Matter of Sarah S.

2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U)
CourtNew York Family Court, Monroe County
DecidedSeptember 15, 2005
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U) (Matter of Sarah S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Monroe County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Sarah S., 2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

Matter of Sarah S. (2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U)) [*1]
Matter of Sarah S.
2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U)
Decided on September 15, 2005
Family Court, Monroe County
O'Connor, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 September 15, 2005
Family Court, Monroe County


In the Matter of Sarah S., A Child under the Age of Eighteen Years Alleged to be Neglected by Carey S. and Edgar S., Respondents.




NN 003231-00/05E

Charles O. Baisch, Esq., Deputy County Attorney, for DHS

Christine Redfield, Esq., Assistant Public Defender, for Carey S.

Tynise Edwards, Esq., Assistant Conflict Defender, for Edgar S.

Mark D. Funk, Esq., Law Guardian

Marilyn L. O'Connor, J.
DECISION

In June, 2005 Monroe County Department of Human Services filed a proposed Order to Show Cause with supporting papers under Family Court Act, Article 10, requesting a modification of the placement of Sarah (DOB 1998), who had originally been adjudicated a neglected child by order made in February, 2001. The Department sought to move the child from the care and custody of Evelyn A. ("Ms. A."), a cousin of the child's mother, to the care and custody of the Monroe County Division of Social Services (DSS), i.e., foster care. The original neglect order had been extended several times, and through the Order to Show Cause signed in June, 2005, the placement of the child with DSS was approved on an interim basis pending determination of the modification proceeding. The matter could not be settled and went to a hearing.

The Department indicated it started this modification proceeding in great part because the relative resource, Ms. A., had asked for the child to be moved. However, throughout the modification proceedings Ms. A. denied that she had ever asked for Sarah to be removed from her care and by the time of trial she had filed for custody. At the time of the trial, the respondent mother wanted the child to remain with her cousin, Ms. A. The respondent father opposed the [*2]child being in foster care, arguing the Department had not done everything it could do to find an alternative, non-foster care placement. There was no evidence at any time that an alternative relative resource had been proposed for placement of the seven-year-old girl.


APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARD

A question arose as to the applicable test which must be met in order to justify moving the child from her relative resource home and placing her in the custody and care of DSS. The Family Court Act does not provide specific guidance in this regard. The purpose of Article 10, set forth in section 1011 of the Family Court Act, is as follows:

This article is designed to establish procedures to help protect children from injury or mistreatment and to help safeguard their physical, mental, and emotional well-being. It is designed to provide a due process of law for determining when the state, through its family court, may intervene against the wishes of a parent on behalf of a child so that his needs are properly met.

Furthermore, as set forth in section 1061 of the Family Court Act, "For good cause shown and after due notice, the court. . . on motion . . .may. . . modify or vacate any order issued in the course of a proceeding under this article." On the issue of the legal standard, the Department argued that it did not need to establish imminent risk (as needed for a removal of a child from the home of parents or legal guardians), but only that the proposed move to foster care is in the child's best interests. The attorney for respondent mother argued that this was essentially a removal hearing, and that the Department had a statutory obligation to exercise reasonable efforts to prevent a removal from Ms. A. which it had not met. She also argued that the best interests of the child were served by leaving Sarah with her relatives and not putting her in foster care. The respondent father's attorney offered no specific position on the applicable legal standard. The law guardian, who had not yet spoken with his client, did not take any position. After closing arguments, all parties were given the opportunity to submit written legal arguments, but no one did so. The law guardian did however submit a post-trial letter after consulting with Sarah. He then supported leaving Sarah in the specific foster care home in which she had been placed pursuant to the interim relief granted by the Order to Show Cause. For the reasons discussed below, the court concludes that the article 10 modification proceeding seeking to remove Sarah from a relative resource is governed by custody principles.

While no case law could be found which is directly on point, i.e., involving the potential transfer of a child from a relative resource to foster care, the Fourth Department has determined that article 10 proceedings are in their essence custody proceedings. Accordingly, it has applied the usual change of custody principles to them. From the Fourth Department's decisions it can be extrapolated that one must allege a significant change of circumstances in order to be entitled to a hearing to determine the best interests of the child arguably needing a new placement. If a substantial change of circumstances is established at the hearing, the best interests question can also be reached. In Matter of Michael W. (120 AD2d 87 [4th Dept. 1986]), as in a typical change of custody proceeding, the petition filed for a modification alleged a "change of circumstances" though in contrast to a typical change of custody petition, the petitioner was the Department of Social Services. In Matter of Michael W., the DSS alleged the child should be returned to his father because he had done what he needed to do to be an adequate father. The [*3]foster parents, who had had the child for more than 12 months in a pre-adoptive placement, sought to intervene. The Fourth Department explained in Matter of Michael W. (supra, p 91):

Although the aim of an article 10 proceeding is the opposite of a permanent neglect proceeding, i.e., the goal in a child protective proceeding is to reunite the family if possible, not to free the child for adoption, the decision to place the child in foster care expands the child protective proceeding into one which thereafter involves the custody of the child. . . . .n1

* * * * *

n1 Any remaining doubt as to whether a placement under section 1055 is a proceeding involving custody is dispelled by reference to the statute. Section 1055 (a) authorizes the court to "place the child in the custody of * * * the commissioner of social services" (emphasis supplied). Under this language it is clear that placement is a proceeding involving "custody".

The Fourth Department, citing Social Services Law, section 383(3), and Family Court Act, section 1055, held the foster parents had a right to participate regarding "the modification petition to return custody of the child to the father". The court specifically noted in Michael W. (supra

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Bluebook (online)
2005 NY Slip Op 51464(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-sarah-s-nyfamctmonroe-2005.