In re the Guardianship of the Person & Custody of Amy S.

89 Misc. 2d 42, 390 N.Y.S.2d 530, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2814
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 Misc. 2d 42 (In re the Guardianship of the Person & Custody of Amy S.) 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 Guardianship of the Person & Custody of Amy S., 89 Misc. 2d 42, 390 N.Y.S.2d 530, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2814 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

W. Denis Donovan, J.

The Deputy Commissioner of Social Services seeks an order of this court pursuant to section 384 of the Social Services Law committing guardianship of the person and custody of Amy S. to the commissioner and empowering the commissioner to place Amy for adoption. The respondent has not sought custody of the subject child nor objected to continued foster care placement. Amy was born in 1967 and has continuously resided with her foster parents since early 1968. Preliminary proceedings were conducted on this petition on April 29, 1975 and the matter came on to be heard on July [43]*4329, 1975. Based upon numerous delays a mistrial was declared by the court (Buell, J.) on January 21, 1976.

The matter again came on to be heard on February 10, 1976 at which time the respondent requested new assigned counsel, and respondent’s motion was granted.

The matter then again came on to be heard on March 16, 1976 at which time the hearing was adjourned at the request of respondent’s attorney with the consent of all parties.

The matter then again came on to be heard on May 7, 1976 at which time counsel mutually indicated a reluctance to again undertake a plenary hearing and set before the court a stipulation of facts on the basis of which it was urged jointly by all participating counsel that the court could properly make a determination concerning the appropriate action to be taken on the pending petition. Additional time was extended to counsel for the submission of briefs.

The Law Guardian for the child, by papers submitted to the court on October 26, 1976 has among other things, made application for additional testimony to be taken as to the relationship of the subject child and her foster parents inflight of the recent decision by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Bennett v Jeffreys (40 NY2d 543).

In his surreply memorandum dated November 11, 1976, counsel for respondent opposes this application on the ground that: "Bennett supports the respondent’s contention that the best interests of the child are not relevant until a finding of abandonment is made.”

While this matter has been sub judice, the Court of Appeals has given careful attention in a number of decisions to the applicable statutory law under which the parental rights of a natural parent may be terminated.

In Matter of Anonymous (St. Christopher’s Home) (40 NY2d 96, 98) the court reviewed the three routes by which an individual or agency can seek to terminate a parent’s right to a child, including the history of these procedures as they now exist under article VII of the Domestic Relations Law, section 384 of the Social Services Law and article 6 of the Family Court Act. The court points out that the permanent neglect proceeding under section 384 of the Social Services Law was designed to be instituted in situations where parental conduct falls short of abandonment. Among other things, the court concluded in Matter of Anonymous (St. Christopher’s Home) [44]*44that the showing of diligent efforts required of the petitioning agency under article 6 of the Family Court Act does not apply as part of the burden of proof required of the agency in a proceeding brought by it under section 384 of the Social Services Law.

In their briefs, counsel for petitioner and respondent have addressed themselves in some detail to this issue. This question was resolved by the holding of the Court of Appeals in Matter of Anonymous (St. Christopher’s Home) (supra) and accordingly, this court finds that there was no burden on the part of the Department of Social Services to prove diligent efforts on its part to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship.

The court finds the following issues to be relevant in taking appropriate action in this proceeding as it now stands. First, whether the record before this court establishes by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the subject child is an abandoned child within the appropriate statutory definition set forth in subdivision 2 of section 371 of the Social Services Law. The statute reads as follows: "2. 'Abandoned child’ means a child who is abandoned or deserted in any place by both parents, or by the parent having its custody, or by any other person or persons lawfully charged with its care or custody, and left * * * (c) without being visited or having payments made toward his support, for a period of at least six months, by his parent, guardian or other lawful custodian without good reason”. (Emphasis added.)

The second issue properly before this court is at what phase in the fact-finding sequence, if at all, the court is to pass upon the best interests of the child in making a fact-finding determination on the petition.

The attorney for the respondent natural mother has argued that "the Court may not use the 'best interest of the child’ test as a basis for terminating parental rights.”, citing as the basis for this position the following statement by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Bennett v Jeffreys (40 NY2d 543, 549, supra): "To recapitulate: intervention by the State in the right and responsibility of a natural parent to custody of her or his child is warranted if there is first a judicial finding of surrender, abandonment, unfitness, persistent neglect, unfortunate or involuntary extended disruption of custody, or other equivalent but rare extraordinary circumstance which would drastically affect the welfare of the child.” (Emphasis added.)

[45]*45The allegations of paragraphs 1 through 9 of the petition are, in the opinion of this court, sufficiently broad to enable this court to determine not only whether Amy is an abandoned child, but also whether intervention by the State is warranted on the ground that there has been "an unfortunate or involuntary extended disruption of custody” so that the welfare of the child stands on a footing different from the presumed norm wherein children are deemed to derive the greatest benefit from being raised by their own parents or parent. Amy was born in 1967 and has been living with her present foster parents since early 1968. This is not a matter in which pleadings are to be strictly construed, and this court feels obliged to examine all of the bases under which parental rights may be terminated pursuant to section 384 of the Social Services Law.

It is noted in passing that this court is fully mindful of the argument of opponents of "extraordinary circumstances” as a ground for termination of parental rights. In essence, that argument is that a "Pandora’s Box” would be opened by allowing a "no-fault” criterion to be used as a basis, because it might allow social service agencies to do indirectly what they cannot do directly. By prolonging separation of parent and child and thereby effectuating the passage of time based upon their own subjective determinations, it is argued, this ground would enable social service agencies themselves to in effect determine who is ultimately to have custody of the child. This argument is not devoid of merit. The delay occasioned by the judicial process itself, which this case serves to illustrate, is equally subject to criticism in this regard.

Counsel has also made reference to prior case law wherein it was held that even where "the flame of parental interest is reduced to a flicker the courts may not properly intervene to dissolve the parentage” (citing Matter of Susan W. v Talbot G., 34 NY2d 76, 80). By virtue of the holding of the Court of Appeals in

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89 Misc. 2d 42, 390 N.Y.S.2d 530, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-the-person-custody-of-amy-s-nycfamct-1976.