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Full Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
In this federal class action, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has certified three questions centered on New Yorkâs statutory scheme for child protective proceedings. The action is brought on behalf of mothers and their children who were separated because the mother had suffered domestic violence, to which the children were exposed, and the children were for that reason deemed neglected by her.
In April 2000, Sharwline Nicholson, on behalf of herself and her two children, brought an action pursuant to 42 USC § 1983 against the New York City Administration for Childrenâs Services (ACS). 1 The action was later consolidated with similar complaints by Sharlene Tillet and Ekaete Udohâthe three named plaintiff mothers. Plaintiffs alleged that ACS, as a matter of policy, removed children from mothers who were victims of domestic violence because, as victims, they âengaged in domestic violenceâ and that defendants removed and detained children without probable cause and without due process of law. That policy, and its implementationâaccording to plaintiff mothersâconstituted, among other wrongs, an unlawful interference with their liberty interest in the care and custody of their children in violation of the United States Constitution.
In August 2001, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York certified two subclasses: battered custodial parents (Subclass A) and their children (Subclass B) (Nicholson v Williams, 205 FRD 92, 95, 100 [ED NY 2001]). For each plaintiff, at least one ground for removal was that the custodial mother had been assaulted by an intimate partner and *366 failed to protect the child or children from exposure to that domestic violence.
In January 2002, the District Court granted a preliminary injunction, concluding that the City âmay not penalize a mother, not otherwise unfit, who is battered by her partner, by separating her from her children; nor may children be separated from the mother, in effect visiting upon them the sins of their motherâs battererâ (In re Nicholson, 181 F Supp 2d 182, 188 [ED NY 2002]; see also Nicholson v Williams, 203 F Supp 2d 153 [ED NY 2002] [108-page elaboration of grounds for injunction]).
The court found that ACS unnecessarily, routinely charged mothers with neglect and removed their children where the mothersâwho had engaged in no violence themselvesâhad been the victims of domestic violence; that ACS did so without ensuring that the mother had access to the services she needed, without a court order, and without returning these children promptly after being ordered to do so by the court; 2 that ACS caseworkers and case managers lacked adequate training about domestic violence, and their practice was to separate mother and child when less harmful alternatives were available; that the agencyâs written policies offered contradictory guidance or no guidance at all on these issues; and that none of the reform plans submitted by ACS could reasonably have been expected to resolve the problems within the next year (203 F Supp 2d at 228-229).
The District Court concluded that ACSâs practices and policies violated both the substantive due process rights of mothers and children not to be separated by the government unless the parent is unfit to care for the child, and their procedural due process rights (181 F Supp 2d at 185). The injunction, in relevant part, âprohibited] ACS from carrying out ex parte removals âsolely because the mother is the victim of domestic violence,â or from filing an Article Ten petition seeking removal on that *367 basisâ (Nicholson v Scoppetta, 344 F3d 154, 164 [2d Cir 2003] [internal citations omitted]). 3
On appeal, the Second Circuit held that the District Court had not abused its discretion in concluding that ACSâs practice of effecting removals based on a parentâs failure to prevent his or her child from witnessing domestic violence against the parent amounted to a policy or custom of ACS, that in some circumstances the removals may raise serious questions of federal constitutional law, and that the alleged constitutional violations, if any, were at least plausibly attributable to the City (344 F3d at 165-167, 171-176). 4 The court hesitated, however, before reaching the constitutional questions, believing that resolution of uncertain issues of New York statutory law would avoid, or significantly modify, the substantial federal constitutional issues presented (id. at 176).
Given the strong preference for avoiding unnecessary constitutional adjudication, the importance of child protection to New York State and the integral part New York courts play in the removal process, the Second Circuit, by three certified questions, chose to put the open state statutory law issues to us for resolution. We accepted certification (1 NY3d 538 [2003]), and now proceed to answer those questions. 5
Certified Question No. 1: Neglect
âDoes the definition of a âneglected childâ under N.Y. Family Ct. Act § 1012(f), (h) include instances in which the sole allegation of neglect is that the parent or other person legally responsible for the childâs care allows the child to witness domestic abuse against the caretaker?â (344 F3d at 176.)
*368 We understand this question to ask whether a court reviewing a Family Court Act article 10 petition may find a respondent parent responsible for neglect based on evidence of two facts only: that the parent has been the victim of domestic violence, and that the child has been exposed to that violence. That question must be answered in the negative. Plainly, more is required for a showing of neglect under New York law than the fact that a child was exposed to domestic abuse against the caretaker. Answering the question in the affirmative, moreover, would read an unacceptable presumption into the statute, contrary to its plain language.
Family Court Act § 1012 (f) is explicit in identifying the elements that must be shown to support a finding of neglect. As relevant here, it defines a âneglected childâ to mean:
âa child less than eighteen years of age
â(i) whose physical, mental or emotional condition has been impaired or is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as a result of the failure of his parent or other person legally responsible for his care to exercise a minimum degree of care . . .
â(B) in providing the child with proper supervision or guardianship, by unreasonably inflicting or allowing to be inflicted harm, or a substantial risk thereof, including the infliction of excessive corporal punishment; or by misusing a drug or drugs; or by misusing alcoholic beverages to the extent that he loses self-control of his actions; or by any other acts of a similarly serious nature requiring the aid of the court.â
Thus, a party seeking to establish neglect must show, by a preponderance of the evidence (see Family Ct Act § 1046 [b] [i]), first, that a childâs physical, mental or emotional condition has been impaired or is in imminent danger of becoming impaired and second, that the actual or threatened harm to the child is a consequence of the failure of the parent or caretaker to exercise a minimum degree of care in providing the child with proper supervision or guardianship. The drafters of article 10 were âdeeply concernedâ that an imprecise definition of child neglect might result in âunwarranted state intervention into private family lifeâ (Besharov, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 1012, at 320 [1999 ed]).
*369 The first statutory element requires proof of actual (or imminent danger of) physical, emotional or mental impairment to the child (see Matter of Nassau County Dept. of Social Servs. [Dante M.J v Denise J., 87 NY2d 73, 78-79 [1995]). This prerequisite to a finding of neglect ensures that the Family Court, in deciding whether to authorize state intervention, will focus on serious harm or potential harm to the child, not just on what might be deemed undesirable parental behavior. âImminent dangerâ reflects the Legislatureâs judgment that a finding of neglect may be appropriate even when a child has not actually been harmed; âimminent danger of impairment to a child is an independent and separate ground on which a neglect finding may be basedâ (Dante M., 87 NY2d at 79). Imminent danger, however, must be near or impending, not merely possible.
In each case, additionally, there must be a link or causal connection between the basis for the neglect petition and the circumstances that allegedly produce the childâs impairment or imminent danger of impairment. In Dante M., for example, we held that the Family Court erred in concluding that a newbornâs positive toxicology for a controlled substance alone was sufficient to support a finding of neglect because the report, in and of itself, did not prove that the child was impaired or in imminent danger of becoming impaired (87 NY2d at 79). We reasoned, â[r]elying solely on a positive toxicology result for a neglect determination fails to make the necessary causative connection to all the surrounding circumstances that may or may not produce impairment or imminent risk of impairment in the newborn childâ (id.). The positive toxicology report, in conjunction with other evidenceâsuch as the motherâs history of inability to care for her children because of her drug use, testimony of relatives that she was high on cocaine during her pregnancy and the motherâs failure to testify at the neglect hearingâsupported a finding of neglect and established a link between the report and physical impairment.
The cases at bar concern, in particular, alleged threats to the childâs emotional, or mental, health. The statute specifically defines â[impairment of emotional healthâ and âimpairment of mental or emotional conditionâ to include
âa state of substantially diminished psychological or intellectual functioning in relation to, but not limited to, such factors as failure to thrive, control of aggressive or self-destructive impulses, ability to *370 think and reason, or acting out or misbehavior, including incorrigibility, ungovernability or habitual truancyâ (Family Ct Act § 1012 [h]).
Under New York law, âsuch impairment must be clearly attributable to the unwillingness or inability of the respondent to exercise a minimum degree of care toward the childâ (id.). Here, the Legislature recognized that the source of emotional or mental impairmentâunlike physical injuryâmay be murky, and that it is unjust to fault a parent too readily. The Legislature therefore specified that such impairment be âclearly attributableâ to the parentâs failure to exercise the requisite degree of care.
Assuming that actual or imminent danger to the child has been shown, âneglectâ also requires proof of the parentâs failure to exercise a minimum degree of care. As the Second Circuit observed, âa fundamental interpretive question is what conduct satisfies the broad, tort-like phrase, âa minimum degree of care.â The Court of Appeals has not yet addressed that question, which would be critical to defining appropriate parental behaviorâ (344 F3d at 169).
ââ[M]inimum degree of careâ is a âbaseline of proper care for children that all parents, regardless of lifestyle or social or economic position, must meetâ (Besharov at 326). Notably, the statutory test is âminimum degree of careâânot maximum, not best, not idealâand the failure must be actual, not threatened (see e.g. Matter of Hofbauer, 47 NY2d 648, 656 [1979] [recognizing, in the context of medical neglect, the courtâs role is not as surrogate parent and the inquiry is not posed in absolute terms of whether the parent has made the ârightâ or âwrongâ decision]).
Courts must evaluate parental behavior objectively: would a reasonable and prudent parent have so acted, or failed to act, under the circumstances then and there existing (see Matter of Jessica YY., 258 AD2d 743, 744 [3d Dept 1999]). The standard takes into account the special vulnerabilities of the child, even where general physical health is not implicated (see Matter of Sayeh R., 91 NY2d 306, 315, 317 [1997] [motherâs decision to demand immediate return of her traumatized children without regard to their need for counseling and related services âcould well be found to represent precisely the kind of failure âto exercise a minimum degree of careâ that our neglect statute contemplatesâ]). Thus, when the inquiry is whether a motherâ and domestic violence victimâfailed to exercise a minimum *371 degree of care, the focus must be on whether she has met the standard of the reasonable and prudent person in similar circumstances.
As the Subclass A members point out, for a battered motherâ and ultimately for a courtâwhat course of action constitutes a parentâs exercise of a âminimum degree of careâ may include such considerations as: risks attendant to leaving, if the batterer has threatened to kill her if she does; risks attendant to staying and suffering continued abuse; risks attendant to seeking assistance through government channels, potentially increasing the danger to herself and her children; risks attendant to criminal prosecution against the abuser; and risks attendant to relocation. 6 Whether a particular mother in these circumstances has actually failed to exercise a minimum degree of care is necessarily dependent on facts such as the severity and frequency of the violence, and the resources and options available to her (see Matter of Melissa U., 148 AD2d 862 [3d Dept 1989]; Matter of James MM. v June OO., 294 AD2d 630 [3d Dept 2002]).
Only when a petitioner demonstrates, by a preponderance of evidence, that both elements of section 1012 (f) are satisfied may a child be deemed neglected under the statute. When âthe sole allegationâ is that the mother has been abused and the child has witnessed the abuse, such a showing has not been made. This does not mean, however, that a child can never be âneglectedâ when living in a household plagued by domestic violence. Conceivably, neglect might be found where a record establishes that, for example, the mother acknowledged that the children knew of repeated domestic violence by her paramour and had reason to be afraid of him, yet nonetheless allowed him several times to return to her home, and lacked awareness of any impact of the violence on the children, as in Matter of James MM. (294 AD2d at 632); or where the children were exposed to regular and continuous extremely violent conduct between their parents, several times requiring official intervention, and where caseworkers testified to the fear and distress the children were *372 experiencing as a result of their long exposure to the violence (Matter of Theresa CC., 178 AD2d 687 [3d Dept 1991]).
In such circumstances, the battered mother is charged with neglect not because she is a victim of domestic violence or because her children witnessed the abuse, but rather because a preponderance of the evidence establishes that the children were actually or imminently harmed by reason of her failure to exercise even minimal care in providing them with proper oversight.
Certified Question No. 2: Removals
Next, we are called upon to focus on removals by ACS, in answering the question:
âCan the injury or possible injury, if any, that results to a child who has witnessed domestic abuse against a parent or other caretaker constitute âdangerâ or âriskâ to the childâs âlife or health,â as those terms are defined in the N.Y. Family Ct. Act §§ 1022, 1024, 1026-1028?â (344 F3d at 176-177.)
The cited Family Court Act sections relate to the removal of a child from home. Thus, in essence, we are asked to decide whether emotional injury from witnessing domestic violence can rise to a level that establishes an âimminent dangerâ or âriskâ to a childâs life or health, so that removal is appropriate either in an emergency or by court order.
While we do not reach the constitutional questions, it is helpful in framing the statutory issues to note the Second Circuitâs outline of the federal constitutional questions relating to removals. Their questions emerge in large measure from the District Courtâs findings of an âagency-wide practice of removing children from their mother without evidence of a motherâs neglect and without seeking prior judicial approvalâ (203 F Supp 2d at 215), and Family Court review of removals that âoften fails to provide mothers and children with an effective avenue for timely relief from ACS mistakesâ (id. at 221).
Specifically, as to ex parte removals, the Circuit Court identified procedural due process and Fourth Amendment questions focused on whether danger to a child could encompass emotional trauma from witnessing domestic violence against a parent, warranting emergency removal. Discussing the procedural due process question, the court remarked that:
âthere is a strong possibility that if New York law *373 does not authorize ex parte removals, our opinion in Tenenbaum at least arguably could weigh in favor of finding a procedural due process violation in certain circumstances. If New York law does authorize such removals, Tenenbaum likely does not prohibit us from deferring to that judgment. In either case, the underlying New York procedural rules will also be an important component of our balancing. Thus, the state-law question of statutory interpretation will either render unnecessary, or at least substantially modify, the federal constitutional questionâ (344 F3d at 172). 7
The court also questioned whether âin the context of the seizure of a child by a state protective agency the Fourth Amendment might impose any additional restrictions above and beyond those that apply to ordinary arrestsâ (id. at 173).
As to court-ordered removals, the Second Circuit recognized challenges based on substantive due process, procedural due processâthe antecedent of Certified Question No. 3âand the Fourth Amendment. The substantive due process question concerned whether the City had offered a reasonable justification for the removals. The Second Circuit observed that âthere is a substantial Fourth Amendment question presented if New York law does not authorize removals in the circumstances allegedâ (id. at 176).
Finally, in certifying the questions to us, the court explained that:
â[t]here is . . . some ambiguity in the statutory language authorizing removals pending a final determination of status. Following an emergency removal, whether ex parte or by court order, the Family Court must return a removed child to the parentâs custody absent âan imminent riskâ or âim *374 minent dangerâ to âthe childâs life or health.â At the same time, the Family Court must consider the âbest interests of the childâ in assessing whether continuing removal is necessary to prevent threats to the childâs life or health. Additionally, in order to support removal, the Family Court must âfind[ ] that removal is necessary to avoid imminent risk.â How these provisions should be harmonized seems to us to be the province of the Court of Appealsâ (344 F3d at 169 [internal citations omitted]).
The Circuit Court summarized the policy challenged by plaintiffs and found by the District Court as âthe alleged practice of removals based on a theory that allowing oneâs child to witness ongoing domestic violence is a form of neglect, either simply because such conduct is presumptively neglectful or because in individual circumstances it is shown to threaten the "childâs physical or emotional healthâ (id. at 166 n 5).
It is this policy, viewed in light of the District Courtâs factual findings, that informs our analysis of Certified Question No. 2. In so doing, we acknowledge the Legislatureâs expressed goal of âplacing increased emphasis on preventive services designed to maintain family relationships rather than responding to children and families in trouble only by removing the child from the familyâ (see Mark G. v Sabol, 93 NY2d 710, .719 [1999] [emphasis omitted] [construing Child Welfare Reform Act of 1979 (L 1979, chs 610, 611)]). We further acknowledge the legislative findings, made pursuant to the Family Protection and Domestic Violence Intervention Act of 1994, that
â[t]he corrosive effect of domestic violence is far reaching. The battererâs violence injures children both directly and indirectly. Abuse of a parent is detrimental to children whether or not they are physically abused themselves. Children who witness domestic violence are more likely to experience delayed development, feelings of fear, depression and helplessness and are more likely to become batterers themselvesâ (L 1994, ch 222, § 1; see also People v Wood, 95 NY2d 509, 512 [2000] [though involving a batterer, not a victim]).
These legislative findings represent two fundamentalâ sometimes conflictingâprinciples. New York has long embraced a policy of keeping âbiological families togetherâ (Matter of Marino S., 100 NY2d 361, 372 [2003]). Yet âwhen a childâs best *375 interests are endangered, such objectives must yield to the Stateâs paramount concern for the health and safety of the childâ (id.).
As we concluded in response to Certified Question No. 1, exposing a child to domestic violence is not presumptively neglectful. Not every child exposed to domestic violence is at risk of impairment. A fortiori, exposure of a child to violence is not presumptively ground for removal, and in many instances removal may do more harm to the child than good. Part 2 of article 10 of the Family Court Act sets forth four ways in which a child may be removed from the home in response to an allegation of neglect (or abuse) related to domestic violence: (1) temporary removal with consent; (2) prehminary orders after a petition is filed; (3) preliminary orders before a petition is filed; and (4) emergency removal without a court order. The issue before us is whether emotional harm suffered by a child exposed to domestic violence, where shown, can warrant the trauma of removal under any of these provisions.
The Practice Commentaries state, and we agree, that the sections of part 2 of article 10 create a âcontinuum of consent and urgency and mandate a hierarchy of required reviewâ before a child is removed from home (see Besharov, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 1021, at 5 [1999 ed]).
Consent Removal
First, section 1021 provides that a child may be removed âfrom the place where he is residing with the written consent of his parent or other person legally responsible for his care, if the child is an abused or neglected child under this articleâ (Family Ct Act § 1021; see Tenenbaum v Williams, 193 F3d 581, 590 n 5 [2d Cir 1999]; Matter of Jonathan P., 283 AD2d 675 [3d Dept 2001]). This section is significant because âmany parents are willing and able to understand the need to place the child outside the home and because resort to unnecessary legal coercion can be detrimental to later treatment effortsâ (Besharov at 6).
Postpetition Removal
If parental consent cannot be obtained, section 1027, at issue here, provides for preliminary orders after the filing of a neglect (or abuse) petition. Thus, according to the statutory continuum, where the circumstances are not so exigent, the agency should bring a petition and seek a hearing prior to re *376 moval of the child. In any case involving abuseâor in any case where the child has already been removed without a court orderâthe Family Court must hold a hearing as soon as practicable after the filing of a petition, to determine whether the childâs interests require protection pending a final order of disposition (Family Ct Act § 1027 [a]). As is relevant here, the section further provides that in any other circumstance (such as a neglect case), after the petition is filed any person originating the proceeding (or the Law Guardian) may apply forâor the court on its own may orderâa hearing to determine whether the childâs interests require protection, pending a final order of disposition (id.). 8
For example, in Matter of Adam DD. (112 AD2d 493 [3d Dept 1985]), after filing a child neglect petition, petitioner Washington County Department of Social Services sought an order under section 1027. At a hearing, evidence demonstrated that respondent mother had told her son on several occasions that she intended to kill herself, and Family Court directed that custody be placed with petitioner on a temporary basis for two months. At the subsequent dispositional hearing, a psychiatrist testified that respondent was suffering from a type of paranoid schizophrenia that endangered the well-being of the child, and recommended the continued placement with petitioner. A second psychiatrist concurred. The Appellate Division concluded that the record afforded a basis for Family Court to find neglect because of possible impairment of the childâs emotional health, and continued placement of the child with petitioner.
While not a domestic violence case, Matter of Adam DD. is instructive because it concerns steps taken in the circumstance where a child is emotionally harmed by parental behavior. The parentâs repeated threats of suicide caused emotional harm that could be akin to the experience of a child who witnesses repeated episodes of domestic violence perpetrated against a parent. In this circumstance, the agency did not immediately remove the child, but proceeded with the filing of a petition and a hearing.
Upon such a hearing, if the court finds that removal is necessary to avoid imminent risk to the childâs life or health, it is *377 required to remove or continue the removal and remand the child to a place approved by the agency (Family Ct Act § 1027 [b] [i]). In undertaking this inquiry, the statute also requires the court to consider and determine whether continuation in the childâs home would be contrary to the best interests of the child (id.). 9
The Circuit Court has asked us to harmonize the âbest interestsâ test with the calculus concerning âimminent riskâ and âimminent dangerâ to âlife or healthâ (344 F3d at 169). In order to justify a finding of imminent risk to life or health, the agency need not prove that the child has suffered actual injury (see Matter of Kimberly H., 242 AD2d 35, 38 [1st Dept 1998]). Rather, the court engages in a fact-intensive inquiry to determine whether the childâs emotional health is at risk. Section 1012 (h), moreover, sets forth specific factors, evidence of which may demonstrate âsubstantially diminished psychological or intellectual functioningâ (see also Matter of Sayeh R., 91 NY2d 306, 314-316 [1997]; Matter of Nassau County Dept. of Social Servs. [Dante M.] v Denise J., 87 NY2d 73, 78-79 [1995]). As noted in our discussion of Certified Question No. 1, section 1012 (h) contains the caveat that impairment of emotional health must be âclearly attributable to the unwillingness or inability of the respondent to exercise a minimum degree of care toward the childâ (see Matter of Theresa CC., 178 AD2d 687 [3d Dept 1991]).
Importantly, in 1988, the Legislature added the âbest interestsâ requirement to the statute, as well as the requirement that reasonable efforts be made âto prevent or ehminate the need for removal of the child from the homeâ (L 1988, ch 478, § 5). 10 These changes were apparently necessary to comport with federal requirements under title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42 USC §§ 670-679D, which mandated that federal âfoster care maintenance payments may be made on behalf of otherwise eligible children who were removed from the home of a specified relative pursuant to a voluntary placement agreement, or as the result of a âjudicial determination to the effect that continuation therein would be contrary to the welfare of *378 the child and . . . that reasonable efforts [to prevent the need for removal] have been madeâ â (Policy Interpretation Question of US Dept of Health & Human Servs, May 3, 1986, Bill Jacket, L 1988, ch 478, at 32-33). The measures âensure[d] that children involved in the early stages of child protective proceedings and their families receive appropriate services to prevent the childrenâs removal from their homes whenever possibleâ (Mem from Cesar A. Perales to Evan A. Davis, Counsel to Governor, July 27, 1988, Bill Jacket, L 1988, ch 478, at 14).
By contrast, the City at the time took the position that
â[t]he mixing of the standards âbest interest of the childâ and âimminent riskâ is confusing. It makes no sense for a court to determine as part of an âimminent riskâ decision, what is in the âbest interest of the child.â If the child is in âimminent riskâ, his/her âbest interestâ is removal from the home. A âbest interestâ determination is more appropriately made after an investigation and a report have been completed and all the facts are availableâ (Letter from Legis Rep James Brennan, City of New York Off of Mayor, to Governor Mario M. Cuomo, July 27, 1988, Bill Jacket, L 1988, ch 478, at 23).
In this litigation, the City posits that the âbest interestsâ determination is part of the Family Courtâs conclusion that there is imminent risk warranting removal, and concedes that whether a child will be harmed by the removal is a relevant consideration. The City thus recognizes that the questions facing a Family Court judge in the removal context are extraordinarily complex. As the Circuit Court observed, âit could be argued that the exigencies of the moment that threaten the welfare of a child justify removal. On the other hand, a blanket presumption in favor of removal may not fairly capture the nuances of each family situationâ (344 F3d at 174).
The plain language of the section and the legislative history supporting it establish that a blanket presumption favoring removal was never intended. The court must do more than identify the existence of a risk of serious harm. Rather, a court must weigh, in the factual setting before it, whether the imminent risk to the child can be mitigated by reasonable efforts to avoid removal. It must balance that risk against the harm removal might bring, and it must determine factually which course is in the childâs best interests.
*379 Additionally, the court must specifically consider whether imminent risk to the child might be eliminated by other means, such as issuing a temporary order of protection or providing services to the victim (Family Ct Act § 1027 [b] [iii], [iv]). The Committee Bill Memorandum supporting this legislation explains the intent that â[w]here one parent is abusive but the child may safely reside at home with the other parent, the abuser should be removed. This will spare children the trauma of removal and placement in foster careâ (Mem of Children and Families Standing Comm, Bill Jacket, L 1989, ch 727, at 7).
These legislative concerns were met, for example, in Matter of Naomi R. (296 AD2d 503 [2d Dept 2002]), where, following a hearing pursuant to section 1027, Family Court issued a temporary order of protection against a father, excluding him from the home, on the ground that he allegedly sexually abused one of his four children. Evidence established that the fatherâs return to the home, even under the motherâs supervision, would present an imminent risk to the health and safety of all of the children. Thus, pending a full fact-finding hearing, Family Court took the step of maintaining the integrity of the family unit and instead removed the abuser.
Ex Parte Removal by Court Order
If the agency believes that there is insufficient time to file a petition, the next step on the continuum should not be emergency removal, but ex parte removal by court order (see e.g. Matter of Nassau County Dept. of Social Servs. [Dante M.] v Denise J., 87 NY2d 73 [1995]). Section 1022 of the Family Court Act provides that the court may enter an order directing the temporary removal of a child from home before the filing of a petition if three factors are met.
First, the parent must be absent or, if present, must have been asked and refused to consent to temporary removal of the child and must have been informed of an intent to apply for an order. Second, the child must appear to suffer from abuse or neglect of a parent or other person legally responsible for the childâs care to the extent that immediate removal is necessary to avoid imminent danger to the childâs life or health. Third, there must be insufficient time to file a petition and hold a preliminary hearing.
Just as in a section 1027 inquiry, the court must consider whether continuation in the childâs home would be contrary to the best interests of the child; whether reasonable efforts were *380 made prior to the application to prevent or eliminate the need for removal from the home; and whether imminent risk to the child would be eliminated by the issuance of a temporary order of protection directing the removal of the person from the childâs residence. 11 Here, the court must engage in a fact-finding inquiry into whether the child is at risk and appears to suffer from neglect.
The Practice Commentaries suggest that section 1022 may be unfamiliar, or seem unnecessary, to those in practice in New York City, âwhere it is common to take emergency protective action without prior court reviewâ (Besharov, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 1022, at 10 [1999 ed]). If, as the District Courtâs findings suggest, this was done in cases where a court order could be obtained, the practice contravenes the statute. Section 1022 ensures that in most urgent situations, there will be judicial oversight in order to prevent well-meaning but misguided removals that may harm the child more than help. As the comment to the predecessor statute stated, â[t]his section . . . [is] designed to avoid a premature removal of a child from his home by establishing a procedure for an early judicial determination of urgent needâ (Committee Comments, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, Family Ct Act § 322 [1963 ed]).
Whether analyzing a removal application under section 1027 or section 1022, or an application for a childâs return under section 1028, a court must engage in a balancing test of the imminent risk with the best interests of the child and, where appropriate, the reasonable efforts made to avoid removal or continuing removal. The term âsafer courseâ (see e.g. Matter of Kimberly H., 242 AD2d 35 [1st Dept 1998]; Matter of Tantalyn TT., 115 AD2d 799 [3d Dept 1985]) should not be used to mask a dearth of evidence or as a watered-down, impermissible presumption.
Emergency Removal Without Court Order
Finally, section 1024 provides for emergency removals without a court order. The section permits removal without a court order and without consent of the parent if there is reasonable cause to believe that the child is in such urgent circumstance or condition that continuing in the home or care of the *381 parent presents an imminent danger to the childâs life or health, and there is not enough time to apply for an order under section 1022 (Family Ct Act § 1024 [a]; see generally Matter of Joseph DD., 300 AD2d 760, 760 n 1 [3d Dept 2002] [noting that removal under such emergency circumstances requires the filing of an article 10 petition âforthwithâ and prompt court review of the nonjudicial decision pursuant to Family Ct Act § 1026 (c) and § 1028]; see also Matter of Karla V., 278 AD2d 159 [1st Dept 2000]). Thus, emergency removal is appropriate where the danger is so immediate, so urgent that the childâs life or safety will be at risk before an ex parte order can be obtained. The standard obviously is a stringent one.
Section 1024 establishes an objective test, whether the child is in such circumstance or condition that remaining in the home presents imminent danger to life or health. 12 In construing âimminent dangerâ under section 1024, it has been held that whether a child is in âimminent dangerâ is necessarily a fact-intensive determination. âIt is not required that the child be injured in the presence of a caseworker nor is it necessary for the alleged abuser to be present at the time the child is taken from the home. It is sufficient if the officials have persuasive evidence of serious ongoing abuse and, based upon the best investigation reasonably possible under the circumstances, have reason to fear imminent recurrenceâ (Gottlieb v County of Orange, 871 F Supp 625, 628-629 [SD NY 1994], citing Robison v Via, 821 F2d 913, 922 [2d Cir 1987]). The Gottlieb court added that, â[s]inee this evidence is the basis for removal of a child, it should be as reliable and thoroughly examined as possible to avoid unnecessary harm to the family unitâ (871 F Supp at 629).
Section 1024 concerns, moreover, only the very grave circumstance of danger to life or health. While we cannot say, for all future time, that the possibility can never exist, in the case of emotional injuryâor, even more remotely, the risk of emotional injuryâcaused by witnessing domestic violence, it must be a rare circumstance in which the time would be so fleeting and *382 the danger so great that emergency removal would be warranted.