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Court Bars Mother from Exposing "Child to an Activity That Violates" "Child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic Faith";
N.Y. appellate court reverses the order.
From Weichman v. Weichman, decided in November by the N.Y. Appellate Division (in an opinion by Judges Mark C. Dillon, Sylvia O. Hinds–Radix, Linda Christopher, and Joseph A. Zayas):
The parties were married in 2005. There is one child of the marriage, born in 2006. The child was raised in accordance with the parties' Orthodox Jewish Chasidic faith and attended an Orthodox Chasidic yeshiva from the age of two. In March 2015, the plaintiff commenced this action for a divorce ….
The plaintiff identifies as a member of the LGBTQ community, and considers herself an Orthodox Jew. Following a trial on the issues of custody and parental access, the Supreme Court issued a decision awarding the defendant sole custody of the child, with the plaintiff to have specified periods of parental access. The court imposed certain restrictions on the plaintiff's periods of parental access, including a requirement that: "The [plaintiff] shall not take the child to a place or expose the child to an activity that violates rules, practices, traditions and culture of the child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic Faith. Thus, the [plaintiff] shall ensure that the child is able to abide by the laws and rules of the Shabbat, Jewish Holidays, Kosher Chasidic and Glatt Kosher food requirement, and the rules of the Mosdos Chasidic Square." …
Ordinarily, absent an agreement, the custodial parent has the right to make educational decisions for a child. Nevertheless, "it may be appropriate, depending upon the particular circumstances of the case, to award some custodial decision-making authority to the noncustodial parent." Here, there was a sound and substantial basis for the Supreme Court's determination to award the defendant decision-making authority on the issue of the child's education. The child had been enrolled in the same yeshiva since he was two years old, where he was doing well socially and academically, and the plaintiff failed to establish that her desired plan of enrolling the child in a different type of yeshiva or a public school would be in the child's best.
However, we agree with the plaintiff that the Supreme Court's direction that, during her periods of parental access, she "shall not take the child to a place or expose the child to an activity that violates rules, practices, traditions and culture of the child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic Faith" must be vacated.
In the absence of a written agreement, the custodial parent may determine the religious training of a child. Consistent with the children's best interests, courts may properly direct noncustodial parents, during periods of parental access, to respect the children's religious beliefs and practices and make reasonable efforts to ensure the children's compliance with their religious requirements. However, … a court oversteps constitutional limitations when it purports to compel a parent to adopt a particular religious lifestyle.
"To the contrary, '[i]t is beyond dispute that, at a minimum, the Constitution guarantees that government may not coerce anyone to support or participate in religion or its exercise.'" A religious upbringing provision "should not, and cannot, be enforced to the extent that it violates a parent's legitimate due process right to express oneself and live freely." Thus, where the effect of a religious upbringing provision is to compel a parent to himself or herself practice a religion, rather than merely directing the parent to provide the child with a religious upbringing, the provision must be stricken.
Here, the challenged restriction does not expressly require the plaintiff to herself comply with the rules of the child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic faith during periods of parental access. Nonetheless, we agree with the plaintiff that the breadth of the provision in forbidding her to "expose" the child to any activities which violate the child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic faith has the same effect as the provisions this Court struck down in [two prior cases]. The only way for the plaintiff to ensure her compliance with the restriction is for her to comply with all religious requirements of the child's faith during her periods of parental access, lest she "expose" the child to activities not in keeping with those religious requirements.
The defendant's testimony at the trial supports this conclusion and demonstrates that he expected the plaintiff to "conduct herself in [the child's] presence according to the rules" of the child's faith. The defendant was especially concerned that the child would be exposed to people involved in a "gay lifestyle" and testified that, if the plaintiff became involved in a relationship with or married a woman, he would request that the partner not be present during periods of parental access because same-sex relationships are inconsistent with Chasidic religious principles. Such restrictions on a parent's ability to "express oneself and live freely" go beyond requiring a noncustodial parent to support and enable the child's religious practices, and impermissibly infringe on the noncustodial parent's rights.
The plaintiff does not challenge the Supreme Court's direction that, during periods of parental access, she "shall ensure that the child is able to abide by the laws and rules of the Shabbat, Jewish Holidays, Kosher Chasidic and Glatt Kosher food requirement, and the rules of the Mosdos Chasidic Square." That provision effectively addresses the plaintiff's obligation to ensure the child's compliance with his religious requirements during her periods of parental access….
For much more on this, see Parent-Child Speech and Child Custody Speech Restrictions.
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Speaking of lousy parents (bigotry is not improved by being wrapped in old-timey superstition) . . it is being reported that Clinger Barbie is being tossed out of court.
"Clinger Barbie" isn't a bigoted characterization? If you say so.
But yeah, apparently, it's OK for the left wing paper of record to falsely claim that Palin incited the shooting of Gabby Giffords. I guess you progressives will have to be disabused of your idiotic conspiracy theories the old-fashioned way, through logic and reason. It's going to be tough, but that's freedom for you...
She should take the case all the way up to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court should replace NY Times with the Journalism Code of Ethics, as a standard of practice.
https://www.spj.org/ethicscode.asp
The Times may well skate by on the "actual malice" standard. Under which bumbling behavior gets a pass from libel. So sayeth the Supreme Court.
But anyone who still believes the Times is a fool. The level of sloppiness in the Palin case is something that would earn an F in an 4th grade English class. If you can't be bothered to check your own newspaper's reporting on the subject you are writing about, then don't expect anyone to believe you.
Disregard the Times and Post and stick with Fox, Newsmax, the Volokh Conspiracy, Newsweek, Gateway Pundit, Instapundit, One America, the Washington Times, Prager, Stormfront, and Breitbart, Bored Lawyer. Wingnut media are the right fit for you.
True to form. All insults, no substance.
OK. Boomer. Tell the class when you are resigning to be replaced by a diverse. Until then, STFU, you are a lawyer.
Bored Lawyer: Yes, The New York Times editorial in question was wrong about the crosshairs on Palin's web page, which marked congressional districts, not faces of legislators. In an actual fourth grade English class, the assignment isn't, "A member of Congress was shot at a baseball practice, now write an editorial in three hours." But if a fourth-grader did write an essay for English class and got a big fact wrong, he/she would be graded on the writing in general, not on the error. (If the class were "current events", which I don't think is often taught in the fourth grade, the fact error would be more of an issue.) Anyway, I strongly disagree with you. The fourth grader wouldn't earn an F for a fact error. The New York Times was under time pressure and got a fact wrong in an editorial. The paper issued a correction the very next day.
"Bored Lawyer: Yes, The New York Times editorial in question was wrong about the crosshairs on Palin's web page, which marked congressional districts, not faces of legislators."
More importantly, it was wrong about the fact that there was any incitement from Palin linked to the Gabby Giffords shooting.
The claim is simply deranged. It is the equivalent of the WSJ publishing a claim about the link between Vince Foster's death and politically motivated murder.
Even though they only had a few hours to publish the editorial, they had years to realized that the "incitement" claim was a batshit-crazy conspiracy theory and not actual fact. The Times had in fact previously published that there was no like between the two.
Let me suggest, B.L., that demanding perfection is not very sensible or fair. Do you think right-wing publications never get their facts wrong? In fact, for example, on the few occasions Fos reports on wrongdoing by a Republican it often puts (D) next to their names.
Sure, the NYT screwed up. Did it's mistake meet the "actual malice" standard? I don't think so. Neither did Rakoff, apparently.
And what significant damage did Palin suffer, anyway? Seems like the case kept her in the limelight longer than she would otherwise have been.
I think you missed my point. I understand the legal standard of NY Times v. Sullivan. And that Judge Rakoff may rule (or have ruled) that Palin could not meet that as a matter of law. I have not reviewed the evidence, nor his ruling, so I can't comment on that directly.
What I can comment on here is that the NY Times did a very poor job. It's not a matter of demanding perfection, but minimal journalistic standards. I don't but the "we only had three hours" excuse. First of all, that is more than enough time to check your own database of reporting. We live in a digitial age, and the relevant articles can be pulled within minutes.
And, second, if you don't have enough time to verify the facts, then you just omit your factual claims. You can still run your editorial telling everyone how awful political assasination is. But if you want to gild the lily and make factual accusations, get your ducks in a row. Or if not, either omit them, or wait another day to run the editorial.
My first boss once told me that the only thing you have as a lawyer is your credibility, and if you lose that, you are gone. Same applies to journalism. The Times' credibility took a beating.
Nor am I impressed by your tu quoque arguments about Fox News, which I don't watch.
Show me an outlet that's never gotten a fact wrong, or even a single journalist who's written a large number of articles.
It seems you indeed are demanding perfection, as you proceed to explain why even a single wrong fact fails to meet minimal journalistic standards.
Sure the Times took a hit to credibility; but since no news source has never taken such hits, all one can do is either consider which outlets have taken the fewest hits, or live in a world where there is no credibility so you choose to believe whatever suits your feelings.
Speaking of anti-semitic trolling, Kirkland.
I am not aware Sarah Palin is Jewish. I was focusing on the substandard education, the lousy parenting, the superstitious gullibility, the comprehensive stupidity, the dysfunctional family, the thorough ignorance, and the like.
If you are referring not to the imbecile Sarah Palin but rather the bigot Prof. Volokh has spotlighted, please describe to what degree and in what way superstition improves gay-bashing bigotry in modern America.
Sychophantic right-wing stooges are among my favorite culture war casualties.
"I am not aware Sarah Palin is Jewish."
You called Orthodox Jews bigots, dumbass.
I described gay-bashing as bigotry.
Gays caused 20 megadeaths by their sexual selfishness. They are not above criticism.
It is rare for a mom to lose all custody rights in family courts. So either she is a crazy monster or she get screwed, I cannot tell.
Either way, she wants the right to expose the orthodox Jew child, whose sex is not identified, to Jewish lesbianism. The appeals court rules on religious freedom. I do not believe religion in the real issue here.
"The child had been enrolled in the same yeshiva since he was two years old, where he was doing well...."
I am an American who is Jewish (not a Jewish American) and it is clear here that like the fundamentalist extremes of all relgions, the faith that they profess in this situation is so contrary to rational thinking, individual freedom and the like that the only way they can maintain their extremist religious views is by force.
If their beliefs were truly supported and they had the faith of their convictions they would welcome exposure of their children and even their adults to alternative views, since that would strengthen their belief that their's was the proper way. The fact that they fight to oppose the presentation of any alternatives to their children shows just how weak and impotent their faith and core beliefs are.
Religion by force is not religion, it is tyranny.
If you were divorced and your ex-spouse became a Klan member, you might be concerned about your child being exposed to Klan activities, constitutionally protected though they be. That doesn't prove that belief in racial equality is so irrational that it can only survive by force.
Homosexuality is more divorced from reality than the KKK.
y81 answered your nonsensical argument quite well. Do you make your toddler brush her teeth? Do you limit your tween's screen time? Don't you think your belief in toothbrushing is fully supported?
So she's allowed to take the kid to events which don't violate the rules, practices, traditions and culture of the child's Orthodox Jewish Chasidic Faith? Does that include circumcisions?
The kid is 15 or 16, and unless there's some peculiarity to the sect in question has been considered an adult in the religious sense since 13. Seems like the responsibility for practicing his faith should fall on him, not on a parent as religious babysitter.
Except that under secular law, she has control over him. She can force him to come to her house, or go places she wants to go. So she had coercive power over an impressionable 16 year old, granted her by the secular law and the court. The court is right to control that.
When he turns 18, and is free from her legal control, then yes, he can decide how to relate to his mother and square that with his religious obligations.
Reason.com is apparently immune to my usually reliable Search Fu so I cannot confirm, but I seem to recall Prof. Volokh having considerably more to say when NYC tried to impose mask and/or vax mandates on orthodox populations than he has to say about a court enforcing orthodox laws/mores.
Too picky, IMO. Almost nobody here would even know about this case if EV hadn't posted it. And you seem to be implying that his lack of commentary indicates some kind of preference for the orthodox parent. I took it the opposite way. If he was certain the higher court got it wrong he probably would have said so in a few words.
Anyway, I believe EVs position has been consistent: child custody cases present difficult religious liberty questions, even for 1st Amendment maximalists.
I’m biased of course but the clear implication is that the Professor has some slippery opinions as to when a government can involve itself in matters with a religious component. Public health measures, no; child custody matters, no problem.
I remember some media outrage around 10-15 years ago when a family court in the South forbade same-sex sleepovers during visitation periods. Is there any federal precedent on this subject or is it all state by state?
Without knowing a whole lot about family law, I believe that the specific context of child custody is wholly controlled by state law. There is definitely federal precedent on the First Amendment in general though.
Thanks. That establishes that he was a boy at age 2. No telling what he might be when the mom gets done with him!
A boy who got to witness hot lesbian action close up.
This provision, "shall ensure that the child is able to abide by the laws and rules of the Shabbat, Jewish Holidays, Kosher Chasidic and Glatt Kosher food requirement, and the rules of the Mosdos Chasidic Square.", pretty much settles the question, to me.
Mom has to abide by that agreement she freely entered. I don't think that is at issue. The information we have is incomplete. What are the rules of Mosdos Chassidic Square, wrt homosexual relationships? To me, you need to start there. Mom knew what those rules were when she signed the agreement. So what do those rules say? If the rules are silent on the topic, then what is Dad upset about? Be pissed at your lawyer, not Mom (who you specifically renounced and released via a get).
I wonder the about the psychological impact to the child when Mom 'comes out'. Is there good long-term observational data (10+years) on children whose parent 'comes out'? Is there a lasting psychological impact - positive or negative? How does that play into the best interest of the child? Do we even know?
The court opinion says the statement you quoted is a requirement imposed by order of the court, not by agreement between the parties. The opinion also repeatedly refers to what what happens in the absence of an agreement.
The mother hadn’t agreed to anything..
I think that makes this case different from one where the parents had made an agreement.
A feature of this case is that it addresses a bare court order by the judge based on the judge’s own view of what is best for the child in the absence of any agreement between the parents. An agreement between the parties is likely considerably less encumbered by Establishment Clause considerations than an order that arises only from the judge’s own opinion.
So parents who are concerned about the religious upbringing of their children and want that upbringing to survive a possible future relapse by one of them, who be wise to create an agreement setting out the rules. It might also be advisable for such an agreement to describe consequences of violation in terms of limitations on the violating parent’s future custody/visitation rather than requiring a court to order specific behavior. Finally, it might be advisable to use arbitration where permitted rather than courts for the key decisions.
I am looking forward to a subsequent case where the two parties disagree on a point of Jewish law and we are treated to the edifying spectacle of duelling rabbis, and words like Chazal, and Besht, and Meshuggener are bandied about to the distress of the court reporter who has never so much as eaten a bagel.