Leora F. v. Sofia D.

167 Misc. 2d 840, 635 N.Y.S.2d 418, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 167 Misc. 2d 840 (Leora F. v. Sofia D.) 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
Leora F. v. Sofia D., 167 Misc. 2d 840, 635 N.Y.S.2d 418, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Betty E. Staton, J.

These guardianship / custody proceedings present a unique set of facts. However, the legal question is common to all disputes related to the custodial care of a child. At issue is a child’s well-being and the court must decide how a child’s interests can best be served under the circumstances presented. This case involves three adults neither of whom have a blood relationship with the child and two of whom contend that she would be the best caretaker for the child. The third petitioner does not in fact request custody but filed a petition which now supports his mother’s petition for custody.

[842]*842This case has quite a procedural history.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The subject child, Astonn, was born to Marguerite H. on November 3, 1991. The natural mother, also known as Margo, died on December 1, 1991 without ever leaving the hospital after the child’s birth. The child had been released by the hospital on November 3rd to petitioner Sofia D., who applied for appointment as the guardian of the child on December 10, 1991. One day earlier, the maternal grandmother, Marjorie C., filed an order to show cause for custody of the child.1 On February 26, 1992, Marjorie C. withdrew her petition and Sophia D. was awarded a temporary order of guardianship.

Derrick F., the natural mother’s estranged husband, filed for custody of the child on January 10, 1992. His mother, Leora F., filed a writ of habeas corpus in Supreme Court on May 18, 1992. The writ was consolidated with her son’s Family Court custody proceeding by consent of the parties on May 20, 1992. A paternity petition, filed on January 10, 1992 by Eric J., alleged that he was Astonn’s biological father. That petition was dismissed on April 14, 1992 when the petitioner failed to appear in court. On June 26,1992, the court directed a temporary order of visitation on behalf of Astonn’s half-sibling, Adrienne, to take place at the home of Astonn’s babysitter and the matter was set down for a hearing on the issue of temporary visitation only.2

THE FACTS

Astonn, the child at the center of these proceedings, has special needs arising from his respiratory disabilities. An expert in pulmonary diseases, Dr. Cheryl Doyle, gave unchallenged testimony that the child had to be in a living environment that was free of smoke, animals, mites and other offending conditions; that he had to receive several medications at regular intervals daily; that he had to undergo special procedures by nebulizer on a daily basis. Dr. Doyle testified [843]*843that persons providing care for the child would have to take a general course of instruction on procedures for such care.

Sofia D. lived with the child’s mother for some three years before her death and was given the approval of the child’s maternal grandmother to bring him from the hospital to the home she had shared with Astonn’s deceased mother. The maternal grandmother acknowledged that she understood that Sofia and Margo would cohabit and raise Astonn. Marjorie C. withdrew the petition she had filed for custody of Astonn informing the court that, after considerable reflection, she was in favor of Sofia obtaining custody.

It is uncontroverted that Astonn is not the child of the natural mother’s estranged husband.3 The child of their marriage and Astonn’s half-sister, Adrienne, lives with her paternal grandmother. The father has been living with Valerie W. with whom he has two children. LaKesha F., born in March 1990 lives with them. D’Andrea F., born in December 1992, lives with her maternal grandmother. Derrick admitted on cross-examination that he went through a marriage ceremony with Valerie while he was still married to Margo.4 Derrick testified that if he and his mother, Ms. F., were awarded custody of Astonn, the plan was for Astonn and Adrienne to live with Ms. F.

Adrienne has lived with Ms. F. and her husband, Charles F., Adrienne’s paternal grandfather5 for six or seven years. Neither sought legal custody of the child Adrienne. ’

THE ARGUMENTS

Sofia D. maintains that her appointment as the legal guardian and custodian of the child would be in his best interest. She argues that she has provided a stable environment, responsive to the child’s special health needs, since the child’s birth. Sofia maintains that neither of the F.’s has acknowledged Astonn’s special needs nor displayed an ability to accommodate them. She contends that her status as the lesbian life partner of the child’s deceased mother supports her petition. The denial of her application solely on the basis of race, she argues, would go against the Equal Protection Clause of our Constitution.

Leora F. and her son Derrick argue that while none of the parties have a blood relationship with the child, Astonn, Ms. F. [844]*844stands in a better position to meet this child’s best interests. They point to the recommendation of the Child Welfare Administration in support of this proposition. The F.’s raise the issue of whether a relationship between petitioner and the child’s dead mother was ever proved and argue that even if it did exist, it does not give Sofia a "claim of right” in determining the custody/guardianship of this child.

As the paternal grandmother and caretaker of the child’s half-sister, Adrienne, they argue that Ms. F., along with her husband, offer Astonn the opportunity to grow up in an African-American two parent family and to exercise his rights to have a continuing relationship with his half-sibling.

The Law Guardian in this proceeding is not convinced that the race or sexual orientation of the members of this child’s proposed family are relevant. While he recognizes Astonn’s need to maintain a strong relationship with his half-sister, the Law Guardian argues that Sofia is the only mother this child has known and that she has been a loving and committed parent.

THE LAW

None of the parties here have a blood relationship to Astonn. However, the lack of a blood relationship does not bar Sofia’s application for letters of guardianship. (SCPA 1703; Matter of Dalida P., 204 AD2d 645 [2d Dept 1994].) Further, under the unique and extraordinary circumstances presented here any of these parties could make an application for custody. (Family Ct Act § 651; Matter of Anonymous v Olson, 112 AD2d 299 [2d Dept 1985].)

In Anonymous (supra) a mother’s death, a father’s incarceration and the apparent consent of the child’s relatives presented a set of circumstances that gave standing to a couple unrelated to the child to seek custody. Here, a mother’s death, a putative father’s disappearance and a maternal grandmother’s withdrawal of a custody petition presents a set of unique circumstances that allows Derrick F. to seek custody and Ms. F. to seek custody under the writ consolidated with her son’s petition for custody.

In the instant proceeding the court is presented with an extraordinary combination of circumstances that must be weighed in determining who would be the best caregiver for this child. The importance of the race of the caregiver, the significance of a party’s physical custody of the subject child’s half-sibling and the lesbian relationship between a party and [845]

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Related

Matter of Baby Doe
2004 NY Slip Op 24247 (Kings Family Court, 2004)
In re Baby Doe
4 Misc. 3d 693 (NYC Family Court, 2004)
In Re Tamara R.
764 A.2d 844 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 Misc. 2d 840, 635 N.Y.S.2d 418, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leora-f-v-sofia-d-nycfamct-1995.