People ex rel. Fields v. Kaufmann

27 Misc. 2d 625, 207 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2723
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 Misc. 2d 625 (People ex rel. Fields v. Kaufmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Fields v. Kaufmann, 27 Misc. 2d 625, 207 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2723 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Vincent A. Lupiano, J.

This writ of habeas corpus proceeding was remanded to Special Term for a new hearing (9 A D 2d 375). At the first hearing the Justice presiding granted the writ and awarded custody of the two infant children involved to their mother with visitation rights to the father, the respondent.

Upon reversal of the order and remand, the Appellate Division cautioned that “ the reports submitted to the trial court are not a part of the record, and were not available to counsel for the parties. They contain many significant conclusions that were not explored on the trial. A determination would rest on a more solid foundation, if some of the facts and conclusions stated in the reports were developed, made a part of the record, and the parties given the opportunity to explore the issues in that respect. * * * That reports of experts are incalculably beneficial as aids to the court in custody matters is no longer open to question. What must be borne in mind, however, is that they are only aids and, if not woven into the fabric of the record, should not form the base for the decision” (supra, pp. 376, 378). The reports referred to are those made by the family counsellor, psychiatrist and psychologist, which were for the use of the court pursuant to stipulation of the parties; they may be made available to the parties or, if not, they should be so exposed or alluded to as to become woven into the fabric of the record ’ \

Extended hearings were conducted, which, at the outset, were prefaced by a preliminary hearing. At that initial juncture, the confidential reports made to the court were exposed in essential parts. In doing this the court said this procedure was taken so that in the course of presentation and development of the evidence * * * these things will be borne in mind and the respective witnesses who may be presented may be examined and cross-examined with such matters projected in the [627]*627examinations of those witnesses. In that way * * * any matters contained in the report, by such exposure, could be met with the challenge of examination and cross-examination and production of further witnesses * * * than those presented heretofore.”

Accordingly, when the hearings commenced in earnest, pertinent matters contained in the reports which had been used by the experts became 11 woven into the fabric of the record ”. However, the recommendations of the experts did not, in my opinion, require outset revelation and were withheld. In that sphere, the court elected to deal with such findings by launching lines-of inquiry from that phase of the report, thusly providing more than inkling stimulation for the examination of the parties, witnesses, and the presentation of other evidence relevant thereto. Having been alerted to some of the matters stated in the reports and given sufficient interval, the parties attacked and counterattacked along those lines which suited their interests. In this process, conclusions became sufficiently well tested and essentialities came to rest in the “ fabric of the record ”. Of course, these reports do not replace the primary importance of tested record considerations; yet, when they find support in the record they should, naturally, have a significant impact upon the judicial process, else there would be no point in having them in the first place. And when it appears that the family counsellor, psychologist and psychiatrist have considered facts, tested and tried through the opportunity of exposure and examination, their reports, so based, become worthy and useful aids. I must say that the excellent report of the family counsellor (Mrs. Sylvia L. Golomb) has proved to be just that, in this most difficult situation.

The relator brought on the writ on behalf of Marion Groen (maiden name), mother of the children, who will hereinafter be referred to as the petitioner. The children of petitioner and the defendant, Roland J. Kaufmann, are a daughter, Toni, now almost eight years old, born on August 18, 1952, and Peter, six years old, born on January 26,1954. The petitioner and defendant were formerly husband and wife. They were first married on April 24, 1947. They separated in November, 1949. The first marriage was annulled in May, 1950. About eight months later, on January 20, 1951, they remarried. Petitioner was stricken with polio on September 14, 1953, when she was pregnant with Peter, and has since been confined to a wheel chair. They separated again July, 1954, signed a separation agreement on May 31, 1956 and were divorced August 13, 1956. The writ involved herein was returnable in February, 1959; the first bear[628]*628ing was held in October, 1959; the new hearing extended through May, 1960.

The facts adduced upon remand are similar, in the main, to those brought forth at the original hearing. However, the evidence developed under suggestions of the Appellate Division has been enlarged; some of which has been culled and explored by the parties with finite degree. Each party attempted to portray the other in a cold and selfish aspect, touching upon facets both as parent and former spouse. It is more important, of course, to see each party in the role of parent, since it is the duty of this court to award custody to the parent who can better serve the children’s best interests (see Domestic Delations Law, § 70). The intensity of the situation may be felt in the feeling of the Appellate Division that While both parents here appear to be worthy enough to be entrusted with the care of the children, we have grave doubts as to which is better qualified” (supra, p. 376).

This proceeding has been bitterly and closely waged. Both parties seek permanent custody of the children. From March 1 until October 3, 1954, petitioner was a patient at the Institute for Physical Medicine and Behabilitation, New York City; a day later, she took up a position as resident nurse at Bellevue Hospital, earning $3,180 per year. She was then physically unable to take care of the children. Defendant agreed to care for the children until the mother could do so and has done so up to the present time. Petitioner, now, vigorously asserts her ability to assume full parental responsibility.

In July, 1954 petitioner told defendant' that she did not wish to live with him; that she intended to terminate their marriage. In 1952, the family had moved to an apartment on East 4th Street, New York City, and defendant continues to reside there, with the children, and his former housekeeper, Marianne Sven-son, now his wife, whom he married on February 20, 1959, the day the writ was returnable.

With great determination, petitioner continued and continues to pursue her career, although largely confined to a self-operated wheel chair. She remained at Bellevue as a medical co-ordinator until December, 1957, when she moved to Collingswood, New Jersey, a metropolitan suburb of Philadelphia; then she began work as director of nursing at Magee Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia. On November 13, 1959 she moved to her present residence in Philadelphia, assuming her present position, in January, 1960, as director of-nursing services for a group of convalescent homes in Philadelphia, at a salary increasing from $6,000 to $10,000 per year. She has leased an apartment in a [629]*629housing development not far from where she' is employed. There she resides alone, and would like to have her children in an environment which she urges has far better play and school opportunities than those in the neighborhood where they presently live.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Misc. 2d 625, 207 N.Y.S.2d 870, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-fields-v-kaufmann-nysupct-1960.