Matter of Justina R.

2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Suffolk County
DecidedNovember 17, 2004
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U) (Matter of Justina R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Suffolk County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Justina R., 2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Matter of Justina R. (2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U)) [*1]
Matter of Justina R.
2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U)
Decided on November 17, 2004
Family Court, Suffolk County
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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 November 17, 2004
Family Court, Suffolk County


In the matter of JUSTINA R.




B-3636/2004

Frank Krotschinsky, Esq. John B. Belmonte, Esq.
Suffolk County Attorney Legal Aid Society
Attorney For Petitioner Law Guardian
400 Carleton Avenue 400 Carleton Avenue
Central Islip NY 11722 Central Islip NY 11722

Stephen M. Hellman, Esq. Terry R. Woodard, Esq.
Attorney For Charlotte D. Attorney For Howard D.
1235 Montauk Highway 320 Carleton Avenue
Mastic NY 11950 Central Islip NY 11722

Jeffrey Arlen Spinner, J.

The Petitioner SUFFOLK COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES has filed Verified Petitions pursuant to Section 384-b of the Social Services Law Of The State Of New York wherein it seeks an Order of the Court terminating the parental rights of the Respondents CHARLOTTE D. and HOWARD D. In its pleadings, the County avers that the Respondents and each of them have permanently neglected the subject child JUSTINA R. (date of birth July 4, 2002) by failing to plan for the child's future, failing to comply with prior Orders of the Court related to this child as well as her two siblings as well as by virtue of the fact that the child has been in foster care for the duration of her life. The County also seeks an Order of this Court pursuant to Family Court Act section 1039-b relieving it of any further diligent efforts to reunify [*2]the family.

The Respondents, each appearing through separate and very capable counsel, have vigorously opposed both of the Petitioner County's application, both upon legal and factual grounds and they seek to have the subject child returned to their care and custody without further delay.

The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing which commenced on October 12, 2004 and concluded on October 25, 2004. Both of the Respondents were physically present at each and every stage of the evidentiary hearing. Over the course of the hearing, both testimony and evidentiary material were adduced from witnesses presented by both the Petitioner and by the Respondents. The Court was afforded the opportunity to evaluate the demeanor, veracity and credibility of all of the witnesses and of the evidence proffered.

In accordance with the provisions of section 4511 of the Civil Practice Laws and Rules and upon the request of the Petitioner, the Court did take judicial notice of all prior proceedings under Suffolk County Family Court docket nos. NN-xxx/2001, NN-xxx/2001, NA-xxx/2001, NA-xxx/2001, NN-xxx/2002, NN-xxx/2002, B-xxx/2002, B-xxx/2002, B-xxx/2002, B-xxx/2002 and B-xxx/2002, each one of which was litigated before the undersigned as presiding judge.

EVIDENCE ADDUCED AT THE HEARING

The subject child JUSTINA R. was received into foster care under the auspices of the Petitioner on or about July 5, 2002 when she was approximately 24 hours old in accordance with the provisions of Section 1024 of the Family Court Act. Her placement was thereafter confirmed by an Order of this Court. Since that time, she has been in a pre-adoptive foster home with her two older siblings. The Petitioner's reasons for assuming such foster care were grounded in prior adjudications of the subject child's older siblings Stefanie D. and Christyn D. as abused children (see docket nos. NN-xxx/2001, NN-xxx/2001, NA-xxx/2001 and NA-xxx/2002). The elder siblings were adjudicated to be severely abused children based upon sworn allocutions and admissions by both Respondents that the child Stefanie had sustained multiple rib and skull fractures which would not have occurred in a child that was cared for properly. These admissions were made by both of the Respondents, under oath, after the commencement of a fact-finding hearing but before the conclusion thereof. Both Respondents were represented by private counsel of their choosing throughout the pendency of those proceedings.

The Petitioner alleges, in sum and substance, that the Respondents have failed, neglected and refused to comply with this Court's prior and multiple Orders of Fact-Finding & Disposition, Orders Of Suspended Judgment and Permanency Orders, which, inter alia, did require them to visit regularly with the child, to participate in and successfully complete a course of psychotherapy from a provider approved by the Petitioner, to complete parent training programs, to attend planning conferences and for Mr. D. to address his medical issues relative to his alleged intestinal problems which, he asserted, constituted an insurmountable impediment to his compliance with the Court's directives. The Respondents were fully aware of the terms and conditions of each of the Orders issued by this Court, each of them having been represented by counsel at all stages of all of the proceedings before this Court.

The Petitioner's witness Sally O'Donnell, the County's Foster Care Supervisor, testified that she had been supervising this matter particularly closely because of the fact that there was abuse involved with the older siblings. Her uncontroverted testimony clearly established that she was fully familiar with all of the terms and conditions of the prior Orders of the Court. Ms. O'Donnell readily admitted that Mrs. D. completed two parent training courses (which the agency magnanimously arranged to be conducted at the home of the Respondents), attended planning conferences at the agency and visited regularly but stated that she did not complete a course of psychotherapy. As to Mr. D., she stated that he had completed two parent training courses but did not comply with any of the other terms of the Orders.

As to the psychotherapy requirement, the Respondents had been seeing Philip Antz MD and then Jerome Abramson CSW until early 2003. They had selected Mr. Abramson from a list of providers who accepted their health insurance and he was initially approved by Petitioner. At some time prior to April of 2003, the County objected to continued therapy with Mr. Abramson and a hearing was held before this Court at which Mr. Abramson appeared and offered testimony on behalf of the Respondents. The Respondents, through prior counsel, vociferously insisted upon continuing with Mr. Abramson but after hearing his testimony together with that of Ann Dalton Morabito CSW (a therapist recommended by the County), the Court was constrained to agree with the Petitioner. [*3]Mrs. D. thereafter attended one visit with Ms. Morabito and adamantly refused to see her again while Mr. D. declined to see her at all. Ms. O'Donnell testified that the Respondents asserted various excuses for their refusal, most prominent among them that Ms. Morabito's office was too geographically distant from their residence (the County's gratuitous and generous offer of full reimbursement for all travel expenses was summarily rejected by the Respondents) and, more importantly, that Ms. Morabito didn't believe the Respondents' claims that they "didn't do anything" to cause injury to Stefanie. Mr. D. claimed an inability to travel at all while Ms. D. told Ms.

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Related

Matter of Justina R.
2004 NY Slip Op 51812(U) (Suffolk Family Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 NY Slip Op 51460(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-justina-r-nyfamctsuffolk-2004.