Matter of Z.V. (J.V.)
This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 50100(U) (Matter of Z.V. (J.V.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Matter of Z.V. (J.V.) |
| 2025 NY Slip Op 50100(U) |
| Decided on January 28, 2025 |
| Family Court, New York County |
| Wilkofsky, 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| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 28, 2025
In the Matter of Z.V.,
A Child Under Eighteen years of Age Alleged to be Neglected by J.V., Respondent. |
Docket No. NN-xxxxx-24
Special Assistant Corporation Counsel Andrew Deckel, for the NYC Administration for Children's Services
Special Assistant Corporation Counsel Taris Rodney, for the NYC Administration for Children's Services
Christina Nevarez, Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem, attorney for the respondent mother
Ryan Napoli, Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem, attorney for the respondent mother
Marly Gonzalez, Lawyers for Children, attorney for subject child
Yael Wilkofsky, J.
On or about May 31, 2024, the petitioner Administration for Children's Services ("ACS") filed a Family Court Act ("FCA") Article 10 neglect petition on behalf of the subject child Z.V. (the "subject child") against the respondent J.V. (the "respondent father"). The respondent father now moves for an Order directing that a visitation assessment be conducted by S.N., LMSW, to assess what, if any, parental visitation or conduct is recommended between the respondent father and the subject child. For the reasons set forth below, the respondent father's motion is denied.
The petition alleges that the respondent father fails to provide the subject child with proper supervision and guardianship based on allegations of excessive corporal punishment. Specifically, the allegations in the petition are as follows. On or about May 22, 2024, the [*2]respondent father burst into the bathroom of their apartment and told the subject child, who was 12 years old at the time, to "square up." The respondent father then took the subject child's laptop and antagonized her to take the laptop back from him. When the subject child attempted to retrieve her laptop from the respondent father, he placed her into a chokehold with his arm around her neck. The subject child then went into the kitchen and the respondent father followed her, at which point the respondent father again placed her in a chokehold and wrestled her to the living room floor. The subject child reported that during the incident, she felt strangled and like she was about to die as she was struggling to breathe and could not feel oxygen. After the respondent father released the subject child from the chokehold, the subject child ran out of the apartment, went to her former school to report the incident, and refused to return to the respondent father's home. On or about May 23, 2024, a forensic interview was conducted at the Manhattan Child Advocacy Center ("CAC") during which the subject child disclosed that the respondent father had wrestled her to the floor prior to the May 22, 2024 incident and that he does so whenever she behaves badly in school or is disrespectful. At the CAC interview, the subject child was observed to have a quarter-sized brown bruise in the center of her right cheek, two-inch long red scratch marks on her right forearm and a red mark on her left forearm, which, the subject child reported, were caused by the respondent father during the May 22, 2024 incident. Thereafter, the subject child was brought to the hospital, received medical attention and was subsequently discharged.
On May 31, 2024, at intake on the neglect petition, the Court removed the subject child from the respondent father, finding that it would be contrary to the subject child's welfare to return home to the respondent father and that removal was necessary to avoid imminent risk to the subject child's life or health. The Court temporarily directly placed the subject child with her adult half-sister. The Court issued a full stay away temporary order of protection against the respondent father on behalf of the subject child except for agency supervised visitation, at the subject child's discretion. At a June 10, 2024 court appearance, the respondent father made an application for resource supervised visitation and family therapy. The subject child's counsel opposed the request on the grounds that there had not yet been any agency-supervised visits based on the subject child's steadfast refusal to visit with the respondent father, that she had not yet spoken to the subject child about expanding to resource-supervised visits and that based on the allegations in the petition, the respondent father should be engaged in his own services prior to beginning family therapy with the subject child. The Court issued an Order permitting the respondent father to have resource-supervised phone contact with the subject child, at the subject child's discretion, and reiterated that all in-person visitation was to be agency-supervised and at the subject child's discretion. At a court appearance on July 25, 2024, the Court again addressed visitation between the respondent father and the subject child. The Child Protective Specialist ("CPS") assigned to the case informed the Court that the subject child was reluctant to have in-person visitation with the respondent father, even if the visits were supervised, and that although the subject child loves her father, she was not yet ready to have virtual visits with him either as she was still working through her feelings about the respondent father's behavior toward her. At a court appearance on November 18, 2024, when discussing visitation, counsel for the subject child informed the Court that in October 2024, the subject child had a telephone visit with the respondent father that did not go well, specifically, that during the visit, the respondent father was crying to the subject child asking the subject child to return home and blaming the subject child's sister for things that the subject child felt were the respondent father's fault. Counsel for [*3]the subject child further reported that the subject child did not wish to have any visits with the respondent father, that she wanted to remain in her sister's care and that the subject child would like to engage in therapy. Counsel for the subject child also asserted that perhaps if the respondent father was engaged in his own therapeutic services, the subject child would be less reluctant to visit with him. Additionally, counsel for the subject child requested that the respondent father provide the subject child with all her personal belongings which had remained in his home since the case was filed. The Court ordered that the respondent father give the subject child all her personal belongings and that the petitioner assist in ensuring that the subject child obtain all her belongings from the respondent father's home. The Court also ensured that the petitioner was making a referral for individual therapy for the subject child.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2025 NY Slip Op 50100(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-zv-jv-nycfamct-2025.