K.C. v. J.C.

50 Misc. 3d 892, 25 N.Y.S.3d 798
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 Misc. 3d 892 (K.C. v. J.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.C. v. J.C., 50 Misc. 3d 892, 25 N.Y.S.3d 798 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Paul I. Marx, J.

It is ordered that the motions are disposed as follows.

Background

The parties were married on July 26, 2003. There are two children of the marriage: O.C., born xx/xx/2004, and M.C., born xx/xx/2007. The parties and children reside in the marital residence in Cross River, NY. Defendant occupies a separate apartment within the marital residence. The parties agreed to joint legal custody and shared residential custody on a temporary basis, in order to resolve their competing family offense petitions and to dissolve their cross orders of protection. (Order to show cause, interim so-ordered stipulation [Hon. Michelle I. Schauer, J.F.C.], exhibit A.)

On September 15, 2014, plaintiff filed the instant action for dissolution of the parties’ marriage based upon irretrievable breakdown of the relationship, pursuant to Domestic Relations Law § 170 (7). On October 21, 2015, defendant filed a verified answer and counterclaim for divorce on the same grounds.

Plaintiff is approximately 45 years old. She is the chief executive officer of K.R., Inc. in Connecticut. Her gross income in 2014, as reflected on her W-2, was $563,096.55. She holds a Master’s degree in Business Administration, earned prior to the marriage.

[894]*894Defendant is approximately 44 years old. He is a consultant/ account manager for an insurance company. His total gross income in 2014, as reflected on his W-2 forms, was $86,785.48.1

On January 12, 2015, the parties and counsel appeared for a conference before Court Attorney Referee Laurie Sullivan. Referee Sullivan recommended consolidation of the parties’ custody and visitation proceeding in the Family Court with the instant action. The Referee also recommended that the Attorney for the Children appointed in Family Court be appointed to represent the children in this court and that a psychologist be appointed to conduct a forensic evaluation of the parties and their children.

The court ordered consolidation of the custody and visitation proceeding then pending in Family Court with the instant matrimonial action. (Consolidation order dated Jan. 12, 2015.) By order dated January 13, 2015, the court appointed Marc S. Mednick, Ph.D., DABPS to conduct a forensic evaluation. By order of the same date, the court appointed Stephen Kmetz, Esq. as privately paid Attorney for the Children.

On September 9, 2015, the parties and counsel appeared for a conference before Referee Sullivan. In accordance with the Westchester County Supreme Court Matrimonial Part Operational Rules,2 plaintiff requested authorization to move for the release of the forensic evaluator’s entire file. Referee Sullivan issued rule E authorization to plaintiff. On the same date, [895]*895Referee Sullivan issued separate rule E authorization to defendant to move for expert and interim counsel fees.

Discussion

Release of Forensic Evaluator’s File

Plaintiff moves for the release to her counsel and retained expert of the entire contents of the court-appointed forensic evaluator’s file, including the notes, test results and raw data used to prepare his report. Plaintiff asserts that the law concerning the release of a forensic evaluator’s underlying notes and data is evolving, with the trend moving toward release of such information being “mandatory.” She notes that there are no Appellate Division decisions on the issue and argues in favor of abandoning the overly restrictive “special circumstances” standard which generally has been applied by trial courts in the Second Department. Plaintiff contends that even if the court applied the “special circumstances” standard, disclosure of the underlying notes and data is warranted because of the numerous deficiencies in Dr. Mednick’s report. Plaintiff claims that Dr. Mednick’s report is “weak, poorly organized . . . and . . . fails to make definitive conclusions or recommendations.” (Affirmation of Dolores Gebhardt, Esq. ¶ 7.) Plaintiff argues further that the conclusions and recommendations made in the report “are unexplained and seemingly unsupported by data.”3 (Id.) She identifies at least 10 specific deficiencies, among them that the report indicates bias against her client by severely criticizing aspects of her personality without examining whether the characteristics he criticizes have any impact on her parenting skills. Plaintiff contends that access to Dr. Mednick’s notes and data will assist the parties with settlement and allow their counsel to better prepare for trial if no settlement is reached.

Defendant objects to the release of Dr. Mednick’s file, contending that plaintiff has not demonstrated any special circumstances that warrant its release. Defendant claims that “Plaintiff has not demonstrated a single reason much less any ‘special circumstances’ to warrant the release of the file.” (Affirmation of Jo-Ann Cambareri, Esq. in opp ¶ 2.) Defendant points out certain contradictions in plaintiff’s position. For example, defendant asserts that plaintiff’s counsel states in [896]*896her affirmation both that Dr. Mednick is biased against her client and that he has “labeled both parties in unflattering ways.” Defendant contends that if plaintiff’s characterization of Dr. Mednick’s labeling is true, it tends to indicate a lack of any bias on the part of the forensic evaluator. Defendant contends further that if the report shows any bias, the bias is against him. Defendant references Dr. Mednick’s statements in the report about his alcoholism, suicide attempt, possible neurological problems and possible lack of appropriate boundaries with the parties’ 11-year-old daughter. Defendant argues that plaintiff can adequately pursue the deficiencies she identified in the report upon cross-examination of Dr. Mednick at trial. Defendant advocates withholding the underlying data, because he believes its release will exacerbate the parties’ difficulties co-parenting their children and only prolong the litigation. (Id. ¶¶ 3-4.)

The reported decisions governing the release of a forensic evaluator’s file are exclusively trial court decisions. The Appellate Division has yet to examine this particular issue. The case law in this area began with Feuerman v Feuerman (112 Misc 2d 961 [Sup Ct, Nassau County 1982]), which held that the underlying information was not relevant and its disclosure was not material or necessary for the party’s private psychiatrist to make an individual evaluation and recommendation. Further, the court determined that the test results and other data was not material, necessary or proper for the “purpose [ ] of having [a] private psychiatrist ‘determine whether [the evaluators] had sufficient objective justification for their conclusions and recommendations’, for that is the function of the trial court based upon all of the evidence and testimony taken at the trial.” (Id. at 965.) Moreover, the court determined that the party’s psychiatrist could conduct similar tests to those performed by the evaluators and present his “own findings and evaluations to the court at the time of trial.” (Id.) The court opined that a trial subpoena to the evaluators directing that any notes, test results and other supporting data be brought to trial would suffice.

Decades later, Feuerman was followed by Ochs v Ochs (193 Misc 2d 502 [Sup Ct, Westchester County 2002]), which noted the court’s concern in Feuerman

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50 Misc. 3d 892, 25 N.Y.S.3d 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kc-v-jc-nysupct-2015.