In re Perez

204 Misc. 187, 120 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1699
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedApril 7, 1953
StatusPublished

This text of 204 Misc. 187 (In re Perez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 Perez, 204 Misc. 187, 120 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1699 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1953).

Opinion

Sicher, J.

There is squarely presented the question whether this court, which on March 5, 1952, adjudged “ Nina Perez ” mentally defective and certified her to Willowbrook State School for custody, treatment and observation pursuant to section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law, has now jurisdiction to entertain her mother’s application for the patient’s discharge.

Study of the controlling legislation leaves no doubt that although there has been conferred upon this statutory court power to certify a mentally defective child for admission to a State school there is wholly lacking jurisdiction to order such patient’s discharge.

On December 12, 1951, the mother of Nina Perez ”, a child born January 6, 1937, in Puerto Rico, filed a petition, under subdivision (15) of section 2 and articles 1, 2 and 3 of title II of the Domestic Relations Court Act of the City of New York, alleging that such daughter was incorrigible, ungovernable, habitually disobedient, and beyond the control of her parent. Thereupon, on December 19, 1951, “ Nina ” was adjudged a delinquent child and remanded to the Youth House-Girls Camp for temporary detention, social worker study and various tests there, a psychiatric examination in this court’s bureau of mental health services, and the usual probation bureau investigation, in the light of the following indorsement on the petition at the conclusion of the hearing: “ Allegations proved and freely admitted. The child seems without moral training and may be the victim of mother’s ignorance and neglect. She admits acts of intercourse over a period of time with two named adults and also in Puerto Rico. She has not been enrolled in school.”

[189]*189Such study, tests, investigation, and physical, psychological, and psychiatric examinations on January 3, 1952, and again on February 18, 1952, showed that “ Nina’s ” maladjustment stemmed largely from such mental defects as to preclude placement with normal children and to require, for the protection of herself and the community, confinement and treatment at one of the State schools for mental defectives designated in section 120 of the Mental Hygiene Law.

Accordingly, on March 5, 1952, a justice of this court made the afore-mentioned order of certification to Willowbrook State School, and shortly afterwards “ Nina ” was transported there. Then, in regular course, the Director of Willowbrook State School filed a certificate, as to her need for continued, indefinite term care and treatment as a patient, pursuant to the provisions of subdivision 7 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law which read: “At any time prior to the expiration of sixty days from the date of admission as provided by this section, the director, or medical officer designated by him, of the institution to which the patient has been admitted for observation may, if he finds that such patient is in need of continued care and treatment, file in the office of the county clerk, a certificate setting forth his findings and the need for the continued care and treatment of such patient. Upon the filing of such certificate, the order theretofore made by the judge shall become a final order and such patient shall thereafter remain in such institution, or any other institution to which he may be transferred, until his discharge in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.” (Emphasis supplied.)

This court’s March 5, 1952, order of certification was made not under any provision of the Domestic Gelations Court Act of the City of New York but, instead, under the Mental Hygiene Law, in a new proceeding separate from and corollary to the prior delinquent child proceeding. And that order of certification was based on forms prescribed and furnished by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene in conformance with subdivision 1 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law, namely, a petition by the mother, a certificate of mental defect by a psychiatrist and a report of examination by a certified psychologist, all duly verified on February 18, 1952.

The power to entertain such mentally defective person proceeding under the Mental Hygiene Law and to certify the child “ Nina ” for admission to an institution for the mentally defective is expressly conferred, in subdivision 1 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law, upon “ a judge of a court of [190]*190record of the city or county, or of a children’s court, or a justice of the supreme court of the judicial district in which the alleged mentally defective person resides or may be.” (Emphasis supplied.) That is the primary source of the authority of this court to commit a mentally defective child rather than subdivision 1 of section 61 of the Domestic Relations Court Act of the City of New York, as mistakenly assumed in Matter of Belloni (188 Misc. 587). And, upon the maldng of that order of certification of Nina Perez ” as a mental defective and her commitment thereunder to Willowbrook State School the prior delinquent child proceeding was held in abeyance except for her continued remand therein at Youth House-Girls Camp until her transportation to Willowbrook State School and thereafter during an adjournment, for all purposes, to June 13,1952, pending word whether “ Nina ” had been certified for indefinite term care pursuant to subdivision 7 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law on which last-mentioned date the delinquent child proceeding was closed with the indorsement “ Discharged to Willowbrook State School ”.

It is the customary practice of this court to keep open a prior delinquent or neglected child proceeding until after it will have been ascertained that the child who was originally the subject of such a proceeding and subsequently of a mentally defective child proceeding has become an indefinite term patient at a State school for mental defectives, so that in the event that the Director of the State school determine that a child who had been certified for sixty days’ observation should not be longer detained, he or she may then be continued under the original jurisdiction of the Children’s Court acquired in the prior delinquent or neglected child proceeding under the Domestic Relations Court Act. But jurisdiction under that statute ends, and such termination is finally recorded, when and if there will have been filed a continued care certificate under subdivision 7 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law.

Moreover, once a patient will have been so certified under subdivision 7 of section 124 of the Mental Hygiene Law he or she may be discharged only in accordance with other provisions of the Mental Hygiene Law, namely:

Section 125 of the Mental Hygiene Law authorizes a review of proceedings by jury trial in the New York Supreme Court if petitioned, by or in behalf of the patient, within thirty days after the making of a final order of certification, and the discharge of such patient if the verdict of the jury be that he or she is not mentally defective.

[191]*191Section 132 of the Mental Hygiene Law authorizes the director of the institution to grant a convalescent status to a patient in accordance with rules prescribed by the Commissioner of Mental Hygiene.

Section 133 of the Mental Hygiene Law authorizes a discharge of a patient at any time by and in the discretion of the director of the institution, and provides that “ When the director is unwilling to certify to the discharge of a mentally defective patient upon request, and so certifies in writing, giving his reasons therefor,

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Related

In re Belloni
188 Misc. 587 (New York Supreme Court, 1946)
Denton v. Denton
179 Misc. 681 (New York Family Court, 1942)
In re Levine
187 Misc. 1054 (New York Family Court, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
204 Misc. 187, 120 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-perez-nyfamct-1953.