In a custody proceeding pursuant to Family Court Act article 6, the mother appeals from an order of the Family Court, Suffolk County (Freundlich, J.), entered April 2, 1992, which, after a hearing, awarded custody of the parties’ child to the father, and granted visitation to the mother.
Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs and disbursements, and the matter is remitted to the Family Court, Suffolk County, for complete forensic evaluations of the parties and the child, and for a hearing de novo, in accordance herewith, which hearing shall be held with all due speed, and it is further,
Ordered that pending the determination after a de novo hearing, the custody of the child shall remain with the father, and the present visitation rights of the mother shall remain in effect.
The determination of a child’s custody by a hearing court is entitled to great weight on appeal, and should not be set aside lightly, as it is to a large extent a matter of the court’s discretion, depending heavily upon the Judge’s assessment of the credibility of witnesses and the character and temperament of the parties (see, Eschbach v Eschbach,
The out-of-wedlock child who is the subject of these proceedings, born on May 17, 1989, was conceived when his father was the mother’s high school guidance counselor. The father was then 40 years old and married. Their affair continued from 1985, when the mother was 19 years old and a student, to 1989, during which period the mother accompanied the father to motels on numerous trips to Albany, Buffalo, and Syracuse, where he was sent to attend guidance conferences. On some of these occasions, another 14-year-old female student joined them and participated in their sexual activities. As a result of a prior pregnancy for which the father was responsible, the mother underwent an abortion for which the father paid the expenses. However, when the child was born, the father paid none of the medical or hospital expenses, and refused to permit the mother to name the child after him or to use his name. Without any source of support, she was required to move into a shelter for the homeless. Although the father visited the child and mother regularly during his lunch hour, he spent no time alone with the child, and took no responsibility financially or otherwise for him. Early in 1991, when the child was about one and one-half years old, the mother left him in the care of her grandmother, intending to make a short trip to Jamaica, West Indies. However, she was arrested there for attempting to smuggle marihuana into the United States, and was incarcerated for a period of 8 or 9 months.
In April 1991 the father disclosed his relationship to the child and the mother to his wife, in the course of explaining his having contracted a sexually-transmitted disease. With his wife’s consent, he then moved the child into their home, and brought a petition in the Family Court, Suffolk County, seeking custody. A temporary custody order was entered in October 1991. Upon the mother’s release from prison and return to the United States, she immediately sought the return of her child, but was denied access to him by the father and his wife. A hearing on the father’s petition for permanent custody was held in January 1992 which resulted in the order appealed from, which granted custody to the father.
At the one-day hearing, the court heard testimony from the mother, the father, his wife, the maternal grandfather, and the girl who allegedly accompanied the mother and father on
We find that under the circumstances of this case, the court erred in failing to investigate the backgrounds, the psychological makeup of the parties, and the child’s needs. In determining custody the court must consider several factors including, inter alia, the relative fitness of the parents, the parent’s ability to provide for the child’s emotional and intellectual needs, and the parental guidance available for the child (see, Louise E. S. v. W. Stephen S.,
Moreover, the physical home environment provided by either parent should have been investigated by the probation department; instead, the court relied entirely upon photographs (see, Matter of Lobo v Muttee,
We note lastly that had a law guardian been appointed, by proper exercise of that counsel’s responsibility to protect the child’s interest, the appropriate investigations and evaluations could have been vigorously advocated and this costly error might have been avoided. Rosenblatt, J. P., Miller, Santucci and Joy, JJ., concur.
