New Jersey Division of Youth & Family Services v. S.S.

902 A.2d 215, 187 N.J. 556, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1083
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 18, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 902 A.2d 215 (New Jersey Division of Youth & Family Services v. S.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Jersey Division of Youth & Family Services v. S.S., 902 A.2d 215, 187 N.J. 556, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1083 (N.J. 2006).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Too many children are born into homes where they are neglected or abused by unfit parents. When parents expose their children to persistent peril, the State removes the children from their homes to safeguard their welfare. In the process, the natural order of familial relationships is often irrevocably altered. In many cases, brothers and sisters are separated from one another and placed in different foster homes. As they are integrated into new families, the question arises whether the separated siblings have a right to a continuing relationship with one another.

In this case, the Family Court terminated S.S.’s parental rights to her biological daughter, A.M.S. The Appellate Division affirmed, and S.S. does not challenge the termination of her rights. At the time of A.M.S.’s birth, her four older siblings had been removed from S.S.’s home. As A.M.S. approaches her fourth birthday, she lives happily with the only family she has known her entire life, a foster family that loves and wishes to adopt her. Her four older siblings, now ages six, nine, thirteen, and sixteen, live with another family that has already adopted them. Through the cooperation and caring of those two families, A.M.S. has been able to visit and maintain a continuing relationship with her siblings.

A.M.S.’s law guardian petitioned for certification, challenging the permanency plan for A.M.S.’s future adoption and asserting the right of A.M.S. to sibling visitation in a post-adoption setting. We granted certification “limited solely to the issue of whether'the Division of Youth and Family Services or the courts have an affirmative duty to ensure that contact between siblings is maintained, even in a post-adoption context, when the siblings are in separate homes.”. 185 N.J. 296, 884 A.2d 1266 (2005). We also *559 granted the motion filed by the New Jersey Child Advocate to participate as amicus curiae.

Because a sibling relationship is not in jeopardy in this case, we have no genuine controversy and therefore we now vacate certification as improvidently granted. We commend to the Legislature’s attention the important issues raised here concerning the scope of sibling rights in the context of the Child Placement Bill of Rights Act, N.J.S.A 9:6B-1 to -6, the Grandparent and Sibling Visitation Statute, N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1, and the Adoption Act, N.J.S.A 9:3-37 to -56.

I.

The law guardian essentially argues that the right of A.M.S. to visitation with her adopted siblings should not be dependent on the discretion of their respective families. As of the present date, those families have voluntarily cooperated to bring A.M.S. together with her three brothers and sister. Using this case as a vehicle, the law guardian seeks to have this Court establish an independent right to sibling visitation in appropriate circumstances, even against the will of the adoptive parents. The law guardian underscores “the importance of sibling relationships to children who are placed in the foster care system” and the reality that following a parental-rights-termination trial, the only remaining and lasting ties may be the biological bonds between brothers and sisters. Thus, the law guardian submits that when maintaining sibling relationships is at issue in a guardianship hearing, the trial court must consider whether “continuing sibling contact is in the child’s best interests.”

Amicus curiae New Jersey Child Advocate supports the law guardian’s position, but adds that siblings, even when adopted by separate families, possess a right of visitation—a right to associate with one another guaranteed by Article I, Paragraph 1 of the New Jersey Constitution. The Child Advocate asserts that “clinical research literature demonstrates that the sibling relationship is of tremendous importance to children, who have been removed from *560 their homes due to abuse or neglect.” The Child Advocate, however, notes that recognizing a fundamental sibling right to association “could lead to conflicts between a child to be adopted, the child’s sibling, and the putative adoptive parents that a court would have to address and resolve at the time of adoption.” One example of a conflict that could arise, according to the Child Advocate, is “when both siblings wish to maintain the sibling relationship and the potential adoptive parents do not agree to the maintenance of that relationship.” In such circumstances, the Child Advocate suggests that the court must “afford substantial deference to the ... child’s constitutional right to maintain sibling visitation.”

DYFS, on the other hand, contends that there is no constitutional right to post-adoption sibling visitation. According to DYFS, “existing constitutional law is clear that the fundamental right to parent autonomy and privacy cannot be eclipsed by the creation of a competing right for sibling contact.” Moreover, DYFS reasons that “enforceable post-adoption sibling visitation is not consistent with” this State’s adoption laws or the Grandparent and Sibling Visitation Statute as construed in In re Adoption of a Child by W.P. & M.P., 163 N.J. 158, 748 A.2d 515 (2000). DYFS urges that this Court not authorize judges to impose sibling visitation on adoptive families, fearing that such a judicial remedy “would adversely effect [DYFS’s] ability to recruit and maintain adoptive parents.” DYFS stresses that “once adoption is granted, the integrity of the new family” unit is paramount and must be protected from interference by relatives from the prior family unit.

A.

The importance of sibling relationships is well recognized by our courts and social science scholars. In L. v. G., the court stated that “[a] sibling relationship can be an independent emotionally supportive factor for children in ways quite distinctive from other relationships, and there are benefits and experiences that a child *561 reaps from a relationship with his or her brother(s) or sister(s) which truly cannot be derived from any other.” 203 N.J.Super. 385, 395, 497 A.2d 215 (Ch.Div.1985). According to that court, “[t]he bonds which develop between brothers and sisters are strong ones, and are, in most cases, irreplaceable.” Id. at 398, 497 A.2d 215. Some mental health experts believe that the sibling relationship can be “longer lasting and more influential than any other, including those with parents, spouse, or children[,]” and that “[w]hen it is severed, the fallout can last a lifetime.” Nat’l Adoption Info. Clearinghouse, The Sibling Bond: Its Importance in Foster Care and Adoptive Placement 1 (1992), http://www.eMldwelfare.gov/pubs/f—siblin.pdf; see also Ellen Marrus, “Where Have You Been, Fran?” The Right of Siblings to Seek Court Access to Override Parental Denial of Visitation, 66 Tenn. L.Rev. 977, 987 (1999) (“[0]ver the course of an entire lifespan, siblings have significant influence on each other’s lives. If nurtured and maintamed, these relationsMps can provide emotional security, affect the intellectual, social, emotional, and moral development of one another, and offer lifetime companionship.”).

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Bluebook (online)
902 A.2d 215, 187 N.J. 556, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-jersey-division-of-youth-family-services-v-ss-nj-2006.