A.D.W. v. F.W., Jr.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 2017
DocketA.D.W. v. F.W., Jr. No. 2792 EDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of A.D.W. v. F.W., Jr. (A.D.W. v. F.W., Jr.) 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
A.D.W. v. F.W., Jr., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-A04030-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

A.D.W. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellant

v.

F.W., JR.

Appellee No. 2792 EDA 2016

Appeal from the Order Entered August 3, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County Domestic Relations at No(s): 2014-FC-0538

BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., SOLANO, J., and PLATT, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY SOLANO, J.: FILED MAY 04, 2017

Appellant, A.D.W. (“Mother”) appeals from a custody order regarding

her children, M.C.W. (born 2005) and T.P.W. (born 2008) (collectively

“Children”). Mother contends the court abused its discretion and committed

an error of law in denying her motion to relocate the primary residence of

her and the Children from Pennsylvania to South Carolina. Mother also

challenges the decision to change the custody arrangements from Mother

having primary custody to both Mother and F.W., Jr. (“Father”) having

shared physical custody, because Father withdrew his petition to modify the

custody arrangement. We affirm.

We adopt the facts as set forth by the trial court:

____________________________________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A04030-17

Mother informed Father in writing of her intention to move with [Children], to Moore, South Carolina. Pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 1915.17 and 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5337(c), on January 15, 2016[,] Mother served Father with notice of relocation within sixty days of her anticipated move, April 2, 2016. She provided information about the location and her proposed modified custody agreement. Her temporary new address at the home of Maternal Grandmother would be . . . , Moore, South Carolina 29369. She identified the school that the children will be attending ....

Mother explained that she was moving because Maternal Grandmother, age 68, semi-retired with health issues, had moved to Moore, South Carolina, and is in need of Mother’s physical assistance. She added that there will not be any remaining family for Mother in Pennsylvania. Most importantly, Mother expounded upon her inability to financially support herself in the Lehigh Valley as the result of two events that will occur in the fall of 2016. Pursuant to the Property Settlement Agreement signed by the parties and filed December 21, 2015 in the divorce action, Mother is required to refinance the mortgage on her residence, the marital home, in order to remove Father from mortgage liability.[1] The Property Settlement Agreement also provides that the term of alimony payments to Mother from Husband terminates in December of 2016. As a consequence, Mother explained that she will have to sell the home, move from the residence where she and the children have lived for four years. Mother’s income from her part-time employment is insufficient to qualify for refinancing of the mortgage. She proposed that in South Carolina, she will be financially able to support the children where the cost of living is less than in the Lehigh Valley. She purported that the lower cost of ____________________________________________ 1 The agreement did not require the sale of the marital residence. Rather, the agreement provided that if Mother was unable to assume sole responsibility for the mortgage and release Father from any obligation to pay the mortgage within nine months from the date of the agreement, then the marital residence would be listed for sale. Settlement Agreement, 12/21/15, at 10.

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living will create a stable financial environment for her to support the children.

Her proposed custodial schedule is as follows. Mother and Father shall share legal custody; sole physical custody shall be vested in Mother. Father shall exercise six uninterrupted weeks of visitation in the summer beginning immediately after the close of school, during which time he will celebrate his son’s birthday, Memorial Day, and Father’s Day with the Children. Father will also have one week of custody over the Christmas break from school. In addition, he will have either a week of custody over Spring Break or the majority of Thanksgiving break, depending upon whether the year is ‘even’ or ‘odd.’

Father objected to the relocation and to the modification of the custody schedule set forth in the agreed order of March 26, 2015. On February 10, 2016, he filed a Counter Affidavit regarding relocation and a Petition for Modification. In response, Mother filed an Answer and New Matter on March 16, 2016 requesting that the Court grant her relocation as per the terms of her notice. On April 5, 2016, Father filed his Answer to Mother’s New Matter. A custody conference was held in May 2016 and thereafter the matter was listed for trial; trial commenced July 8, 2016 during which an attempt was made to interview the Children. The interview was cancelled; the Court found that both children exhibited substantial anxiety in the Court’s presence in response to preliminary attempts to discuss the family. The Court was advised that the Children were also upset in anticipation of coming into court. On or before July 14, 2016, both parties submitted briefs; the matter was taken under advisement. An Order for custody was filed on August [3], 2016; this is the opinion in support of that order.

. . . Mother has not been straightforward in her notice to Father in setting forth her motives for the move. In addition to those reasons identified in the notice, the testimony at trial revealed that Mother had other motives for relocating not revealed in her writing. Mother planned to move to maternal grandmother’s home and upon the termination of her alimony, marry her fiancé. Her fiancé is a longtime friend and a South Carolina resident who lives

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just ten miles from maternal grandmother’s home. Mother and witnesses on her behalf testified that the close proximity of the Mother’s proposed South Carolina home and that of Fiancé was not planned; the Court found this to be disingenuous on Mother’s part and discourteous to all involved.

* * *

Mother and Father were married January 21, 2003; they lived at Mother’s home, . . . , Hellertown, Pennsylvania, until May 2012. In 2012, they purchased the marital residence, . . . , in Emmaus, where the family resided together until separation in April 2014 when Father left the home. Mother and the Children have continued to reside at the marital residence. The residence is currently under an agreement of sale. The divorce was finalized in January 2016. . . .

Mother is . . . age 39. She has been employed part- time as a Salon Coordinator . . . in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania for several years. She works Tuesday thru Saturday for 30 hours a week. Her monthly income is approximately $1,000. She is a graduate of Georgia Southern University with a bachelor’s degree in Hotel and Restaurant Management with a minor in Business Administration. After graduation she was employed in her field at Hilton Head Island, SC. She moved to Pennsylvania and purchased a home. She has previously been employed in a beauty salon, Chili’s Grill & Bar, and LA Weight Loss Centers, before taking her current job. She has been actively involved in organizing a successful fund raising event each year since maternal grandfather’s death due to pancreatic cancer.

Father is . . . age 39. Since separation in April 2014, Father has resided at . . . , Allentown, the home of retired paternal grandparents, . . . . The home is located in the Allentown School District.[2] Father is a veteran, an Army ____________________________________________ 2 According to the trial court, the Allentown School District “falls short of the quality of education at other suburban school districts,” which includes the Children’s present school district. Trial Ct. Op., 8/8/16, at 10.

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A.D.W. v. F.W., Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adw-v-fw-jr-pasuperct-2017.