In re Jose H.

54 Misc. 3d 324, 40 N.Y.S.3d 710
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 Misc. 3d 324 (In re Jose H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Jose H., 54 Misc. 3d 324, 40 N.Y.S.3d 710 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William C. Donnino, J.

Petitioner Jose H. seeks an order from this court setting out special findings that would make him eligible for special immigrant juvenile status which, if granted by immigration authorities, would permit him to stay in the United States.1 (See 8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J]; 8 CFR 204.11.) The application for special findings is denied, as the petitioner is not “dependent” on a “juvenile court” within the meaning of the governing federal statute.

Petitioner’s Judgments

On April 21, 2014, in the Supreme Court, Nassau County, the petitioner was charged by indictment, as an adult, with assault in the first degree and related crimes, based on his having inflicted serious physical injury on the complainant by means of a machete. On July 16, 2014, the petitioner pleaded guilty to assault in the first degree. On February 20, 2015, the court decided to adjudicate the petitioner (who was 17 years of age at the time of the crime) a youthful offender and sentence him to IV3 to 4 years in state prison. On the date of that sentence, the petitioner also pleaded guilty under a separate indictment to promoting prison contraband in the first degree, for possession of a homemade knife while he was detained in jail pending the resolution of the assault charge, and, in the same sentencing proceeding the court also adjudicated the petitioner a youthful offender for that felony, and accorded him a time-served sentence on that adjudication.

[326]*326Summary of Decision

Special immigrant juvenile status is intended to provide relief from deportation to children who are in the United States illegally and who, because abuse, neglect, or abandonment prevents reunification with one or both of their parents, find themselves in need of the intervention of a “juvenile court”— typically in the form of guardianship, foster care, or other provisions for their care and custody. When a “juvenile court” has such a child before it, federal law permits it to make certain special findings which can serve as the basis for a special immigrant juvenile application with immigration authorities. Among these findings are that the child is “dependent” on the “juvenile court”; that the child is unable to reunite with one or both parents due to parental abuse, neglect, or abandonment; and that it is in the child’s best interest to remain in the United States. One of the bases for a finding that a child is “dependent” on a “juvenile court” is that “such a court has legally committed [the child] to, or placed [him or her] under the custody of, an agency or department of a State.” (8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J] [i].)

Here, the petitioner argues that he is “dependent” on a “juvenile court” because he was “legally committed to, or placed under the custody of, an agency or department of a State” when this court—after the petitioner’s conviction of felony assault for ambushing and hacking an unarmed man with a machete— adjudicated him a youthful offender and sentenced him to state prison.

This strained interpretation of the federal statute fails. The “juvenile court” in New York State is the Family Court. While the New York Supreme Court is a court of general jurisdiction and a judge of the Supreme Court may sit to adjudicate a family court case, this Supreme Court judge did not do that in the petitioner’s case. Indeed, the Family Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the petitioner’s case because he was charged, as an adult, with a felony. In other words, the petitioner was not legally committed or placed in custody by a “juvenile court,” as required for special immigrant juvenile status (see 8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J]) because this court was not exercising “juvenile court” jurisdiction when it sent him to state prison.

The petitioner is wrong in claiming that a youthful offender adjudication is a type of “juvenile court” adjudication. For eligible young adults who have been convicted of a crime, [327]*327youthful offender treatment ameliorates some of the collateral consequences of that conviction by replacing it with a youthful offender adjudication and keeping the records relating to it confidential, and youthful offender treatment permits a more lenient prison sentence. But, in contrast to a juvenile delinquent or a juvenile offender, a youthful offender is someone who was subject to adult criminal liability, was tried in an adult court, using adult criminal procedures, and was sent to an adult prison for a maximum indeterminate term of up to four years.

Thus, as federal courts have recognized, youthful offender adjudications are adult, rather than juvenile, proceedings in New York.

Consequently, the petitioner does not qualify as “dependent” on a “juvenile court” within the meaning of the federal statute—and he certainly is not the type of vulnerable child in need of “juvenile court” intervention that special immigrant juvenile status was intended to aid. Accordingly, his application is denied.

Background

Special Immigrant Juvenile Status

In 1990, Congress created the status of special immigrant juvenile to provide relief from deportation to unaccompanied or otherwise neglected children who were in the United States illegally. (See 8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J] [defining special immigrant juvenile]; Matter of Marcelina M.-G. v Israel S., 112 AD3d 100, 101 [2d Dept 2013] [setting out history of special immigrant juvenile statute]; Matter of Hei Ting C., 109 AD3d 100, 102 [2d Dept 2013] [same].) To be eligible for special immigrant juvenile status, a child had to be a child under federal immigration law (that is, under age 21 and unmarried); declared “dependent” on a “juvenile court”; eligible for long-term foster care; and, in addition, a state “juvenile court” had to make a factual finding that it was not in the child’s best interest to return to his or her native country. (8 CFR 204.11 [c] [implementing regulations for special immigrant juvenile statute]; Marcelina M.-G. at 107.)

In 1997, Congress became concerned that special immigrant juvenile status was being abused by visiting foreign students who were having themselves declared wards of the court and eligible for long-term foster care. (Marcelina M.-G. at 107.) Consequently, Congress amended the statute to require that [328]*328the child be eligible for long-term foster care due to abuse, abandonment, or neglect, “in order to limit the beneficiaries of this provision to those juveniles for whom it was created, namely abandoned, neglected, or abused children.” (HR Rep 105-405, 105th Cong, 1st Sess at 130, reprinted in 1997 US Code Cong & Admin News at 2941; Marcelina M.-G. at 107-108.) At the same time, Congress modified the dependency requirement—that is, that a child be “declared dependent on a juvenile court”—to include as well children who were “legally committed to, or placed under the custody of, an agency or department of a State.” (Marcelina M.-G. at 107-108.)

Significantly, Congress also added a requirement that immigration authorities consent to the granting of special immigrant juvenile status. (Id.) This requirement was intended to limit the granting of this status to children who were genuinely vulnerable. (Id.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Misc. 3d 324, 40 N.Y.S.3d 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jose-h-nysupct-2016.