Matter of Aaliah

2005 NY Slip Op 25468
CourtNew York Family Court, Bronx County
DecidedOctober 20, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 2005 NY Slip Op 25468 (Matter of Aaliah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Aaliah, 2005 NY Slip Op 25468 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

Matter of Aaliah (2005 NY Slip Op 25468)
Matter of Aaliah
2005 NY Slip Op 25468 [10 Misc 3d 640]
October 20, 2005
Hoffman, J.
Family Court, Bronx County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Wednesday, January 25, 2006


[*1]
In the Matter of the Adoption of Aaliah.

Family Court, Bronx County, October 20, 2005

APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL

Lauri Braun for petitioner. Legal Aid Society (Jonathan Roman of counsel), Law Guardian.

OPINION OF THE COURT

Douglas E. Hoffman, J.

This adoption proceeding presents the issue of whether a putative father, who declined to take a paternity test during a prior paternity proceeding, but who filed with the Putative Father Registry after the termination of parental rights (TPR) proceeding concerning the subject child was withdrawn without prejudice, is entitled to notice of this adoption proceeding, filed thereafter. There has been no finding as to the putative father's status.

Petitioner and the Law Guardian contend that no notice to the putative father, Armstrong Wilkerson, is required. This legal position is stated in the adoption petition, but no hearing has yet been held concerning the adoption and neither petitioner nor the Law Guardian has filed a formal motion to dispense with any notice requirement to the putative father. The court asked petitioner and the Law Guardian to brief this notice issue. As the court cannot merely issue an advisory opinion, the court is treating both petitioner and the Law Guardian's application to dispense with notice to Wilkerson as an oral motion that the court will consider. For reasons set forth below, the court holds that Wilkerson is an individual entitled to notice of this adoption proceeding.

Petitioner E.[FN*] filed the instant petition to adopt subject child Aaliah on March 12, 2004. Previously, petitioner had filed an adoption petition on March 2, 2001, prior to the mother having surrendered her parental rights and before there was any adjudication as to the parental status of Wilkerson. The foster care agency filed a TPR petition on October 1, 1999, initially naming only the biological mother of Aaliah as a respondent. On January 16, 2002, the agency also filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of Wilkerson, the putative father of the subject child. At [*2]his first appearance in the TPR proceeding against him, the court assigned an attorney to represent Wilkerson, who accepted service. During the TPR proceeding, Wilkerson, who has been incarcerated at all pertinent times, filed a paternity petition. The court assigned the same attorney to represent Wilkerson in the paternity petition. For purposes of judicial economy, the predecessor judge in this part and the undersigned addressed the TPR and paternity petitions jointly. For a variety of reasons, explained in relevant part below, the adjudication of the TPR spanned a period of years. The agency ultimately withdrew its TPR petition against the mother since, on April 8, 2002, she executed a judicial surrender of her parental rights. The surrender was conditioned upon the foster parent, petitioner in the instant adoption petition, adopting Aaliah.

The joint TPR and paternity proceedings were heard on at least 10 court dates. The duration of these proceedings resulted from three primary developments. First, Wilkerson's attorneys sequentially moved to be relieved as counsel for good cause. The court assigned an 18-B attorney for Wilkerson from the Bronx Family Court Assigned Counsel Panel. That attorney successfully moved to be relieved as counsel after Wilkerson reportedly filed a grievance against him with the Appellate Division, Departmental Disciplinary Committee. As a result of the filing of the grievance and, apparently, as a consequence of some notoriety these proceedings attained throughout the courthouse, no 18-B attorney from the Family Court Assigned Counsel Panel would agree to represent Wilkerson. After the court conducted an exhaustive search for assigned counsel for Wilkerson and with the assistance of the Appellate Division, a second attorney, a member of the Appellate Division, First Department, Appellate Panel, was assigned as counsel for Wilkerson. After a number of appearances, during most of which the court could not make appreciable progress on the case for reasons discussed below, this attorney, too, moved to be relieved as counsel. The thrust of the motion was that Wilkerson allegedly threatened to kill this attorney.

Second, Wilkerson could not be produced in the courtroom on numerous occasions. The captain's office of Bronx Family Court, mandated to ensure security in the courtroom, determined that Wilkerson was too belligerent and dangerous to appear in open court without extra security measures. On at least one occasion, it was reported by the captain's office that Wilkerson had actually engaged in a physical altercation with one of the court officers. To ensure courtroom security, the captain's office found it necessary to have Wilkerson appear in court only when shackled in this nonjury proceeding. With respect to the issue of courtroom security, the court deferred to the expertise of the captain's office. Wilkerson was produced by the Department of Correction on several occasions but refused to be brought to court in shackles. The court nonetheless found it inappropriate to proceed to the merits of the TPR or paternity petitions in his absence.

Third, Wilkerson was unable to serve the paternity petition upon the biological mother of the subject child. The foster care agency, the petitioner in the TPR proceeding, maintained an address in its records for the mother. Out of stated concern for the safety of the mother, the foster care agency refused to disclose the mother's whereabouts. Wilkerson's second assigned counsel therefore had to conduct a diligent search to locate the mother. Although this attorney ultimately obtained the location of the mother, he refused to disclose the mother's location to his client out of concern for the mother's safety. This occurred contemporaneously with the filing of this attorney's motion to be relieved as a result of purported threats of physical harm by his client. The court had also sought unsuccessfully to have the mother accept service or to consent to someone accepting service on her behalf.

The biological mother's address was never disclosed to the court, but late in the proceedings, the foster care agency submitted a handwritten and notarized letter from the mother claiming that Wilkerson was not the father of the subject child. The mother asserted that Wilkerson knew that he was not the [*3]father of the subject child and had assaulted her to initiate miscarriage of the pregnancy. The mother stated further that when this was not successful, Wilkerson threatened her and insisted that he be named on the child's birth certificate. Contrary to this statement, no father was in fact listed on the birth certificate that was submitted to the court.

Although Wilkerson was unable to effectuate service of the paternity petition, in the interest of justice, the court ordered DNA testing of the putative father and Aaliah to determine whether Wilkerson was indeed the biological father of the subject child, as the results could have had an impact upon the pending TPR proceeding.

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Related

In re Catholic Child Care Society of Diocese
112 A.D.2d 1039 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1985)
In re Male F.
97 Misc. 2d 505 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1978)
In re Trina M.
121 Misc. 2d 732 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1983)
In re the Adoption of C.
6 Misc. 3d 357 (NYC Family Court, 2004)
In re the Adoption of Aaliah
10 Misc. 3d 640 (NYC Family Court, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2005 NY Slip Op 25468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-aaliah-nyfamctbronx-2005.