Matter of Charisma D.

2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Kings County
DecidedMay 31, 2005
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U) (Matter of Charisma D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Charisma D., 2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

Matter of Charisma D. (2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U)) [*1]
Matter of Charisma D.
2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U)
Decided on May 31, 2005
Family Court, Kings County
Freeman, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 May 31, 2005
Family Court, Kings County


In the Matter of Charisma D.




B-7754/02

For Administration for Children's ServicesNoah Powlen, Esq.

For Seamen's Society for ChildrenJohn Eyerman, Esq.

Law GuardianJill Wade, Esq.

For Marlene P. James M. Abramson, Esq.

Nora Freeman, J.

By order dated October 25, 2004 this Court permitted Marlene P, formerly the foster parent of the child Charisma D., to participate in a permanency proceeding pursuant to a petition filed by the Administration for Children's Services ("ACS"); Family Court Act ("FCA") section 1055-a. The Court stated in that order that "given the significant events . . . the Court's review will require a full hearing to determine

"the ultimate question of what arrangement is best for the child in light of current circumstances.'" ACS moved on December 21, 2004 to re-argue and to vacate the October 25th order. After reviewing the papers submitted since December 21, 2004 by ACS, Seamen's Society for Children ("the agency"), the law guardian, and Ms P., the Court grants the motion for re-argument and upon re-argument denies Ms. P. status to participate, and vacates the October 25, [*2]2004 order. The Court's reasons are set forth below.

Procedural History

Charisma was placed in foster care shortly after her birth on July 8, 1999. The neglect case against her birth mother (docket NN16047/99) was completed promptly, resulting in a dispositional order dated November 4, 1999, which placed Charisma in foster care until September, 2000. The agency's petition to terminate parental rights, filed on April 9, 2002, was granted after inquest on August 7, 2002. The birth mother, however, filed a motion to vacate the order entered on her default. That motion was granted on February 27, 2003. After a second inquest held on May 20, 2002 the Court again signed an order terminating parental rights (on June 20, 2003). A second motion to vacate the default was "settled" on September 4, 2003, by agreement to uphold the fact-finding of permanent neglect but to hold a new dispositional hearing.

The third dispositional hearing the only one in which Charisma's birth mother participated was held on December 2 and 4, 2003. Both the birth mother and Charisma's foster mother Marlene P. (with whom Charisma was placed in February, 2002) testified at the December 2003 hearing. The Court found that it was in Charisma's best interest to grant the petition, allowing Charisma to be adopted by Ms. P., despite evidence that Ms P. had, contrary to clear foster care regulations, used corporal punishment to discipline Charisma. The Court noted at the conclusion of the hearing that the discipline did not reach to the level of "excessive corporal punishment" that would warrant a neglect petition; that Ms. P. had cooperated fully in agency-sponsored programs teaching parenting skills and anger management; and that except for the isolated incident of corporal punishment, Ms. P. had provided exemplary care for

Charisma, who was described by the agency caseworkers as closely bonded with Ms. P. and thriving in her home.

Following entry of the order transferring Charisma's custody and guardianship jointly to ACS and the agency, a permanency petition was filed pursuant to FCA section 1055-a, and on March 18, 2004 Referee Gayle Lerner continued foster care for six months, to allow time to file and complete the adoption.

A second 1055-a petition, filed on June 20, 2004, initiated the present litigation.

That petition recited that Charisma's permanency plan was adoption by Marlene P., to

whom notice of the petition was sent. However, on July 8, 2004 (the return date of the petition) it was disclosed that Charisma had been removed from the P. foster home on

April 18, after the agency and ACS investigated a report from Charisma's pre-school that the child had been hit in the face by Ms. P., causing scratches, swelling and bruising.

ACS claimed the notice to Ms P. was a mere clerical error; she, however, retained counsel and on July 14, 2004 filed a cross-petition for a permanency hearing at which she would be allowed to participate. [*3]

When the permanency petition and cross-petition were referred to this Court, on July 15, 2004, the Court learned for the first time of Charisma's removal from Marlene P.'s care and of the de-certification of her foster home. The Court was informed that Ms. P. had requested the "independent review" of those decisions to which she was entitled; that the independent reviewer upheld the decisions; and that five-year-old Charisma was deeply distressed by her abrupt removal from the home in which she had lived since she was two and a half years old. Ms. P.'s cross-petition requested not only a role in the permanency proceeding, but court-ordered visitation with Charisma and immediate therapy for the child.

With hearing dates some weeks away, and given the child's long-term bond with Ms. P., the severity of her behavioral problems in her new foster home, and the

uncertainty of the outcome of Ms. P.'s administrative appeals, the Court sought recommendations from mental health professionals regarding visitation with Ms. P. during the pendency of the litigation. Despite repeated court orders, Charisma's engagement in therapy and receipt of the requested recommendations were delayed for months. Finally, the Court received reports dated November 9, 16 and 18 from Dr. Erba, offering the opinion that visitation could not even be considered until the ultimate question of Charisma's future home was decided. Since the purpose of the evaluation was to assess visitation in the context of a prolonged period of uncertainty, Dr. Erba's reports begged the question. However, given the opposition to visits by ACS, the agency, and Charisma's law guardian, the Court denied Ms. P.'s motion for further visits. (Two "visits" had been held as part of the evaluation, and were observed by Dr.

Mangiotti and the law guardian's Social worker.)

On October 25, 2004 the Court denied ACS's motion to dismiss Ms. P.'s petition and stated its intention to conduct "a full hearing" regarding what plan would serve Charisma's best interests. Throughout the fall of 2004 the Court was informed that the "fair hearing"held before the Office of Children and Family Services ("OCFS") was still "pending," and ACS and the agency reiterated their firm refusal to consent to adoption by Ms. P. even if they were ordered to return Charisma to her home. On December 21, ACS filed its motion to re-argue, and in January 2005 the Court requested memoranda of law addressing Family Court's authority to approve adoption by a former foster parent without the agency's consent. Memoranda and affirmations were submitted by all parties, and on February 4, 2005 the Court reserved decision on the motion to re-argue.

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2005 NY Slip Op 50802(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-charisma-d-nyfamctkings-2005.