Matter of J.A. v. A.B.

2005 NY Slip Op 25434
CourtNew York Family Court, Ulster County
DecidedOctober 18, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 2005 NY Slip Op 25434 (Matter of J.A. v. A.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Ulster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of J.A. v. A.B., 2005 NY Slip Op 25434 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

Matter of J.A.E. v A.B. (2005 NY Slip Op 25434)
Matter of J.A.E. v A.B.
2005 NY Slip Op 25434 [10 Misc 3d 446]
October 18, 2005
Nussbaum, J.
Family Court, Ulster County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Friday, March 3, 2006


[*1]
In the Matter of J.A.E., Petitioner,
v
A.B., Respondent.

Family Court, Ulster County, October 18, 2005

APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL

A.B., respondent pro se. Francis T. Murray, County Attorney (Lara M. Quintiliani of counsel), for petitioner.

OPINION OF THE COURT

Steven Nussbaum, J.

Respondent A.B. (objectant or respondent) has filed objections to an order of support on consent signed by the Support Magistrate on August 4, 2005, and entered on August 8. The order provides that objectant is to pay child support in the amount of $25 for the support of his daughter, A.E. (date of birth Dec. 15, 1997). It also provides that retroactive child support for the period of November 16, 2004 to August 4, 2005 is set at $500. The order was entered in connection with a Uniform Interstate Family Support Act paternity proceeding commenced by J.A.E. Mr. B. is currently incarcerated at Shawangunk [*2]Correctional Facility, serving the eighth year of a sentence of 28½ years to life. He was convicted of murder in the second degree based upon depraved indifference to life, criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, and criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree.

By letter to this court dated November 26, 2004, Mr. B. requested that the necessary paternity tests be done before he was produced from prison. A genetic marker test was ordered, and the results indicated objectant is the biological father of the child within 99.99% of reasonable certainty.

On August 4, 2005, a hearing was scheduled. Present were counsel from the County Attorney's Office and Mr. B. Objectant, after being advised of his right to counsel, waived the same and admitted to paternity. With regard to setting an order of support, the Magistrate stated:

"Based on your circumstances, [Mr. B.], the law would have me enter what has been called a minimum order of support. It would say that you would have the obligation to pay $25 for the support of [A.] but that your debt can never accumulate to any larger than $500. The end result of all that is that you will owe $500 when you finally get out of the correctional institute that you're in. Do you understand all that? Do you have any questions about that? Do you have any objections to that?"

Mr. B. responded that he had no choice as he was in prison. The Support Magistrate then stated, "Unless there is an objection I will order all that." Objectant replied, "If you want me to pay $25 a month, I will pay $25 a month."

Mr. B. sets forth three objections to the order of the Support Magistrate. The first objection is that the order inaccurately states that he is unemployed and "possessed of sufficient means and able to earn such means to provide support to his child in the form of financial payments." He asserts that he is not employed in the traditional sense of the word, being barred by New York State from pursuing work release or seeking gainful employment because of his violent felony conviction. According to respondent, his lack of income is unavoidable.

His second objection is premised on the purported negative impact the $25 per month award of child support will have on his daughter, the mother, and himself. It is his belief that because he cannot pay the child support ordered, "his daughter and her mother . . . may become hurt and confused because it appears as if the father was found capable of paying the support and simply opted not to." The child will be led to believe he refuses to support her. Were the child support amount reduced to zero, according to objectant, the mother and child's "unrealistic expectations" would be eliminated.

According to respondent, he also will be negatively impacted by the order because were he labeled a "dead beat dad," he would be irreparably harmed and unfairly subjected "to bias and possible prejudice in any future criminal proceedings such as parole." Although he is in prison for at least another 20 years and will not be released until his daughter will be over the age of 21, he claims that the "dead beat dad" label would undermine his rehabilitation goals, preventing any possible tangible child support in the future.

His final objection is premised on the argument that since he will not be out of prison until his daughter is well past her majority, her need for support will have passed and the order is, [*3]therefore, merely punitive. Mr. B. argues that, since he is unable to pay, a support order serves no legitimate purpose.

Objectant requests that his order be reduced to no child support until such time as he is able to pay support. In the alternative, he seeks a stipulation from the court that any arrears of unpaid child support be capped at $500 pursuant to Family Court Act § 413 (1) (g). In the event that there are any future hearings or proceedings, he requests that he be provided counsel.

The County Attorney, in opposition to the objections, argues that the use of the term "unemployed" in the order is appropriate as it describes his uncontested working status and was important to recite in the order so as to justify the below poverty order being signed and entered. It is further argued that the objectant's claim that he would be labeled a "dead beat dad" is irrelevant to this court's determination. In addition, Mr. B. agreed to the order, and it should not be set aside. The County Attorney asserts that the inability of the objectant to make payments is the result of his own wrongdoing. Accordingly, it is argued, the objections should be denied.

Discussion

The issue essentially raised on objections in this matter is whether it is appropriate to establish an initial child support order for an individual already incarcerated and serving a sentence of 28½ years to life. All appeals by the father of his criminal conviction appear to have been decided and, in all likelihood, he will not be released from prison, if at all, until his child is well into her majority. Based upon the information provided, it appears that he committed the felony and was arrested shortly before the child's birth. Mr. B. had already served seven years of his sentence at the time the paternity proceeding in issue was commenced. Objectant does not contest his paternity, but rather his obligation to pay child support of $25 a month.

Most of the published case law in New York concerning the obligation of an incarcerated parent to pay child support arises in the context of the filing of a downward modification petition. In those instances, a support order was entered prior to the criminal sentence and incarceration of the payer, and that parent was seeking to change an existing support order or to justify a failure to pay previously court-ordered support. (Matter of Knights v Knights, 71 NY2d 865 [1988] [incarceration does not justify downward modification of child support]; Matter of Commissioner of Social Servs. v Darryl B., 306 AD2d 54 [1st Dept 2003]; Matter of Furman v Barnes

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2005 NY Slip Op 25434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-ja-v-ab-nyfamctulster-2005.