Matter of Anonymous

2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Nassau County
DecidedFebruary 27, 2006
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U) (Matter of Anonymous) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Nassau County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Anonymous, 2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

Matter of Anonymous (2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U)) [*1]
Matter of Anonymous
2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U) [11 Misc 3d 1058(A)]
Decided on February 27, 2006
Family Court, Nassau County
Lawrence, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on February 27, 2006
Family Court, Nassau County


IN THE MATTER OF ANONYMOUS,




xxxxx

CHRISTOPHER M. POWERS, ESQ.

Ingerman Smith, L.L.P.

Attorney for School District

RENEE G. MAYER, ESQ.

Attorney for Anonymous

Richard S. Lawrence, J.

The Court has before it a PINS petition brought by Respondent's school district, in which the Respondent moves this Court for the "right to withdraw her admission" with respect to the captioned PINS petition or in the alternative to dismiss the petition in the interests of justice.

Petitioner opposes the motion, stating that the admission was made because it was true. Petitioner further points out that

several of the absences admitted to were prior to the date of the incidents which have given rise to Respondent's instant motion.

Previously and on April 13, 2005, the Respondent, represented by counsel, admitted to Paragraph 6 in its entirety , with respect to being absent from school, without legal excuse, for 9 out of 18 days during September 2004, and being illegally absent for every single school day during the months of October 2004, November 2004 and December 2004, and 12 days out of 12 school days during January

2005, at which time the instant petition was verified and shortly thereafter filed with this Court.

Upon Respondent's admission, this Court ordered a Probation investigation and report. It was during that investigation that

the Respondent first made disclosure of two sexual attacks against her by a school bus driver who had transported her home upon a school bus from the school. Respondent has alleged, through her disclosure, that she did not disclose this earlier because that person threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone. Respondent alleges that as a result of this, she stopped going to school, became "school phobic," and was in fear of her safety, and that of her siblings, who also attend within the same school district and who also allegedly were the subject of threats, to the Respondent, by the alleged perpetrator. The Respondent has also now fully cooperated with the Special Victims Unit of the Nassau County Police Department, and the Police are allegedly searching for the perpetrator.

Respondent now moves to vacate her admission, stating that [*2]it was not "voluntary" but was made under duress, that duress being the threat by the Respondent's assailant for Respondent not to

disclose what had been done to her on two occasions. It should be noted that this Court has absolutely no doubt that the Respondent's recent disclosure is genuine with respect to acts perpetrated against her. The Court also notes that she is currently in therapy.

While Respondent moves to withdraw her admission, the Court notes that there is no comparable provision in Article 7 (PINS) as exists in Article 3 (JD). Family Court Act §321.4 is headed "With-

drawal of an admission or denial," and states, in subparagraph 2:

At any time prior to the entry of a finding

under section 352.1 the court in its dis-

cretion may permit a respondent who has entered

an admission to the entire petition or to part

of the petition to withdraw such admission, and

in such event the entire petition as it existed

at the time of the admission shall be restored.

Likewise, Article 3 contains FCA §321.3., "Acceptance of an ad-mission," which states what is necessary to obtain, by way of allocution, an admission to a juvenile delinquency petition. Again, there is no comparable Article 7 provision.

Lastly, FCA §315.2 is entitled, "Motion to dismiss in further-ance of justice," and lists the circumstances under which the Court may dismiss one or more counts of a JD petition, and the considera-

tions the Court must give to the list set forth in the statute. That list includes, "(a) the seriousness and circum-stances of the crime; (e) the needs and best interest of the respondent;" and (g) "any other relevant fact indicating that a finding would serve no useful purpose." §315.2(2) states that such an order to dismiss a

petition in the interest of justice may be issued upon motion of the petitioner, the respondent, or the court itself. Again, there is no comparable provision in Article 7.

Family Court Act §762 states: [*3]

For good cause, the court on its own motion

or on motion of any interested person acting

on behalf of the respondent may stay execu-

tion of, arrest, set aside, modify or vacate

any order issued in the course of a proceed-

ing under this article.

In the sad circumstances of this case, this Court can think of no more pressing instance to grant a dismissal in the interests of justice. While it is true that several of the absences occurred prior to the first alleged sexual assault upon the Respondent, nevertheless, virtually all of the admitted dates the Respondent was absent occurred subsequent to the first assault. Now that dis-

closure has been made and Respondent is in therapy, hopefully she can rebound and get her life together.

Here, when this Court took the Respondent's admission, it went through the necessary allocution in order to determine that the Respondent entered the admission knowingly, voluntarily, and will-ingly, and that nobody had forced her or threatened her to make the

admission. Respondent now alleges that the admission was not in fact entered voluntarily, as the Respondent was under threats by her assailant of bodily injury or worse, not only to herself, but to her siblings. Again, although there is nothing in Article 7 regarding this, this Court analogizes the issues now before it, to criminal court matters. Criminal Procedure Law §220.60 allows the court, in its discretion, to withdraw a guilty plea. See People v White, 226 AD2d 750 (2d Dept 1996), appeal den'd 88 NY2d 943 (1996); People v Nuzzi, 6 Misc 3d 127A (App Term, 9th and 10th Jud Dists, 2004); and People v Alexander, 97 NY2d 482 (2002). These cases state that the trial judge is the one best able to determine whether a plea is entered voluntarily or not. Again, however, there is no comparable statute in an Article 7 matter. The question for this Court thus becomes whether this Court has authority to vacate an admission "in the interests of justice."

The Court has thoroughly researched the sparse case law with respect to the issue of whether a PINS petition may be dismissed subsequent to an admission (or even previous to an admission)in the interests of justice. Respondent cites only one applicable case,

In the Matter of Robert T. Doe, 194 Misc 2d 93 (Family Court of New York, Delaware County, 2002), where the Court dismissed a school PINS petition in the interests of justice. That Court stated, as its authority, in a footnote at pages 96-97:

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2006 NY Slip Op 50273(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-anonymous-nyfamctnassau-2006.