People ex rel. William R. v. New York State Family Court

99 Misc. 2d 427, 416 N.Y.S.2d 960, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2306
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 Misc. 2d 427 (People ex rel. William R. v. New York State Family Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family 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. William R. v. New York State Family Court, 99 Misc. 2d 427, 416 N.Y.S.2d 960, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2306 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kathryn McDonald, J.

This consolidated proceeding is before the court in a somewhat complex procedural posture. There are three separate matters: a petition filed by New York Foundling Hospital (hereafter NYFH or the agency) pursuant to section 384-b of the Social Services Law seeking termination of parental rights and a transfer of custody and guardianship to NYFH; a petition filed by the Commissioner of Social Services (CSS) pursuant to section 1055 of the Family Court Act seeking an extension of this court’s original placement order entered in the course of a prior article 10 of the Social Services Law neglect proceeding; and a petition in the form of a writ of habeas corpus filed by the natural father seeking return of the children to his custody. All three petitions were consolidated, and a hearing was held on October 19 and 20 and concluded on October 25, 1978. Counsel were requested to submit post-trial memoranda in lieu of oral summations; the last was received on December 22, 1978.

The facts are uncontested unless otherwise noted.

The natural parents, William R. and Maria O., never married but lived together from 1967 to 1974, during which time three children were born: Yvonne, on October 23, 1968; Gladys, on June 9, 1970; and William, on April 20, 1973. In August, 1974, after many earlier criminal convictions, the natural father was convicted on drug charges and sentenced to prison for a two-year-to-life sentence. He was imprisoned until September, 1977.

[429]*429In 1975, the natural mother voluntarily placed Gladys, who suffers from severe physical and mental handicaps, in temporary foster care. In 1976, the mother abandoned the two other children and on December 7, 1976, the Family Court placed them in the CSS’s custody for 18 months.

During his entire imprisonment Mr. R. (whose whereabouts were then unknown) made no attempt to stay in touch with his family, and he testified he heard nothing from Maria O. Only after the agency, through its own diligent efforts, located him in Greenhaven Correctional Facility in August, 1977, did Mr. R. learn of the children’s foster care placements; immediately after being paroled, in September, 1977, he visited the agency (with Maria O., who reappeared briefly, and subsequently disappeared again) to seek custody or visitation.

The three children, meanwhile, had lived in separate foster homes and facilities until summer, 1977. The foster parents, Barbara and Frank C., had asked the agency for a handicapped child to adopt in 1976. After Gladys had been placed in their home for some two months, the C.’s requested that Yvonne and William join her; the children were reunited in September, 1977 for the first time since 1975.

In October, 1977 the agency denied Mr. R.’s requests for custody or visitation, and he began legal proceedings to protect his rights. On December 1, 1977 he was adjudicated the legal father, and, by agreement among counsel he had two visits with the children, the first in December, 1977 and the second in February, 1978. Only the oldest child, Yvonne, had any recollection of her father, William having been only one year old when Mr. R. was imprisoned, and Gladys being mentally incapacitated. Visits were discontinued when Yvonne and William became upset by them.

When these proceedings came to trial in October, 1978, Mr. R. was unemployed, on parole, and living on public assistance with a Ms. S., a woman he had known less than a year, who was expecting his child in December, 1978. Ms. S. never appeared at trial.

The foster parents, the C.’s, live with the three children in a three bedroom suburban garden apartment. Mr. C. is employed as a maintenance man; Mrs. C. is a full-time housewife.

The foregoing constitutes the basic factual background underlying the legal disputes. Other pertinent details are addressed in subsequent portions of this decision. The court now [430]*430turns to an examination of the petitions before it, and to an analysis of the parties’ legal contentions.

THE GUARDIANSHIP PETITION

At the outset of the hearing, the agency presented its evidence of abandonment by the natural mother, the only named respondent on the petition, who failed to appear at the hearing and whose whereabouts are unknown. At the conclusion of the hearing the court found, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that the natural mother, Maria O., abandoned her three children; in that since May, 1976, she failed to visit or communicate with them; that her only contact with the agency during this entire period consisted of two brief meetings with an agency caseworker on September 29, 1977 and October 14, 1977 when she was brought to the agency’s office by Mr. R; that those two agency contacts (not, note, contacts with her children) are insufficient to preclude a finding that Maria O. has otherwise evinced an unmistakable intent to forego her parental rights and obligations in a manner which manifestly rises to the level of abandonment as that term is set forth in section 384-b of the Social Services Law.1

Accordingly, on the basis of these findings the court adjudicated these children to be "abandoned” pursuant to subdivision 5 of section 384-b of the Social Services Law by their natural mother, Maria O.

Having made a fact finding adverse to the respondent parent in a petition under section 384-b of the Social Services Law, the court would ordinarily proceed to a dispositonal hearing to determine whether it is in the children’s best interests to sever the parental tie and free the child for adoption by transferring guardianship to the commissioner. Here, however, the intervening presence of the natural father, who is not named as a respondent on this petition and whose unfitness on specific statutory grounds is not alleged, raises a question of constitutional dimension which necessitates close scrutiny.

From the outset of this proceeding it has been the agency’s position that it need not allege nor prove statutory grounds of unfitness with regard to a natural father, such as Mr. R, who has been adjudicated the legal father of the children but who [431]*431never married the children’s mother. This view flows principally from the structure and statutory language of subdivision 2 of section 384-c of the Social Services Law which provides for notice to "any person adjudicated by a court in this state to be the father of the child” who is the subject of a proceeding initiated pursuant to section 384-b of the Social Services Law. Subdivision 3 of section 384-c specifically states that, "[t]he sole purpose of notice under this section shall be to enable the person served * * * to present evidence to the court relevant to the best interests of the child.” The clear implication of the text is that the agency need not name an unwed father as a respondent, nor prove his unfitness as a parent on statutory grounds, regardless of whether, as here, he has acquired the status of a legal father through an order of filiation.

This same distinction and concomitant limitation on the parental rights of an adjudicated but unwed father is even more manifest in the closely related sections 111 and 111-a of the Domestic Relations Law regarding the rights of unwed fathers in adoption proceedings. Section 111 of the Domestic Relations Law requires the consent "(b) Of the parents or surviving parent, whether adult or infant, of a child born in wedlock; (c) Of the mother,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of M./B. Children
2004 NY Slip Op 24554 (Kings Family Court, 2004)
In re the M./B. Children
7 Misc. 3d 272 (New York Family Court, 2004)
In re the Guardianship & Custody of Patti Ann N.
104 Misc. 2d 263 (NYC Family Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 Misc. 2d 427, 416 N.Y.S.2d 960, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-william-r-v-new-york-state-family-court-nyfamct-1979.