Judges: Levine
Filed Date: 12/21/1989
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/31/2024
Appeals from two orders of the Family Court of St. Lawrence County (Nelson, J.), entered August 25, 1988, which granted petitioner’s applications, in six proceedings pursuant to Social Services Law § 384-b, to adjudicate respondents’ children to be children of a mentally ill or mentally retarded parent, and terminated respondents’ parental rights.
Respondents are the parents of three children. They appeal from orders of Family Court terminating their parental rights. In 1984, the children were adjudicated as neglected and placed in the custody of petitioner, the St. Lawrence County Department of Social Services (hereinafter DSS). That proceeding arose out of an investigation disclosing that the two daughters of respondents had been sexually abused. In September 1987, while the children were still in foster care, DSS filed separate petitions against the father seeking termination of parental rights as to each child on, inter alia, the statutory ground of his mental illness rendering him incapable then or for the foreseeable future to provide proper and adequate care for the children (Social Services Law § 384-b [4] [c]). Petitions were also filed against the mother invoking the same statutory ground of mental incompetency, in her case, by reason of mental retardation.
At the hearings conducted before Family Court, DSS submitted overwhelming and uncontradicted evidence of the fa
On appeal, the father’s primary contention is that DSS, during the period of foster care, withheld contact with the children from him and failed to offer services to ascertain whether such services could have assisted him in providing adequate care for the children. It is urged that the absence of contact and offer of services renders the evidence insufficient, as a matter of law. We disagree. In a termination case based upon mental incapacity, no proof is required of a child care agency’s diligent efforts to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship (Social Services Law § 384-b [4] [c]; [6]; cf., Social Services Law § 384-b [7] [a] [permanent neglect]; Matter of Jammie CC., 149 AD2d 822, 823). While under many circumstances the mental incapacity of the parent to provide care must take into account the measures the agency took to maintain the family setting (see, Matter of Joyce T., 65 NY2d 39, 48), here the serious nature and overt manifestations of the father’s mental illness, all well documented in the record, supported one expert’s conclusion that, under his care, the children’s home life would have to be monitored virtually 24 hours a day to ensure that their minimal daily care needs would be met. No such burden is required of a child care agency before parental rights may be terminated for a parent’s mental incapacity (see, Matter of Kevin R., 112 AD2d 462, lv denied 67 NY2d 602). Thus, the evidence was amply convincing to sustain Family Court’s termination of the father’s parental rights.
In the case of the mother, DSS introduced the expert testimony of a physician and two clinical psychologists. The psychologists placed her IQ in the range of 47 to 64, under which she would be classified as moderately to mildly mentally retarded, with a mental age of six years, nine months. Each expert agreed that the mother’s retardation originated
There was also evidence of DSS services provided to the mother to improve her parenting and homemaking skills. This included five sessions with the Home Service Director for United Cerebral Palsy Association, qualified by training and experience to work with the retarded, in conjunction with visitations with the children at the mother’s home. It was this witness’s conclusion that these sessions did not result in any improvement in parenting abilities. DSS also provided case work and homemaker services, which had no impact. In 1986, DSS also arranged for the mother to attend eight parent effectiveness training classes. Preclass and postclass testing established no improvement in her skills. The foregoing evidence again met the requisite clear and convincing standard that the mother was mentally retarded and that her incapacity then and for the foreseeable future to provide proper and adequate care for the children was such that if they were to return to her custody they would be in danger of becoming neglected (Social Services Law § 384-b [4] [c]; [6] [b]). The demonstrated fact that the provision of protracted homemaker services and of training which was reasonably calculated to improve her parenting skills were all unavailing also confirms Family Court’s finding of future incapacity (see, Matter of Joyce T., 65 NY2d 39, 48, supra).
The foregoing conclusion is not shaken by the fact that expert testimony was introduced by the mother to the effect that intensive training could elevate her skills to the point of being able to provide adequate care for her children. In our view, it was not unreasonable for Family Court to have rejected the opinion of the mother’s expert. The clinical psychologist appointed by the court to examine the mother
Orders affirmed, without costs. Mahoney, P. J., Casey, Yesawich, Jr., Levine and Harvey, JJ., concur.