In re MP

50 Misc. 3d 678, 22 N.Y.S.3d 330
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedNovember 13, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 Misc. 3d 678 (In re MP) 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 MP, 50 Misc. 3d 678, 22 N.Y.S.3d 330 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Erik S. Pitchal, J.

Now pending before the court are the petitions of Mercy First seeking review of a failed condition of a surrender of the parental rights by Ms. S. to her two children, MP and CP. For the reasons set forth below, the court holds that there has been a failure of a material condition of the surrenders and that the court has the authority to vacate the surrenders as a result. The court further holds that under the circumstances of this case, a hearing must be held for the court to determine whether vacatur of these surrenders is in the children’s best interests, with the burden on the parent to demonstrate that it is.

Procedural History

The children MP and CP are twins born in 2009. They were removed from their mother’s custody and entered foster care on or about January 4, 2010, pursuant to a petition filed by the [680]*680Administration for Children’s Services alleging that she had neglected them. The children have been in foster care ever since.

On or about June 20, 2011, the foster care agency Mercy First filed petitions seeking to involuntarily terminate Ms. S.’s parental rights to the children. Midway through that proceeding, Ms. S. filed applications to voluntarily surrender her rights to the children, based on two specified conditions. First, her surrender was conditioned on the children being adopted by their paternal great aunt, Ms. L., who was at the time their approved kinship foster parent. Second, the surrender was conditioned on Ms. S. having post-adoption contact with the children at least six times per year, as arranged between her and Ms. L., and that she receive the children’s report cards and photographs of them on an annual basis. Following an allocution, the court (Olshansky, J.) approved the surrenders on July 25, 2014.

Sometime after the surrenders were approved, a call was made to the Statewide Central Register concerning maltreatment by Ms. L. of children in her care. MP and CP were removed from her foster home, and by the end of February 2015, she had exhausted her administrative remedies to seek their return. Shortly thereafter, Ms. S. moved to have her surrenders of the children vacated based on a material failure of the first condition. In response, the agency argued that the application was premature, as Ms. L. still had the option of seeking a CPLR article 78 review of the administrative determination to remove the children from her care. In a written decision dated June 1, 2015, the court (Salinitro, J.) concluded that a material condition of the surrenders had failed, and directed the agency to file a formal petition pursuant to Family Court Act § 1055-a notifying Ms. S. of the failed condition and seeking court review.

On or about June 15, 2015, the agency filed the petitions as directed. They were assigned to the undersigned, and a conference was conducted on the record with counsel on August 6, 2015. At the conference, the agency renewed its argument that it was premature to conclude that a condition had failed, because by that date Ms. L. had filed an article 78 petition which was then pending in Supreme Court. All counsel also briefly stated their positions with respect to the legal remedies, if any, available to Ms. S. in the event the court were to determine that there has indeed been a substantial failure of a [681]*681material condition of the surrenders. The undersigned was provided counsel’s memoranda of law on this issue which had previously been submitted as part of Ms. S.’s initial motion to vacate the surrenders.1 The court reserved decision.

Analysis

As an initial matter, the court rejects the agency’s assertion that there has not been a failure of a material condition of Ms. S.’s surrenders. First and foremost, the court is constrained from adopting the agency’s position by the law of the case. Judge Salinitro’s written decision finding that the removal of the children from Ms. L.’s home constituted a failure of a material condition is binding so long as the facts and circumstances remain substantially the same. Courts of coordinate jurisdiction should not overrule one another in the same case. (People v Evans, 94 NY2d 499, 504 [2000], citing Matter of Dondi v Jones, 40 NY2d 8, 15 [1976].) At the time of Judge Salinitro’s decision, Ms. L. had lost an administrative fair hearing seeking the return of the children and had not yet had her article 78 petition adjudicated. As far as the court is aware, that remains the basic posture of this case at the present time.

Moreover, as discussed with counsel during the August 6 conference, even if Ms. L. prevails in an article 78 proceeding— and even if the agency does not appeal such a ruling—the agency is still not required to consent to her as the adoptive parent. If the agency withholds its consent at that point, Ms. L. would have to pursue yet another administrative hearing and, if necessary, another article 78 petition. A surrender of parental rights may only be conditioned on the child being adopted by a specified person if the person is an approved adoptive parent. (Social Services Law § 383-c [2] [a].) The agency’s position that she might yet be the adoptive parent is predicated on a string of hypothetical events all coming true, a result which is highly speculative at best, and all the while, the children would remain in a state of legal limbo. In this case, an arm of the state disrupted the placement of the children with their intended adoptive parent. It is vaguely Kafkaesque for another agent of the state to assert that despite this disruption, the identified resource may yet still be in a position to [682]*682adopt the children. Either Ms. L. is going to adopt the children, or she is not. Under the circumstances of this case, it appears that the agency cannot consent to her doing so, and thus a material condition of Ms. S.’s surrender of parental rights has failed.

Given this failure, the heart of the matter before the court is what, if anything, can and should be done. The agency, supported by the Attorney for the Children, argues that the answer is: Nothing. In contrast, Ms. S. argues that under the statute, the court has the power as well as the obligation to revoke the surrenders once it has been demonstrated there has been a failure of a material condition.

The court agrees with the mother that Social Services Law § 383-c gives the court the authority to vacate a parental surrender when a material condition on which it is predicated has failed. While the agency argues that the plain meaning of the statute clearly prohibits judicial nullification of parental surrenders under any circumstances, the court finds that the statute is more ambiguous. The statute provides in relevant parts:

“The guardianship of the person and the custody of a child in foster care under the age of eighteen years may be committed to an authorized agency by a written instrument which shall be known as a surrender . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Misc. 3d 678, 22 N.Y.S.3d 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mp-nycfamct-2015.