State ex rel. J.D.

588 A.2d 842, 247 N.J. Super. 37, 1991 N.J. Super. LEXIS 87
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 25, 1991
StatusPublished

This text of 588 A.2d 842 (State ex rel. J.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. J.D., 588 A.2d 842, 247 N.J. Super. 37, 1991 N.J. Super. LEXIS 87 (N.J. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ASHBEY, J.A.D

The Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS) appeals from a Family Part May 25, 1990 court order involving the alleged delinquent J.D. and the family of P.S., a DYFS foster mother.1 J.D. was under the custody of DYFS and had been placed with the P.S. family, apparently with a view toward adoption. P.S. prompted the police to sign a delinquency complaint against J.D., alleging that J.D., along with another foster child, had sexually abused her neurologically impaired natural son and a foster son. On February 2, 1990, there was a detention hearing. The court ordered DYFS to investigate the D.D. family, where DYFS proposed to place J.D., based upon Mr. D.D.’s representation in court that J.D. was a friend of his companion’s son and welcome in their home. After that hearing, P.S. brought an order to show cause to restrain DYFS from placing J.D. at the D.D. household because of its location, a short distance from her home.

[39]*39On March 7, 1990, the court heard the matter and ordered DYFS not to place J.D. within ten miles of P.S.’s home, as P.S. requested. DYFS sought to vacate that order and P.S. moved to make the restraining order permanent resulting in a March 9 and March 30, 1990 hearing. On May 25, 1990, the judge modified the order, restraining J.D. and DYFS as follows:

ORDERED, that the Division of Youth and Family Services is hereby restrained from placing the said [J.D.], a minor, in a foster home within three (3) miles of the home of [P.S.] ...
FURTHER ORDERED, that the said [J.D.], a minor, is hereby restrained from interfering with [J.M.S.], a minor, and shall not present himself within three (3) miles of ... the [P.S.] residence.
And it being further ORDERED that this matter shall be scheduled for review one (1) year from the date of this Order to determine whether or not the said restraints shall continue.

That order accorded with the judge’s March 9th and March 30th oral opinions. On March 30th, the judge said his order was based upon J.D.’s guilty plea to the sexual offense and

DYFS’ conduct in this case as an admission on their part that the child acted in an offensive way, criminally or not, sexually towards [P.S.’s] nine year old son.

Neither statement, however, concerning J.D.’s plea of guilt nor DYFS’ admission of J.D.’s guilt, is supported in the record. On March 9, 1990, J.D. was represented by the Public Defender who requested that the delinquency matter be heard within two weeks. Yet on March 30, 1990, the judge said that J.D. had pleaded guilty on February 16, 1990. Although not provided to us, we requested and received a copy of that February 16, 1990 order which places the delinquency complaint on an inactive list for one year on conditions. No counsel is recorded as appearing for J.D. There is no evidence that a plea was taken.

According to respondent’s brief, the evidence that J.D. committed any offense was that the other foster child in the P.S. household (who had been charged by P.S.) said so. According to respondent’s certification before the trial court, P.S.’s natural son told her that another child had admitted sexual abuse on a third child, and “[h]e [the admitted abuser] had also indicated [to P.S.’s son] that [J.D.] had also sexually abused [two children].”

[40]*40J.D. is reported as steadfastly denying any wrong conduct. On March 9, when the judge changed the restraints from a ten-mile radius of the P.S. home to a three-mile radius, the judge specifically rejected an attempt by the proposed foster father, Mr. D.D., to speak about whether J.D. was guilty. The judge also forbade Mr. D.D. from entertaining J.D. in his home for any occasion.

Based on this record, DYFS first contends that there was no jurisdictional basis for an order infringing on J.D.’s right not to have his movements restricted. Respondent urges one potential jurisdictional basis for such a Family Part order in the juvenile-family crisis section of N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-24a:

Upon the determination that a juvenile has committed an act of delinquency or that a juvenile-family crisis exists, the court may impose such disposition or dispositions over those persons subject to its jurisdiction consistent with the purposes of this act.
Such jurisdiction shall extend in these matters over a juvenile and his ... guardian ... found by the court to be contributing to a juvenile-family crisis.

A juvenile-family crisis is statutorily defined to be “behavior ... of a juvenile ... which presents or results in ... a serious threat to the well-being and physical safety of a juvenile____” N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-22g.

We agree with respondent that, had the judge found from a hearing that J.D. was a threat to J.S. and that DYFS as his guardian was contributing to the crisis, the court arguably had the power to enter any disposition permissible in a juvenile-family crisis. There is no doubt that one such disposition included placement in the care of DYFS to provide J.D. with services “in or out of the home,” in accord with a DYFS service plan, which DYFS had the duty to present to the court within 30 days. Such a plan, however, must be presumed valid, “and had to be developed within the limits of ... [DYFS’] resources available.” N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-43b(5). That disposition was also available following an adjudication that J.D. was a delinquent. As we have noted, however, there was no hearing on either ground.

[41]*41Another source of jurisdiction over J.D. stemmed from the power of the court to detain him or to set conditions upon his release pending a hearing on the delinquency charge. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-38d. However, upon any detention, an adjudicatory hearing was required to be held within 30 days. N.J. S.A. 2A:4A-38k. While J.D. was not detained in a detention facility, we know of no jurisdiction permitting the court to establish significant pretrial restraints without setting any hearing on the delinquency charges. In our view, setting a hearing in one year was the equivalent of not setting a hearing at all.

We note that J.D. was first represented and then unrepresented by his public defender. It is axiomatic that J.D. was entitled to be represented by counsel “at every critical stage in the proceeding [potentially leading to] institutional commitment,” N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-39a, and to the extent that informal dispositions restrain liberty, they cannot be made the subject of institutionalization if violated. In one hearing, J.D.’s public defender argued that J.D. should be restrained from contact with the P.S. family as a condition of freedom from detention, while clearly seeking to have the child placed with the one person who sought to be his foster parent, Mr. D.D. The judge rejected this approach. Ironically, the result was a coercive and restrictive order unfettered by the time restraints which would have been required concerning a condition of release pending trial. At the beginning, the judge said several times that J.D. could not be held to the terms of his restrictive order. Later he said that J.D. would “not be tolerated within 3 miles of the [P.S. home],” and finally, "I’m saying that [J.D.] is not to go within three miles of the [P.S.] house.” The order reflected a coercive limitation on J.D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
588 A.2d 842, 247 N.J. Super. 37, 1991 N.J. Super. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jd-njsuperctappdiv-1991.