M. v. K.

452 A.2d 704, 186 N.J. Super. 363, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 928
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 24, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 452 A.2d 704 (M. v. K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. v. K., 452 A.2d 704, 186 N.J. Super. 363, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 928 (N.J. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

186 N.J. Super. 363 (1982)
452 A.2d 704

M., PLAINTIFF,
v.
K., DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Bergen County.

Decided August 24, 1982.

*365 Donald L. Garber for plaintiff.

Judith E. Ball for defendant.

Kenneth G. Poller, guardian ad litem (Wurtzel & Poller, attorneys).

KRAFTE, J.J.D.R.C. (temporarily assigned).

There has arisen a novel question during the pendency of this custody dispute: Do the United States and New Jersey Constitutions[1] allow a party to invoke a legislatively-created privilege[2]*366 to prevent the admission of certain material evidence at a child custody hearing? There is a dearth of case law dealing with the privilege under consideration and no published New Jersey decision resolves either inquiry. Thus, we are compelled to do so today.

We begin with an examination of the history of this case.

Plaintiff, the father of the infant child of the marriage, a girl age four, filed a complaint for custody by way of application for order to show cause, on April 20, 1982. At that time plaintiff alleged that defendant, mother of the infant, had wrongfully removed the child from the State of New Jersey.

In response to plaintiff's emergent application, the court scheduled a return date of May 11, 1982, at which time defendant was to show cause why an order should not be entered which would require her to return the infant to New Jersey and would award temporary custody of the infant to plaintiff. Further, the court appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the infant's interests and directed the Bergen County Probation Department and its counterpart in Bibb County, Georgia, where the infant had been removed by defendant, to prepare a custody investigation report.

What is central to our purposes, however, is that attached to plaintiff's emergent application were a number of letters and reports from two psychiatrists, two psychologists and a medical doctor. As will be seen, it is the inclusion in plaintiff's application *367 of one letter[3] from each psychiatrist, both addressed to plaintiff's attorney, which is the genesis of the conflict at hand.

Following the return date of May 11, 1982 the court entered an order on May 12, 1982, which, among other things, directed defendant to return the infant to New Jersey within 72 hours of May 11, 1982, and continued the return to May 17, 1982.[4]

On May 18, 1982, after the return of the previous day, the court entered another order which included a provision calling for an examination of the parties and infant by a court-appointed psychiatrist.

Thereafter, plaintiff, defendant and infant were examined by said psychiatrist, with defendant and the infant each appearing on more than one occasion. The psychiatrist's report was filed with the court on July 19, 1982.[5] Subsequent thereto, amid allegations of sexual abuse of the infant by plaintiff and others, a peremptory custody hearing date was established.

Between the time of the appointment of the psychiatrist on May 18, 1982 and the present there were a number of applications to the court. In one, by way of motion returnable July 16, 1982, defendant's attorney asked that plaintiff be barred from introducing into this case any and all reports, statements, opinions or other evidence, either written or oral, based directly or *368 indirectly on defendant's communications with two certain psychiatrists who are the psychiatrists whose letters were attached to plaintiff's emergent application, and which letters were also presented to the court-appointed psychiatrist as forementioned. The thrust of the nine counts of relief sought by defendant was to totally eliminate from this case any person who had made or seen these two letters (including one judge) and any evidence, oral or written, which may in any way have been "tainted" by exposure to these letters. Defendant also requested the excision from the record of the letters and any reference to the letters.

Defendant contends that she and plaintiff consulted the two psychiatrists for purposes of marriage counseling. By virtue of N.J.S.A. 45:8B-29 (hereinafter referred to as the privilege), defendant advances the position that any communication between her, plaintiff and the two psychiatrists, acting as marriage counselors, is absolutely confidential. Thus, the attachment of these letters to plaintiff's initial application and the release of these letters to others violates the privilege.

Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-30,[6] defendant contends that for the act to have any meaning, communications by either party to these two psychiatrists, made in the setting of marriage counseling, are not admissable evidence, either directly or indirectly, and any person or evidence "exposed" to these letters is "tainted" and must either be removed from the proceedings, stricken from the record and barred from entry into the case.

Carried to the fullest, the relief sought by defendant, if granted, would require the removal as a trial judge of the judge who first had occasion to address this case when plaintiff filed his emergent application and custody complaint,[7] the court-appointed *369 psychiatrist, the Bergen County Probation Department investigator assigned to this case and the guardian ad litem. The letters themselves would have to be removed from the record, references to the letters excised, any evidence in any way derived from or influenced by these letters would have to be stricken or barred and, of course, not permitted would be the in-court testimony of these two psychiatrists, alleged marriage counsellors. We would effectively be dealing with a tabula rasa.

On July 16, 1982 the court entered an order in which the relief requested by defendant was denied in toto. Defendant then came before this court to request a stay of that order pending resolution of her application for appeal. Allowing such a stay would have effectively required a postponment of the custody hearing which was imminent. The best interests and welfare of the infant child, highlighted in this case because of the allegations of her being sexually abused, also mitigated against granting a stay. We denied defendant's request for a stay. This opinion explains our decision.

It is unfortunate that the Legislature left no guidance in the form of a history or notes when it enacted this statute. A brief look at relevant case law is in order.

Research reveals three decisions from our courts which address the privilege. The first is Wichansky v. Wichansky, 126 N.J. Super. 156 (Ch.Div. 1973). In Wichansky the husband subpoenaed a licensed psychologist to testify as to certain conversations which occurred while the parties were engaged in marriage counseling with the psychologist. The court held that the privileges of the Practicing Marriage Counseling Act, supra, and the Practicing Psychology License Act, N.J.S.A. 45:14B-28, were not mutually exclusive; that the privilege under the Practicing Marriage Counseling Act applied to all marriage counselors, whether licensed as such or not, and is also broader in scope as it applies to all communications, whether made in confidence or not. Id. at 158-160. The subpoena was quashed.

*370 In Touma v. Touma, 140 N.J. Super. 544 (Ch.Div.

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452 A.2d 704, 186 N.J. Super. 363, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-v-k-njsuperctappdiv-1982.