In re the Commissioner of Social Services ex rel. Peter R.

171 Misc. 2d 278, 654 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 529
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 Misc. 2d 278 (In re the Commissioner of Social Services ex rel. Peter R.) 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 the Commissioner of Social Services ex rel. Peter R., 171 Misc. 2d 278, 654 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 529 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lee H. Elkins, J.

In this proceeding under Family Court Act article 10, the New York City Corporation Counsel, on behalf of the Administration for Children’s Services, seeks leave of the court to allow Peter R.’s (hereinafter respondent) placement with the Commissioner of Social Services (CSS) to lapse, in light of the respondent’s placement with the New York State Division for Youth (DFY).

This court placed the respondent, Peter R., now 14 years old, with CSS on October 22, 1991. The Commissioner of Social Services brought a neglect proceeding against the respondent’s father, after the father left respondent in the care of a girlfriend without making any provision for the child’s care. Respondent’s mother died in 1987. CSS worked with the father for the respondent’s return to his care for four years, during which time the father intermittently was incarcerated. In the summer of 1995, the 13-year-old respondent ran away from foster care and took up residence with his father. On September 28, 1995 the respondent’s father took the respondent with him to steal an automobile from the parking lot of a Nassau County station of the Long Island Railroad. Both were arrested. The father was convicted of grand larceny and remains incarcerated. A delinquency petition filed against the respondent resulted in an admission to unauthorized use of an automobile (Penal Law § 165.05 [1]). The Family Court of Nassau County transferred the delinquency proceeding to this court for disposition. On January 28, 1996, despite the willingness of the agency where the respondent had been placed by CSS to continue foster care for the respondent, the court placed the respondent for a period of 12 months with DFY for Berkshire Farm, a nonsecure residential facility.

CSS is required to file an extension of placement petition at least 60 days prior to the expiration of the child’s placement in foster care (Family Ct Act § 1055 [a]). The anniversary of Peter R.’s foster care placement was October 22, 1996. Placement with CSS has been temporarily extended pending the decision of the Corporation Counsel’s application. A letter from Berk[280]*280shire Farm to the Law Guardian, indicates that the respondent has no discharge resources, given his father’s current incarceration and negative influence on the respondent’s conduct. The facility notes that the agency which manages Berkshire Farm is attempting to find a foster care family for the respondent, and recommends that the respondent "remain in [CSS’] foster care system”. The facility notes that "unless a court extension is granted” the respondent will not be eligible for continued services through DFY and, if terminated from placement with CSS, the respondent will have no community resources and will be at risk for continued criminal behavior.

The Corporation Counsel urges this court to allow placement with CSS to lapse, not because the respondent is no longer in need of foster care, but because "DFY placement without a CSS placement does not, in any way, diminish the protection afforded children” in CSS foster care who are found to be delinquent. Corporation Counsel notes that the Family Court in a delinquency proceeding has the authority simply to continue the delinquent child in an existing foster care setting. If such placement is consistent with the protection of the community (Family Ct Act § 352.2 [2]), under Family Court Act article 3 (Family Ct Act § 353.3 [2]) a delinquent child may be placed with CSS. The Corporation Counsel also notes that under either Family Court Act article 3 or 10, placement may be extended annually after judicial review (Family Ct Act § 355.3 [4]; § 1055 [b] [i]). Under both statutes, the Family Court must consider the best interests of the child; efforts made to remove obstacles to the child’s return home; and the services necessary to assist a child over 16 to make the transition from foster care to independent living (Family Ct Act § 355.3 [4] [i], [ii]; § 1028 [b]). Corporation Counsel points out that even a delinquent child placed in a restrictive setting may be transferred from DFY to CSS foster care. Section 399 of the Social Services Law requires CSS to assist DFY, upon discharge of a child from institutional care, to ascertain the conditions of the home and the character and habits of the child’s parents, and to recommend the advisability of discharging the child to the parents’ home. In the event CSS "shall deem it unwise to have any such child returned to his former home,” and with the Commissioner’s consent, the child then may be placed into the care of CSS (Social Services Law § 399).

The common features of placement under Family Court Act articles 3 and 10 lend a syllogistic appeal to the Corporation Counsel’s argument. Moreover, duplication of judicial and ex[281]*281ecutive efforts should be avoided in the interest of economy of resources. This argument especially is attractive in a case such as this, where it appears that there is little hope of the respondent being discharged from foster care to the care of his father. Nonetheless, the court finds that to discontinue the foster care placement under article 10 would disadvantage the respondent and deprive him of statutory protections to which he is entitled.

The Commissioner of Social Services has responsibility for both neglected and delinquent children placed with CSS by the Family Court, and must provide services to both categories of children (Social Services Law § 398 [2], [3], [6]), as well as to children found to be persons in need of supervision (PINS), destitute or abandoned. Moreover, under Federal mandate, CSS must provide services to prevent such children from coming into or remaining in foster care unnecessarily (42 USC § 670 et seq.). Consequently, the Family Court must consider the efforts made to prevent or to remove the need for placement under both articles 3 and 10 of the Family Court Act. These similarities, however, do not result in an equivalence of the conditions of placement with DFY and CSS, even in a foster care setting.

On the most basic level, foster care placement under Family Court Act article 10 is distinct from DFY placement under article 3, since in the former there is never the possibility of placement in a restrictive setting. A child in foster care who is adjudicated delinquent may be placed in a setting more restrictive than a foster boarding home or group home, if such placement is the least restrictive alternative consistent with the respondent’s needs and the safety needs of the community (Family Ct Act § 352.2 [2]). By statute (Executive Law § 504 [4]) DFY "shall determine the particular [DFY] facility or program in which a child placed with [DFY] shall be cared for, based upon an evaluation of such child.” The same statute gives DFY authority to discharge or to conditionally release children placed with DFY, and to transfer such children from a limited secure or nonsecure facility to another limited or nonsecure facility "when the interest of such children requires” (Executive Law § 504 [4]). Apart from the statutory authority to order the respondent found to have committed an act of delinquency equivalent to a felony placed in a residential facility for a minimum period set by court order not to exceed six months (Family Ct Act § 353.3 [9]), and to order restrictive placement for designated felony acts (Family Ct Act § 353.5), the Family Court has no authority to prohibit DFY from transferring or [282]*282releasing a child committed to DFY (Matter of Lavar C., 185 AD2d 36 [4th Dept 1992]).

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Bluebook (online)
171 Misc. 2d 278, 654 N.Y.S.2d 235, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-commissioner-of-social-services-ex-rel-peter-r-nycfamct-1996.