118 Misc. 2d 705 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1983
OPINION OF THE COURT
In the course of the instant proceeding for adoption of a six-year-old boy in which the petitioners are his natural mother and her husband, a constitutional question is raised by the respondent, the natural father. Respondent is serving a sentence in a State correctional institution, a circumstance which, under section 111 (subd 2, par [d]) of the Domestic Relations Law, makes his consent to the proposed adoption of his son unnecessary as one whose civil rights are suspended pursuant to section 79 of the Civil Rights Law. As applied to him, he argues, the statute denies rights to due process and equal protection of the law and is violative of his son’s Federally guaranteed associational rights as well.
In the instant case, the respondent natural father did, in fact, successfully defend the allegation of abandonment (see Matter of Gerard F. C., NYLJ, Nov. 26,1982, p 17, col 1). While the uncontroverted evidence was that he had not visited with his son for approximately one and one-half years before he began to serve his prison sentence in November, 1980, this court found that he had made sufficiently continuous efforts to do so which had been frustrated largely by deliberate actions of the mother, most notably, removal of the child to Florida immediately prior to the date weekly visitation with the father was to begin by order of the Family Court. Thus, the constitutionality of the afore-mentioned provisions of the Domestic Relations Law and Civil Rights Law as applied to respondent must be reached.
The challenged statutes have a long history. Attainder of all civil rights, including the right of parental management of children, was an immediate consequence of judgment following conviction of any felony at common law, when every felony was a capital crime (see, generally, Avery v Everett, 110 NY 317). In this State, civil death was retained as an incident of felony status, both for offenses which continued to be punishable by death and those for which life imprisonment had been substituted in 1796. After the advent of less severe terms for certain felonies, suspension of civil rights for the duration of the sentence was substituted for civil death (see Act, Recommendation and Study Relating to Capacity of Certain Convicts to Sue, 1948 Report of NY Law Rev Comm, p 159). In 1873, when the first general enactment establishing a procedure for adoption of children became law, it was expressly provided that the consent of a natural parent who was deprived of civil rights was unnecessary (L 1873, ch 830). Remarkably, despite the century in which the concept of loss of civil rights has been applied to the adoption concept, no appellate court of this State has as yet addressed the question of its constitutionality. (One has, however, recently applied it in a proceeding for termination of parental rights under
As in the instant case, in several of the more recent decisions the argument was made that dispensing with the felon’s consent violates procedural due process. That argument has been rejected where, as here, a hearing was afforded to the felon at which he was free to present evidence to show that an adoption would not best serve the child’s moral and temporal interests (see Matter of Anonymous, supra; Matter of Ginnan, 101 Misc 2d 853; Matter of Anonymous, 79 Misc 2d 280). Respondent’s suggestion that his right to procedural due process is abridged in that his lack of veto power over the adoption deprives him of any realistic opportunity to retain his parental rights as a result of the hearing is mistaken. He enjoyed the assistance of appointed counsel and, in addition to a full and fair chance to air any objections he might have to the character, ability or wherewithal of the proposed adoptive father to raise the child in the company of the natural mother, he had the opportunity by means of his own testimony and otherwise to establish the history of his own relationship with his natural son. As afore-mentioned, the relative remoteness or intimacy of that natural parent-child relation is keenly pertinent in establishing whether or not the proposed adoption would be advantageous to the child or whether his best interests would be better served by preservation of the natural parent’s parental status looking toward eventual resumption of custody or visitation. While the court has located no reported cases wherein a parent deprived of civil rights has prevailed on the basis of a best interests hearing, none of them posed a close question as each almost invariably was shown to have ignored his parental rights and obligations from the child’s infancy or to have relinquished them long before institution of the adoption proceedings. Thus, it can hardly be concluded on the basis of such cases that the disability imposed by the challenged statutes has alone sufficed to deprive those affected of a meaningful opportunity to prevail.
The same line of reasoning was adopted in Matter of Ginnan (101 Misc 2d 853, supra). Though Judge Tillman was careful to point out that he found section 111 (subd 2, par [d]) of the Domestic Relations Law constitutional as applied to the felon before the court, who had taken the life of the mother of the infant child, but was aware (p 863) that “there may be a fact pattern which could give rise to a contrary decision”, the thrust of the opinion is strongly indicative that such fact patterns are few and far between. While recognizing that the right of parentage is a fundamental one carrying “ ‘a momentum for respect’ ” (Stanley v Illinois, 405 US 645, 651), it is not absolute and it is the prerogative of the State to deprive those who violate its laws of even fundamental rights when necessary to preserve the rights of other innocent citizens. He noted that the Legislature in enacting the challenged provision had concluded that those who fell within its confines had, by their own acts, shown themselves to have eroded their parental rights to the extent that the State in its capacity as parens patriae could act in the best interests of the child
Respondent relies principally upon the decision from the Family Court, New York County, in Matter of Miller (105 Misc 2d 41), in which section 111 (subd 2, par [d]) of the Domestic Relations Law was held unconstitutional as applied to parolees and on certain language in Matter of Jonathan E. G. (107 Misc 2d 900).
In Miller (supra), in the context of a petition brought by a child care agency to free a child for adoption under section 384-b of the Social Services Law, Judge Fogarty laid considerable stress on the fact that the strict scrutiny standard of review is appropriate to legislation which impinges upon the right of a natural parent to raise his or her child (see Caban v Mohammed, 441 US 380; Pierce v Society of Sisters, 268 US 510). As release from confinement to parole represents a judgment that the offender is a candidate for rehabilitation, he reasoned, retention of a punitive measure such as continued withholding of the legal rights accorded other fathers is inconsistent with the prospect of a successful return to society. Indeed, release of a prisoner before the completion of his or her full term is intended as an incentive for reunion with family members and the making of a stable and permanent home with them. Accordingly, as applied to parolees, section 111
While Matter of Miller (supra) is of considerable interest, the instant respondent is not among those who would benefit by this court’s adherence to its holding. He is still incarcerated, serving an indeterminate sentence of 3Vá to 10 years and will first become eligible for parole, according to his testimony, in December of this year. It is, of course, not feasible for this court to hold this matter in abeyance in anticipation of a parole which may never be granted. And Miller itself allowed (p 48) that as to felons still incarcerated, the granting of an adoption without a finding of unfitness may meet both strict scrutiny and valid State purpose tests. The present case is factually dissimilar in other salient respects as well. Miller concerned a petition brought by a child care agency seeking termination of the natural father’s parental rights, the mother having theretofore voluntarily surrendered the child. Judge Fogarty was careful to explain that he had weighed the interests of the respondent natural father against those of possible adoptive parents yet unknown, suggesting that greater weight should be afforded to the interests of custodial “parents” who had established ties with the child vis-a-vis those of the parent deprived of civil rights. It is an instance of the latter type which is presented here.
Invocation of Matter of Jonathan E. G. (supra) is likewise unavailing to respondent despite its intimation that the disability created by section 111 (subd 2, par [d]) might be unconstitutional as applied to certain individuals not then before the court. In Jonathan E. G. the respondent felon was found to have abandoned his child and, in a contest against the foster parents who sought to adopt concurrently with the termination of parental rights at the behest of the foster care agency under section 384-b of the Social
The Supreme Court of the United States has said that the fundamental liberty interest of a natural parent in the care, custody and management of his child does not “evaporate” simply because he has not been a model parent or lost custody temporarily (Santosky v Kramer, 455 US 745). However, this court does not find it incompatible to hold, as does Jonathan E. G. (supra, p 911), that the importance of that fundamental legal interest is “somewhat weakened by
It was, in fact, in that very case, Bennett v Jeffreys (supra, p 544), that the Court of Appeals articulated for the first time that certain “extraordinary circumstances” provided sufficient cause to deprive a parent of custody in the best interests of the child apart from parental surrender, abandonment or unfitness. Though such extraordinary circumstances should be “narrowly categorized” (p 545), the specific example given of what that term includes is “unfortunate or involuntary disruption of custody over an extended period of time” (p 546), an example drawn from the scenario before the court in which a 23-year-old single woman attempted to have the custody of her eight-year-old daughter wrested from an older woman to whom she had entrusted the child at birth. This court recognizes that custody matters are distinct from the irretrievable loss of parental rights through adoption and does not mean to imply that an “extraordinary circumstances” category has
There has been a prolonged interruption of the natural father’s custody and visitation here. Neither is the cessation of contact between the natural father and his son entirely attributable to blameworthy conduct by the mother; a considerable portion must be laid at the feet of respondent himself. After all, respondent was, and still is, married to a woman other than the natural mother and is the father of a minor child born to his marriage. When he chose to cohabit with the natural mother of the child here in question, whom he was not free to marry, he faced the not unforeseeable risk that should a separation occur, she might well be in a better position to prevail in a custody dispute with respect to any children who might be born to them. Certainly the sentence he now serves for commission of armed robbery, the consequences of which he is presumed by law to know, is the product of his own moral turpitude. Accordingly, we find that the mother’s conduct has not been sufficiently egregious to warrant a denial of the adoption petition on public policy grounds.
The child has been integrated into a new family unit consisting of his natural mother, his stepfather and a child born of their marriage and it is doubtful that the child has any recollection of his natural father. Respondent failed to substantiate his alleged hearsay information concerning domestic violence in the adoptive home. The preadoption investigation was favorable to the petitioners and the guardian ad litem for the child recommends that the adoption be granted.
Deep appreciation is extended to Samuel M. Price, Esq., who graciously and gratuitously contributed many hours of service as guardian ad litem for the adoptive child.