In the case below in Kings County Family Court, Judge Paula Hepnar decides that she does not have the power to grant the relief requested by petitioner in their application to have the child declared a special immigrant under the relevant provisions of the Family and Surrogates court acts.
In the Matter of the Guardianship of V D.
FAMILY COURT OF NEW YORK, KINGS COUNTY
2007 NY Slip Op 27112; 15 Misc. 3d 819; 834 N.Y.S.2d 644;; 237 N.Y.L.J. 61
March 14, 2007, Decided
JUDGES: PAULA J. HEPNER, J.F.C.
Before the court is a motion to have V D. declared a "special immigrant" under the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J]). For the reasons set forth below the motion is denied.
V
D. was born in 1989. In August 2004, it is alleged that this child was
brought to the United States by her father and began living with her
mother. Thereafter the father returned to Haiti where he died in
January 2005. In February 2006, the mother left V with the
petitioner, a long-time friend of hers, and returned to Haiti where she
died in May 2006. The petitioner has cared for the child without
financial assistance from the state, friends or relatives since
February 2006. Nineteen days before V's 18th birthday, the
petitioner filed for guardianship and an attorney from the Door Legal
Services Center appeared as independent counsel for V pursuant to
section 249 (a) of the Family Court Act. When counsel's oral
motion to have the court make the findings necessary to declare the
child a "special immigrant" was denied, V's attorney filed the
written motion and memorandum of law presently before the court.
In
1990 the federal government enacted legislation as part of the
Immigration and Nationality Act to give undocumented children under the
jurisdiction of a juvenile court the ability to petition for "special
juvenile immigrant status" and obtain permanent legal residence in the
United States. Under 8 USC § 1101 (a) (27) (J) (i) and (ii), a "special immigrant" is an immigrant who "has been declared dependent on a juvenile court"
and "deemed eligible . . . for long-term foster care"
and
for whom a judicial determination has been made "that it would not be
in the alien's best interest to be returned to the alien's or parent's
previous country of nationality or country of last habitual residence."
Even if this court were able to make the requested findings, it could
not because the pleadings are insufficient since the guardianship
petition filed in this case contains no allegations to support the
third element required to satisfy the definition of "special
immigrant." Under
the federal regulations promulgated to implement the federal statute, a
child is eligible for classification as a "special immigrant" when
she/he has been "declared dependent upon a juvenile court located in
the United States
in accordance with state law governing such declarations of dependency" (8 CFR 204.11 [c] [3] [emphasis added]). The definition of "dependent" varies from state to state as the regulations recognize. Section 371 (7) of the Social Services Law
defines a "dependent child" as a "child who is in the custody of, or
wholly or partly maintained by an authorized agency or an institution,
society or other organization of charitable, eleemosynary,
correctional, or reformatory character." An "abandoned child" is defined in section 371 (2) of the Social Services Law
as a "child under the age of eighteen years who is abandoned by both
parents . . . in accordance with the definition and other criteria set
forth in subdivision five of section three hundred eighty-four-b."Under section 371 (3) (a) of the Social Services Law,
a "destitute child" is a "child who, through no neglect on the part of
its parent, guardian or custodian is . . . destitute or homeless." Under New York law, a
declaration of dependency can be made in one of three proceedings: in a child protective proceeding under article 10 of the Family Court Act, in a surrender proceeding as a destitute or abandoned child under sections 358-a and 384 of the Social Services Law or in an adoption proceeding pursuant to article 7 of the Domestic Relations Law.
Were V the subject of any of these proceedings, the facts of her
case would establish she is dependent, abandoned and destitute. Absent
an adjudication under these provisions of the Family Court Act, V
cannot be considered a "dependent" child nor is she "dependent upon a
juvenile court." When counsel's oral motion for "special immigrant
status" was denied on February 27, 2007 the court informed her that,
pursuant to section 1032 (b) of the Family Court Act,
the undersigned would authorize her, as the child's attorney, to file a
neglect petition on behalf of her client so there would be a proceeding
before the court in which the requested findings could be made. When time was of the essence, counsel chose to file a written motion for the same relief that already had been denied.
The Family Court is a court of limited jurisdiction. Its authority in guardianship proceedings under article 6 of the Family Court Act derives from article 17 of the Surrogates Court Procedure Act.
Neither a declaration of "dependency," as that term is defined in the
Social Services Law, nor any of the other declarations required by the
definition of "special immigrant" are made in the context of a guardianship proceeding under New York law (Matter of Zaim R., 13 Misc 3d 180, 822 NYS2d 368 [Fam Ct, Orange County 2006]). In
Zaim R.
the child's great uncle was awarded letters of guardianship in 2005.
One year later, Zaim's attorney filed a motion to have the child
declared a "special immigrant." The Family Court held it was "without
the jurisdictional authority to proceed as requested" (Zaim R., 13 Misc 3d at 185). Judge Klein's decision in
Zaim R.
references three other opinions from courts in Minnesota, Michigan and
Florida finding that the juvenile and probate courts, under their state
statutes, lacked subject matter jurisdiction to grant this type of
relief.
The standard for adjudication in guardianship cases, as set forth in section 1707 (1) of the Surrogates Court Procedure Act, is whether the "interests of the infant will be promoted by the appointment of a guardian," and courts generally perform a
Bennett v Jeffreys analysis
before reaching the question of best interests. When a court finds that
because of parental abandonment the interests of the child will be
promoted by the appointment of a guardian, the adjudication does not
result in a determination that the minor is a "dependent
child" or that she/he "is dependent upon the juvenile court."
Accordingly, under New York law, a guardianship proceeding is not the
proper vehicle for seeking this relief.
The administrative appeal in
Matter of Menjivar
(29 Immigr L & Pro Rptr B2-37 [1994]) from Texas, cited by
V's attorney in support of her motion, is not binding on this
court nor is it determinative of the issues herein. In that matter the
District Director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service
determined the minor had not been declared dependent on a juvenile
court and therefore was not eligible to petition for "special juvenile
immigrant status" because the Texas court had appointed the child's
uncle as his "managing conservator." The court's decree specifically
stated that "it was not in the beneficiary's best interest to return to
his native country of El Salvador" and the record contained an
affidavit from one of the attorneys who drafted the Texas Family Code
which stated that "when a family court decree designates a nonparent as
a managing conservator over a minor child whose parents have
relinquished
their parental rights, this situation is analogous to that described by
the term 'dependent on a juvenile court.' " On these facts and under
the Texas Family Code,
the District Director's determination was not upheld on appeal because
it was contrary to the express provisions of the federal
regulations.
Inasmuch as the parental rights to V have not been supplanted in
a court proceeding, and the statutory scheme in New York differs
substantially from the Texas Family Code, this administrative
determination is not pertinent.