Matter of H.S. v. P.S.

2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Kings County
DecidedFebruary 13, 2026
DocketDocket No. V-02629-17/23B
StatusUnpublished
AuthorNisha Menon

This text of 2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U) (Matter of H.S. v. P.S.) 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 H.S. v. P.S., 2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

Matter of H.S. v P.S. (2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U)) [*1]
Matter of H.S. v P.S.
2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U)
Decided on February 13, 2026
Family Court, Kings County
Menon, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 13, 2026
Family Court, Kings County


In the Matter of Article 6 Custody/Visitation Proceeding H.S., Petitioner,

against

P.S., Respondent,




Docket No. V-02629-17/23B

Petitioner H.S., pro se.

Mina Walner, Esq., New York Legal Assistance Group, 7 Hanover Sq., Floor 18, New York, NY 10004 for Respondent P.S.

Mara Wishingrad, Esq., Children's Law Center, 44 Court St., Floor 11, Brooklyn, NY 11201 for child Y.S.
Nisha Menon, J.

Procedural History and Factual Background

On October 18, 2018, this Court entered a Final Order on Petition for Custody and Visitation on Default, which granted sole legal and physical custody of the parties' two children, Y.S. (DOB 2010) and A.S. (DOB 2008), to their mother, P.S. This Order also granted alternate weekend visitation of the two children to their father, H.S.

On October 17, 2023, H.S. filed the instant Petition for Modification of Order of [*2]Custody, seeking a change of the custody arrangement with regard to the child Y.S. only.[FN1] In his petition, H.S. alleged that since the 2018 Final Order there had been a change in circumstances in that "Y.S. age 13 y/o decided and actually moved all belongings to father, verbally expresses he is 'uncomfortable' living with mother, refuses to live with mother and wants to live with father and that father should have full custody in the best interest of the child's physical and emotional well being," and requested "full legal and physical custody" of Y.

Trial on this matter commenced on November 13, 2024, and then continued on April 9, 2025; April 21, 2025; July 30, 2025; August 13, 2025; and December 1, 2025. The Court conducted an in-camera interview of Y on January 14, 2026.

The parties were the only witnesses. Despite their obvious areas of disagreement and the palpable hostility displayed by H.S. toward P.S., the following facts are undisputed. The parties were married in February 2008. Their first child, A, was born in November 2008, and Y was born in August 2010. The parties separated in 2016, P.S. obtained a final order of sole custody of both children on default in 2018, and the parties' divorce was finalized in December 2023.[FN2] From the parties' separation in 2016 until "September or October"[FN3] of 2023, both children resided with P.S. P.S. eventually remarried and became pregnant with a daughter. In September or October of 2023 P.S. informed Y that she was pregnant, and shortly thereafter Y began to spend the majority of his nights at H.S.'s home. Y's brother A, has continued to reside with P.S. since the parents separated in 2016. At this time, also residing with P.S. are her husband and her daughter, who is the half-sister of A and Y.

The parties offered conflicting explanations and characterizations about their experiences with Y and with one another. P.S. testified about how her marriage to H.S. was defined by his violence and control. H.S. instead was fixated on what he considered her "dishonesty"[FN4] during the marriage. The sharply contrasting testimony, along with other evidence elicited at trial, is representative of a defense mechanism first coined by Jennifer J. Freyd, Ph.D, Professor of [*3]Psychology at the University of Oregon, known as DARVO. This acronym stands for Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender and is as a three-part strategy of manipulation used "in order to silence victims and escape culpability."[FN5] When confronted with his behavior, H.S. would deny that it ever took place, instead would attack P.S., and would ultimately attempt to reverse the situation to paint her as the offender and himself as the victim. P.S. testified that starting in 2021 she would no longer communicate with H.S. by phone call or text message, and instead only would email him, due to alleged threats and inappropriate responses. The evidence before the Court, including both parties' respective testimony, shows that this problematic dynamic pervaded the parties' relationship, and remains unchanged even now, nearly 10 years after the parties' separation.

While H.S. testified that Y has been effectively residing with him full time since September or October 2023, P.S. in contrast testified that as a teenager Y has been fluid in how much time he spends at each respective parent's home and considered that he was essentially residing in both parents' homes. Both parties offered into evidence copies of emails exchanged between them, but each had a very different views of the appropriateness (or lack thereof) and motives of their respective messages. Each party likewise offered contrasting views on issues of how financial support of Y were handled and communicated among them, including regarding his education and enrollment in a private school. The parties also offered conflicting testimony and rationales on a variety of other issues, including discussing family court litigation with Y, international travel, medical coverage, and each other's parental fitness.

Having had the unique opportunity to observe the demeanor and testimony of the parties, and to assess their respective credibility, the Court generally credits the testimony of P.S. over that of H.S. P.S. consistently presented as reasonable and believable in her explanation of events and her thought process, and her responses to the points of contention during examination by H.S.[FN6] comported with her testimony about how she conducted herself during prior points of dispute between them, and was also consistent with her tone in email messages submitted into evidence. In contrast, the Court finds the testimony of H.S. to have been incredible, self-serving, and incongruent with his alleged rationales for his behavior. Notably, H.S., who opted to represent himself in these proceedings, used his cross examination of P.S. as a mechanism to continue to berate her, requiring the Court and P.S.'s attorney to intervene throughout the trial.



Legal Standard and Analysis

It is well established that a party seeking to modify a prior order of custody or visitation must establish the existence of change in circumstances between the date of the prior order and [*4]the filing date of the petition. Here, it is undisputed that since the underlying order was entered in 2018, until the fall of 2023, Y resided primarily with his mother. In the fall of 2023 Y began spending the vast majority of his time at the home of his father and that, at this present time, he generally spends time at the home of this mother on some weekends and during holidays. But this change of circumstances is only part of what the petitioner had the burden to establish at trial. The relevant and necessary legal questions before this Court also include if changing legal and/or physical custody is warranted to protect Y's best interests. See e.g. Maynard v Maynard, 138 AD3d 794, 795 [2d Dept 2016]; Franco v Franco, 127 AD3d 810, 810 [2d Dept 2015]; Holmes v Holmes, 116 AD3d 955, 955 [2d Dept 2014];

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Related

Matter of H.S. v. P.S.
2026 NY Slip Op 50252(U) (Kings Family Court, 2026)

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