Matter of Child R.

2006 NY Slip Op 26533
CourtNew York Family Court, Queens County
DecidedNovember 28, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 2006 NY Slip Op 26533 (Matter of Child R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Queens County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Child R., 2006 NY Slip Op 26533 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

Matter of Child R. (2006 NY Slip Op 26533)
Matter of Child R.
2006 NY Slip Op 26533 [14 Misc 3d 806]
November 28, 2006
Lubow, J.
Family Court, Queens County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Wednesday, March 21, 2007


[*1]
In the Matter of the Adoption of Child R., an Infant.

Family Court, Queens County, November 28, 2006

APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL

Carway & Flipse, Mineola (Jacqueline Carway of counsel), for petitioners. Larry S. Bachner, Jamaica, Law Guardian.

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fran L. Lubow, J.

Petitioners, Mr. and Mrs. P., residents of Florida, seek to adopt R. born in Montreal, Canada, in August 2004. Petitioners, through their attorney, have filed the instant adoption petition in Queens County Family Court on July 5, 2006. R.'s birth parents had executed extrajudicial surrenders relinquishing guardianship and custody of R. to the "agency" in Albany, New York, on March 7, 2005, conditioned upon the petitioners being the adoptive resource for R. Petitioner adoptive mother was given physical custody of R. that same date and she did immediately remove R. from New York to Florida where R. has since resided with the petitioners.

The agency submitted documents to the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children (hereinafter ICPC) office in Albany. A copy of the "Interstate Compact Placement Request" form (form 100A) has been provided to the court as part of the adoption package. The request form was signed by the executive director of the agency on March 16, 2005 and thereafter by the New York State compact administrator on March 23, 2005. The request was received by the Florida Department of Children and Families on March 24, 2005. On May 27, 2005, written approval for the placement was granted by the Florida state compact administrator.

Upon a review of the written materials submitted to the court in support of the adoption proceeding, the court sought clarification of R.'s whereabouts between March 7, 2005 (the surrender date) and May 27, 2005 (the written ICPC approval date), a period of approximately 11 weeks. In response to the court's request for clarification, the agency and the adoptive parents separately submitted written responses to the court. The agency represented that the adoptive father's mother died in Florida on March 20, 2005 and the adoptive mother together with R. then returned to Florida for the funeral and to support her husband.[FN1] The agency states that it received oral approval from the Florida ICPC office for R. to remain in Florida until final [*2]ICPC approval was granted.[FN2]

The adoptive parents, in their written statement, acknowledged not waiting for ICPC approval, but instead in the "best interests of R." scheduled numerous medical appointments for her in Florida, commencing on March 15, 2005. Those numerous medical appointments and evaluations for R. were outlined spanning from March 15 to May 25, 2005. As stated by the petitioner mother, "Had I waited for the ICPC to clear, because of the mistakes and delay of the agency in New York, the baby would not have been able to receive proper medical care and would have missed nearly two months of therapy."[FN3]

Thereafter the court requested memoranda of law from petitioners' attorney and from the agency as to whether the illegality of removing R. from New York to Florida prior to ICPC approval might be cured and whether the court therefore would have the authority to entertain R.'s adoption. The court received a memorandum of law from petitioners' attorney and thereafter appointed a law guardian to represent R.'s best interests in this adoption proceeding and to investigate, report and submit a memorandum of law on the ICPC violation. Subsequently, the court received a letter from the agency indicating it was not submitting its own memorandum of law but was "standing as part of the adopting family's attorney's Memorandum." The court received the law guardian's memorandum of law and its addendum on November 1, 2006.

The ICPC is an agreement among all 50 states, the District of Columbia and the United States Virgin Islands, establishing uniform legal and administrative procedures governing the interstate placement of children. Its purpose is to ensure that a suitable out-of-state placement is located for the subject child prior to the child being placed there. The text of this agreement has been ratified as uniform state law in all the above jurisdictions. In New York, this is codified in Social Services Law § 374-a. Pursuant to Social Services Law § 374-a (1), article I (a), "Each child requiring placement shall receive the maximum opportunity to be placed in a suitable environment and with persons or institutions having appropriate qualifications and facilities to provide a necessary and desirable degree and type of care." Pursuant to Social Services Law § 374-a (1), article III (d),

"The child shall not be sent, brought, or caused to be sent or brought into the receiving state until the appropriate public authorities in the receiving state shall notify the sending agency, in writing, to the effect that the proposed placement does not appear to be contrary to the interests of the child" (emphasis added).

The ICPC mandates that a child be placed in the receiving state only after the designated compact authorities in the receiving state have approved the placement. The statute by its express terms prohibits the transfer of a child from one state to another until the placement has been approved by both the sending and receiving states' ICPC administrators.

R.'s placement in Florida was unauthorized and in violation of Social Services Law § 374-a. The physical transfer of a child should not occur at all absent full compliance with Social Services Law § 374-a, including the transmittal of the written notices to the receiving state and the approval of the proposed placement by the receiving state. An ICPC application was not even initiated by the [*3]agency until after the child had been taken to Florida in violation of Social Services Law § 374-a.

There is no explicit provision in the ICPC for oral approval. If in fact there was oral approval provided prior to the formal written approval, petitioners' attorney and the agency have not provided proof of such to the court. Indeed, telephone contact between the court and the compact administrators of both New York and Florida has not convinced the court otherwise.

By removing the adoptive child from the jurisdiction of the State of New York immediately upon the extrajudicial surrender by the birth parents and even before the application for the ICPC was completed by the adoption agency for forwarding to the New York State ICPC compact administrator (much less awaiting receipt and approval of the receiving compact administrator in the State of Florida), they have blatantly violated Social Services Law § 374-a and the corresponding Florida statutes.

Although there has been "after the fact" compliance with the ICPC, this court must still address the violation of law that has occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 NY Slip Op 26533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-child-r-nyfamctqueens-2006.