Matter of Shirley XX. v. Molly YY.

CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 4, 2026
DocketCV-24-1728
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of Shirley XX. v. Molly YY. (Matter of Shirley XX. v. Molly YY.) 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 Shirley XX. v. Molly YY., (N.Y. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Matter of Shirley XX. v Molly YY. - 2026 NY Slip Op 03484
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Law Reporting
Bureau
Thomas J.K. Smith, State Reporter

Matter of Shirley XX. v Molly YY.

2026 NY Slip Op 03484

June 4, 2026

Appellate Division, Third Department

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 Shirley XX., Respondent-Appellant,

v

Molly YY., Appellant- Respondent, et al., Respondent. Attorney for the Child, Appellant- Respondent.

Decided and Entered:June 4, 2026

CV-24-1728

Calendar Date: April 23, 2026

Before: Clark, J.P., Aarons, Pritzker, Mcshan And Ryba, JJ.

Kelley M. Enderley, Poughkeepsie, for Molly YY., appellant-respondent.

Betty J. Potenza, Milton, attorney for the child, appellant-respondent.

Bousquet Holstein PLLC, Syracuse (Ryan S. Suser of counsel), for respondent-appellant.

[*1]

Clark, J.P.

Appeal from an order of the Family Court of Tompkins County (Matthew Hayden, J.), entered September 12, 2024, which granted petitioner's application, in a proceeding pursuant to Family Ct Act article 6, for visitation with the subject child.

Respondent Molly YY. (hereinafter the mother) is the mother of the subject child (born in 2013). Petitioner Shirley XX. (hereinafter the grandmother) is the child's maternal grandmother, who has played a substantial caretaking role in the child's life. In October 2014, the grandmother moved by order to show cause for visitation with the child. She was awarded a temporary visitation schedule during the pendency of the proceeding amounting to 16 hours per week and one overnight per month. That proceeding was ultimately resolved in July 2015, when Family Court (Morris, J.) issued an order on consent that awarded the mother sole legal and physical custody of the child, with the grandmother granted one 24-hour period of visitation per week.

In July 2018, the grandmother and the mother sent a notarized letter to Family Court seeking termination of the July 2015 visitation order on the basis that it was no longer necessary. In the letter, both parties agreed that it was "best for [the child]" to continue to have visitation with the grandmother given their "strong bond," but requested "the opportunity to heal and move forward from the Family Court system." In accordance with such sentiment, the mother thereafter formally petitioned to terminate the grandmother's visitation, which was granted in November 2018.

The relationship between the grandmother and the mother subsequently deteriorated and, in January 2022, the grandmother filed another petition for visitation with the child alleging, among other things, that the mother had abruptly restricted her contact with the child and raising a concern that "such an extreme and abrupt" reduction in visitation would negatively impact the child. The January 2022 proceeding was subsequently resolved by stipulation of the parties, with the grandmother agreeing to withdraw her petition and the mother consenting to a set visitation schedule for the grandmother which included multiple overnights per month and a full week during the summer. The parties followed that schedule for a period of time, but their relationship subsequently broke down again and, by the fall of 2023, the mother had placed restrictions on the grandmother's contact with the child. This prompted the grandmother to commence the instant proceeding seeking an order of visitation.

Following a fact-finding hearing and Lincoln hearings with the child, Family Court (Hayden, J.) issued a 41-page decision that, as relevant here, granted the grandmother visitation with the child on a limited basis.FN1 In so doing, the court first determined that the grandmother had standing to seek visitation with the child under Domestic Relations Law § 72 by virtue of her substantial caretaking role and consistent presence in the child's [*2]life. As for its finding that court-ordered visitation with the grandmother was in the child's best interests, the court recognized that it was "required to provide a fit parent the presumption that [his or] her parenting decisions are in the best interest[s] of [his or her] child." However, the court expressed concern about the mother's choice to expose the child to her animus toward the grandmother, which it found had influenced the child's relationship with the grandmother and was a source of the child's "overwhelming" stress. The court further determined that the child's position had been "pressured, coached, or encouraged" by the mother and her husband and that the mother's stated rationale for cutting off visitation with the grandmother — i.e., due to the child's alleged desire not to have contact — was "pretextual" and "born[e] out of [the mother]'s own complicated history" with the grandmother. Emphasizing that the grandmother had played a substantial role in the child's life and was a nurturing and loving resource, the court found that the mother's anger at the grandmother did not "provide a valid basis for [her] to seek to cut off all visitation" with the child, whose best interests would be served by continuing to visit with the grandmother. The mother and the child separately appeal, and the grandmother cross-appeals.FN2

Initially, contrary to the mother's contention, Family Court properly concluded that the grandmother established standing to petition for visitation with the child. In circumstances where a child's parents are alive, grandparents may obtain standing to seek visitation with their grandchildren when they "can establish circumstances in which equity would see fit to intervene" (Matter of Emanuel S. v Joseph E., 78 NY2d 178, 181 [1991]; see Domestic Relations Law § 72 [1]).For grandparents to have standing under the equitable circumstances prong of Domestic Relations Law § 72 (1), they "must establish a sufficient existing relationship with their grandchild, or in cases where that has been frustrated by the parents, a sufficient effort to establish one, so that the court perceives it as one deserving the court's intervention" (Matter of Emanuel S. v Joseph E., 78 NY2d at 182; accord Matter of Ferguson v Weaver, 165 AD3d 1397, 1397-1398 [3d Dept 2018]; see Matter of Daniel RR. v Heather RR., 221 AD3d 1301, 1302 [3d Dept 2023]). Here, the grandmother readily established standing to seek visitation with the child by virtue of her substantial and prolonged caretaking role in the child's life from birth until the commencement of this proceeding. Moreover, the child was previously closely bonded with the grandmother and the grandmother has made considerable efforts to maintain a relationship with the child despite the mother's restrictions (see Matter of Vandenburg v Vandenburg, 137 AD3d 1498, 1499 [3d Dept 2016]; compare Matter of Couse v Couse, 72 AD3d 1231, 1232 [3d Dept 2010]).

Having established standing, the question becomes [*3]

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Matter of Shirley XX. v. Molly YY., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-shirley-xx-v-molly-yy-nyappdiv-2026.