602 N.Y.S.2d 50 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1993
OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue on appeal is whether the doctrine of issue preclusion bars the People from prosecuting the defendant for the alleged assault of his three-year-old daughter because the Family Court, in an earlier child protective proceeding, found child neglect but not child abuse. We conclude that the prosecution should not be precluded by reason of the Family Court’s finding. Accordingly, we reverse the order of the County Court dismissing the first three counts of the indictment.
I
The facts pertinent to both the instant criminal action, and the related Family Court proceeding, concern an incident which occurred on April 29, 1990. On that date, the defendant allegedly filled a bathtub with scalding hot water and placed his then three-year-old daughter inside, causing serious burns on the child’s buttocks, perineum and right foot. Following the child’s arrival and treatment at a nearby hospital, the matter was promptly referred to the Westchester County Department of Social Services (hereinafter the DSS). The defendant was interviewed by a caseworker from the Child Protective Services on May 1, 1990, and within days, the child was placed in the temporary custody of the DSS pursuant to Family Court Act § 1021.
On July 6, 1990, all parties, including a nonlawyer domestic violence aide representing the District Attorney, appeared in the Family Court for a fact-finding hearing. The child’s mother withdrew her denial of the petition and consented to a finding of neglect. After extended conferences, both on and off the record, it was further agreed that the defendant would likewise withdraw his denial and make a statement describing what he claimed occurred, in lieu of a full trial, leaving it for the court to determine whether his description of his conduct constituted abuse or neglect. The defendant was then sworn and allowed to give his account of how the child sustained her injuries.
The defendant testified that he was preparing to give his three-year-old daughter and his two-year-old son a bath at approximately 12:00 noon on April 29, 1990. He said that he ran the water into the tub and tested it to see if it was warm enough. He claimed that his daughter was uncooperative because she did not want to take a bath. The child was screaming and fighting as he was putting her in the tub, so he ordered her to sit down. The defendant saw steam rising from the water and touched it, but it did not feel hot to him. He then noticed that the child’s "body was all messed up”. He put cold water and cocoa butter on her burns and then took her to the hospital.
During cross-examination conducted by an Assistant County Attorney, the defendant was unable to explain why the child’s left foot had not been burned in the incident. He also admitted that he had previously lied about the incident and told the authorities that the child’s mother had caused the injuries. Based solely on the defendant’s testimony, the Family Court (Lefkowitz, J.), sustained the allegations of neglect but dismissed the charge of abuse, and made the following pertinent findings:
"The petition is sustained that on or about April 29 [the subject child] was burned on the buttocks and top of her feet by scalding hot water while in the care and custody of the [defendant], Sean Roselle. The [defendant] explained to the Court how the injuries occurred and his explanation was very credible as to how they occurred. At this time the Court, because of his explanation is going to make a finding of neglect rather than abuse, but again, the injuries are serious. So, I have to tell you again, when you have a child in your care and custody you got to be awful careful * * * [T]he petition is sustained as to neglect”.
On or about August 15, 1990, the Family Court issued a written order of fact finding and interim disposition sustaining the petition as to neglect, and directing that the subject child remain in the custody of the DSS pending a dispositional hearing. The court also directed that the mother and the defendant undergo psychiatric evaluations.
On or about September 26, 1990, the indictment in the instant criminal action was filed, charging the defendant with the crimes of assault in the first degree, criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree, and endangering the welfare of a child, all arising out of the April 29, 1990 incident. He was also charged with making a punishable false statement and perjury in the third degree as a result of allegedly false statements he made to authorities on May 7, 1990 and May 11, 1990, respectively.
The defendant filed an omnibus motion seeking, inter alia, dismissal of the first three counts of the indictment. The defense counsel argued that the People are collaterally es-topped from litigating the issue of whether the defendant intentionally caused injury to his daughter during the April 29, 1990 incident. According to defense counsel, the identical
The County Court granted that branch of the motion, holding that the People were precluded from prosecuting the defendant on the criminal charges since the Family Court had "specifically credited the defendant’s testimony and found his daughter’s injuries were caused by accident and not by acts of intentional abuse” (People v Roselle, 152 Misc 2d 191, 194). The court concluded that the District Attorney had had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue of abuse as a "necessary party” pursuant to Family Court Act § 254 (b), but instead "sat on [his] hands in the Family Court [and could not now argue that] the issues were not fully litigated” (People v Roselle, 152 Misc 2d 191, 193, supra).
II
In our view, the County Court’s decision misconstrued the role of the District Attorney in an abuse proceeding pursuant to Family Court Act article 10 by equating his designation as a "necessary party” with being accorded a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue of abuse. In fact, the only lawyer presenting the case for abuse was the County Attorney. The District Attorney could not have elected to be an additional presenter of the same case because no litigant may have multiple lawyers presenting essentially duplicate cases
When the Family Court Act was adopted in 1962, alleged child abuse was litigated under Family Court Act former article 3, which specifically addressed child neglect proceedings. The District Attorney did not play a role or participate in civil child abuse matters until 1969, when the Legislature added article 10 to the Family Court Act. The new article created a separate child abuse part designed to give such matters special attention, and expedite the handling of cases involving serious physical abuse (see, L 1969, ch 264, § 1013). For the first time, police attorneys assigned by the Police Commissioner in the City of New York, and Assistant District Attorneys assigned by the District Attorney in counties outside the City of New York, were required to assist in the presentation of all cases originating in the separate child abuse parts. Both police attorneys and District Attorneys were authorized to originate proceedings (Family Ct Act § 1014), and both were required to represent the abused child during all stages of the proceedings (Family Ct Act § 1016).
The enactment of Laws of 1969 (ch 264) was a legislative response to strong public outcry concerning the Family Court’s alleged mishandling of the Roxanne Felumero case (see generally, Besharov, Introductory Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act art 10, at 214-216). The facts are summarized in the report of the Judiciary Relations Committee of the First Judicial Department, which was published in full in the New York Law Journal (see, Judiciary Relations Panel’s Report on Felumero Case, NYLJ, June 30, 1969, at 1, col 4; July 1, 1969, at 1, col 4; July 2, 1969, at 1, col 4; July 3, 1969, at 1, col 4). The case involved an infant girl who had been placed in foster care in 1966. In December 1968 the child was taken from her foster home and returned to the custody of her natural mother, allegedly against the recommendation of a caseworker who had been providing social services to the family. In early January 1969 the foster parents filed a second neglect petition against the child’s natural mother but the matter dragged on
The Judiciary Relations Committee (hereinafter the Committee) which had conducted an investigation concerning the Family Court’s handling of the Felumero case, issued its comprehensive report identifying serious deficiencies within the Family Court. The report also cited inadequate coordination among the various social agencies responsible for providing protective services for abused children.
The Legislature moved with such dispatch that it enacted chapter 264 even before the Committee completed its investigation and issued its report. Nonetheless, several areas of concern identified in the Committee’s report provide insight in understanding the evolution of the District Attorney’s role in abuse proceedings.
One recommendation in the Committee’s report was to provide for an attorney to represent the petitioner in all abuse and neglect proceedings, both to insure proper drafting of the petition, and to investigate and prepare the matter properly for presentation to the court. The Committee recognized that most petitions were prepared and presented by counsel acting on behalf of a child welfare agency, but on occasions, private parties, such as foster parents, were attempting to prosecute serious cases without assistance from an attorney. The petition filed by the foster parents in the Felumero case did not name the child’s stepfather as a respondent, a deficiency which the Committee viewed as contributing to the Family Court’s apparent failure to apprehend the danger of allowing the child to be returned to her natural mother. The Committee also found serious deficiencies in the way the case was handled by the child’s Law Guardian. The Committee’s observation mirrored the concern expressed by the Governor in approving chapter 264 (Governor’s mem approving L 1969, ch 264, 1969 NY Legis Ann, at 549-550) that an abused child be represented during all stages of the proceeding by either a police attorney or the District Attorney.
The Legislature responded quickly again by consolidating the neglect and abuse proceedings under an amended article 10 (see, L 1970, ch 962). The District Attorney’s role was changed from lead counsel for the State to "necessary party”, and police attorneys were deleted (Family Ct Act § 254 [b]) as Law Guardians resumed the role of acting as the abused child’s representative (Family Ct Act § 249). The Corporation Counsel in the City of New York, and the County Attorney in counties outside the City of New York who serve as counsel for their local child welfare agencies, were charged with the primary responsibility for representing the interests of petitioners in virtually all cases (Family Ct Act § 254 [a]; § 1032).
The realignment of lawyering responsibilities under the current provisions of the Family Court Act is important to our analysis. The District Attorney no longer has standing to originate abuse proceedings under Family Court Act article 10 without leave of the court (see, Family Ct Act § 1032). The Legislature also deleted the requirement that Assistant Dis
However, even though the District Attorney’s original function was given to the County Attorney, the District Attorney was named "a necessary party to the proceeding” (Family Ct Act § 254 [b]). Douglas J. Besharov, author of the Practice Commentary to Family Court Act § 254, recalls that the "necessary party” designation for both the District Attorney and the Corporation Counsel was adopted because: "This language was the result of a legislative compromise meant to insure that these legal officers would have notice of and be available for all child protective proceedings without automatically displacing the role or function of the petitioner’s counsel, if one is present. In cases involving child abuse, the Corporation Counsel and District Attorney are required to be parties to the proceeding in order to insure the fullest possible development of facts and law so that the children’s safety and well-being are best protected” (Besharov, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 254, at 226).
The quoted explanation focuses on notice and the deployment of resources so as to best protect abused children. In 1970 when the new child protective law took effect, there was no formalized system for notification to a prosecutor’s office of suspected abuse. Rather, the police and child care providers were expected to report allegedly criminal abuse. Today, the reporting requirements are statutory as part of an elaborate notification and investigation scheme first adopted in 1973 as the Child Protective Services Act (see, Social Services Law § 411 et seq.). In a case in which a child dies, the appropriate District Attorney must be notified by the investigating child protective agency and reports of other types of abuse are to be forwarded upon written request by the prosecutor (see, Social Services Law § 424 [4]). In addition, Family Court Act § 1014 (a) permits the Family Court to activate the criminal process if it concludes that Family Court proceedings are "inappropriate or insufficient”. In sum, although the statute requires it, there is no longer a compelling need to make the District Attorney a "necessary party” to all civil abuse proceedings. The issue of available resources to investigate and prosecute allegations of child abuse is somewhat more problematic.
Resources are essential if cases are to be adequately investigated and presented. The 1970 legislation under review made no provision for additional funding to investigate and present
In the case at bar, the child’s interests in the context of the article 10 proceeding were adequately protected by a determination of either abuse or neglect because the dispositional remedies available to protect her were the same irrespective of whether the court sustained a finding of neglect or abuse (see, Family Ct Act § 1052). Both the petitioner and the child were represented by independent counsel. Thus, there was no valid reason for the District Attorney to intervene or object to the disposition of the Family Court case, or to insist on a plenary determination on the issue of abuse, since it had no impact on the filing of criminal charges. The District Attorney would have had an incentive to litigate further if that had been necessary to avoid having collateral estoppel preclude a criminal prosecution. However, we hold today that the application of issue preclusion in such a situation would contravene the "litigation-limiting” purposes of the doctrine and simply encourage overlitigation at an earlier stage (Staatsburg Water Co. v Staatsburg Fire Dist., 72 NY2d 147, 155). Indeed, it is clear that the parties did not contemplate the possibility that a determination by the Family Court sustaining neglect but not abuse would act as a bar to a later prosecution for the same act. The Family Court Act contemplates separate but concurrent civil and criminal cases arising from allegations of abuse (Family Ct Act §§ 1013, 1014). Without attempting to exhaustively define what the Legislature intended by naming the District Attorney as a "necessary party”
The County Court overlooked important policy considerations in allowing the prior determination in the Family Court proceeding to be given collateral estoppel effect in the instant criminal proceeding. The doctrine of issue preclusion, commonly referred to as collateral estoppel, originated in civil litigation. It is designed to conserve time and judicial resources by barring a party from relitigating issues decided in a prior action, provided that he or she had a full and fair opportunity to contest the determination said to be controlling (see, Schwartz v Public Adm’r of County of Bronx, 24 NY2d 65).
The Court of Appeals has consistently emphasized that issue preclusion is an elastic doctrine which should not be mechanically applied in either a civil or criminal case, even when it may appear that its basic requirements have been met (see, People v Fagan, 66 NY2d 815, 816; Gilberg v Barbieri, 53 NY2d 285, 292). In Staatsburg Water Co. v Staatsburg Fire Dist. (72 NY2d 147, 153, supra), the Court stated: "In the end, the fundamental inquiry is whether relitigation should be permitted in a particular case in light of what are often competing policy considerations, including fairness to the parties, conservation of the resources of the court and the litigants, and the societal interests in consistent and accurate
In People v Fagan (supra), the Court of Appeals rejected the defendant’s contention that dismissal of charges lodged against him by the State, following a parole revocation hearing, should be given collateral estoppel effect to bar a later prosecution based on the same acts. Although the formal prerequisites for collateral estoppel had been met, the Court held that "[sjtrong policy considerations militate against giving issues determined in prior litigation preclusive effect in a criminal case, and indeed we have never done so” (People v Fagan, supra, at 816; see also, People v Plevy, supra, at 65, n 4). Further, the Court noted: "The correct determination of guilt or innocence is paramount in criminal cases (People v Berkowitz, 50 NY2d 333, 345), and the People’s incentive to litigate in a felony prosecution would presumably be stronger than in a parole revocation proceeding” (People v Fagan, supra, at 816).
Because the State’s paramount interest in the Family Court setting is to provide quick access to the court and protection for the abused child rather than to punish the parent named as a respondent (see, Matter of Diane P., 110 AD2d 354, 357), a proceeding pursuant to Family Court Act article 10 is considered civil in nature (see, People v Smith, 62 NY2d 306). Less than a decade ago, in Nelson v Dufficy (104 AD2d 234, supra), this Court, emphasizing the civil nature of the proceedings, refused to give a determination favorable to the respondent collateral estoppel effect to bar a later criminal prosecution of the same charge. The District Attorney was not a necessary party to the Family Court proceedings in Nelson v Dufficy (supra) because the matter was filed in New York City, where the Corporation Counsel, rather than the District Attorney, was named as a necessary party (see, Family Ct Act § 254 [b]), so there was no identity of parties. However, the broad policy considerations enunciated by the Court of Appeals in People v Fagan (supra) were an additional reason for the ruling in Nelson v Dufficy (supra) and they apply with equal force in the case at bar (see also, People v Bosilkofski, 134 AD2d 869, 870; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 28 [3], [5]). Thus, irrespective of what role the District Attorney serves as a "necessary party” in the Family Court abuse proceeding, we conclude that collateral estoppel should not be applied to bar the prosecution of the criminal charges here.
Order that the order is reversed, on the law, that branch of the defendant’s motion which was to dismiss the first three counts of the indictment is denied, those counts of the indictment are reinstated, and the matter is remitted to the County Court, Westchester County, for further proceedings consistent herewith.
. On November 16, 1990, the Family Court issued a further dispositional order directing that the subject child remain in the custody of the DSS for an additional six months. The defendant was further directed to participate in a parenting skills program and to obtain job counseling.
. The defendant’s motion to dismiss was made on or about November 16, 1990. After submission of a series of papers, the court issued its order granting the defendant’s motion with respect to the first three counts of the indictment on October 4, 1991. On October 11, 1991, the defendant pleaded guilty to the two remaining counts of the indictment charging him with perjury in the third degree and making a punishable false statement. On November 22, 1991, he was sentenced to concurrent three-year terms of probation. The People contend that these two counts do not arise out of the same criminal transaction as the first three counts, citing CPL 40.10 (2), so that the plea has no impact upon the dismissed counts. We are not called upon to decide this question on this appeal. On November 25, 1991, the court denied the People’s motion for leave to reargue the October 4, 1991 determination. Since the denial of reargument is not appealable, the People are only appealing from the original order.
. While it is not permissible for two or more lawyers to make separate presentations of one party’s case, this rule does not preclude the representation of a single party by two or more lawyers who agree on a division of trial responsibilities so that, for example, one lawyer opens and closes while another examines the witnesses.
. "Necessary party” is not defined by the CPLR, although prior law spoke of "indispensable” and "conditionally necessary” parties (Civ Prac Act § 193, as added by L 1946, ch 971, § 3). Currently, CPLR 1001 (a) deals with "Persons who ought to be parties if complete relief is to be accorded”. In any case, the District Attorney cannot be permitted to duplicate the work of the County Attorney (see, Matter of Williams, 120 Misc 2d 269, 272, supra).
. It cannot be said that the defendant satisfied his burden of establishing that the issue of his innocence or guilt of the crimes charged was determined in his favor by the Family Court’s determination sustaining neglect but not abuse (see, People v Berkowitz, 50 NY2d 333, 346; Nelson v Dufficy, 104 AD2d 234, supra). A commentator suggests that Family Court Judges may sometimes make a finding of neglect "even though abuse has been or can be established, in order to avoid antagonizing, threatening, or stigmatizing the parents” (Besharov, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 1031, at 341). The record supports such an analysis in this case.