housing Authority (Authority) on the basis that adequate housing is needed to enable a child’s grandmother to obtain custody of her grandchild? While we deeply sympathize with the plight of the child’s grandmother, who has been unreasonably thwarted in securing proper housing, basically as a result of bureaucratic red tape incident to Housing Authority procedures, and the inaction, bordering on irresponsibility, of the Authority, we conclude, nevertheless, that the order to that extent exceeds the statutory jurisdiction of the Family Court.

The proceeding was brought to review the status of Enrique R., a seven-year-old child, born on September 13, 1979. He was placed in foster care on a voluntary basis by his maternal grandmother on August 28, 1981. After having been briefly discharged to his paternal grandfather, he was returned to foster care on December 15, 1981, and remains to the present in such status, with regular overnight weekend visits with his paternal grandmother, Gladys Torres. She is the only blood relative willing to assume permanent custody and provide the child with a stable home environment and she earnestly seeks this. All parties have consented to this proposed arrangement, including the child’s parents, the Law Guardian and the agency to which the Commissioner had assigned custody, McMahon Services for Children (McMahon). Although the agency had originally petitioned to terminate parental rights in order to free the child for adoption, the application was denied and foster care continued to permit formulation of a plan so that Enrique would be discharged to the custody of his paternal grandmother. The Law Guardian concluded that this was in the child’s best interests.

[171]*171It is conceded that the sole obstacle to the child’s immediate discharge to his grandmother is the inadequacy of her apartment at 58 East 1st Street in Manhattan, where she resides with her adult and infant daughters, in an apartment which allegedly amounts to a health hazard and is too small for occupancy by an additional child. It is claimed, without dispute, that the four-room apartment will not accommodate another bed and the building is infested with rats, mice and roaches, to such an extent that, in November 1984, Mrs. Torres’ youngest daughter was treated for skin lesions from roach bites. It is further asserted that the absence of heat and hot water during the winter months is unbearable and, at times, has prevented Enrique from making his regular visits to his grandmother. Mrs. Torres’ inability to obtain adequate housing, it is alleged, is enhanced by her status as a welfare recipient and her need to remain in lower Manhattan, where other family members also live and provide a support network.

Unfortunately, there are long waiting lists for public housing. Mrs. Torres first applied for public housing in November 1980 but was not informed by the Housing Authority that she was on a waiting list until March 1984, 3 Vi years later. Although, under Authority regulations, she did not fall within a category of applicants eligible for "priority” treatment, she was, nevertheless, told that her application would be marked "Rush” for humanitarian and health reasons. In May 1984, Mrs. Torres was again advised by the Authority that she was still on the waiting list for the LaGuardia Project but, later that month, she was told that her name was not on the list. The project’s assistant manager speculated that her application may have been inadvertently sent to the wrong project. The Housing Authority did, however, acknowledge that her application was on file but requested that she update it, with an updated application being filed August 1, 1984. One week later, McMahon’s investigator inquired about an empty apartment for Mrs. Torres at Columbia Houses, but it had already been taken and the investigator was told that Mrs. Torres was not on the waiting list. Later that month, the Authority’s central office once again acknowledged that Mrs. Torres was on the list but that there was a five-year waiting period.

Having had no success in obtaining either public or private housing for Mrs. Torres, the Law Guardian, in October 1984, applied to the Family Court. The court ordered the Authority, the Commissioner and McMahon to lend assistance in "finding [172]*172an apartment, preferably in the Lower East Side,” and directed that Enrique be discharged to Mrs. Torres within four weeks after a suitable apartment was obtained (order, Sheldon Rand, J., entered Oct. 29, 1984). On January 3, 1985, an agency social worker was advised by the Authority’s attorney assigned to the case that there was nothing he could do and that Authority records reflected that Mrs. Torres had first submitted an application in July 1984, with no record of any prior application. Upon further request by the agency and the Law Guardian for clarification of Mrs. Torres’ status, the Authority, on February 6, 1985, advised that her Social Security number no longer appeared in its computer file and, as a result, on February 8th, Mrs. Torres agreed to file a third housing application. When the Law Guardian contacted the Authority on February 14th, the Authority again stated that there was no computer record of any application, new or old, and that accidental erasures were not uncommon.

With this extensive history of misfeasance and nonfeasance in the processing of the application by the Authority, the matter again came before the Family Court in September 1985 for a further review of Enrique’s foster care status. Although the prior order had directed the Authority to provide assistance in obtaining suitable housing, it appears that nothing was done toward that end and no Authority attorney appeared at the Family Court hearing. As a result, the court, in apparent despair, strongly reiterated its conclusion that the child ought to be discharged to his grandmother but that this had been prevented by her inability to secure adequate housing. Since the matter had not been rectified, it continued foster care for another 18 months and directed the Commissioner and McMahon to assist in acquiring suitable housing for Mrs. Torres and that such assistance include the commencement of appropriate legal proceedings, including an article 78 proceeding against the Authority. (Matter of Enrique R., 129 Misc 2d 956, 961.)

Although the Family Court may have justifiably felt absolutely frustrated by the apparent irresponsibility on the part of the Authority in failing to ameliorate Mrs. Torres’ housing predicament, there was no statutory authority for the court to direct that legal proceedings be commenced by the Commissioner on behalf of the child and his grandmother. Support for the court’s direction is claimed in part under Family Court Act § 255, which reads as follows: "It is hereby made the duty of, and the family court or a judge thereof may order, any [173]*173state, county, municipal and school district officer and employee to render such assistance and cooperation as shall be within his legal authority,

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Bluebook (online)
126 A.D.2d 169, 512 N.Y.S.2d 837, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 41141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-enrique-r-nyappdiv-1987.