In the Matter of DESTINY EE., a Child Alleged to be Permanently Neglected. ULSTER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Respondent; KAREN FF., Appellant. (Proceeding No. 1.) In the Matter of BRANDON EE., a Child Alleged to be Permanently Neglected. ULSTER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Respondent; KAREN FF., Appellant. (Proceeding No. 2.) In the Matter of NIGAL FF., a Child Alleged to be Permanently Neglected. ULSTER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Respondent; KAREN FF., Appellant. (Proceeding No. 3.) (And Three Other Related Proceedings.)
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
December 29, 2011
90 AD3d 1437 | 936 NYS2d 703
Garry, J.
Garry, J.
Respondent is the mother of two sons (born in 1997 and 2000) and a daughter (born in 2003). In 2001, petitioner commenced abuse and neglect proceedings against respondent and her husband arising out of the husband‘s sexual abuse of the older son; both sons were removed from their custody.1 Respondent subsequently consented to a finding of neglect based on, among other things, her admission that she should have known of the abuse. The husband absconded, and Family Court issued a warrant for his arrest, which was never executed. Following an inquest held in the husband‘s absence, Family Court determined that he had sexually abused the older son and had neglected both sons, and issued orders of protection as to both children; the order applicable to the older son extended until his 18th birthday. In July 2003, the sons were returned to respondent‘s custody. Petitioner continued to provide services and supervision until approximately June 2005, when the proceedings were closed. Respondent thereafter took the children to Wisconsin, where they lived for approximately 18 months before returning to New York.
In June 2007, approximately one month after her return to New York, respondent filed a custody petition alleging that the younger son was visiting the husband in Mississippi, the husband was “doing drugs” and drinking, the husband‘s girlfriend had hit the younger son with a belt, and the husband had refused respondent‘s request to return him to her custody. On the day that this custody petition was filed, petitioner
Respondent contends that dismissal and vacatur are required because Family Court lacked jurisdiction over the temporary removal and neglect proceedings under
The UCCJEA establishes specific grounds as the basis for
Respondent now claims that the family‘s stay in New York was intended to be a “temporary absence” (
Pursuant to
The removal and neglect proceedings in this matter did not depend primarily upon information or contacts available in Wisconsin, but on the degree of risk posed to respondent‘s children by her decision to permit the younger son to visit the husband. New York was the only jurisdiction with pertinent information about the husband‘s previous abuse of the older son, respondent‘s knowledge of that abuse, and the related risk to her children. The prior proceedings took place in the same
As an alternative basis for jurisdiction,
Spain, J.P., Rose, Kavanagh and Stein, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, without costs.
