Jewish Child Care Ass'n of New York, In re

Decision Date23 January 1959
Citation156 N.E.2d 700,5 N.Y.2d 222,183 N.Y.S.2d 65
Parties, 156 N.E.2d 700 In the Matter of JEWISH CHILD CARE ASSOCIATION OF NEW YORK, Respondent Seymour Sanders et al., Appellants.
CourtNew York Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Albert M. Goldberg, Mineola, for appellants.

Helen L. Buttenwieser and Chester T. Lane, New York City, for respondent.

CONWAY, Chief Judge.

The purpose of this habeas corpus proceeding is to determine the custody of Laura Neuberger, an infant who is now about five and a half years old. About four and a half years of her short life have been spent in the home of the appellants, Mr. and Mrs. Sanders. Appellants are not related to Laura, nor do they have legal custody. They have her on a temporary foster parent basis pursuant to an arrangement with the respondent Jewish Child Care Association of New York, hereinafter referred to as Child Care.

Child Care is a philanthropic organization chartered by the State of New York to care for children who are in need of custodial care outside of their own homes. It accepts for care children whose parents are temporarily unable to care for them but who are unwilling to place them for adoption. These children are care for until such time as their own families can properly care for them. While some of these children are placed in a cottage plan institution, the majority are placed in boarding or foster homes. During this boarding period, Child Care's workers assist those in the natural home in preparing for the return of the child, and at the same time exert efforts to insure the child's adjustment and preparation for the return to its family. When such a child is placed in a foster home, it is the function of the foster parents to assist in the proper orientation of the child so that it may be prepared and ready for its eventual return to its family. This relationship of foster parent and child is carefully explained to persons who undertake to assist Child Care in its worthy purpose. Such persons are paid an agreed sum of money for the child's room and board, and clothes and medical care are paid for by Child Care. Persons accepting such a child for temporary boarding care do so with the understanding that adoption is not contemplated, that the child will return to its natural parent or parents as soon as feasible, and that one of the primary responsibilities of such boarding parents is to prepare the child psychologically for its contemplated return to its natural home. In order to maintain and strengthen the ties between the child and its parent or parents, the boarding program contemplates periodic visits by the natural parent with the child at the boarding home.

It was in this context that on about July 30, 1954 the Sanders, husband and wife, accepted Laura into their home having applied to Child Care three or four months previously to serve as foster parents. Laura's young mother was unable to care for her after her birth and the child was placed with the Department of Welfare of New York City which in turn commended her welfare and custody to Child Care. When Mr. and Mrs. Sanders first applied to Child Care to participate in its boarding program, that program was explained to them and they were expressly told at that time that Child Care was a boarding agency and not an adoption agency. When they took Laura they knew she had a mother who would visit her, although not for a while in the beginning. The precise chronology of the events that followed during Laura's stay with the Sanders is not clearly revealed by the record. It appears that sometime during the first year that they had Laura, the Sanders acquired a desire to adopt her. They mentioned this to one of Child Care's workers who told them that adoption was out of the question, and explained the necessity for helping Laura to understand who her mother was. Despite this, Mr. and Mrs. Sanders actively sought to effectuate their desire to adopt Laura. In their pursuit of adoption, and contrary to the known policies and rules of Child Care, the Sanders arranged to speak to Laura's mother about adoption. On several occasions they attempted to persuade Laura's maternal grandmother and uncle to interfere and intercede in their behalf and prevail upon Laura's mother to give her up. At one point the Sanders were required by Child Care, as a condition to their keeping Laura, to sign a paper in March of 1957 to the effect that they had Laura on a foster home or boarding home basis only. This occurred after an attorney, representing himself as the Sanders' attorney, telephoned Child Care and inquired about the availability of Laura for adoption. Some time prior to Thanksgiving Day in November of 1957, Mr. and Mrs. Sanders asked Child Care if they could take Laura to Florida for that holiday. They were refused permission, one of Child Care's workers explaining to them that by that time Laura might be back with her mother, and that Child Care was working on a plan with the mother toward that end. When thus advised, Mrs. Sanders became upset and she described her emotional reaction as follows: 'I was heartbroken, very worried about Laurie, about how she would react. In fact, that was my prime worry, how she would feel being taken away from her mother and father' (emphasis supplied). In their zeal to adopt Laura, the Sanders persuaded Laura's uncle to discuss his sister's (Laura's mother) background with the district supervisor of the foster home department of Child Care. It does not appear what this background was. At any rate the district supervisor then informed the Sanders that they would be asked to give up Laura in a few weeks because they had become too emotionally involved with the child. During approximately a week that followed, the Sanders intensified their efforts to persuade Laura's mother to surrender her for adoption. Mr. Sanders approached Laura's mother both at her place of business and at her home, but she steadfastly refused to give up her daughter. He spoke with Laura's grandmother but she refused again to interfere. Finally, Laura's mother telephoned Child Care about these efforts. The district supervisor then informed the Sanders that they would have to give up Laura and that this course would be kinder to them in view of their deep emotional involvement with Laura. When Child Care's representatives came to call for Laura, however, the Sanders refused to give her up, whereupon Child Care commenced this proceeding. Almost all of the foregoing is based upon the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Sanders.

The district supervisor of the foster home department of Child Care testified, in part, that Child Care has worked with the Sanders to help them continue to keep Laura while performing their proper function as boarding parents. However, it become evident that the child's best interests necessitated her placement in another environment where she would not be torn between her loyalty to her mother and her boarding parents. According to the testimony of a representative of the Department of Welfare of New York City, that department was in agreement with Child Care that Laura's best interests required that she be placed elsewhere. A psychiatrist, the only witness called by appellants, testified in substance that he had interviewed Laura and the Sanders the afternoon before the trial, that the Sanders took Laura to satisfy their own parental instincts, that Laura is well adjusted, that if she were taken from the Sanders now she might become maladjusted, that the Sanders are the only ones Laura knows as parents, that it would be better to allow Laura's attachment to the Sanders to grow, and that Laura would make a better adjustment to the change to her own mother later on, whenever that should be, if she were left with the Sanders.

Upon this record, the Supreme Court Trial Justice, who had formerly been a Children's Court Justice for 11 years, found that it would be in Laura's best interests if she were taken from the Sanders before, as he phrased it, 'further damage is done or a still more difficult situation for her is created'. This discretionary finding was expressly affirmed by the Appellate Division. There is no merit to the appellants' claim that the Trial Justice failed or refused to exercise independent discretion as to what is in Laura's best interests, or that he made his determination upon any basis other than her best interests. Consequently, the precise question which this record presents is whether there is such a lack of supporting evidence that we must charge the court below with an abuse of discretion as a matter of law. See Bachman v. Mejias, 1 N.Y.2d 575, 582, 154 N.Y.S.2d 903, 908; People ex rel. Kropp v. Shepsky, 305 N.Y. 465, 468, 113 N.E.2d 801, 803; People ex rel. Portnoy v. Strasser, 303 N.Y. 539, 542, 104 N.E.2d 895, 896; Bunim v. Bunim, 298 N.Y. 391, 393, 83 N.E.2d 848, 849. It should be remembered that 'Questions of custody are, generally, for the Supreme Court in its discretion, and it is rarely that any such determination by it can raise any question of law for us.' People ex rel. Portnoy v. Strasser, supra, 303 N.Y. at page 542, 104 N.E.2d at page 896.

In considering what is in Laura's best interests it was not only proper, but necessary, for the Trial Justice to consider the facts in terms of their significance to Laura's eventual return to her own mother. The record permits no other perspective to be taken, both in view of Laura's mother's steadfast refusal to give her up, and Child Care's declared purpose to return Laura to her own mother when she is able to care for her. Viewing the record thus, it supports in a most compelling manner the Trial Justice's determination which has been affirmed by the Appellate Division. It clearly establishes that the appellants have conducted themselves in a fashion inconsistent with their agreement and, indeed, diametrically opposed to their trust. Their own witness testified that Laura had come to look upon appellants as her...

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