Filed Date: 3/15/2013
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeal from an order of the Family Court, Onondaga County (Martha E. Mulroy, J), entered September 15, 2011 in a proceeding pursuant to Social Services Law § 384-b. The order, inter alia, terminated the parental rights of respondent.
It is hereby ordered that the order so appealed from is unanimously affirmed without costs.
Memorandum: In this proceeding pursuant to Social Services Law § 384-b, respondent mother appeals from an order that,
The mother further contends that she was denied effective assistance of counsel on the grounds that her attorney failed to request posttermination contact and allegedly failed to call the child’s maternal grandmother as a witness during the dispositional hearing. We reject that contention. With respect to the posttermination contact, a court has no authority to direct continuing contact between a parent and child once that parent’s rights have been terminated pursuant to Social Services Law § 384-b (see Hailey ZZ., 19 NY3d at 426). Thus, the mother was not prejudiced by her attorney’s failure to request posttermination contact (see generally Sean W., 87 AD3d at 1319). With respect to her attorney’s alleged failure to call the child’s maternal grandmother as a witness, the mother did not meet her burden of demonstrating that the alleged failure resulted in actual prejudice (see Matter of Michael C., 82 AD3d 1651, 1652 [2011], lv denied 17 NY3d 704 [2011]). Indeed, there is no support in the record for the mother’s contention that the child’s maternal grandmother was willing or able to care for the child during the mother’s incarceration and thus should have been called as a witness to testify to that effect. Present— Centra, J.E, Peradotto, Lindley, Whalen and Martoche, JJ.