|
(Cite
as: 455 U.S. 745, 102 S.Ct. 1388, 71 L.Ed.2d 599)
Santosky
v. Kramer
U.S.N.Y., 1982.
Supreme
Court of the United States
John
SANTOSKY II and Annie Santosky, Petitioners
v.
Bernhardt
S. KRAMER, Commissioner, Ulster County Department of Social Services, et
al.
No.
80-5889.
Argued
Nov. 10, 1981.
Decided
March 24, 1982.
*745
Under New York law, the State may terminate, over parental
objection, the rights of parents in their natural child upon
a finding that the child is “permanently
neglected.”
The New York Family Court Act (§
622)
requires that only a “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
support that finding.
Neglect proceedings were brought in Family Court to terminate petitioners'
rights as natural parents in their three children.
Rejecting petitioners' challenge to the constitutionality of §
622's
“fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard, the Family Court weighed the evidence under that standard
and found permanent neglect.
After a subsequent dispositional hearing, the Family Court ruled that
the best interests of the children required permanent termination of
petitioners' custody.
The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court affirmed,
and the New York Court of Appeals dismissed petitioners' appeal
to that court.
Held:
1.
Process
is constitutionally due a natural parent at a state-initiated parental
rights termination proceeding.
Pp. 1393-1396.
(a)
The
fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in the care, custody,
and management of their child is protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment, and does not evaporate simply because they have not
been model parents or have lost temporary custody of their
child to the State.
A parental rights termination proceeding interferes with that fundamental liberty
interest.
When the State moves to destroy weakened familial bonds, it
must provide the parents with fundamentally fair procedures.
Pp. 1393-1394.
(b)
The
nature of the process due in parental rights termination proceedings
turns on a balancing of three factors:
the
private interests affected by the proceedings;
the
risk of error created by the State's chosen procedure;
and
the countervailing governmental interest supporting use of the challenged procedure.
Mathews
v. Eldridge,
424 U.S. 319, 335, 96 S.Ct. 893, 903, 47 L.Ed.2d
18.
In any given proceeding, the minimum standard of proof tolerated
by the due process requirement reflects not only the weight
of the public and
*746
private**1391
interests affected, but also a societal judgment about how
the risk of error should be distributed between the litigants.
The minimum standard is a question of federal law which
this Court may resolve.
Retrospective case-by-case review cannot preserve fundamental fairness when a class
of proceedings is governed by a constitutionally defective evidentiary standard.
Pp. 1394-1396.
2.
The
“fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard prescribed by §
622
violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pp. 1396-1402.
(a)
The
balance of private interests affected weighs heavily against use of
such a standard in parental rights termination proceedings, since the
private interest affected is commanding and the threatened loss is
permanent.
Once affirmed on appeal, a New York decision terminating parental
rights is final
and irrevocable.
Pp. 1397-1398.
(b)
A
preponderance
standard does not fairly allocate the risk of an erroneous
factfinding between the State and the natural parents.
In parental rights termination proceedings, which bear many of the
indicia of a criminal trial, numerous factors combine to magnify
the risk of erroneous factfinding.
Coupled with the preponderance standard, these factors create a significant
prospect of erroneous termination of parental rights.
A standard of proof that allocates the risk of error
nearly equally between an erroneous failure to terminate, which leaves
the child in an uneasy status quo, and an erroneous
termination, which unnecessarily destroys the natural family, does not reflect
properly the relative severity of these two outcomes.
Pp. 1398-1401.
(c)
A
standard of proof more strict than preponderance of the evidence
is consistent with the two state interests at stake in
parental rights termination proceedings-a parens
patriae
interest in preserving and promoting the child's welfare and a
fiscal and administrative interest in reducing the cost and burden
of such proceedings.
Pp. 1401-1402.
3.
Before
a State may sever completely and irrevocably the rights of
parents in their natural child, due process requires that the
State support its allegations by at least clear and convincing
evidence.
A “clear
and convincing evidence”
standard adequately conveys to the factfinder the level of subjective
certainty about his factual conclusions necessary to satisfy due process.
Determination of the precise burden equal to or greater than
that standard is a matter of state law properly left
to state legislatures and state courts.
Pp. 1402-1403.
75
App.Div.2d 910, 427 N.Y.S.2d 319, vacated and remanded.
*747
Martin Guggenheim, New York City, for petitioners.
Stephen
Scavuzzo, Washington, D. C., for respondents, pro hac vice, by
special leave of Court.
Justice
BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Under
New York law, the State may terminate, over parental objection,
the rights of parents in their natural child upon a
finding that the child is “permanently
neglected.”
N.Y.Soc.Serv.Law
§§
384-b.4.(d),
384-b.7. (a) (McKinney Supp.1981-1982) (Soc.Serv.Law).
The New York Family Court Act §
622
(McKinney 1975 and Supp.1981-1982) (Fam.Ct.Act) requires that only a “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
support that finding.
Thus, in New York, the factual certainty required to extinguish
the parent-child relationship is no greater than that necessary to
award money damages in an ordinary civil action.
Today
we hold that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment demands more than this.
Before a State may sever completely and irrevocably the rights
of parents in
*748
their natural child, due process requires that the State support
its **1392
allegations by at least clear and convincing evidence.
I
A
New
York authorizes its officials to remove a child temporarily from
his or her home if the child appears “neglected,”
within the meaning of Art. 10 of the Family Court
Act.
See §§
1012(f),
1021-1029.
Once removed, a child under the age of 18 customarily
is placed “in
the care of an authorized agency,”
Soc.Serv.Law §
384-b.7.(a),
usually a state institution or a foster home.
At that point, “the
state's first obligation is to help the family with services
to ...
reunite it....”
§
384-b.1.(a)(iii).
But if convinced that “positive,
nurturing parent-child relationships no longer exist,”
§
384-b.1.(b),
the State may initiate “permanent
neglect”
proceedings to free the child for adoption.
The
State bifurcates its permanent neglect proceeding into “fact-finding”
and “dispositional”
hearings.
Fam.Ct.Act
§§
622,
623.
At the factfinding stage, the State must prove that the
child has been “permanently
neglected,”
as defined by Fam.Ct.Act §§
614.1.(a)-(d)
and Soc.Serv.Law §
384-b.7.
(a).
See
Fam.Ct.Act §
622.
The Family Court judge then determines at a subsequent dispositional
hearing what placement would serve the child's best interests.
§§
623,
631.
At
the factfinding hearing, the State must establish, among other things,
that for more than a year after the child entered
state custody, the agency “made
diligent efforts to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship.”
Fam.Ct.Act §§
614.1.(c),
611.
The State must further prove that during that same period,
the child's natural parents failed “substantially
and continuously or repeatedly to maintain contact with or plan
for the future of the child although physically and financially
able to do so.”
§
614.1(d).
Should
the State support its allegations by “a
fair preponderance of the evidence,”
§
622,
the child may be declared permanently neglected.*749
§
611.
That declaration empowers the Family Court judge to terminate permanently
the natural parents' rights in the child.
§§
631(c),
634.
Termination denies the natural parents physical custody, as well as
the rights ever to visit, communicate with, or regain custody
of the child.FN1
FN1.
At
oral argument, counsel for petitioners asserted that, in New York,
natural parents have no means of restoring terminated parental rights.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 9.
Counsel for respondents, citing Fam.Ct.Act §
1061,
answered that parents may petition the Family Court to vacate
or set aside an earlier order on narrow grounds, such
as newly discovered evidence or fraud.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 26.
Counsel for respondents conceded, however, that this statutory provision has
never been invoked to set aside a permanent neglect finding.
Id.,
at 27.
New
York's permanent neglect statute provides natural parents with certain procedural
protections.FN2
But
New York permits its officials to establish “permanent
neglect”
with less proof than most States require.
Thirty-five States, the District of Columbia, and the Virgin Islands
currently specify a higher standard of proof, in parental rights
termination proceedings, than a “fair
preponderance of the evidence.”
FN3
**1393
The only analogous federal statute of which we are aware
*750
permits termination of parental rights solely upon “evidence
beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, Pub.L. 95-608, §
102(f),
92 Stat. 3072, 25 U.S.C. §
1912(f)
(1976 ed., Supp.IV).
The question here is whether
*751
New York's “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard is constitutionally sufficient.
FN2.
Most
notably, natural parents have a statutory right to the assistance
of counsel and of court-appointed counsel if they are indigent.
Fam.Ct.Act
§
262(a)(iii).
FN3.
Fifteen
States, by statute, have required “clear
and convincing evidence”
or its equivalent.
See Alaska Stat.Ann. §
47.10.080(c)(3)
(1980);
Cal.Civ.Code
Ann. §
232(a)(7)
(West Supp.1982);
Ga.Code
§§
24A-2201(c),
24A-3201 (1979);
Iowa
Code §
600A.8
(1981) (“clear
and convincing proof”);
Me.Rev.Stat.Ann.,
Tit. 22, §
4055.1.B.(2)
(Supp.1981-1982);
Mich.Comp.Laws
§
722.25
(Supp.1981-1982);
Mo.Rev.Stat.
§
211.447.2(2)
(Supp.1981) (“clear,
cogent and convincing evidence”),
N.M.Stat.Ann. §
40-7-4.J.
(Supp.1981);
N.C.Gen.Stat.
§
7A-289.30(e)
(1981) (“clear,
cogent, and convincing evidence”);
Ohio
Rev.Code Ann. §§
2151.35,
2151.414(B) (Page Supp.1982);
R.I.Gen.Laws
§
15-7-7(d)
(Supp.1980);
Tenn.Code
Ann. §
37-246(d)
(Supp.1981);
Va.Code
§
16.1-283.B
(Supp.1981);
W.Va.Code
§
49-6-2(c)
(1980) (“clear
and convincing proof”);
Wis.Stat.
§
48.31(1)
(Supp.1981-1982).
Fifteen
States, the District of Columbia, and the Virgin Islands, by
court decision, have required “clear
and convincing evidence”
or its equivalent.
See Dale
County Dept. of Pensions & Security v. Robles,
368 So.2d 39, 42 (Ala.Civ.App.1979);
Harper
v. Caskin,
265 Ark. 558, 560-561, 580 S.W.2d 176, 178 (1979);
In
re J. S. R.,
374 A.2d 860, 864 (D.C.1977);
Torres
v. Van Eepoel,
98 So.2d 735, 737 (Fla.1957);
In
re Kerns,
225 Kan. 746, 753, 594 P.2d 187, 193 (1979);
In
re Rosenbloom,
266 N.W.2d 888, 889 (Minn.1978) (“clear
and convincing proof”);
In
re J. L. B.,
182 Mont. 100, 116-117, 594 P.2d 1127, 1136 (1979);
In
re Souza,
204 Neb. 503, 510, 283 N.W.2d 48, 52 (1979);
J.
v. M.,
157 N.J.Super. 478, 489, 385 A.2d 240, 246 (App.Div.1978);
In
re J.A.,
283 N.W.2d 83, 92 (N.D.1979);
In
re Darren Todd H.,
615 P.2d 287, 289 (Okl.1980);
In
re William L.,
477 Pa. 322, 332, 383 A.2d 1228, 1233, cert. denied
sub
nom. Lehman v. Lycoming County Children's Services,
439 U.S. 880, 99 S.Ct. 216, 58 L.Ed.2d 192 (1978);
In
re G. M.,
596 S.W.2d 846, 847 (Tex.1980);
In
re Pitts,
535 P.2d 1244, 1248 (Utah 1975);
In
re Maria,
15 V.I. 368, 384 (1978);
In
re Sego,
82 Wash.2d 736, 739, 513 P.2d 831, 833 (1973) (“clear,
cogent, and convincing evidence”);
In
re X.,
607 P.2d 911, 919 (Wyo.1980) (“clear
and unequivocal”).
South
Dakota's Supreme Court has required a “clear
preponderance”
of the evidence in a dependency proceeding.
See In
re B.E.,
287 N.W.2d 91, 96 (1979).
Two States, New Hampshire and Louisiana, have barred parental rights
terminations unless the key allegations have been proved beyond a
reasonable doubt.
See State
v. Robert H.,
118 N.H. 713, 716, 393 A.2d 1387, 1389 (1978);
La.Rev.Stat.Ann.
§
13:1603.A
(West Supp.1982).
Two States, Illinois and New York, have required clear and
convincing evidence, but only in certain types of parental rights
termination proceedings.
See Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 37, ¶¶
705-9(2),
(3) (1979), amended by Act of Sept. 11, 1981, 1982
Ill.Laws, P.A. 82-437 (generally requiring a preponderance of the evidence,
but requiring clear and convincing evidence to terminate the rights
of minor parents and mentally ill or mentally deficient parents);
N.Y.Soc.Serv.Law
§§
384-b.3(g),
384-b.4(c), and 384-b.4(e) (requiring “clear
and convincing proof”
before parental rights may be terminated for reasons of mental
illness and mental retardation or severe and repeated child abuse).
So
far as we are aware, only two federal courts have
addressed the issue.
Each has held that allegations supporting parental rights termination must
be proved by clear and convincing evidence.
Sims
v. State Dept. of Public Welfare,
438 F.Supp. 1179, 1194 (S.D.Tex.1977), rev'd on other grounds sub
nom. Moore v. Sims,
442 U.S. 415, 99 S.Ct. 2371, 60 L.Ed.2d 994 (1979);
Alsager
v. District Court of Polk County,
406 F.Supp. 10, 25 (S.D.Iowa 1975), aff'd on other grounds,
545 F.2d 1137 (CA8 1976).
B
Petitioners
John Santosky II and Annie Santosky are the natural parents
of Tina and John III.
In November 1973, after incidents reflecting parental neglect, respondent Kramer,
Commissioner of the Ulster County Department of Social Services, initiated
a neglect proceeding under Fam.Ct.Act §
1022
and removed Tina from her natural home.
About 10 months later, he removed John III and placed
him with foster parents.
On the day John was taken, Annie Santosky gave birth
to a third child, Jed.
When Jed was only three days old, respondent transferred him
to a foster home on the ground that immediate removal
was necessary to avoid imminent danger to his life or
health.
In
October 1978, respondent petitioned the Ulster County Family Court to
terminate petitioners' parental rights in the three children.FN4
Petitioners
challenged the constitutionality of the “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard specified in Fam.Ct.Act §
622.
The Family Court Judge rejected this constitutional challenge, App. 29-30,
and weighed the evidence under the statutory standard.
While acknowledging that the Santoskys had maintained contact with their
children, the judge found those visits “at
best superficial and devoid of any **1394
real emotional content.”
Id.,
at 21.
After
*752
deciding that the agency had made “
‘diligent
efforts' to encourage and strengthen the parental relationship,”
id.,
at 30, he concluded that the Santoskys were incapable, even
with public assistance, of planning for the future of their
children.
Id.,
at 33-37.
The judge later held a dispositional hearing and ruled that
the best interests of the three children required permanent termination
of the Santoskys' custody.FN5
Id.,
at 39.
FN4.
Respondent
had made an earlier and unsuccessful termination effort in September
1976.
After a factfinding hearing, the Family Court Judge dismissed respondent's
petition for failure to prove an essential element of Fam.Ct.Act
§
614.1.(d).
See
In
re Santosky,
89 Misc.2d 730, 393 N.Y.S.2d 486 (1977).
The New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, affirmed, finding that
“the
record as a whole”
revealed that petitioners had “substantially
planned for the future of the children.”
In
re John W.,
63 App.Div.2d 750, 751, 404 N.Y.S.2d 717, 719 (1978).
FN5.
Since
respondent Kramer took custody of Tina, John III, and Jed,
the Santoskys have had two other children, James and Jeremy.
The State has taken no action to remove these younger
children.
At oral argument, counsel for respondents replied affirmatively when asked
whether he was asserting that petitioners were “unfit
to handle the three older ones but not unfit to
handle the two younger ones.”
Tr. of Oral Arg. 24.
Petitioners
appealed, again contesting the constitutionality of §
622's
standard of proof.FN6
The
New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, affirmed, holding application of
the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard “proper
and constitutional.”
In
re John AA,
75 App.Div.2d 910, 427 N.Y.S.2d 319, 320 (1980).
That standard, the court reasoned, “recognizes
and seeks to balance rights possessed by the child ...
with those of the natural parents....”
Ibid.
FN6.
Petitioners
initially had sought review in the New York Court of
Appeals.
That court sua
sponte
transferred the appeal to the Appellate Division, Third Department, stating
that a direct appeal did not lie because “questions
other than the constitutional validity of a statutory provision are
involved.”
App. 50.
The
New York Court of Appeals then dismissed petitioners' appeal to
that court “upon
the ground that no substantial constitutional question is directly involved.”
App. 55.
We granted certiorari to consider petitioners' constitutional claim.
450
U.S. 993, 101 S.Ct. 1694, 68 L.Ed.2d 192 (1981).
II
Last
Term in Lassiter
v. Department of Social Services,
452 U.S. 18, 101 S.Ct. 2153, 68 L.Ed.2d 640 (1981),
this Court, by a 5-4 vote, held that the
*753
Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause does not require the appointment
of counsel for indigent parents in every parental status termination
proceeding.
The case casts light, however, on the two central questions
here-whether process is constitutionally due a natural parent at a
State's parental rights termination proceeding, and, if so, what process
is due.
In
Lassiter,
it was “not
disputed that state intervention to terminate the relationship between [a
parent] and [the] child must be accomplished by procedures meeting
the requisites of the Due Process Clause.”
Id.,
at 37, 101 S.Ct., at 2165 (first dissenting opinion);
see
id.,
at 24-32, 101 S.Ct., at 2158-2162 (opinion of the Court);
id.,
at 59-60, 101 S.Ct., at 2176 (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
See also Little
v. Streater,
452 U.S. 1, 13, 101 S.Ct. 2202, 2209, 68 L.Ed.2d
627 (1981).
The absence of dispute reflected this Court's historical recognition that
freedom of personal choice in matters of family life is
a fundamental liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Quilloin
v. Walcott,
434 U.S. 246, 255, 98 S.Ct. 549, 554, 54 L.Ed.2d
511 (1978);
Smith
v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U.S. 816, 845, 97 S.Ct. 2094, 2110, 53 L.Ed.2d
14 (1977);
Moore
v. East Cleveland,
431 U.S. 494, 499, 97 S.Ct. 1932, 1935, 52 L.Ed.2d
531 (1977) (plurality opinion);
Cleveland
Board of Education v. LaFleur,
414 U.S. 632, 639-640, 94 S.Ct. 791, 796, 39 L.Ed.2d
52 (1974);
Stanley
v. Illinois,
405 U.S. 645, 651-652, 92 S.Ct. 1208, 1212-1213, 31 L.Ed.2d
551 (1972);
Prince
v. Massachusetts,
321 U.S. 158, 166, 64 S.Ct. 438, 442, 88 L.Ed.
645 (1944);
Pierce
v. Society of Sisters,
268 U.S. 510, 534-535, 45 S.Ct. 571, 573-574, 69 L.Ed.
1070 (1925);
Meyer
v. Nebraska,
262 U.S. 390, 399, 43 S.Ct. 625, 626, 67 L.Ed.
1042 (1923).
[1][2][3]
The
fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in the care, custody,
and **1395
management of their child does not evaporate simply because they
have not been model parents or have lost temporary custody
of their child to the State.
Even when blood relationships are strained, parents retain a vital
interest in preventing the irretrievable destruction of their family life.
If anything, persons faced with forced dissolution of their parental
rights have a more critical need for procedural protections than
do those resisting state intervention into ongoing family affairs.
When the State moves to
*754 destroy
weakened familial bonds, it must provide the parents with fundamentally
fair procedures.FN7
FN7.
We
therefore reject respondent Kramer's claim that a parental rights termination
proceeding does not interfere with a fundamental liberty interest.
See Brief for Respondent Kramer 11-18;
Tr.
of Oral Arg. 38.
The fact that important liberty interests of the child and
its foster parents may also be affected by a permanent
neglect proceeding does not justify denying the natural
parents
constitutionally adequate procedures.
Nor can the State refuse to provide natural parents adequate
procedural safeguards on the ground that the family unit already
has broken down;
that
is the very issue the permanent neglect proceeding is meant
to decide.
[4]
In
Lassiter,
the Court and three dissenters agreed that the nature of
the process due in parental rights termination proceedings turns on
a balancing of the “three
distinct factors”
specified in Mathews
v. Eldridge,
424 U.S. 319, 335, 96 S.Ct. 893, 903, 47 L.Ed.2d
18 (1976):
the
private interests affected by the proceeding;
the
risk of error created by the State's chosen procedure;
and
the countervailing governmental interest supporting use of the challenged procedure.
See 452 U.S., at 27-31, 101 S.Ct., at 2159-2162;
id.,
at 37-48, 101 S.Ct., at 2164-2171 (first dissenting opinion).
But see id.,
at 59-60, 101 S.Ct., at 2176 (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
While the respective Lassiter
opinions disputed whether those factors should be weighed against a
presumption disfavoring appointed counsel for one not threatened with loss
of physical liberty, compare 452 U.S., at 31-32, 101 S.Ct.,
at 2161-2162, with id.,
at 41, and n. 8, 101 S.Ct., at 2167, and
n. 8 (first dissenting opinion), that concern is irrelevant here.
Unlike the Court's right-to-counsel rulings, its decisions concerning constitutional burdens
of proof have not turned on any presumption favoring any
particular standard.
To the contrary, the Court has engaged in a straight-forward
consideration of the factors identified in Eldridge
to determine whether a particular standard of proof in a
particular proceeding satisfies due process.
[5]
In
Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S. 418, 99 S.Ct. 1804, 60 L.Ed.2d 323 (1979),
the Court, by a unanimous vote of the participating Justices,
declared:
“The
function of a standard of proof, as that concept is
embodied in the Due Process Clause and in the realm
of factfinding, is to
*755
‘instruct
the factfinder concerning the degree of confidence our society thinks
he should have in the correctness of factual conclusions for
a particular type of adjudication.’
”
Id.,
at 423, 99 S.Ct. at 1808, quoting In
re Winship,
397 U.S. 358, 370, 90 S.Ct. 1068, 1075, 25 L.Ed.2d
368 (1970) (Harlan, J., concurring).
Addington
teaches that, in any given proceeding, the minimum standard of
proof tolerated by the due process requirement reflects not only
the weight of the private and public interests affected, but
also a societal judgment about how the risk of error
should be distributed between the litigants.
Thus,
while private parties may be interested intensely in a civil
dispute over money damages, application of a “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard indicates both society's “minimal
concern with the outcome,”
and a conclusion that the litigants should “share
the risk of error in roughly equal fashion.”
441
U.S., at 423, 99 S.Ct., at 1808.
When the State brings a criminal action to deny a
defendant liberty or life, however, “the
interests of the defendant are of such magnitude that historically
and without any explicit constitutional requirement they have been protected
by standards of proof designed to exclude as **1396
nearly as possible the likelihood of an erroneous judgment.”
Ibid.
The
stringency of the “beyond
a reasonable doubt”
standard bespeaks the “weight
and gravity”
of the private interest affected, id.,
at 427, 99 S.Ct., at 1810, society's interest in avoiding
erroneous convictions, and a judgment that those interests together require
that “society
impos[e] almost the entire risk of error upon itself.”
Id.,
at 424, 99 S.Ct., at 1808.
See also In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 372, 90 S.Ct., at 1076 (Harlan, J.,
concurring).
[6]
The
“minimum
requirements [of procedural due process] being a matter of federal
law, they are not diminished by the fact that the
State may have specified its own procedures that it may
deem adequate for determining the preconditions to adverse official action.”
Vitek
v. Jones,
445 U.S. 480, 491, 100 S.Ct. 1254, 1262, 63 L.Ed.2d
552 (1980).
See also Logan
v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
455 U.S. 422, 432, 102 S.Ct. 1148, 1155-1156, 71 L.Ed.2d
265 (1982).
Moreover, the degree of proof required in a particular type
of proceeding “is
the kind of question which has
*756
traditionally been left to the judiciary to resolve.”
Woodby
v. INS,
385 U.S. 276, 284, 87 S.Ct. 483, 487, 17 L.Ed.2d
362 (1966).FN8
“In
cases involving individual rights, whether criminal or civil, ‘[t]he
standard of proof [at a minimum] reflects the value society
places on individual liberty.’
”
Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S., at 425, 99 S.Ct., at 1809, quoting Tippett
v. Maryland,
436 F.2d 1153, 1166 (CA4 1971) (opinion concurring in part
and dissenting in part), cert. dism'd sub
nom. Murel v. Baltimore City Criminal Court,
407 U.S. 355, 92 S.Ct. 2091, 32 L.Ed.2d 791 (1972).
FN8.
The
dissent charges, post,
at 1404, n. 2, that “this
Court simply has no role in establishing the standards of
proof that States must follow in the various judicial proceedings
they afford to their citizens.”
As the dissent properly concedes, however, the Court must examine
a State's chosen standard to determine whether it satisfies “the
constitutional minimum of ‘fundamental
fairness.’
”
Ibid.
See,
e.g.,
Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S. 418, 427, 433, 99 S.Ct. 1804, 1810, 1813,
60 L.Ed.2d 323 (1979) (unanimous decision of participating Justices) (Fourteenth
Amendment requires at least clear and convincing evidence in a
civil proceeding brought under state law to commit an individual
involuntarily for an indefinite period to a state mental hospital);
In
re Winship,
397 U.S. 358, 364, 90 S.Ct. 1068, 1072, 25 L.Ed.2d
368 (1970) (Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects
the accused in state proceeding against conviction except upon proof
beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute
the crime with which he is charged).
This
Court has mandated an intermediate standard of proof-“clear
and convincing evidence”-when
the individual interests at stake in a state proceeding are
both “particularly
important”
and “more
substantial than mere loss of money.”
Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S., at 424, 99 S.Ct., at 1808.
Notwithstanding “the
state's ‘civil
labels and good intentions,’
”
id.,
at 427, 99 S.Ct. at 1810, quoting In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 365-366, 90 S.Ct., at 1073-1074, the Court
has deemed this level of certainty necessary to preserve fundamental
fairness in a variety of government-initiated proceedings that threaten the
individual involved with “a
significant deprivation of liberty”
or “stigma.”
441
U.S., at 425, 426, 99 S.Ct., at 1808, 1809.
See, e.
g., Addington v. Texas, supra
(civil commitment);
Woodby
v. INS,
385 U.S., at 285, 87 S.Ct., at 487 (deportation);
Chaunt
v. United States,
364 U.S. 350, 353, 81 S.Ct. 147, 149, 5 L.Ed.2d
120 (1960) (denaturalization);
*757
Schneiderman
v. United States,
320 U.S. 118, 125, 159, 63 S.Ct. 1333, 1336, 1353,
87 L.Ed. 1796 (1943) (denaturalization).
[7]
In
Lassiter,
to be sure, the Court held that fundamental fairness may
be maintained in parental rights termination proceedings even when some
procedures are mandated only on a case-by-case basis, rather than
through rules of general application.
452
U.S., at 31-32, 101 S.Ct., at 2161-2162 (natural parent's right
to court-appointed counsel should be determined by the trial court,
subject to appellate review).
But this Court never has approved case-by-case determination of the
proper standard
of proof
for a given proceeding.
Standards of proof, like other “procedural
due process **1397
rules[,] are shaped by the risk of error inherent in
the truth-finding process as applied to thegenerality
of cases,
not the rare exceptions.”
Mathews v. Eldridge,
424 U.S., at 344, 96 S.Ct., at 907 (emphasis added).
Since the litigants and the factfinder must know at the
outset of a given proceeding how the risk of error
will be allocated, the standard of proof necessarily must be
calibrated in advance.
Retrospective case-by-case review cannot preserve fundamental fairness when a class
of proceedings is governed by a constitutionally defective evidentiary standard.FN9
FN9.
For
this reason, we reject the suggestions of respondents and the
dissent that the constitutionality of New York's statutory procedures must
be evaluated as a “package.”
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 25, 36, 38.
Indeed, we would rewrite our precedents were we to excuse
a constitutionally defective standard of proof based on an amorphous
assessment of the “cumulative
effect”
of state procedures.
In the criminal context, for example, the Court has never
assumed that “strict
substantive standards or special procedures compensate for a lower burden
of proof....”
Post,
at 1404.
See In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 368, 90 S.Ct., at 1074.
Nor has the Court treated appellate review as a curative
for an inadequate burden of proof.
See Woodby
v. INS,
385 U.S. 276, 282, 87 S.Ct. 483, 486, 17 L.Ed.2d
362 (1966) (“judicial
review is generally limited to ascertaining whether the evidence relied
upon by the trier of fact was of sufficient quality
and substantiality to support the rationality of the judgment”).
As
the dissent points out, “the
standard of proof is a crucial component of legal process,
the primary function of which is ‘to
minimize the risk of erroneous decisions.’
”
Post,
at 1411, quoting Greenholtz
v. Nebraska Penal Inmates,
442 U.S. 1, 13, 99 S.Ct. 2100, 2106, 60 L.Ed.2d
668 (1979).
Notice, summons, right to counsel, rules of evidence, and evidentiary
hearings are all procedures to place information before
the factfinder.
But only the standard of proof “instruct[s]
the factfinder concerning the degree of confidence our society thinks
he should have in the correctness of factual conclusions”
he draws from that information.
In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 370, 90 S.Ct., at 1076 (Harlan, J.,
concurring).
The statutory provision of right to counsel and multiple hearings
before termination cannot suffice to protect a natural parent's fundamental
liberty interests if the State is willing to tolerate undue
uncertainty in the determination of the dispositive facts.
*758
III
In
parental rights termination proceedings, the private interest affected is commanding;
the
risk of error from using a preponderance standard is substantial;
and
the countervailing governmental interest favoring that standard is comparatively slight.
Evaluation of the three Eldridge
factors compels the conclusion that use of a “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard in such proceedings is inconsistent with due process.
A
[8]
“The
extent to which procedural due process must be afforded the
recipient is influenced by the extent to which he may
be ‘condemned
to suffer grievous loss.’
”
Goldberg
v. Kelly,
397 U.S. 254, 262-263, 90 S.Ct. 1011, 1017-18, 25 L.Ed.2d
287 (1970), quoting Joint
Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v. McGrath,
341 U.S. 123, 168, 71 S.Ct. 624, 646, 95 L.Ed.
817 (1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring).
Whether the loss threatened by a particular type of proceeding
is sufficiently grave to warrant more than average certainty on
the part of the factfinder turns on both the nature
of the private interest threatened and the permanency of the
threatened loss.
[9]
Lassiter
declared it “plain
beyond the need for multiple citation”
that a natural parent's “desire
for and right to ‘the
companionship, care, custody, and management of his or her children’
”
is an interest far more precious than any property
*759
right.
452
U.S., at 27, 101 S.Ct., at 2160, quoting Stanley
v. Illinois,
405 U.S., at 651, 92 S.Ct., at 1212.
When the State initiates a parental rights termination proceeding, it
seeks not merely to infringe that fundamental liberty interest, but
to end it.
“If
the State prevails, it will have worked a unique kind
of deprivation....
A
parent's interest in the accuracy and justice of the decision
to terminate his or her parental status is, therefore, a
commanding one.”
452
U.S., at 27, 101 S.Ct., at 2160.
**1398
In government-initiated proceedings to determine juvenile delinquency, In
re Winship, supra
;
civil
commitment, Addington
v. Texas, supra;
deportation,Woodby
v. INS, supra
;
and
denaturalization, Chaunt
v. United States, supra,
and Schneiderman
v. United States, supra,
this Court has identified losses of individual liberty sufficiently serious
to warrant imposition of an elevated burden of proof.
Yet juvenile delinquency adjudications, civil commitment, deportation, and denaturalization, at
least to a degree, are all reversible
official actions.
Once affirmed on appeal, a New York decision terminating parental
rights is final
and irrevocable.
See n. 1, supra.
Few forms of state action are both so severe and
so irreversible.
Thus,
the first Eldridge
factor-the private interest affected-weighs heavily against use of the preponderance
standard at a state-initiated permanent neglect proceeding.
We do not deny that the child and his foster
parents are also deeply interested in the outcome of that
contest.
But at the factfinding stage of the New York proceeding,
the focus emphatically is not on them.
[10]
The
factfinding does not purport-and is not intended-to balance the child's
interest in a normal family home against the parents' interest
in raising the child.
Nor does it purport to determine whether the natural parents
or the foster parents would provide the better home.
Rather, the factfinding hearing pits the State directly against the
parents.
The State alleges that the natural parents are at fault.
Fam.Ct.Act
§
614.1.(d).
The
questions disputed and decided are
*760
what the State did-“made
diligent efforts,”
§
614.1.(c)-and
what the natural parents did not do-“maintain
contact with or plan for the future of the child.”
§
614.1.(d).
The
State marshals an array of public resources to prove its
case and disprove the parents' case.
Victory by the State not only makes termination of parental
rights possible;
it
entails a judicial determination that the parents are unfit to
raise their own children.FN10
FN10.
The
Family Court Judge in the present case expressly refused to
terminate petitioners' parental rights on a “non-statutory,
no-fault basis.”
App. 22-29.
Nor is it clear that the State constitutionally could terminate
a parent's rights without
showing parental unfitness.
See Quilloin
v. Walcott,
434 U.S. 246, 255, 98 S.Ct. 549, 554, 54 L.Ed.2d
511 (1978) (“We
have little doubt that the Due Process Clause would be
offended ‘[i]f
a State were to attempt to force the breakup of
a natural family, over the objections of the parents and
their children, without some showing of unfitness and for the
sole reason that to do so was thought to be
in the children's best interest,’
”
quoting Smith
v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U.S. 816, 862-863, 97 S.Ct. 2094, 2119, 53 L.Ed.2d
14 (1977) (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment)).
At
the factfinding, the State cannot presume that a child and
his parents are adversaries.
After the State has established parental unfitness at that initial
proceeding, the court may assume at the dispositional
stage that the interests of the child and the natural
parents do diverge.
See Fam.Ct.Act §
631
(judge shall make his order “solely
on the basis of the best interests of the child,”
and thus has no obligation to consider the natural parents'
rights in selecting dispositional alternatives).
But until the State proves parental unfitness, the child and
his parents share a vital interest in preventing erroneous termination
of their natural relationship.FN11
Thus,
*761
at the factfinding, the interests of the child and his
natural parents coincide to favor use of error-reducing procedures.
FN11.
For
a child, the consequences of termination of his natural parents'
rights may well be far-reaching.
In Colorado, for example, it has been noted:
“The
child loses the right of support and maintenance, for which
he may thereafter be dependent upon society;
the
right to inherit;
and
all other rights inherent in the legal parent-child relationship, not
just for [a limited] period ...,
but forever.”
In
re K.S.,
33 Colo.App. 72, 76, 515 P.2d 130, 133 (1973).
Some
losses cannot be measured.
In this case, for example, Jed Santosky was removed from
his natural parents' custody when he was only three days
old;
the
judge's finding of permanent neglect effectively foreclosed the possibility that
Jed would ever know his natural parents.
**1399
However substantial the foster parents' interests may be, cf. Smith
v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U.S., at 845-847, 97 S.Ct., at 2110-2111, they are
not implicated directly in the factfinding stage of a state-initiated
permanent neglect proceeding against the natural parents.
If authorized, the foster parents may pit their interests directly
against those of the natural parents by initiating their own
permanent neglect proceeding.
Fam.Ct.Act §
1055(d);
Soc.Serv.Law
§§
384-6.3(b),
392.7.(c).
Alternatively,
the foster parents can make their case for custody at
the dispositional stage of a state-initiated proceeding, where the judge
already has decided the issue of permanent neglect and is
focusing on the placement that would serve the child's best
interests.
Fam.Ct.Act
§§
623,
631.
For the foster parents, the State's failure to prove permanent
neglect may prolong the delay and uncertainty until their foster
child is freed for adoption.
But for the natural parents, a finding of permanent neglect
can cut off forever their rights in their child.
Given this disparity of consequence, we have no difficulty finding
that the balance of private interests strongly favors heightened procedural
protections.
B
[11]
Under
Mathews
v. Eldridge,
we next must consider both the risk of erroneous deprivation
of private interests resulting from use of a “fair
preponderance”
standard and the likelihood that a higher evidentiary standard would
reduce that risk.
See 424 U.S., at 335, 96 S.Ct., at 903.
Since the factfinding phase of a permanent neglect proceeding is
an adversary contest between the State and the natural parents,
the relevant question is whether a preponderance standard fairly allocates
the risk of an erroneous factfinding between these two parties.
*762
In New York, the factfinding stage of a state-initiated permanent
neglect proceeding bears many of the indicia of a criminal
trial.
Cf. Lassiter
v. Department of Social Services,
452 U.S., at 42-44, 101 S.Ct., at 2167-2169 (first dissenting
opinion);
Meltzer
v. C. Buck LeCraw & Co.,
402 U.S. 954, 959, 91 S.Ct. 1624, 1626, 29 L.Ed.2d
124 (1971) (Black, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari).
See also dissenting opinion, post,
at 1406-1408 (describing procedures employed at factfinding proceeding).
The Commissioner of Social Services charges the parents with permanent
neglect.
They are served by summons.
Fam.Ct.Act
§§
614,
616, 617.
The factfinding hearing is conducted pursuant to formal rules of
evidence.
§
624.
The State, the parents, and the child are all represented
by counsel.
§§
249,
262.
The State seeks to establish a series of historical facts
about the intensity of its agency's efforts to reunite the
family, the infrequency and insubstantiality of the parents' contacts with
their child, and the parents' inability or unwillingness to formulate
a plan for the child's future.
The attorneys submit documentary evidence, and call witnesses who are
subject to cross-examination.
Based on all the evidence, the judge then determines whether
the State has proved the statutory elements of permanent neglect
by a fair preponderance of the evidence.
§
622.
At
such a proceeding, numerous factors combine to magnify the risk
of erroneous factfinding.
Permanent neglect proceedings employ imprecise substantive standards that leave determinations
unusually open to the subjective values of the judge.
See Smith
v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U.S., at 835, n. 36, 97 S.Ct., at 2105,
n. 36.
In appraising the nature and quality of a complex series
of encounters among the agency, the parents, and the child,
the court possesses unusual discretion to underweigh probative facts that
might favor the parent.FN12
*763
Because parents **1400
subject to termination proceedings are often poor, uneducated, or members
of minority groups, id.,
at 833-835, such proceedings are often vulnerable to judgments based
on cultural or class bias.
FN12.
For
example, a New York court appraising an agency's “diligent
efforts”
to provide the parents with social services can excuse efforts
not
made on the grounds that they would have been “detrimental
to the best interests of the child.”
Fam.Ct.Act
§
614.1.(c).
In
determining whether the parent “substantially
and continuously or repeatedly”
failed to “maintain
contact with ...
the child,”
§
614.1.(d),
the judge can discount actual visits or communications on the
grounds that they were insubstantial or “overtly
demonstrat[ed] a lack of affectionate and concerned parenthood.”
Soc.Serv.Law
§
384-b.7.(b).
When
determining whether the parent planned for the child's future, the
judge can reject as unrealistic plans based on overly optimistic
estimates of physical or financial ability.
§
384-b.7.(c).
See
also dissenting opinion, post
at 1407-1408, nn. 8 and 9.
The
State's ability to assemble its case almost inevitably dwarfs the
parents' ability to mount a defense.
No predetermined limits restrict the sums an agency may spend
in prosecuting a given termination proceeding.
The State's attorney usually will be expert on the issues
contested and the procedures employed at the factfinding hearing, and
enjoys full access to all public records concerning the family.
The State may call on experts in family relations, psychology,
and medicine to bolster its case.
Furthermore, the primary witnesses at the hearing will be the
agency's own professional caseworkers whom the State has empowered both
to investigate the family situation and to testify against the
parents.
Indeed, because the child is already in agency custody, the
State even has the power to shape the historical events
that form the basis for termination.FN13
FN13.
In
this case, for example, the parents claim that the State
sought court orders denying them the right to visit their
children, which would have prevented them from maintaining the contact
required by Fam.Ct.Act. §
614.1.(d).
See
Brief for Petitioners 9.
The parents further claim that the State cited their rejection
of social services they found offensive or superfluous as proof
of the agency's “diligent
efforts”
and their own “failure
to plan”
for the children's future.
Id.,
at 10-11.
We
need not accept these statements as true to recognize that
the State's unusual ability to structure the evidence increases the
risk of an erroneous factfinding.
Of course, the disparity between the litigants' resources will be
vastly greater in States where there is no statutory right
to court-appointed counsel.
See Lassiter
v. Department of Social Services,
452 U.S. 18, 34, 101 S.Ct. 2153, 2163, 68 L.Ed.2d
640 (1981) (only 33 States and the District of Columbia
provide that right by statute).
*764
The disparity between the adversaries' litigation resources is matched by
a striking asymmetry in their litigation options.
Unlike criminal defendants, natural parents have no “double
jeopardy”
defense against repeated state termination efforts.
If the State initially fails to win termination, as New
York did here, see n. 4, supra,
it always can try once again to cut off the
parents' rights after gathering more or better evidence.
Yet even when the parents have attained the level of
fitness required by the State, they have no similar means
by which they can forestall future termination efforts.
Coupled
with a “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard, these factors create a significant prospect of erroneous termination.
A standard of proof that by its very terms demands
consideration of the quantity, rather than the quality, of the
evidence may misdirect the factfinder in the marginal case.
See In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 371, n. 3, 90 S.Ct., at 1076,
n. 3 (Harlan, J., concurring).
Given the weight of the private interests at stake, the
social cost of even occasional error is sizable.
Raising
the standard of proof would have both practical and symbolic
consequences.
Cf. Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S., at 426, 99 S.Ct., at 1809.
The Court has long considered the heightened standard of proof
used in criminal prosecutions to be “a
prime instrument for reducing the risk of convictions resting on
factual error.”
In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 363, 90 S.Ct., at 1072.
An elevated standard of proof in a parental rights termination
proceeding would alleviate “the
possible risk that a factfinder might decide to [deprive] an
individual based solely on a few isolated instances of unusual
conduct [or] ...
idiosyncratic behavior.”
Addington
v. Texas,
441 U.S., at 427, 99 S.Ct., at 1810.
“Increasing
the burden of proof is one way to **1401
impress the factfinder with the importance*765
of the decision and thereby perhaps to reduce the
chances that inappropriate”
terminations will be ordered.
Ibid.
The
Appellate Division approved New York's preponderance standard on the ground
that it properly “balanced
rights possessed by the child ...
with those of the natural parents....”
75
App.Div.2d, at 910, 427 N.Y.S.2d, at 320.
By so saying, the court suggested that a preponderance standard
properly allocates the risk of error between
the parents and the child.FN14
That
view is fundamentally mistaken.
FN14.
The
dissent makes a similar claim.
See post,
at 1411-1414.
The
court's theory assumes that termination of the natural parents' rights
invariably will benefit the child.FN15
Yet
we have noted above that the parents and the child
share an interest in avoiding erroneous termination.
Even accepting the court's assumption, we cannot agree with its
conclusion that a preponderance standard fairly distributes the risk of
error between parent and child.
Use of that standard reflects the judgment that society is
nearly neutral between erroneous termination of parental rights and erroneous
failure to terminate those rights.
Cf. In
re Winship,
397 U.S., at 371, 90 S.Ct., at 1076 (Harlan, J.,
concurring).
For the child, the likely consequence of an erroneous failure
to terminate is preservation of
*766
an uneasy status quo. FN16
For
the natural parents, however, the consequence of an erroneous termination
is the unnecessary destruction of their natural family.
A standard that allocates the risk of error nearly equally
between those two outcomes does not reflect properly their relative
severity.
FN15.
This
is a hazardous assumption at best.
Even when a child's natural home is imperfect, permanent removal
from that home will not necessarily improve his welfare.
See, e.g.,
Wald, State Intervention on Behalf of “Neglected”
Children:
A
Search for Realistic Standards, 27 Stan.L.Rev. 985, 993 (1975)
(“In
fact, under current practice, coercive intervention frequently results in placing
a child in a more detrimental situation than he would
be in without intervention”).
Nor
does termination of parental rights necessarily ensure adoption.
See Brief for Community Action for Legal Services, Inc., et
al. as Amici
Curiae
22-23.
Even when a child eventually finds an adoptive family, he
may spend years moving between state institutions and “temporary”
foster placements after his ties to his natural parents have
been severed.
See Smith
v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U.S., at 833-838, 97 S.Ct., at 2103-06 (describing the
“limbo”
of the New York foster care system).
FN16.
When
the termination proceeding occurs, the child is not living at
his natural home.
A child cannot be adjudicated “permanently
neglected”
until, “for
a period of more than one year,”
he has been in “the
care of an authorized agency.”
Soc.Serv.Law
§
384-b.7.(a);
Fam.Ct.Act
§
614.1.(d).
See
also dissenting opinion, post,
at 1413.
Under
New York law, a judge has ample discretion to ensure
that, once removed from his natural parents on grounds of
neglect, a child will not return to a hostile environment.
In this case, when the State's initial termination effort failed
for lack of proof, see n. 4, supra,
the court simply issued orders under Fam.Ct. Act §
1055(b)
extending the period of the child's foster home placement.
See App. 19-20.
See also Fam.Ct. Act §
632(b)
(when State's permanent neglect petition is dismissed for insufficient evidence,
judge retains jurisdiction to reconsider underlying orders of placement);
§
633
(judge may suspend judgment at dispositional hearing for an additional
year).
C
[12]
Two
state interests are at stake in parental rights termination proceedings-a
parens
patriae
interest in preserving and promoting the welfare of the child
and a fiscal and administrative interest in reducing the cost
and burden of such proceedings.
A standard of proof more strict than preponderance of the
evidence is consistent with both interests.
“Since
the State has an urgent interest in the welfare of
the child, it shares the parent's interest in an accurate
and just decision”
at the factfinding
proceeding.
Lassiter
v. Department of Social Services,
452 U.S., at 27, 101 S.Ct., at 2160.
As parens
patriae,
the State's goal is to provide the child with a
permanent home.
See Soc.Serv.Law §
384-b.1.(a)(i)
(statement of legislative findings and intent).
Yet while **1402
there is still reason to believe that positive, nurturing parent-child
relationships exist, the parens
patriae
interest favors preservation, not
*767
severance, of natural familial bonds.FN17
§
384-b.1.(a)(ii).
“[T]he
State registers no gain towards its declared goals when it
separates children from the custody of fit parents.”
Stanley
v. Illinois,
405 U.S., at 652, 92 S.Ct., at 1213.
FN17.
Any
parens
patriae
interest in terminating the natural parents' rights arises only at
the dispositional phase, after
the parents have been found unfit.
The
State's interest in finding the child an alternative permanent home
arises only “when
it is clear
that the natural parent cannot or will not provide a
normal family home for the child.”
Soc.Serv.Law
§
384-b.1.
(a)(iv) (emphasis added).
At the factfinding, that goal is served by procedures that
promote an accurate determination of whether the natural parents can
and will provide a normal home.
Unlike
a constitutional requirement of hearings, see, e.g.,
Mathews
v. Eldridge,
424 U.S., at 347, 96 S.Ct., at 908, or court-appointed
counsel, a stricter standard of proof would reduce factual error
without imposing substantial fiscal burdens upon the State.
As we have observed, 35 States already have adopted a
higher standard by statute or court decision without apparent effect
on the speed, form, or cost of their factfinding proceedings.
See n. 3, supra.
Nor
would an elevated standard of proof create any real administrative
burdens for the State's factfinders.
New York Family Court judges already are familiar with a
higher evidentiary standard in other parental rights termination proceedings not
involving permanent neglect.
See Soc.Serv.Law §§
384-b.3.(g),
384-b.4.(c), and 384-b.4.(e) (requiring “clear
and convincing proof”
before parental rights may be terminated for reasons of mental
illness and mental retardation or severe and repeated child abuse).
New York also demands at least clear and convincing evidence
in proceedings of far less moment than parental rights termination
proceedings.
See, e.g.,
N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law §
227.1
(McKinney Supp.1981)
(requiring
the State to prove traffic
*768
infractions by “clear
and convincing evidence”)
and In
re Rosenthal v. Hartnett,
36 N.Y.2d 269, 367 N.Y.S.2d 247, 326 N.E.2d 811 (1975);
see
also Ross
v. Food Specialties, Inc.,
6 N.Y.2d 336, 341, 189 N.Y.S.2d 857, 859, 160 N.E.2d
618, 620 (1959) (requiring “clear,
positive and convincing evidence”
for contract reformation).
We cannot believe that it would burden the State unduly
to require that its factfinders have the same factual certainty
when terminating the parent-child relationship as they must have to
suspend a driver's license.
IV
[13]
The
logical conclusion of this balancing process is that the “fair
preponderance of the evidence”
standard prescribed by Fam.Ct.Act §
622
violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.FN18
The
Court noted in Addington
:
“The
individual should not be asked to share equally with society
the risk of error when the possible injury to the
individual is significantly greater than any possible harm to the
state.”
441 U.S., at 427, 99 S.Ct., at 1810.
Thus, at a parental rights termination proceeding, a near-equal allocation
of risk between the parents and the State is constitutionally
intolerable.
The next question, then, is whether a “beyond
a reasonable doubt”
or a “clear
and convincing”
standard is constitutionally mandated.
FN18.
The
dissent's claim that today's decision “will
inevitably lead to the federalization of family law,”
post,
at 1404, is, of course, vastly overstated.
As the dissent properly notes, the Court's duty to “refrai[n]
from interfering with state answers to domestic relations questions”
has never required “that
the Court should blink at clear constitutional violations in state
statutes.”
Post,
at 1403.
In
Addington,
the Court concluded that application of a reasonable-doubt standard is
inappropriate in civil commitment proceedings for two reasons-because of our
hesitation to apply that unique standard **1403
“too
broadly or casually in noncriminal cases,”
id.,
at 428, 99 S.Ct., at 1810, and because the psychiatric
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