In re Otis A.

89 Misc. 2d 109, 390 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2823
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 Misc. 2d 109 (In re Otis A.) 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 Otis A., 89 Misc. 2d 109, 390 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2823 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Stanley Gartenstein, J.

The surprising aspect of this decision holding in contempt the Commissioner of Social Services of the City of New York — and that is the decision of the court — is not that this action, which has been so richly earned, is being taken, but that such remarkable judicial [110]*110restraint has been shown by the court in not doing so until now. Perhaps this restraint, which is consonant with a Judge’s duty to take every measure possible, short of total surrender of respect for the court itself, has been exercised with the recognition that agencies charged by law with responsiveness to the needs of those they are to serve, are staffed by persons who mean well. In the name of paying respect to these good intentions, we have tried wherever possible to educate and to ignore prior disregard of court mandates in the hope that the best interests of the wards of this court would somehow be served. Unfortunately these hopes are futile ones.

The lessons which the Commissioner of Social Services and indeed, all agency heads, will learn from these proceedings are twofold:

1. The decision of a court of competent jurisdiction will not be unilaterally reversed by any agency functionary from the commissioner himself down to some worker in the field who takes it upon himself to disregard it, unless that decision has been vacated, stayed, reversed or modified by an appellate court. Future compliance will be forthcoming without equivocation or delay. In short, the commissioner is advised that there exists an Appellate Division from which the court will gratefully and respectfully accept and expect reversal if its order is incorrect and/or inappropriate, and that this appellate power does not vest in the commissioner’s hands or in those of one of his social workers.

2. It is not incumbent upon a court or the litigants to search out the appropriate clerk from the incomprehensible maze of red-tape and "organization charts” in a super-agency to discharge a court mandate directed to its commissioner. Rather when the commissioner has been ordered to fulfill his statutory obligation, it is his responsibility to find the proper agent to discharge this mandate; and failing direction from the top, that particular commissioner will have sufficient opportunity while serving whatever sentence is imposed, to ascertain precisely which of his numerous functionaries should have prevented his current problem by acting as required.

the facts:

On February 13, 1976, a petition charging neglect of the three children Otis, Michael and James was filed by the Commissioner of Social Services. This petition alleged that the respondent mother uses alcoholic beverages to excess, losing [111]*111control of her actions; and further, that on February 9, 1976, when the caseworker came to the mother’s home, it was found to be without food, the respondent mother having used her public assistance moneys for the purchase of alcoholic beverages.

On March 9, 1976, Kim, the emancipated daughter of respondent, and sibling of the three subject children was granted leave, pursuant to section 1032 of the Family Court Act to act as copetitioner, at which time, respondent mother, openly acknowledging her problem, entered an admission to being unable to properly supervise the children. This was accepted by the court on consent in full satisfaction of all charges. Investigation and report were ordered with a view toward disposition which might keep this closely-knit family together while rehabilitating the mother. When efforts at rehabilitation bogged down, an order of disposition was entered on September 23, 1976 placing the children with the Commissioner of Social Services with further directions that the commissioner have the children reside with the emancipated sibling Kim. To augment its decision, the court, on application of the copetitioner, also directed the commissioner, pursuant to section 255 of the Family Court Act to obtain adequate shelter for Kim to care for her siblings; to approve the rental on such living arrangements; and to implement a budget accordingly. The court, in view of disturbing developments at this hearing wherein it was learned that the caseworker was being muzzled by her superiors regarding recommendations concerning the children’s best interests, took the additional precaution of admonishing that failing completion of these arrangements within one month, it would entertain contempt proceedings against the commissioner. In addition, the court took special pains to commend the candor of the caseworker whose courage in testifying truthfully over the efforts of her superiors to undercut her work spoke for itself.

CONTEMPT PROCEEDINGS:

The thrust of the instant contempt proceedings centers around the failure and refusal of the commissioner to obtain adequate housing for Kim so that she may have her siblings live with her.

The torturous history of these proceedings which finally culminated in a hearing before the undersigned on December 3, 1976 is irrelevant except to the extent that it underscores [112]*112the fact that these three children who were unceremoniously removed from their home 10 months ago are still in temporary shelter in limbo; and that the commissioner has yet to make any tangible good faith effort at reuniting the family.

Before dealing with the legal issues, it is germane to note that there are simple moral considerations before the court. To set these issues in their proper perspective it is necessary to underscore an unconscious slip of the tongue by a witness for the commissioner, one Isidore Baron, office manager of the Linden Social Service Center. Mr. Baron, in referring to Kim’s presence in the welfare center in a vain effort to move the bureaucracy toward compliance with the order, first referred to her by name, and when appropriate to refer to her by pronoun, the one he chose was "it”. What made matters worse was the total unawareness by the witness of his use of the term on the one hand and the attitude underlying it on the other.

The fact remains, Mr. Baron notwithstanding, that we deal here with human beings — more importantly, with children. It should be obvious by now even to the most insensitive, that a child’s scale of time is different from an adult’s and that 10 months in this scale is tantamount to a lifetime (see Goldstein, Freud and Solnit, Beyond the Best Interests of the Child [1973] cited in Matter of Bennett v Jeffreys, 40 NY2d 543, 553 concurring opn Fuchsberg, J.). When these three children spend 10 unresolved months in cold storage as a result of indifference and nonperformance by that agency charged by law with protecting their best interests (Social Services Law, § 398), the damage to them is deep and possibly irreparable. In a penetrating study published by Maas and Engler under the title Children in Need of Parents, it is postulated that (a) most children in foster care should never have been there in the first instance; (b) once a child has been in foster care for a year, the chances are that he will be doomed to spending his entire childhood there; and (c) that the ratio of emotionally disturbed children coming from this background is staggering.

We turn now. to the terrible and immoral disregard for taxpayer dollars which is illustrated by the attitude of the commissioner in this proceeding.

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Related

McCormick v. Axelrod
453 N.E.2d 508 (New York Court of Appeals, 1983)
In re Commissioner of Social Services
67 A.D.2d 815 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
89 Misc. 2d 109, 390 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-otis-a-nycfamct-1976.