Mary I v. Sisters of Mercy

200 Misc. 115, 104 N.Y.S.2d 939, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1834
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 200 Misc. 115 (Mary I v. Sisters of Mercy) 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
Mary I v. Sisters of Mercy, 200 Misc. 115, 104 N.Y.S.2d 939, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1834 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Hart, J.

P- A- T-was born out of wedlock on July 16, 1946. Her mother, whose present whereabouts are unknown, authorized the commissioner of welfare of the City of Hew York to commit her, pursuant to which the commissioner committed the infant to the Angel Guardian Home, an agency conducted by the Convent of the Sisters of Mercy in Brooklyn, as a destitute and dependent child, and as a charge against the City of Hew York. On December 23, 1946, the Angel Guardian Home boarded out the child with Mr. and Mrs. I-. Prior thereto they executed a written application which acknowledged receipt of a copy of the rules of the Angel Guardian Home, among which was one that the child was to be returned on request of the home. Other children have at various times since then been boarded with them and subsequently returned to the home.

On January 4, 1951, over the objection of Mr. and Mrs. I-the child was removed from their home by the Angel Guardian Home for the purpose of arranging adoptive placement. The request of Mr. and Mrs. I-for permission to adopt the child was refused. Apparently there is a rule of the governing board that consent to adoption will not be forthcoming where the proposed foster parents are over forty years of age. At the time P-was first boarded with them, Mrs. I-was about thirty-seven and Mr. I-forty-two.

On January 29, 1951, Mr. and Mrs. I-sued out a writ of habeas corpus returnable on February 1,1951. Upon the return of the writ the department of welfare of the City of Hew York intervened as a defendant. At that time evidence was adduced, but the hearing was not completed. The matter was adjourned to March 9, 1951. Pending the conclusion of the testimony the court directed that the child be given into the custody of Mr. and Mrs. I-without prejudice to a further disposition upon final conclusion of the testimony. It appears further, that on January 29th or 30th, about the time the writ was obtained, the department of welfare in endeavoring to locate the mother of the infant, communicated with her sister, Mrs. K-, who it is claimed, then learned for the first time, of the existence of her niece. She and her husband thereafter obtained a writ of habeas corpus, joining as respondents all the parties in the first proceeding. On the return day, by consent, this matter was referred to this court and the parties agreed at the hearing on March 9,1951, that the two writs be tried together and that the evidence adduced at the first hearing be deemed to have been [118]*118the proof offered in both proceedings. In passing it may be noted that the claim that Mrs. K-was ignorant of her niece’s existence taxes the court’s credulity. It is conceded that her sister, Mrs. 0-, knew of the birth of the child and that Mrs. K- visited her. It seems incredible that she was not apprised by Mrs. C-of the fact. True, she was not married at the time and therefore was unable to care for the child. Moreover only recently did she learn, after two miscarriages, that it was dangerous for her to bear children. The court, however, in view of all the circumstances, finds it difficult to credit her testimony that she was without knowledge that her sister Helen had given birth to a daughter.

From the evidence adduced at the hearing and from my personal observations of the parties and the child, I am satisfied that the petitioners I- should retain custody. A contrary result would do irreparable and permanent harm to the child.

The testimony of the neighbors, friends and of the parish priest who frequently visited petitioners I-, and who are fully familiar with them and their environment, satisfies me that the child could not be better cared for by the kindest and most indulgent natural parents. She is maintained in a home in a rural setting, having her own bedroom, a large yard including her own small swimming pool. She regards the I — —s as her parents. She was brought to them at the age of six months and is now four and one half years of age. It is but natural, therefore, that she regards Mr. I-as her father and Mrs. I-as her mother. The genuine affection and devotion of these people for the child was testified to by the witnesses but what is of greater importance, are the manifestations of love and affection of the child for the I-s which were, observed by the court. The I-s have two sons, one of whom is married. The other is in the armed forces. The infant regards them as her brothers. At one of the hearings the court observed the affection and attachment of the infant for her brother ” in uniform. When she was first produced, after being in the custody of the Angel Guardian Home for approximately three weeks, she was suppressed and quiet. Upon the day on which the hearing was resumed, after having been again in custody of the I-family for about four weeks, she was cheerful, buoyant and had appeared to have gained weight.

Dr. Eeder, a competent psychiatrist, whose testimony is completely credited by the court, testified that in his opinion the uprooting of this infant from the place she calls home and away [119]*119from a family she believes hers, would have a permanent deleterious psychological effect. It was his opinion, which the court accepts, that the mental trauma accompanying this separation would cause a harmful result from which she would never fully recover. This opinion was concurred in by the parish priest, who testified on petitioners’ behalf as follows: Q. Father, can you give an opinion as to whether it would be injurious and damaging to the child if it were permanently removed from the present surroundings? A. I have always stated that — 1 think I stated it to the Judge once before — that I felt the child in the early stages of its life is dreadly affected by these things, and you will hear children after a while talking, especially when that child is older, mentioning they don’t know what it is connected with in their early life. I think it upsets the child mentally and physically, and you will see that happening time and time again. The teachers in the school will call you down and say, ‘ What’s the matter with this child? ’ You examine the home life and so forth — you will find the child being affected by all those things.”

The testimony of Dr. Reder and of the parish priest adds substance to the expression of the court in Matter of Bock (280 N. Y. 349, 353): “ The surroundings and associations of the young have so great an effect upon their outlook and so form the basis of their future development that nothing can prevent the courts from considering the human aspects of the question presented.”

The testimony given by respondents ’ experts with respect to this aspect of the matter was not effective to overcome the court’s acceptance of Dr. Reder’s statements and the testimony of the parish priest.

In opposing the writ respondents urge (1) that they have a superior right to custody of the child; (2) that the court’s equity powers should not be exercised so as to destroy the effectiveness of the placement and boarding programs and practices established by the public and private welfare agencies, and that (3) the transfer of custody to the boarding parents would not be in the best interest of the child.

These contentions will be treated in inverse order for the reason that in a habeas corpus proceeding the prime question is, what would best serve the interests and welfare of the child.

Bringing the problem before the court into clear focus and demonstrating beyond cavil the duty devolving upon it is the statement in Matter of Lee (220 N. Y. 532, 538): “ Further[120]

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Bluebook (online)
200 Misc. 115, 104 N.Y.S.2d 939, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-i-v-sisters-of-mercy-nysupct-1951.