New York FCT Code § 115

Jurisdiction of family court
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
§ 115. Jurisdiction of family court. (a) The family court has\nexclusive original jurisdiction over\n  (i) abuse and neglect proceedings, as set forth in article ten;\n  (ii) support proceedings, as set forth in article four;\n  (iii) proceedings to determine paternity and for the support of\nchildren born out-of-wedlock, as set forth in article five;\n  (iv) proceedings to permanently terminate parental rights to\nguardianship and custody of a child: (A) by reason of permanent neglect,\nas set forth in part one of article six of this act and paragraph (d) of\nsubdivision four of section three hundred eighty-four-b of the social\nservices law, (B) by reason of mental illness, intellectual disability\nand severe or repeated child abuse, as set forth in paragraphs (c) and\n(e) of subdivision four of section three hundred eighty-four-b of the\nsocial services law, and (C) by reason of the death of one or both\nparents, where no guardian of the person of the child has been lawfully\nappointed, or by reason of abandonment of the child for a period of six\nmonths immediately prior to the filing of the petition, where a child is\nunder the jurisdiction of the family court as a result of a placement in\nfoster care by the family court pursuant to article ten or ten-A of this\nact or section three hundred fifty-eight-a of the social services law,\nunless the court declines jurisdiction pursuant to section three hundred\neighty-four-b of the social services law;\n  (v) proceedings concerning whether a person is in need of supervision,\nas set forth in article seven; and\n  (vi) proceedings concerning juvenile delinquency as set forth in\narticle three.\n  (b) The family court has such other jurisdiction as is set forth in\nthis act, including jurisdiction over habeas corpus proceedings and over\napplications for support, maintenance, a distribution of marital\nproperty and custody in matrimonial actions when referred to the family\ncourt by the supreme court, conciliation proceedings, and proceedings\nconcerning physically handicapped and developmentally disabled children.\n  (c) The family court has such other jurisdiction as is provided by\nlaw, including but not limited to: proceedings concerning adoption and\ncustody of children, as set forth in parts two and three of article six\nof this act; proceedings concerning the uniform interstate family\nsupport act, as set forth in article five-B of this act; proceedings\nconcerning children in foster care and care and custody of children, as\nset forth in sections three hundred fifty-eight-a and three hundred\neighty-four-a of the social services law and article ten-A of this act;\nproceedings concerning former foster children as set forth in article\nten-B of this act; proceedings concerning destitute children, as set\nforth in article ten-C of this act; proceedings concerning guardianship\nand custody of children by reason of the death of, or abandonment or\nsurrender by, the parent or parents, as set forth in sections three\nhundred eighty-three-c, three hundred eighty-four and paragraphs (a) and\n(b) of subdivision four of section three hundred eighty-four-b of the\nsocial services law; proceedings concerning standby guardianship and\nguardianship of the person as set forth in part four of article six of\nthis act and article seventeen of the surrogate's court procedure act;\nproceedings concerning the interstate compact on juveniles as set forth\nin chapter one hundred fifty-five of the laws of nineteen hundred\nfifty-five, as amended; proceedings concerning the interstate compact on\nthe placement of children, as set forth in section three hundred\nseventy-four-a of the social services law; proceedings concerning the\nuniform child custody jurisdiction and enforcement act, as set forth in\narticle five-A of the domestic relations law; and proceedings concerning\nthe change of the name of a child as set forth in section sixty of the\ncivil rights law.\n  (d) Notwithstanding subdivisi

‹ Prev All New York sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.