FAMILY COURT JUDGE CRITICIZED BY THE FOURTH DEPARTMENT FOR ABANDONING HER ROLE AS A JUDGE AND ACTING AS AN ADVOCATE (FOURTH DEPT).
Although the appeal was moot, the Fourth Department took the opportunity to criticize the Family Court judge for acting as an advocate in this child placement proceeding:
At the hearing, the Judge “took on the function and appearance of an advocate” by choosing which witnesses to call and “extensively participating in both the direct and cross-examination of . . . witnesses” … , with a clear intention of strengthening the case for removal. For example, she asked a … caseworker whether the mother was “hostile, aggressive, violent or out of control,” and repeated questions to that caseworker using the same or similar phrasing at least 10 times. When the mother’s counsel objected to the Judge’s leading questions of another witness regarding incidents outside the relevant time period, the Judge overruled the objection, stating that “there’s no one else to run the hearing except for me.” She also introduced and admitted several written documents during the mother’s testimony over the objection of the mother’s counsel, and despite the mother’s statement that she could not read and was not familiar with the documents. In short, the Judge “essentially ‘assumed the parties’ traditional role of deciding what evidence to present’ ” while simultaneously acting as the factfinder … and thereby “transgressed the bounds of adjudication and arrogated to [herself] the function of advocate, thus abandoning the impartiality required of [her]” … .
This ” ‘clash in judicial roles,’ ” in which the Judge acted both as an advocate and as the trier of fact, “[a]t the very least . . . created the appearance of impropriety” … , particularly when the Judge aggressively cross-examined the mother regarding topics that were not relevant to the issue of the child’s removal and seemed designed to embarrass and upset the mother … . One such area of cross-examination concerned the fact that the mother had become pregnant several months before the hearing, but had been forced to terminate the pregnancy when it was determined to be ectopic. The Judge repeatedly questioned the mother regarding how many times the mother had engaged in sexual intercourse with the father of the terminated fetus, even though such information does not appear to have been relevant to the issue of the subject child’s placement inasmuch as, inter alia, there was no indication that the man was ever in the subject child’s presence. The Judge also asked the mother baseless questions about whether that man was a pedophile. Matter of Zyion B. (Fredisha B.), 2024 NY Slip Op 00550, Fourth Dept 2-2-24
Practice Point: Here the Fourth Department criticized the Family Court judge for acting as an advocate in this child placement proceeding.
