Appeal from so much of an order of Family Court, Monroe County (Kohout, J.), entered May 12, 2003, that, inter alia, dismissed those parts of the amended petition alleging that respondents abused the two younger children and that respondent D.C. neglected them.
It is hereby ordered that the order so appealed from be and the same hereby is unanimously modified on the law by adjudging the two younger children to be abused children in reference to respondent F.A. and those two children to be neglected children in reference to respondent D.C. and as modified the order is affirmed without costs, and the matter is remitted to Family Court, Monroe County, for further proceedings in accordance with the following memorandum: Petitioner commenced this proceeding alleging that respondents sexually abused and neglected respondent mother’s three daughters. At the fact-finding hearing, petitioner offered evidence that respondent F.A., respondent mother’s live-in boyfriend, had sexually abused the oldest of the three children. Family Court found that respondent boyfriend abused the oldest child and neglected the two younger children, and that respondent mother neglected the oldest child. The court dismissed those parts of the amended petition alleging that respondents abused the two younger children and that respondent mother neglected them. On appeal, petitioner contends that it established by a preponderance of the evidence that respondent boyfriend derivatively abused the two younger children and that respondent mother neglected them. We agree.
As a preliminary matter, petitioner contends that the court erred in taking judicial notice of a prior PINS adjudication involving the oldest child. We disagree. A court has the power to take judicial notice of its own prior proceedings (see CPLR 4511; Family Ct Act § 164; Matter of Justin EE.,
With respect to respondent boyfriend, we note that a derivative finding of abuse or neglect is appropriate “where a respondent’s abuse of the subject child is so closely connected with the care of another child as to indicate that the second child is equally at risk” (Matter of Marino S.,
With respect to respondent mother, we conclude that the court should have found that she neglected the two younger children in addition to the oldest child. When the investigator interviewed respondent mother, he told her about the disclosures of both of the two older children. Respondent mother refused to believe her children and informed the investigator that nothing he could show her or tell her would make her believe that her boyfriend had done anything inappropriate. The child protective services worker was present during that interview and told respondent mother that her boyfriend could not be allowed back in the home where the two younger children were residing and could have no contact with them. Nevertheless, respondent mother allowed him back into the home less than a week later. Petitioner thus established by a preponderance of the evidence that respondent mother neglected the two younger children by establishing that she knew or should have known that they were in imminent danger of being sexually abused by her boyfriend (see Family Ct Act § 1012 [f] [i] [B]; Matter of Dutchess County Dept. of Social Servs. v Donald W.,
We therefore modify the order by adjudging the two younger children to be abused children in reference to respondent boyfriend and those two children to be neglected children in reference to respondent mother and as modified, we affirm. We remit the matter to Family Court, Monroe County, for a dispositional hearing. Present — Pigott, Jr., P.J., Green, Pine, Scudder and Hayes, JJ.
