In re Peter L.

453 N.E.2d 480, 59 N.Y.2d 513, 466 N.Y.S.2d 251, 1983 N.Y. LEXIS 3227
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 453 N.E.2d 480 (In re Peter L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Peter L., 453 N.E.2d 480, 59 N.Y.2d 513, 466 N.Y.S.2d 251, 1983 N.Y. LEXIS 3227 (N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jones, J.

Members of the extended family of a child who has been surrendered to an authorized agency for the purpose of adoption have no special nonconstitutional right to custody of the child which permits them to override a decision by the agency to place the child for adoption with adoptive parents to be selected by the agency.

In May, 1981 the Commissioner of Social Services instituted this proceeding in Family Court, New York County, pursuant to section 392 of the Social Services Law for review of the foster care status of Peter L., Jr., a lad five years of age who had been in a foster home, through placement by the Department of Social Services, for a [517]*517period of 18 months, thereby requiring judicial review of his foster care status.1 The child had initially come into the custody of the department in November, 1979 when an aunt with whom the father had left him was unable to care for him. After the department had received the child and placed him in a foster home the father was killed in an incident of street violence and promptly thereafter the boy’s mother executed and delivered to the commissioner both a voluntary placement agreement dated September 11, 1980, transferring temporary custody, and a surrender instrument pursuant to section 384 of the Social Services Law dated September 19, 1980, committing the guardianship and custody of the child to the commissioner and authorizing him to consent to the adoption of the child in place of the parent.2

During the 18-month period when Peter was in the care of the foster parents the Social Services Department made inquiry of the child’s 57-year-old grandmother, with whom the child and his father had lived for a time before going to the aunt’s, whether she might accept release of the boy, but the grandmother declined because of ongoing asthmatic, heart and arthritic problems to which she was subject. Peter did however spend some periods of visitation with her over holidays.

When the foster care status review proceeding was instituted, by order of the Family Court, the grandmother was given notice and permitted to participate with counsel. The agency stated then that it was recommending placement of Peter for adoption with a foster family thereafter to be selected.3 The grandmother’s attorney objected to such placement asserting that, although a proceeding had not been formally instituted, custody should be given to the grandmother as a blood relative of Peter.4 The agency, opposing that request on the basis of investigation of the [518]*518grandmother’s home while Peter was in foster care, took the position that an award of custody to her would not be in the child’s best interests.

Following the receipt of testimony at a hearing scheduled for trial on the grandmother’s request for custody along with the foster care status review sought by the commissioner, Family Court issued an order and opinion reciting that most of the testimony had focused on the suitability of the grandmother as the person to whom the child should be discharged for permanent care and adoption, stating that the grandmother had no greater legal right to Peter than any stranger, finding that it was not in the best interests of the child to be placed with the grandmother, and directing that he be placed in a suitable adoptive home.

On the grandmother’s appeal from the order of Family Court the Appellate Division reversed the order, terminated authorization for foster home placement and awarded custody to the grandmother. Although stating the question posed as “all other factors being equal, whether the law favors a natural grandparent over a foster couple in awarding custody of a child who has been surrendered to the care of the State”, the court, reciting facts which it concluded demonstrated that the grandmother offered a “loving and close-knit family environment”, nevertheless resolved the appeal on the ground that “the best interests of the child would manifestly be better served by placing the child in his grandmother’s care and custody”. No provision for adoption, however, was included in the order.

On the commissioner’s appeal we now reverse the Appellate Division’s order and reinstate the order of Family Court.

At the outset we determine that the disposition made by the Appellate Division is not within the statutorily authorized dispositions in a proceeding brought under section 392 of the Social Services Law. Where the guardianship and custody of a child have been committed to an [519]*519authorized agency by a surrender instrument executed by the surviving natural parent empowering the agency to consent to adoption only two dispositions are available to the court: it may either direct that foster care be continued (Social Services Law, § 392, subd 7, par [a]) or it may direct that the child be placed for adoption either in the foster family home where he resides or has resided or with any other person or persons (Social Services Law, § 392, subd 7, par [d]). Unlike the order of Family Court, which directed placement for adoption, the Appellate Division has done neither; it has discharged Peter from foster care and done no more than vest custody in the grandmother, leaving the child without either placement looking to the establishment of a permanent parental relationship through adoption or the prospect of subsequent review of foster care status with the possibility of adoption placement at that time. The disposition at the Appellate Division has left the child in a state of limbo, precisely contrary to the intent of the statute which, with recognition that “all children deserve the right to the security of parents and a home”, sought to release foster children for adoption or to return them to their biological parents and natural home environment (NY Legis Ann, 1970, pp 32-33; Matter of John J., 89 AD2d 933).

The grandmother argues however that, notwithstanding the execution by the mother as surviving parent of a surrender under section 384, as a close relative and a part of Peter’s extended family she has a pre-emptive right to custody of the child surpassing that of strangers who might be selected by the agency as suitable adoptive parents. To the extent that she now argues that she has a fundamental, constitutional, substantive due process right to the custody of her grandchild and a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the child, the argument — not tendered in Family Court and not relied on or addressed by the Appellate Division — is unavailable in our court (Tumolillo v Tumolillo, 51 NY2d 790). We are therefore foreclosed from consideration of the constitutional claims which are the principal components of the grandmother’s argument before us.

[520]*520 Nor is any statutory or judicial precedent in this jurisdiction offered for the proposition that a fit member of an extended family takes precedence over adoptive parents selected by an agency to which has been transferred the natural parent’s power to consent to an adoption. The recognition of any such right would of course materially undermine the decision voluntarily made by the parent in determining to confer on the agency the power to act in her place in granting or withholding consent to adoption.

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Bluebook (online)
453 N.E.2d 480, 59 N.Y.2d 513, 466 N.Y.S.2d 251, 1983 N.Y. LEXIS 3227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peter-l-ny-1983.