In re Sheila G.

462 N.E.2d 1139, 61 N.Y.2d 368, 474 N.Y.S.2d 421, 1984 N.Y. LEXIS 4118
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by585 cases

This text of 462 N.E.2d 1139 (In re Sheila G.) 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 Sheila G., 462 N.E.2d 1139, 61 N.Y.2d 368, 474 N.Y.S.2d 421, 1984 N.Y. LEXIS 4118 (N.Y. 1984).

Opinions

[373]*373OPINION OF THE COURT

Chief Judge Cooke.

When a child-care agency has custody of a child and brings a proceeding to terminate parental rights on the ground of permanent neglect, it must affirmatively plead in detail and prove by clear and convincing evidence that it has fulfilled its statutory duty to exercise diligent efforts to strengthen the parent-child relationship and to reunite the family. Only when this duty has been deemed satisfied may a court consider and determine whether the parent has fulfilled his or her duties to maintain contact with and plan for the future of the child. In the instant proceeding, the petitioning agency presented nothing to establish that it had fulfilled its duty with respect to the subject child’s natural father. Consequently, the Family Court properly dismissed the petition insofar as it alleged that the child had been permanently neglected by her father.

_L

Sheila G. was born out of wedlock on August 29, 1977. Soon after her birth, she was placed voluntarily by her mother with the Department of Social Services for the City of New York. The department, in turn, authorized its agent, the Orphan Asylum Society of the City of Brooklyn, commonly known as the Brookwood Child Care Agency, to supervise the child’s care. Sheila was placed in a foster home on September 29, 1977.

On November 7, 1977, Sheila’s natural father, Dennis H., telephoned the Brookwood agency. He acknowledged paternity and requested a meeting with agency officials, which was held two weeks later. At that time, Dennis expressed his desire to visit and financially support the child.

Representatives of Brookwood informed Dennis that the mother had adamantly refused to permit Dennis access to the child. Dennis was instructed that, until such time as he formally established paternity, the agency would be bound by the mother’s instructions and he would not be allowed to see Sheila. Brookwood provided Dennis with the name and the address of the Kings County Family Court.

Over the course of the next year, Dennis regularly contacted Brookwood, inquired about Sheila’s well-being, and [374]*374related his progress in establishing paternity. Dennis reported a number of visits he had made to the Family Court and discussions he had had with clerks and with a Judge. He also stated that he had been informed that the matter could go no further unless Sheila’s mother participated in the process. The mother’s failure to co-operate was cited by Dennis in explaining why he had been unable to establish paternity.

During this period, Brookwood’s efforts centered on working with Sheila’s mother toward reuniting the two. The mother’s disinterest and her inability to appropriately care for the child or plan for the child’s future soon became apparent to Brookwood. Consequently, it was determined in early 1978 that the agency plan would be to seek a surrender of Sheila for adoption and to place the child in a preadoptive home. In the event that a voluntary surrender by the natural parents was not forthcoming, Brookwood decided that it would initiate a proceeding to terminate the rights of the mother and father.

Sheila was placed in her current foster home in October, 1978, when she was 13 months old. Her foster parents were, at that time, informed by the Brookwood caseworker that the father’s whereabouts were unknown and that Sheila would be available for adoption within six months’ time.

The next month, the mother had a “change of heart” and decided that Dennis should be permitted access to the child. A biweekly visitation schedule was established by which Dennis, his mother, and his sister would visit Sheila at Brookwood’s offices. For the next year and a half, until the instant proceeding was brought, Dennis and his family regularly attended the scheduled visits.

In January, 1979, Dennis came forward with a plan to take custody of Sheila. Dennis, an employee of the Post Office, had adequate income to support himself and Sheila. At that time, however, he lived at a YMCA. Dennis proposed to the Brookwood caseworker that he would move in with his mother who would take care of the child until he returned from work each day. Dennis reiterated this plan to the caseworker in April, 1979.

[375]*375In July, 1979, Dennis formally established paternity. He then suggested a new plan for taking custody of his daughter. Under this plan, Dennis stated that he preferred independence from his mother and that, rather than moving to his mother’s home, he would find his own apartment. Sheila would be placed in a day-care center while the father was at work. Dennis reiterated this plan in October, 1979 and January, 1980.

This proceeding was commenced in May, 1980. Brookwood brought a petition in Family Court against both of the natural parents for a determination that Sheila was a permanently neglected child, that both parent’s rights be terminated, and that Sheila be made available for adoption (see Family Ct Act, § 614, subd 1; Social Services Law, § 384-b, subd 7, par [a]). The matter was set down for a fact-finding hearing (see Family Ct Act, § 622).

Evidence relating to the allegations against the natural mother was presented at many scheduled hearings held during the latter part of 1980 and the early months of 1981. At the close of the fact-finding hearing, the Family Court found that Sheila had been permanently neglected by her mother. That determination was not appealed to the Appellate Division and is not at issue in this appeal.

The allegations against the natural father were the subject of hearings held on February 18-19, 1981. “The essence of the agency’s case” against Dennis, in the words of Brookwood’s attorney, was “the failure to plan. Not lack of visitation, but failure to plan.” The agency argued that it had, under the circumstances, made a reasonable effort in assisting Dennis. It was noted that the agency repeatedly informed Dennis that he would have to establish paternity and that it had provided Dennis with the name and address of the court in which he could receive an order of filiation. Also cited were two incidents, one in April, 1979, when the agency had offered Dennis counseling, and a second in February, 1980, when Dennis had been offered assistance in finding an apartment. Relying on these efforts and the assertion that Dennis was a well-intentioned and intelligent individual, the agency argued that it nevertheless took Dennis 18 months, from the time of Sheila’s birth, to establish paternity. In the agency’s view, this constituted [376]*376evidence of a failure to plan for Sheila’s future sufficient to give rise to a determination of permanent neglect.

At the close of the fact-finding hearing, the guardian ad litem for Sheila argued that Dennis’s parental rights should not be terminated. It was noted that, promptly after Sheila’s birth, Dennis had informed Brookwood that he was the child’s father and had since undertaken his own efforts to establish paternity. The guardian also asserted that a finding of a failure to plan should not rest on Dennis’s failure to establish paternity. To this end, it was pointed out that the “morass of coming to court * * * and getting orders of filiation, getting summons [is] something * * * that many attorneys, many attorneys that I have been familiar with, have difficulty with, let alone a lay person.”

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Bluebook (online)
462 N.E.2d 1139, 61 N.Y.2d 368, 474 N.Y.S.2d 421, 1984 N.Y. LEXIS 4118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sheila-g-ny-1984.