| Matter of Samy F. |
| 2011 NY Slip Op 51822(U) [33 Misc 3d 1209(A)] |
| Decided on October 14, 2011 |
| Family Court, Queens County |
| Hunt, J. |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
In the Matter of Samy
F., A Person Alleged to be a Juvenile Delinquent, Respondent.
|
By petition filed pursuant to Family Court Act §310.1 (1) on August
10, 2011 respondent,
Samy F., is alleged to have committed acts which, were he an adult, would constitute
the
crimes of Obstructing Governmental Administration in the Second Degree and
Resisting Arrest.
Respondent and his mother appeared before the Court for the initial appearance upon
the
petition on August 10, 2011 (see, Fam. Ct. Act §320.1). Respondent
was advised of the charges
and was provided with a copy of the juvenile delinquency petition (Fam. Ct. Act
§320.4 [1]).
The Court then proceeded to ascertain whether independent legal representation was
available
to the respondent or whether an attorney should be appointed to represent respondent
pursuant to
Family Court Act §249 (Fam. Ct. Act §320.2 [2]).
According to the respondent's mother she has owned a private home located at 25-53 89th
Street in Jackson Heights, Queens County, since 1989. According to Ms.
F., she resides in
[*2]
"the basement" of that house along with her two
sons and her husband,[FN1]
and the upstairs portion
of the house is occupied by a tenant who pays rent in the amount of $1,500 per
month. Ms. F.
further stated that she "is unemployed", that her husband "receives disability"
benefits of an
unknown amount due to his physical incapacity, and that the family owns a motor
vehicle. It
is also unclear whether the mother of the respondent received unemployment
insurance benefits.
Based upon the limited information provided to the Court, the Court was unable to
concludethat respondent's family was indigent and that the respondent qualified for
the
appointmentof counsel at public expense pursuant to Family Court Act §249.
Therefore, the
Court adjourned the conclusion of the initial appearance until August 24, 2011 to
allow
respondent's mother to retain an attorney to represent him (Fam. Ct. Act §320.2
[1], [3]).The
Court advised respondent's mother that she should bring documents establishing her
family's
income and assets on the adjournment date.[FN2]
On August 24, 2011 respondent and his mother again appeared but no attorney
appeared
for the respondent. Respondent's mother claimed that she had attempted to obtain a
home equity
loan to finance the cost of counsel for her son, but that the bank had denied her
application for
the loan. Although the Court was unable to determine based upon the information
available that
respondent's mother is indigent and unable to afford counsel to represent the
respondent, given
that two weeks had elapsed since the filing of the petition, the Court appointed a
member of the
Family Court Attorneys for Children and Assigned Counsel Plan to serve as the
attorney for the
[*3]
respondent for the duration of the proceedings.
Thereafter, based upon the representation of
counsel that the parties were considering the informal resolution of the case through
the
Department of Probation adjustment process (Fam. Ct. Act §308.1; 22
NYCRR§§205.22;
205.23; Matter of Aaron J., 80 NY2d 402, 406), the Court further adjourned
the conclusion of
the initial appearance until September 1, 2011.
Respondent, his mother, and the attorneys for the parties appeared on September 1, 2011.
At that time the Court was informed that efforts at adjustment had failed, and the
initial
appearance was then continued. Respondent entered a denial to the charges, he was
released to
the custody of his mother, and the case was scheduled for a fact-findinghearing on
October 18,
2011 (Fam. Ct. Act §§320.4 [2]). In addition, as there had been no
determination that
respondent's mother is indigent and is unable to afford the expense of providing
counsel for her
son, the Court informed respondent's mother that she and any other person legally
responsible
for respondent's support would be required to reimburse the State of New York for
the cost of
the representation by the attorney who had been appointed by the Court.
The representation ofan accused juvenile delinquent by counsel is an indispensable
elementof due process (Fam. Ct. Act §§241; 320.3; In re Gault,
387 US 1 [1967]; In re C.S.,
115 Ohio St3d 267, 277, 874 NE2d 1177, 1187 [Sup Ct 2007]). Under New
York lawa parent is
ordinarily responsible for thesupport of his or her children until they reach the age of
21 (Fam.
Ct. Act §413 [1]; Social Services Law §101 [1]; Bani-Esraili v.
Lerman, 69 NY2d 807, 808;
Matter of Miller v. Miller, 299 AD2d 463, 464; Matter of Calvello v. Calvello, 20
AD3d 525,
527; Matter of Cancilla v.
Cancilla, 22 AD3d 490, 491; Cimons v. Cimons, 53 AD3d 125, 134),
and a parent's obligation to provide child support has been construed to include the
expense of
[*4]
providing counsel for a child who is the subject
of a proceeding before the Family Court (Fam.
Ct. Act §416;[FN3] Pascazi v. Pascazi, 65 AD3d 1202, 1203, lv denied 13
NY3d 714; Matter of Plovnick v.
Klinger, 10 AD3d 84, 89-90; Matter of Cheri H., 121 Misc 2d 973, 974;
People v.
Kearns, 189 Misc 2d 283, 288; Matter of Giles C. v. Janet L., 31
Misc 3d 1245[A], 2011 NY
Slip Op 5114[U], at *1; see also, In re W.B.J., 966 P2d 295, 298-299
[Utah Sup Ct 1998]; In re
J.B., 157 Vt 668, 669, 608 A2d 368, 369 [Sup Ct 1991]; State ex rel.
Gordon v. Copeland, 803
SW2d 153, 160 [Mo. Ct. App 1991]; Opinion of the Justices, 121 NH 531,
535, 431 A2d 144,
148 [Sup Ct 1981]).
While New York has enacted a comprehensive system to provide counsel at public
expense for indigent children and adults who appear before the Family Court, "[t]he
assigned
counsel Law Guardian panel is only intended to provide public funding for children
of those
parents unable to afford privately retained counsel" (Colangelo v. Colangelo,
176 Misc 2d 837,
842). The state funded Attorneys for Children (i.e., Law Guardian) program
does "not preclude
[the] representation of minors by private counsel and relegate all children to publicly
funded
attorneys "(id. at 843), and "[t]o provide publicly funded legal representation
to individuals with
an ability to afford their own counsel makes no sense" (id. at 842; see
also, Plovnick at 89;
Pascazi at 1203).
As a matter of public policy, the Family Court Act mandates the "swift and certain"
adjudication of juvenile delinquencycharges (Matter of Frank C., 70 NY2d
408, 413; Matter of
Randy K., 77 NY2d 398, 402; Matter of Benjamin L., 92 NY2d
660, 665; Matter of Bernard T.,
[*5]
92 NY2d 738, 745). A parent's reluctance or
outright refusal to hire an attorney for a child
charged with juvenile delinquency cannot operate as a waiver of counsel (Matter
of Cheri H. at
974; Gordon v. Copeland at 159),[FN4] or be permitted to impair the child's right to a
speedy
resolution of the proceeding (In re J.B., 157 Vt 668, 669, 608 A2d 368, 369
[Sup Ct 1991]; In re
W.B.J. at 299).
Accordingly, as the record does not establish that respondent's mother is indigent and
unable to afford the expense of retaining the services of an attorney for her son, she
is
responsible for the cost of the legal services provided by the court appointed
attorney. At the
conclusion of this proceeding, the attorney for respondent shall submit his claim for
compensation to the Court, and the Court will determine the liability of the
respondent's mother
for the cost of the representation. Respondent's mother will be provided with an
opportunity to
submit updated financial documentation prior to any final determination by the
Court.
This constitutes the order of the Court.
E N T E R:
_________________________________
JOHN M. HUNT
Judge of the Family Court
Dated: Jamaica, New York
October ____, 2011