Matter of N'Thai N. (Mali N.)

2025 NY Slip Op 05723
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 16, 2025
DocketCV-23-0082
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 05723 (Matter of N'Thai N. (Mali N.)) 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 N'Thai N. (Mali N.), 2025 NY Slip Op 05723 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Matter of N'Thai N. (Mali N.) (2025 NY Slip Op 05723)

Matter of N'Thai N. (Mali N.)
2025 NY Slip Op 05723
Decided on October 16, 2025
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:October 16, 2025

CV-23-0082

[*1]In the Matter of N'Thai N. and Others, Alleged to be Neglected Children. Albany County Department of Children, Youth and Families, Respondent; Mali N., Appellant. (Proceeding No. 1.) (And Two Other Related Proceedings.)

In the Matter of N'Thai N. and Others, Alleged to be Abused Children. Albany County Department of Children, Youth and Families, Respondent; Mali N., Appellant. (Proceeding No. 4.) (And Two Other Related Proceedings.)


Calendar Date:September 11, 2025
Before:Clark, J.P., Pritzker, Reynolds Fitzgerald and McShan, JJ.

Matthew C. Hug, Albany, for appellant.

Eugenia Koutelis Condon, County Attorney, Albany (Daniel C. McGinn of counsel), for respondent.

Pamela J. Joern, East Chatham, attorney for the children.

Veronica Reed, Schenectady, attorney for the children.



Pritzker, J.

Appeal from an order of the Family Court of Albany County (Amy Joyce, J.), entered February 9, 2022, which granted petitioner's applications, in six proceedings pursuant to Family Ct Act article 10, to adjudicate the subject children to be abused and neglected.

Respondent is the father of two children (born in 2006 and 2009). In 2018, respondent lived in a house in Schenectady County with his two children, his mother (hereinafter the grandmother), his brother (hereinafter the brother), the brother's three children, his paramour and her two children and his stepchild, of whom he had custody (eight children altogether). On April 6, 2018, one of the brother's children (born in 2003, hereinafter the deceased child) who was severely autistic, nonverbal and required intense supervision due to his tendency to ingest nonfood items, was left unattended while respondent was in the home. The deceased child found a bag of loose oxycodone pills, ingested the pills as well as part of the bag, overdosed on the medication and died. Thereafter, the grandmother and the brother were held criminally responsible for the deceased child's death. Alongside the police investigation into the deceased child's death, the Schenectady County Department of Social Services (hereinafter SCDSS) also began an investigation and filed abuse petitions against respondent, the brother and the grandmother, which were later withdrawn once an investigation in Albany County was commenced.

Respondent then moved into another home in Albany County with his two children, the paramour and her two children and two children of the brother. As a result of an initial investigation by the State Police into respondent's suspected drug dealing, they executed a search warrant on the Albany County home on January 31, 2019. The children were present in the house when this occurred. Police found a locked lockbox in one of the children's rooms that contained, among other things, heroin and crack cocaine. Respondent was arrested, charged with various drug offenses and endangering the welfare of a child and subsequently pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree.

In connection with the 2019 arrest of respondent, respondent's two children and the two children of the brother were removed from the home and placed in petitioner's custody. In February 2019, petitioner filed three neglect petitions against respondent alleging that he failed to maintain a safe and clean home for the six children in the home due to, among other things, the presence of drugs as well as the lack of cleanliness in the home. Four months later, petitioner filed three abuse petitions alleging that respondent abused the deceased child and derivatively abused the other seven children who were in the home the day that the deceased child died. The petition also alleged that respondent was legally responsible for all eight of the children, that he knew or should have known about the rampant [*2]drug use by adults in the Schenectady County home and that respondent failed to take the necessary steps as a reasonably prudent parent to protect all of the children from the hazardous and unsecured drugs that killed the deceased child.

Family Court heard testimony on these petitions at a three-day fact-finding hearing and subsequently found that respondent neglected his two children, the brother's two children and the paramour's two children based upon the events of January 31, 2019, when the search warrant was executed and drugs were found in the home. Petitioner alleged that these events placed the children in imminent risk of harm and thus demonstrated that respondent failed to exercise a minimal degree of care. The court further found that respondent abused the deceased child and derivatively abused respondent's two children, his stepchild, the brother's two children and the paramour's two children. The court explained that petitioner sufficiently demonstrated a prima facie case of abuse by presenting evidence that the deceased child had significant developmental and physical limitations, needed help with basic hygiene tasks and had a propensity to ingest nonfood items, and, despite knowing this, respondent left the child unattended in a home where he knew or should have known that the brother left unsecured narcotics, which the child overdosed on. The court then explained that respondent failed to rebut this evidence of culpability because, although respondent claimed he did not know the brother was using narcotics or that the deceased child was left unattended, the court stated that as a person legally responsible for the child, it was his duty to know the child's whereabouts given his needs and the tendencies toward drug use in the home by the other adults and a reasonably prudent person would have acted differently under the circumstances. The court further found that respondent also exposed the remaining children to the conditions that led to the deceased child's death and, in doing so, respondent evinced a fundamentally flawed understanding of his responsibilities as a parent that placed the children at a substantial risk of harm, such that respondent derivatively abused these children. Respondent appeals.

We turn first to respondent's assertion that Family Court's findings of abuse and derivative abuse are not supported by a sound and substantial basis in the record. As relevant here, "[t]o sustain a finding of abuse, the petitioner must demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that a parent or other legally responsible person either created or inflicted — or allowed to be created or inflicted — physical injury or substantial risk of physical injury by other than accidental means which caused or created a substantial risk of death, or serious or protracted disfigurement, or protracted impairment of physical or emotional health or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ" (Matter of Lazeria F. [Paris [*3]H.], 193 AD3d 145, 148 [3d Dept 2021] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]). "Proof of injuries to a child that would ordinarily not occur absent an act or omission of the respondent, along with evidence that the respondent was the caretaker of the child at the time of the injury, shall be prima facie evidence of abuse . . .

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Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 05723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-nthai-n-mali-n-nyappdiv-2025.