Matter of Michael J. v. Sherrie H.

2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Kings County
DecidedJanuary 11, 2024
DocketFile No. 202205
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U) (Matter of Michael J. v. Sherrie H.) 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 Michael J. v. Sherrie H., 2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Matter of Michael J. v Sherrie H. (2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U)) [*1]

Matter of Michael J. v Sherrie H.
2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U)
Decided on January 11, 2024
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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 January 11, 2024
Family Court, Kings County


In the Matter of an Article 6 Proceeding
Michael J., Petitioner,

against

Sherrie H., Respondent.




File No. 202205

Kira J. Schettino, Esq., 80 S. Swan St. Fl. 11, Albany, NY 11210 for Respondent Sherrie H.

Mindy L. Gress, Esq., 44 Court St. Suite 906, Brooklyn, NY 11201 for Petitioner Michael J.

Rayana Baum Lifson, Esq., Children's Law Center, 44 Court St., Fl. 11, Brooklyn, NY 11201 for Child M.
Nisha Menon, J.

In this proceeding for an order of visitation filed pursuant to Article 6 of the Family Court Act, Petitioner father Michael J. (hereinafter "Petitioner" or "Mr. J.") seeks an order of parenting time with the subject child, M.J., DOB 2007 (hereinafter "M." or "the child"), the son of both parties. Mr. J.'s petition, filed on January 16, 2016, asserts that visitation is in M.'s best interest so that he and Mr. J. can bond, and so that M. can know who his father is. Mr. J.'s petition alleges that he hasn't seen his son since his incarceration [FN1] "due to Ms. H." in reference to M.'s mother, the respondent herein, Sherrie H. (hereinafter "Respondent" or "Ms. H.").

History

Trial commenced on December 6, 2017 and continued on March 5 of 2018, August 22 and October 7 of 2019, and February 21 of 2020, concluding testimony on July 1 of 2022.[FN2] At the request of Mr. J. and the attorney for the child, an in camera interview with the child was held on October 26, 2023, after over 15 months of delays resulting from scheduling conflicts with the child and the child's attorney.[FN3]

Mr. J.'s direct case included his own testimony and testimony from his current wife, D.J. In addition, Mr. J. entered documentary evidence, including temporary orders of visitation and orders granting county pay for visitation supervisors in the instant matter, several photos of him with M., and a text message from M. Ms. H. also testified on her own behalf, and the attorney for the child called Mr. J. to testify in her case, and sought an in camera interview with her client. All counsel filed written summations by December 8, 2023.

This Court had the unique opportunity to assess the credibility, truthfulness and demeanor of both parties and D.J. during testimony over several trial dates, as well as during pre-trial conferences held in 2016 and 2017 and the status conferences held throughout trial into 2022. In general, all three witnesses presented as credible and sincere. Likewise, the child's testimony during his in camera interview was credible and consistent with the position put forth by the child's attorney throughout this proceeding—specifically, that the child opposes any order of visitation.

It is undisputed that M. and Mr. J. had a positive relationship preceding Mr. J.'s incarceration, which occurred prior to the child's fourth birthday. Mr. J. resided with Ms. H. and the child at his birth, and after he moved out when the parties separated, he continued to see M. regularly, spending significant amounts of time with him and generally caring for him. Mr. J.'s relationship with M. only began to deteriorate during Mr. J.'s incarceration. M. visited Mr. J. once while he was being held at Riker's Island, and during Mr. J.'s year at Riker's before he was convicted and issued a prison sentence, he spoke with M. by phone frequently. Mr. J. testified that he and M. spoke every other day: he would call Ms. H., and she would put M. on the phone. [*2]Mr. J. testified that these phone calls stopped occurring, but he did not offer an explanation as to why. Ms. H. agreed that Mr. J. and M. spoke frequently by phone in that period. Mr. J. also wrote letters to M., but never received a response. Throughout the life of this case, on several occasions, Ms. H.'s attorney raised that the letters Mr. J. sent to M. were derogatory and harassing toward Ms. H., and inappropriately questioned the child about Ms. H.'s personal life.[FN4]

Mr. J. commenced this proceeding while he was still incarcerated, and as a result, court-ordered visits were limited to telephone for the remainder of his incarceration. At the urging of the attorney for M., these calls were ordered to be supervised. By all accounts, phone contact was sporadic for an unfortunate confluence of reasons, including availability of all parties involved and restrictions from the various correctional facilities where Mr. J. was housed in that period. It is undisputed that in the two years that telephone visits were ordered, only a handful occurred.

Upon Mr. J.'s release, on consent of all parties and the child, this Court ordered weekly, in-person visits for four hours commencing on August 1, 2018. That order was discontinued at the next court date in November of 2018 when Mr. J.'s attorney contacted the court to inform the court and counsel that Mr. J. was withdrawing his petition. Mr. J. was directed to file a notice of withdrawal and never did so; at the next court appearance in January of 2019, it was put forth that Mr. J. was not withdrawing his petition, but that he was having contact with M. absent a court order. At that time, Ms. H. raised that M. was coming home from visits crying, and that Mr. J. continued to inappropriately question M. about Ms. H.'s personal life including making derogatory remarks about her partner with whom M. has a close relationship, which upset M. Without an updated position on visits from the child at that appearance, this Court declined to issue a new visitation order. At the next court date in April of 2019, the relationship between Mr. J. and M. remained strained, and Ms. H.'s attorney reported that she had blocked Mr. J. from calling her due to a reported threatening text message Mr. J. had sent to the family. Ms. H. remained willing to facilitate the visits, but only if M. wanted to visit with Mr. J. Continued trial dates were scheduled.

At the appearance for trial in August of 2019, in colloquy, the attorney for the child opposed an order for visits, but at this Court's urging, revisited the topic with M., who was present in court on the day of trial, and agreed to a visit that day, as well as weekly visits thereafter. By October 2019, both Ms. H. and the child opposed visits. Both reported that Mr. J. continued to question the child inappropriately about Ms. H. M.'s attorney reported that Mr. J. had sent M. photos of his child support payments and of court orders, and that M. had overheard Mr. J. urging Ms. H. to terminate his support, and inquiring about when he could sign away his parental rights. While Ms. H. opposed visits at that time, her position remained that she would support any visitation arrangement that M. wanted. Over the objection of the attorney for the child, this Court ordered therapeutic visits between M. and Mr. J. to be facilitated by either an agency or by M.'s individual therapist, if deemed appropriate. This order was continued on several court dates into 2021, yet these visits never occurred.

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Related

Matter of Michael J. v. Sherrie H.
2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U) (Kings Family Court, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 51880(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-michael-j-v-sherrie-h-nyfamctkings-2024.