Matter of Lester M.

2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Richmond County
DecidedOctober 12, 2006
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U) (Matter of Lester M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Richmond County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Lester M., 2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

Matter of Lester M. (2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U)) [*1]
Matter of Lester M.
2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U) [13 Misc 3d 1222(A)]
Decided on October 12, 2006
Family Court, Richmond County
DiDomenico, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 October 12, 2006
Family Court, Richmond County


In the Matter of Lester M. A Child under Eighteen Years of Age Alleged to be Neglected by Navija M., Respondent.




NN-00578-06

Janet Chaplan, Esq.

Legal Aid Society

60 Bay Street

Staten Island, NY 10301

Victoria Gibbons, Esq.

ACS

51 Stuyvesant Place , 3rd Floor

Staten Island, NY 10301

Susanna Saul, Esq.

Legal Services of New York

36 Richmond Terrace

Staten Island, NY 10301

Catherine M. DiDomenico, J.

By Petition dated February 7, 2006, Petitioner, The Administration for Children's Services ("ACS"), commenced this neglect action against Respondent Mother, Navija M.. The Petition alleges that the subject child Lester M.' physical, mental or emotional condition has been impaired or is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as a result of the failure of the Respondent Mother to exercise a minimum degree of care in providing the child with proper supervision or guardianship. Specifically, the Petition alleges that Respondent Mother failed to adequately supervise Lester on February 4, 2006, at which time he sustained a 1st and 2nd degree burn on his arm. The Petition further alleges that the Respondent Mother neglected this child by failing to seek medical attention for the child, although Respondent Mother was aware of Lester's extensive burn history.

This is not the only child protective action involving this now three year old child. On May 31, 2005, when he was 18 months old, Lester sustained 2nd and 3rd degree burns over 30% of his body inflicted by Respondent Mother's then boyfriend, Hugo L. This act resulted in the filing of a child neglect and abuse Petition against Mr. L. and Respondent Mother on June 2, 2005. See ACS v. Hugo L., Navija M., NA 2204/05 (Fam. Ct. Richmond County) (Porzio J.). On June 2, 2006, Judge Porzio found that allowing Lester to remain home constituted imminent risk to his life, health or safety. Accordingly, Lester was remanded and placed in the care and custody of [*2]the Petitioner.

A finding of severe abuse was entered against Hugo L., after inquest, by Order dated October 11, 2005. The Petition was dismissed as against Respondent Mother after trial. See Order dated December 13, 2005. Lester was returned to Respondent Mother on January 11, 2006. On February 4, 2006, some three weeks later, Lester sustained another burn. This Court again removed Lester from Respondent Mother on February 28, 2006, and placed him back in the care of ACS in the physical custody of his maternal grandmother.

A fact-finding hearing on the instant petition was held on May 10, 2006, May 12, 2006, May 16, 2006, May 17, 2006, May 25, 2006, May 26, 2006, June 14, 2006 and July 12, 2006. At the fact finding hearing, ACS called four witnesses: (1) Ms. Glenda C., an ACS case worker, (2) Mary S., a pediatric nurse practitioner, (3) Annette M., a clinical nurse/medical case manager with Children's Aid Society, and (4) Merlyn J., a Children's Aid Society caseworker. Petitioner also introduced documents into evidence (Petitioner's 1-6). Respondent testified on her own behalf and also called Dr. Steven A., a board certified pediatrician, as an expert witness. Respondent introduced documents into evidence (Respondent's A; C). The Law Guardian presented no evidence at trial.

Findings of Fact

After considering the testimony of the witnesses who testified at the fact finding hearing and observing their demeanor, this Court credits the testimony of Petitioner's witnesses and makes the following findings of fact after trial.

Prior to Lester's return on January 11, 2006, the agency instructed Respondent Mother on such subjects as how to care for Lester's recovering burns; the importance of his continuing occupational and physical therapies, and safety precautions, including burn prevention. To illustrate the importance of burn prevention, Ms. M., a nurse from the Children's Aid Society, told Respondent Mother about another nurse's child who had been burned by a curling iron. Respondent Mother stated that the nurse in that story was "careless" for allowing the child to be burned in that way. The agency also provided Respondent Mother with an emergency medical beeper number and instructed her to contact the agency in the event that Lester sustained any injury, regardless of severity.

On February 4, 2006, while home alone with Respondent Mother, Lester suffered a 1st and 2nd degree burn to his arm, triangular in shape and 1 to 3 inches in diameter. According to Respondent Mother, this burn was sustained when Lester's arm made accidental contact with a curling iron she was using to curl her hair. Respondent Mother stated while she was sitting on her bed curling her hair, Lester was in the room jumping from the floor to her bed when he accidentally touched the iron.

Notwithstanding the Agency's instructions, Respondent Mother did not call the agency, [*3]and did not seek any medical attention at all for Lester, allegedly because she did not perceive the burn as serious enough to warrant emergency assistance. Moreover, although Respondent Mother concedes that Lester cried when burned, she did not put ice or cold water on the burn or administer any pain relief to him. Rather, she applied Sulfur Silvadine cream, previously prescribed for Lester's healing burns, which had no pain relief properties. When asked why she did not administer any pain relief, Respondent Mother claimed he stopped crying after awhile. She further stated that she had burned herself with the same curling iron earlier that evening, leaving a mark that later formed a scab which she removed herself.

Respondent admits she told no one that Lester had been burned until the next day, on February 5, 2006, when she told her mother. Lester's grandmother called the agency the following day on February 6, 2006. Ms. C., an ACS case worker, met Lester and his grandmother at St. Vincent's Hospital. The burn was diagnosed as a 1st degree burn with a 2nd degree burn in the center. He was treated and released.

The Court credits Dr. A.'s testimony that the burn sustained by Lester on February 4, 2006, was not life threatening, although parts of it was admittedly second degree. However, Dr. A.'s failure to examine Lester, and his failure to consider the fact that Lester was already recovering from burns on over 30% of his body at the time this additional burn was sustained, persuades this Court to afford limited weight to his testimony. The Court further notes that Dr. A. is not an expert in burns or burn care.

The Court does not credit at all the testimony of Respondent Mother. When attempting to explain how this accident happened, Respondent Mother's testimony appeared at times to be deliberately evasive and inconsistent. Compare Tr. 5/16/06 p. 95-96 with Tr. 5/17/06 p. 29.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 NY Slip Op 51943(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-lester-m-nyfamctrich-2006.