OPINION OF THE COURT
Thеse petitions to terminate the parental rights of Leslie B. and Antoinette M. were filed in December 2002, alleging that Ms. M. (the mother) permanently neglected the children and that, pursuant to section 384-c of the Social Services Law and section 111 (1) (d) of the Domestic Relations Law, Mr. B. (the father) is entitled only to notice of the proceedings and an opportunity to be heard as to the children’s best interests. Respondent father’s motion to dismiss was filed on July 15, 2004. Counsel for petitioner Lutheran Social Services (the agency) аnd the Law Guardian filed affirmations in opposition, which the court deemed unresponsive. At the court’s direction, petitioner and Law Guardian submitted supplemental affirmations in opposition. Respondent’s counsel also filed a “reply affirmation in support of the motion” and, on December 10, over objection by the Law Guardian and petitioner, the court accepted respondent’s “reply to petitioner’s supplemental affirmation in opposition.” Mr. B. moves to dismiss the petitions on the grounds that Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (d), which sets forth the criteria necessary for an unwed father’s consent to be required for the adoption of his children, is unconstitutional as applied to him. (The Attorney General did not respond to Mr. B.’s notice of motion.)
Factual History
The facts necessary to decide the motion are undisputed, and largely established by court orders of which the court takes judicial notice. Leslie B. and Antoinette M. never married, but had five children between the years 1989 and 1997: Freedom, born February 21, 1989; Stephon, born July 26, 1990; Fantashia, born June 22, 1993; Lucindа, born March 3, 1995; and Shaqueal, born December 21, 1997. Orders of filiation recognizing Mr. B. as the father of Freedom, Stephon, Fantashia and Lucinda were entered under docket numbers P-9782/89 (CSET); P-1638-39/96; P-2646-47/96. (It appears that an order of filiation was granted
Neither petitioner nor the Law Guardian challenge the accuracy of Mr. B.’s claim, presented in counsel’s affirmation in support of his motion, that he was incarcerated during the period 1998 to June 2003. Petitioner’s witness, maternal grandmother Lucille M. (who is the children’s foster mother) testified that Mr. B. was released from prison in the summer of 2003; that he telephoned his children (who have been in thеir grandmother’s foster home for years) “all the time,” and that he has seen them on several occasions since his release.
The four older children have remained continuously in foster care since September 2000, pursuant to voluntary placement by their grandmother (who later became their foster mother and is now the “pre-adoptive” resource). Shaqueal’s foster care placement was under a neglect case, N-19998/98; he was placed on September 9, 1999, with subsequent extensions of placement. (Throughout his placement, Shaqueal has lived in a foster home separate from his siblings.) The agency’s petitions to terminate parental rights were filed in December 2002. On April 30, 2004 this court found by clear and convincing evidence that Ms. M. had, as alleged, permanently neglected the children. Based on favorable reports regarding her progress in drug treatment after the petitions were filed (see petitioner’s exhibit 1 at Sept. 30, 2004 hearing), the agency intended to consent to a suspended judgment for the mother. As to Mr. B., the agency presented testimony from the caseworker and the foster mother/ grandmother as well as several exhibits (including voluminous case records for the years 1999 through 2003) in support of its position that Mr. B. is not a father whose consent is required for adoption, but merely a “notice” father entitled to be heard as to whether termination of parental rights is in the children’s best interest. Just recently, on December 10, 2004 the court was informed that the agency no longer supports a suspended judgment for the mother, but will pursue adoption.
To summarize Mr. B.’s relationship with his children: he was never married to Antoinette M.; he has court orders of filiation
The memorandum of law presented by Mr. B.’s counsel in support of the motion cites several decisions by the United States Supreme Court, the New York State Court of Appeals, and New York appellate courts in support of his position. In their affirmations in opposition counsel for the agency and the Law Guardian offer no analysis of case law or statutes, choosing instead to oppose the motion on procedural grounds: that the facts relied upon by Mr. B. have not been established by his sworn testimony, and therefore the motion is premature. They appear to overlook the record as developed through the agency’s own witnesses and exhibits, and prior court orders. After review of the exhibits, the testimony of the agency’s witnesses, and of prior Family Court orders, this court accepts Mr. B.’s presentation of the relevant facts (as summarized abоve) and, based on its review of controlling case law, concludes that section 111 (1) (d) as applied to Mr. B., and his four older children is unconstitutional. Accordingly, the motion is granted, and the petitions against Mr. B. shall be dismissed.
Constitutional Analysis
As the Court of Appeals noted in Matter of Raquel Marie X., “Until the 1970’s, unwed fathers had no legally recognized interest” in their children. (
All questions relating to marriage and legitimacy are sensitive, particularly in a multicultural society that strives to respect religious beliefs while separating the realms of church and state. Of all the issues, no aspect of family law is more challenging than balancing the interests between parents of a child born out of wedlock. Every step providing enhanced protections for fathers has been resisted on social policy grounds — strongly held beliefs that single mothers struggling to raise infants must be protected from irresponsible fathers; adoptions must be encouraged; fathers must be prevented from extorting cash in exchange for their cooperation. (See Matter of Malpica-Orsini,
Stanley v Illinois (
Quilloin v Walcott (
The following year, the Supreme Court decided Caban v Mohammed (
Caban was a New York case, and the Legislature’s response came the following year, with enactment of chapter 575 of the Laws of 1980. Domestic Relations Law § 111 was amended to
“only if such father shall have maintained substantial and continuous or repeated contact with the child as manifested by: (i) the payment by the father toward the support of the child of a fair and reasonable sum . . . and either (ii) thе father’s visiting the child at least monthly when physically and financially able to do so and not prevented from doing so by the person or authorized agency having lawful custody of the child, or (iii) the father’s regular communication with the child or with the person or agency having the care or custody of the child, when physically and financially unable to visit the child or prevented from doing so.”
The constitutionality of section 111 (1) (d) was challenged in 1985 in Matter of Andrew Peter H.T. (
In Matter of Raquel Marie X. (
Application of section 111 (1) (d) to Leslie B. would require a ruling by this court that his consent is not required, since there is no evidence in the record that he provided financial support — except for the period 1996-1997, when he had sole legal custody. Theoretically, Mr. B. could present such evidence if the trial were to continue, but he has not claimed such support, and his motion is predicated on his failure to satisfy the statutory criteria. New York courts have called financial support “the threshold question” (see Andrew Peter H.T., supra; Matter of Maxamillian,
The appropriate standard for review was stated in Caban-. “Gender-based distinctions must serve important governmental objectives and must be substantially related to achievement of those objectives in order to withstand judicial scrutiny under the Equal Protection clause.” (Caban, supra at 388 [internal quotation marks omitted].) The Court of Appeals, analyzing the Supreme Cоurt’s Quilloin decision, wrote that “the Supreme Court identified the issue, unresolved by Stanley, as one of the degree of protection a State must afford the rights of an unwed father in a situation, such as that presented here, in which the countervailing interests are more substantial.” (Raquel Marie X., supra at 398 [internal quotation marks omitted], quoting Quilloin, supra at 248.) The Court of Appeals also stated that the Supreme Court defined “the father’s liberty interest [and] characterized the rights of the parents [as] a counterpart to the responsibilities they have assumed.” (Id. at 400 [internal quotation marks omitted].)
Having determined the correct standard, the next question is what actions by the father will support a conclusion that the father has a constitutionally protected liberty interest. The clearest example is Mr. Stanley. The Supreme Court announced
The decisions of both the Supreme Court and the New York Court of Appeals focus primarily on the gender distinctions bеtween unwed mothers and fathers. In footnote 16, Caban notes that “[a]ppellant also challenges the constitutionality of the distinction . . . between married and unmarried fathers,” but “[a]s we have resolved that the sex-based distinction of § 111 violates the Equal Protection Clause, we need express no view as to the validity of this additional classification.” {Id. at 394 n 16.) However, the analysis by the New York Court of Appeals of the “living together” requirement that it ultimately rejected uses language that is arguably applicable to “marriage” requirеments. Under Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (b), consent to adoption is required of a father of a child “born in wedlock” regardless of his relationship, if any, with the child. In rejecting
The actual bond between father and child is quite distinct from the legally recognized relationship, and can be established by married and unmarried fathers alike. Granting the right to consent to married fathers without additional requirements to demonstrate a “substantial” or “significant” relationship to
Applying the Law to the Facts
It is not the role of trial courts to make new law, but to apply recognized law. (Marcus Assoc. v Town of Huntington,
“I recognize my duty as an inferior . . . judge to accept and follow controlling decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States whether I personally agree with those decisions or whether I do not. I fully appreciate that the . . . law would soon become chaotic if judges such as I should do otherwise. But I do not believe that as a consequence of this we . . . are under a positive duty always to follow blindly.” {Id. at 434-435, quoting United States v Girouard, 149 F2d 760, 765 [1945, Woodbury, J., dissenting], revd328 US 61 [1946].)
This court is mindful of its duty not only to apply, but to interpret, the law. The Court of Appeals, after declaring the “living together” requirement in Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (e) unconstitutional, noted that “[e]stablishing a proper substitute is of course the prerogative of the Legislature, not
Leslie B. cannot change his sex or (unilaterally) his marital status in order to acquire the rights granted to married fathers and all mothers under subdivision (1) (b) and (c) of Domestic Relations Law § 111. He did, however, manifest his significant, substantial relationship with his children. Although his name is not on any of the birth certificates, he obtained orders of filiation for the four eldest children. According to the grandmother’s testimony, Mr. B. was very much involved with the four older children’s daily care even before he obtained custody. He then sought and obtained orders of custody, which were in effect for 11 months. (The record does not show whether, as is usually the case, he had physical custody for some period befоre he obtained the court orders.) He, unlike Mr. Caban, had sole custody, not merely sharing custody with the children’s mother during periods of cohabitation. When custody was transferred to the grandmother, he (but not the mother) was granted court-ordered visitation. His ongoing telephone contacts with his children was established unequivocally by the grandmother’s testimony, who also testified that he had visits after his release from prison in June 2003. In this court’s view, Mr. B.’s circumstances more closely resemble those of Mr. Stanley and Mr. Caban, rather than Mr. Quilloin. He satisfiеs the parameters set out in Raquel Marie X.: “The protected interest is not established simply by biology. The unwed father’s protected interest requires both a biological connection and full parental responsibility; he must both be a father and behave like one.” (Raquel Marie X., supra at 401.) There is no doubt that an unwed mother — who at one point had custody, then lost it, who was incarcerated but maintained some contact with her children while imprisoned, who resumed contact upon her release — could not be deprived of her rights unless a petition pursuant to Social Services Law § 384-b were filed and granted. This father is entitled to no less. To impose the requirements in subdivision (1) (d) to Mr. B., when they are not required of mothers and married fathers, would, in this court’s judgment, constitute denial of equal protection based on sex and marital status. The court concludes, therefore, that Domestic Relations Law § 111 (1) (d) is unconstitutional as applied
Having ruled that Mr. B. has parental rights on a par with all mothers and with married fathers, the court notes that he, like those other parents, may lose his rights if the agency pleads and proves, by cleаr and convincing evidence, that he has either abandoned or (like Ms. M.) permanently neglected the children (see Social Services Law § 384-b). But the agency must first give him notice of such allegations by filing the proper petitions and then prove them by clear and convincing evidence. The burden is properly the agency’s to prove a statutory basis for terminating his rights, not Mr. B.’s, to establish his right to consent. See Matter of Taylor R. (
