Adoption of: B.R.S., Appeal of: T.L.L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 4, 2025
Docket278 WDA 2025
StatusUnpublished

This text of Adoption of: B.R.S., Appeal of: T.L.L. (Adoption of: B.R.S., Appeal of: T.L.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of: B.R.S., Appeal of: T.L.L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S24019-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

IN RE: ADOPTION OF: B.R.S., A : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MINOR : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: T.L.L., MOTHER : : : : : No. 278 WDA 2025

Appeal from the Decree Entered February 4, 2025 In the Court of Common Pleas of Bedford County Orphans’ Court at No(s): AD-12 for 2024

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and LANE, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED: September 4, 2025

T.L.L. (“Mother”) appeals from the decree involuntarily terminating her

parental rights to B.R.S. (“Child”). Mother argues the court disregarded the

obstacles that prevented her from performing parental duties, her attempts

to overcome those obstacles, and Child’s best interests. We affirm.

Mother and Child’s father, B.L.S. (“Father”), were married in 2017. They

divorced in August 2019, when Child was two years old. Father has since

exercised primary custody of Child. Mother initially exercised physical custody

of Child on alternating weekends; Mother’s custody was later reduced to

weekly visitation with Child at Father’s home, supervised by Father’s partner,

B.J.S. Mother’s last contact with Child was in late 2020, when Child was three

years old. Shortly thereafter, in January 2021, Mother was hospitalized with

COVID-19. She was transferred to a rehabilitation facility, where she remained J-S24019-25

until March 2024.1 In the interim, in 2022, Father married B.J.S.

(“Stepmother”).

In August 2024, Father filed a petition for the involuntary termination

of Mother’s parental rights. The court appointed a guardian ad litem for Child2

and counsel for Mother. The court held a hearing on December 20, 2024,

where Mother, Father, and Stepmother testified. Child was seven years old at

the time.

Following the hearing, the court found there was clear and convincing

evidence that Mother, “by conduct continuing for a period of at least six

months immediately preceding the filing of the Petition[,] either has evidenced

a settled purpose of relinquishing parental claim to a child or has refused or

failed to perform parental duties.” Trial Ct. Op. at 4 (quoting 23 Pa.C.S.A. §

2511(a)(1)). The court gave the following analysis:

Mother alleged that Father and [Stepmother] prevented her from maintaining contact with the child despite [Mother’s] best efforts. However, the evidence does not support Mother’s position. While in the facility, Mother had access to a telephone where she could make and receive telephone calls. Mother also had internet

____________________________________________

1 The reasons for Mother’s prolonged treatment are disputed. While Stepmother testified the facility informed her that Mother “was being treated for various psychological and physical issues related to COVID-19,” Mother maintained “that her treatment was not related to her mental health and was solely for physical issues.” Trial Court Opinion, filed 2/4/25, at 2.

2 The guardian ad litem told the court she was unable to ascertain Child’s legal

interest due to his autism. The court determined there was no conflict between Child’s best interest and legal interest. No party objected to this determination or requested the appointment of additional counsel for Child. See Trial Ct. Op. at 2.

-2- J-S24019-25

access and use of a tablet. Additionally, Mother had the ability to use the mail. While in the facility, [Stepmother] was on Mother’s call list, and Father was added after his identity was verified by staff. [Stepmother] credibly testified that she spoke to Mother several times during her hospitalization. Early on in her rehab stay, Mother called [Stepmother] and they discussed Mother missing a court appearance in the custody case, and Mother called [Stepmother] again to discuss access to a bank account. [Stepmother] further testified to another call about the status of Mother’s health. [Stepmother] testified that these initial few calls were essentially to discuss Mother’s condition and that Mother did not ask about the child. [Stepmother] testified that she called Mother another time to advise her that the child was having anesthesia for dental work. [Stepmother] continuously had the same cell phone number and never blocked Mother from calling. Mother testified that she tried calling [Stepmother] 5-6 times after her discharge but each time there was a recording that it was disconnected. [Stepmother] credibly testified that she never received any of those calls and her cell phone number has consistently remained the same at all times relevant hereto.

Mother testified that she tried to contact Father and [Stepmother] via Facebook on multiple occasions while at the rehab facility. Mother testified that she sent a Facebook Messenger message to [Stepmother] on November 27, 2022. The exhibit indicated that “this person in unavailable on Messenger,” which is consistent with [Stepmother]’s testimony that she has had Mother blocked on Facebook since 2019. Father credibly testified that he maintains multiple Facebook accounts. Mother entered screenshots showing multiple attempts at contact with Father via Facebook Messenger from April 24, 2023, until December 11, 2024. There was no conclusive evidence that Father received any of Mother’s attempts at contact via Facebook Messenger. Generally, when a message is read, a blue check mark appears next to the message. However, none of the messages show the blue check mark evidencing receipt. The [c]ourt questions why Mother would continue sending repeated messages after receiving no response for such a long period of time, rather than seeking an alternate method of contact. Mother testified that Father used this Facebook account because he posted a yard sale event on August 12, 2024.

Father and [Stepmother] continued to live at the same address where Mother previously exercised her partial custody until they moved in October 2022. Upon moving to the new

-3- J-S24019-25

address, [Stepmother] provided their new address to the social worker at the facility and thereafter confirmed that the facility had the information. The [c]ourt notes that during her stay, Mother took multiple thirty-day leaves of absence from the facility. Mother would stay with her father and the evidence showed that Mother traveled to Ohio and Florida and music concerts. Mother claimed that she did not receive Father and [Stepmother]’s new address until her discharge on March 28, 2024. However, Mother had easy access to the internet where she could have searched and obtained Father’s new address while still in the facility. Additionally, Mother could have telephoned [Stepmother] during this time, but did not do so. The [c]ourt notes that in her testimony, Mother acknowledged that she never mailed or attempted to mail anything to the child because she “figured Father would throw it out.” Mother never even attempted to mail anything to the child.

Upon discharge on March 28, 2024, Mother moved in with her father in Glassport, Pennsylvania, where she continues to reside. Upon moving in with her father, Mother took little to no affirmative actions to re-establish contact with the child. By her own testimony, Mother had Father’s new address upon being discharged, but yet took no steps to establish contact, mail the child anything, or file a custody petition. Mother testified that she did not go to Father’s house because the state police were summoned during the last visit she had with the child in 2020. Mother did not pursue exercising the custody rights already granted to her in the Custody Consent Order. Furthermore, Mother did not pursue her custody rights by filing a Petition to Modify the custody order.

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Related

In Re: C.M.C., a minor, Appeal of C.L.C.
140 A.3d 699 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)
In re Z.S.W.
946 A.2d 726 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2008)
In re K.C.
199 A.3d 470 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)

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Adoption of: B.R.S., Appeal of: T.L.L., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-brs-appeal-of-tll-pasuperct-2025.