Matter of Natalie P. v. Steven L.R.

CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 23, 2026
DocketIndex No. V-16345-18/18|Appeal No. 6434|Case No. 2024-03792|
StatusPublished
AuthorGesmer
Cited by1 cases

This text of Matter of Natalie P. v. Steven L.R. (Matter of Natalie P. v. Steven L.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Natalie P. v. Steven L.R., (N.Y. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Matter of Natalie P. v Steven L.R. - 2026 NY Slip Op 02458

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Court Decisions Resources About

Matter of Natalie P. v Steven L.R.

2026 NY Slip Op 02458

April 23, 2026

Appellate Division, First Department

Gesmer, J.

Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.

This decision is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.

In the Matter of Natalie P., Petitioner-Respondent,

v

Steven L.R., Respondent-Appellant.

Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Judicial Department

Decided and Entered: April 23, 2026

Index No. V-16345-18/18|Appeal No. 6434|Case No. 2024-03792|

Saliann Scarpulla

David Friedman Ellen Gesmer Martin Shulman Margaret A. Chan

Law Office of Bryan Greenberg, LLC, New York (Bryan Greenberg of counsel), for appellant.

Jill M. Zuccardy, New York, for respondent.

Lawyers for Children, Inc., New York (Shirim Nothenberg of counsel), attorney for the child.

Respondent father appeals from an order of Family Court, New York County (Anna R. Lewis, J.), entered on or about May 17, 2024, which granted the mother's petition to modify an order of custody and visitation.

Gesmer, J. [*1]

This case presents the difficult situation faced by a judge addressing a petition by a party who seeks to modify a custody order issued by a court of another state. Under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act [UCCJEA] (Domestic Relations Law Art. 5-A, §§ 75 — 78-a), even where New York has become the child's "[h]ome state" (Domestic Relations Law §75-a[7]), a New York judge does not have jurisdiction to modify a custody order issued by a foreign state unless either: 1) the foreign state cedes jurisdiction; or 2) neither the parents nor the child continue to reside in the foreign state (Domestic Relations Law § 76-b). Since neither of these situations was present in this case, Family Court had no jurisdiction to modify the custody order before it. Alternatively, if the New York judge determines that it is necessary to protect a child, sibling or parent, the court may take temporary emergency jurisdiction, communicate with the foreign court, and issue a time-limited order as necessary to protect the child and t0 permit the party seeking a modification to request it in the foreign court (Domestic Relations Law § 76-c). Here, since Family Court failed to communicate with the foreign court and failed to specify a time-limited duration for its order, it also did not appropriately take emergency jurisdiction.

In this case, respondent father appeals from an order of the Family Court, New York County, which granted the mother's petition to modify a 2015 order of custody and visitation issued by the District Court of Brewster County, Texas. He argues that Family Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to modify the Texas custody order. For the reasons discussed below, we agree, and find that the order appealed from should be vacated and the matter remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this order.

The parties separated shortly after the birth of their child in 2012. Until 2015, both parties and the child resided in Texas. By order dated April 16, 2015, the District Court of Brewster County, Texas granted the mother's request for a modification of that court's April 16, 2014 custody order. The 2015 order permitted the mother to choose a primary residence for the child anywhere within the continental United States and provided a modified visitation schedule for the father. The 2015 order also continued the 2014 order's permanent injunction directing the father not to communicate with the mother, except by email, and to stay away from the mother's residence, and modified the injunction by adding a directive that the father not engage in behavior "likely to annoy, alarm, abuse, torment, or embarrass" the mother.

[*2]

The mother moved with the child to New York in 2015 to attend graduate school. She registered the 2015 Texas custody order in Kings County Family Court in July 2015 (Domestic Relations Law § 77-d). The father was notified of the registration and did not object. The mother later married and had a second child in New York. The parties' child visited her father in Texas in 2015 for Christmas, and during the summer and for Christmas in 2016 and 2017. In 2018, the child again visited her father in Texas during the summer. Upon the child's return, the child complained of vaginal discomfort, began compulsively wiping herself, had trouble sleeping, and made statements to the mother that caused her to be concerned that the child had been abused.

On September 5, 2018, the mother filed a pro se petition in New York County Family Court seeking a modification of the Texas custody order to permit her to obtain a passport for the child. On or about November 20, 2018, after the mother retained counsel, her attorney filed an amended petition seeking a modification to award the mother sole physical and legal custody, suspend or impose conditions on the father's video calls with the child, decrease his in-person visitation, and require his in-person visits to be supervised. On or about November 26, 2018, the mother's attorney filed an order to show cause seeking to suspend the father's visitation and video calls with the child pending trial. Family Court granted the mother's request in her order to show cause for an order temporarily suspending the father's in-person visitation. He has not visited the child since summer 2018. Although the father continued to have the right to speak to the child on video calls, he has not done so since September 2021.

The initial trial date scheduled for June 2020 was adjourned due to the pandemic. Family Court held a trial on the issues raised in the mother's petition and order to show cause, which Family Court referred to as a "custody trial," on May 9, 2022, January 27, 2023, and April 26, 2023. At trial, the mother and her counsel appeared, the father appeared remotely and by counsel, and the child was represented by counsel. On January 24, 2024, Family Court conducted an in camera interview with the child, who was 11 years old at the time. The parties also submitted post-trial written submissions.

By order dated May 17, 2024, Family Court issued the order now appealed from, which purports to modify the Texas custody order to grant sole physical and legal custody to the mother and suspend all visitation between the child and her father. We now reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with the UCCJEA.

[*3]

The UCCJEA is intended "to provide an effective mechanism to obtain and enforce orders of custody and visitation across state lines and to do so in a manner that ensures that the safety of the children is paramount and that victims of domestic violence and child abuse are protected" (Domestic Relations Law § 75[2]). It establishes a system to determine which court has priority to exercise "exclusive, continuing jurisdiction" (Domestic Relations Law § 76-a; see also 2001 Recommendation of the Family Court Advisory and Rules Committee).

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