Sandra S. v. Abdul S.

30 Misc. 3d 797
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedOctober 20, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Misc. 3d 797 (Sandra S. v. Abdul S.) 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
Sandra S. v. Abdul S., 30 Misc. 3d 797 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ann E. O’Shea, J.

This is a custody proceeding brought on by the mother’s petition for custody of three of the parties’ four children, Nisaa S., [798]*798born on xx/xx/1997, Yusef S., born on xx/xx/1999, and Hakim S., born on xx/xx/2001.1 The children have resided primarily with their father since the beginning of November 2007 when, according to the father, the mother left but, according to the mother, the father locked her out of the family home.

On April 12, 2010, the Attorney for the Children (AFC or the children’s attorney) citing child-protective concerns, requested that the court interview the children in camera. Counsel for the mother and the father did not object, although the father’s attorney asked to be provided a transcript of the interviews, to which the AFC strenuously objected. I determined, without objection, to hold the in camera interviews but to withhold the transcripts of those interviews from the parents and their attorneys in order to afford the AFC an opportunity to file a motion to keep them confidential and counsel for each parent to respond. On April 30, 2010,1 met separately with Nisaa, Hakim, and Yusef. The children’s attorney was present during each of the interviews; the parents and their attorneys were not.

On June 17, 2010, the AFC filed a motion for an order granting the children’s mother temporary custody and directing that the transcripts of the in camera interviews remain confidential and that they be sealed for transmission to the appellate court in the event of appellate review. Neither the mother nor the father submitted any response to the AFC’s motion.

On June 23, 2010, based in large measure on what I learned during the in camera interviews, I determined that I had sufficient information to grant the AFC’s motion to the extent it sought a temporary transfer of physical custody of Nisaa and Hakim to the mother (see e.g. Assini v Assini, 11 AD3d 417, 418 [2d Dept 2004]; Rosenberg v Rosenberg, 60 AD3d 658 [2d Dept 2009]). I reserved decision with respect to Yusef to afford his attorney time to investigate a report that he had run away from his mother’s home during one of her visitation periods to return to his father. I subsequently awarded the mother temporary custody of Yusef as well based upon the recommendation of his attorney.

This decision addresses that part of the AFC’s motion for an order that the transcripts of the in camera interviews remain confidential and be sealed for transmission to the appellate court in the event of an appellate review. As no opposition [799]*799papers have been filed with the court, my determination is based upon the submission of the Attorney for the Children alone (see Middle Is. Drywall Supply v Kaufman & Broad Homes of Long Is., 74 AD2d 634, 635 [2d Dept 1980]). Except as described below, the motion is denied.

The instant motion pits the responsibility of a court in a custody proceeding to obtain what may be important, relevant information from the subject children, while shielding them as much as possible from the emotional fallout or retaliation that might ensue if their disclosures are revealed, against the court’s obligation to insure that the parents’ due process rights are protected, that they are afforded an opportunity to test, refute, or explain the children’s revelations, and that the court’s decision be informed by the most complete and tested evidence available.

In Kesseler v Kesseler (10 NY2d 445, 451 [1962]), the Court of Appeals held that a trial court may properly consider, but withhold from counsel for the opposing parties, reports which the parties stipulated could remain confidential, but that reports which are not included in the stipulation are subject to standard evidentiary rules and may not be considered by the court unless they are made available to the parties’ counsel (id. at 452, 455). In dicta, and by way of an analogy to the reports in issue in the case, the Court noted that in custody cases “parties frequently stipulate that the Trial Justice may interview the child in chambers . . . and . . . whatever impressions or information the child may give privately to him ... is necessarily secret unless the Justice chooses to disclose it.” (Id. at 451.)

Subsequently, in Matter of Lincoln v Lincoln (24 NY2d 270 [1969]), the Court of Appeals discounted the suggestion in Kesseler that a court could interview a child in camera only if the parties stipulated that it could do so, and held that a trial court in a custody case has discretion, without the consent of the parties — or even over their objection — to interview the child without the parents or their counsel present (id. at 274). The Court reasoned that the rights of the parents must give way to the welfare and interests of the child in custody cases and that, in order “to obtain a full understanding of the effect of parental differences on the child, as well as an honest expression of the child’s desires and attitudes” (id. at 272), the court may need to interview the child in private. Such interviews should be private in order to “limit the psychological danger to the child” and avoid placing the child “in the position of having its relation[800]*800ship with either parent further jeopardized by having to publicly relate its difficulties with them or be required to openly choose between them” (id.). Moreover, private interviews of the child by the court “will . . . be far more informative and worthwhile than the traditional procedures of the adversary system — an examination of the child under oath in open court” (id.).

Having concluded that judges in custody proceedings have discretion to hold private interviews with the subject children, the Court also recognized that there were “grave risks” in such interviews:

“A child whose home is or has been torn apart is subjected to emotional stresses that may produce completely distorted images of its [sic] parents and its [sic] situation. Also its [sic] feelings may be transient indeed, and the reasons for its [sic] preferences may indicate that no weight should be given the child’s choice. Without a full background on the family and the child, these interviews can lead the most conscientious Judge astray.” (Id. at 273.)

Acknowledging the risks, the Court cautioned trial courts to “not use any information, which has not been previously mentioned and is adverse to either parent, without in some way checking on its accuracy during the course of the open hearing” (id.; see also Matter of Benjamin v Benjamin, 48 AD3d 912 [3d Dept 2008]).2

Lincoln raised two distinct and competing concerns. The first is that the subject child be permitted to voice her opinions and preferences and that her confidences in those respects be honored so that she may speak freely without fear that she may be hurting the feelings of one or the other parent or that she will incur the wrath or resentment of the less-preferred parent. The Court resolved that concern by holding that a trial judge may interview the child without her parents or their attorneys present and without requiring her to testify or be subjected to cross-examination in open court.

The second and thornier concern raised by Lincoln is that the accuracy of information gleaned from the child, which may be [801]

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Bluebook (online)
30 Misc. 3d 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-s-v-abdul-s-nyfamct-2010.