In re Walker

87 A.D.2d 555, 448 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15800
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 23, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 A.D.2d 555 (In re Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Walker, 87 A.D.2d 555, 448 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15800 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinions

February 17, 1982 was the return date set for all papers on the original motions. The Simpson firm attempted to submit to this court an affidavit of Jane Edwards, dated February 20,1982, and a memorandum of William J. Manning on February 22 and February 26, 1982. On each date, this court rejected the Edwards affidavit and the Manning memorandum as untimely. Upon the present motion, the Edwards affidavit, the Manning memorandum and all other papers submitted by the parties will be considered. This court will also correct a factual misstatement in its original decision accompanying the order entered February 26, 1982. Specially, the court will note that the Reardon affidavit, dated February 17, 1982, stated that on February 1, 1982 “Mr. Nowak also communicated the terms of the altered order to Spence-Chapin”. The present motion is granted so that this court may consider all the papers filed. Upon reconsideration, the court finds no reason for changing the order entered February 26, 1982. However, the original decision upon the prior motions, is hereby recalled and the following decision is rendered in lieu thereof: Two motions are pending before this court. Stanley Bass, the attorney for the former foster parents, moved on February 2,1982 for an order (a) explicitly reinstating the stay of the adoption proceeding in Oregon and (b) directing Spence-Chapin to rescind any action it might have taken in furtherance of the proposed adoption of the three children pending the disposition of this appeal. Bass also moved on February 10, 1982 for an order directing Spence-Chapin to rescind its consent to the adoption and for related relief. Affidavits have been submitted by the attorneys for all the parties. Moreover, the Justices of this court have conferred with their staff to reconstruct the course of events between January 27, 1982 and February 11, 1982. Suffice it to say that there are many factual disputes that will not be resolved at this time. On occasion, we may point to some of the factual discrepancies for background purposes. However, those matters in dispute will not serve as a basis for this decision. In deciding these motions, the papers will be viewed [556]*556most favorably to Spence-Chapin and its attorney, Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett. In responding to these motions, Roy L. Reardon, a partner in Simpson, has submitted an 18-page affidavit dated February 17, 1982. Two associates in that firm, Edward J. Nowak and John N. O’Shea, and the managing attorney, John V. Monckton, have read Reardon’s affidavit and have affirmed its correctness. This same affidavit was also adopted by certain administrators at Spence-Chapin. Special cognizance will also be taken of the individual affidavits submitted by (i) Edward Nowak, (ii) William J. Manning of the Simpson firm, (iii) Jane D. Edwards, Spence’s executive director, (iv) Joanne R. Hiscox, Spence’s assistant executive director, and (v) Reardon upon reconsideration. In a prior motion returnable January 18, 1982, the Commissioner of Social Services had moved for (a) leave to appeal from two orders of the Family Court, dated March 7, 1981 and December 3, 1981, and (b) a stay of a section 392 of the Social Services Law hearing scheduled for January 28, 1982. SpenceChapin, through the Simpson firm, cross-moved for identical relief including “such other and further relief as the court may deem just and proper.” It should be emphasized that John N. O’Shea, for the Simpson firm, made the following comments at the conclusion of his moving affidavit: “4. It is respectfully requested that in order that meaningful relief may be afforded herein, the Section 392 hearing currently scheduled to commence on January 28,1982 be stayed pending determination of this appeal and that an expedited appeal be granted. In addition, it is asked that this cross-motion be heard on an expedited basis”. Each of the orders appealed from contained decretal paragraphs that, in effect, stayed the commissioner and Spence-Chapin from proceeding with the adoption in Oregon. As a result of the stay in each order, Spence-Chapin had not been able to give its consent to the Oregon adoption for an extended period of time. Upon the original motion and cross motion returnable January 18, 1982, neither the commissioner nor Spence-Chapin requested specifically that this court stay the “stay” of the adoption proceedings. Any request by those parties in that regard would have been frivolous because a completed adoption in Oregon would have mooted this appeal. On January 27,1982, an employee of the court received an internal memorandum granting leave to appeal and staying the section 392 hearing., Accordingly, the parties were notified by telephone on January .27, 1982 that leave to appeal had been granted and that the section 392 hearing, scheduled for January 28, 1982, had been stayed. None of the attorneys, except Edward J. Nowak, contest this fact. In an affidavit, dated March 1, 1982, Nowak recalls his memory of that occurrence: “3. The caller stated my name, then identified himself by name and as a clerk of this Court. I said, ‘Yes, sir.’ He then said, ‘Matter of Walker [or perhaps “Walker and Pitman”] — motions for leave to appeal — granted.’ I again said, ‘Yes, sir.’ He next said, ‘Motions for stay — granted.’ I again said, ‘Yes, sir.’ He then said the appeals were to be perfected for the April term and that an order was being filed. I thanked him for calling and we hung up. The entire conversation took no more than twenty to thirty seconds”. In drafting the written orders on the afternoon of January 27, 1982, the clerk correctly transcribed the order granting leave to appeal. This four-Justice order is not in dispute upon these motions and warrants no further discussion. The clerk correctly drafted the decretal paragraph of the single-Justice order for a stay. However, the recital paragraph incorrectly described the motion and cross motion as having been made to stay both orders appealed from. The recital paragraph was patently incorrect. On January 28,1982, the attorneys for the parties met in Family Court. At that time, copies of the single-Justice order granting the stay were distributed. Concededly, that order was drawn in overly broad language that seemed to stay both orders appealed from instead of simply staying the section 392 hearing. In Family Court, the Judge and the [557]*557attorneys appeared to recognize that the single-Justice stay apparently permitted the adoption to go forward if the recital paragraph was read literally. After an extended colloquy, the Family Court Judge suggested that a clarification be sought in this court of the original order of January 27,1982. Allan G. Krams, the attorney for the commissioner, agreed on the record that he would not consent to the adoption proceedings until the original order was clarified. Nowak and O’Shea departed without expressing their intentions upon the record. During the late morning or the early afternoon of January 28, 1982, Stanley Bass, attorney for the foster parents, contacted a clerk of this court to correct the ministerial error in the original order of January 27,1982. As the Simpson firm notes in its papers, it was improper for Bass to make this ex parte communication. However, this application by Bass was not unexpected since the Simpson firm had been advised in Family Court that all parties wished a clarification. On January 28,-1982, a clerk of the court corrected the original order so as to make it clear that only the section 392 hearing was being stayed. This action was understandable because the clerk was conforming the recital paragraph to (i) the court’s internal memorandum limiting the stay to the section 392 proceeding and (ii) the commissioner’s and SpenceChapin’s specific requests for that same relief.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A.D.2d 555, 448 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-walker-nyappdiv-1982.