Cassani, E. v. Kamiak, O.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 2023
Docket2961 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cassani, E. v. Kamiak, O. (Cassani, E. v. Kamiak, O.) 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
Cassani, E. v. Kamiak, O., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A12003-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

EMANUELE CASSANI : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : OLGA SOFIA KAMIAK : : Appellant : No. 2961 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Order Entered November 22, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Civil Division at No(s): 2019-20404

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

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED OCTOBER 12, 2023

Olga Sofia Kamiak (“Mother”) appeals pro se from the November 22,

2022 custody order concerning the parties’ four-year-old son, A.C. (“Child”).

The challenged order denied as moot the emergency petition for contempt file

by Emanuele Cassani (“Father”); denied the parties’ cross-claims to modify

the custody order; and granted Father’s request to travel with Child to Italy

in December of 2022, inter alia.1 We vacate and remand.

It is undisputed that Father is from Italy, and Mother is from Belarus.

Father initiated a divorce action in 2019, and the parties filed cross-complaints

for custody of Child that same year. The trial court issued a custody order on

January 14, 2020 (“original order”), when Child was twenty-one months old,

____________________________________________

1 Father did not file an appellee brief in this case. J-A12003-23

which awarded the parties shared legal and physical custody on an alternating

weekly basis. In the highly contentious underlying custody action, the parties

never contested the shared custody award.

Given their countries of origin, the original order included parameters

for the parties to travel internationally with Child. It required that Child have

a United States passport and that it be renewed on a timely basis. However,

the original order prohibited Father from obtaining an Italian passport for

Child. In addition, when either party desired to take an international trip with

Child, the court required that he or she “submit a proposed order to the court

which shall contain Child’s proposed travel dates, itinerary, flight information

and address while traveling [abroad]. The parent proposing travel shall give

a minimum of 45 days written notice.” Order, 1/14/20, at ¶ 9.

The ensuing procedural history is relevant to this appeal. On October

25, 2021, Mother filed a counseled petition to modify the original order,

wherein she requested, in part, that the custody schedule be modified from

Child alternating between her and Father on a weekly basis to a 2-2-3 basis,

which she averred was more suitable for the then three-year-old Child. In

addition, Mother requested that the court suspend Child’s international

traveling until he is ten years old, alleging that Father intended to abscond

with Child. Father filed an answer denying Mother’s allegations.

On November 22, 2021, Father filed a cross-petition to modify the

original order. He requested, in part, that the parties no longer be required

-2- J-A12003-23

to submit a proposed order for international travel and that they be mandated

to provide 30 days’ notice of proposed travel rather than 45 days’ notice.

Father also requested that the court modify the Christmas custody schedule

to accommodate his desire to travel with Child to Italy in alternating years.

The trial court scheduled a hearing on the above petitions for March 30,

2022. Pursuant to a scheduling order, on March 23, 2022, and March 25,

2022, Father and Mother, through counsel, filed their respective pre-trial

memoranda which included, in part, the names of witnesses to be called and

an analysis of the custody factors delineated in 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a). For

reasons unspecified in the record, the court held a conference and not an

evidentiary hearing on March 30, 2022, which resulted in the interim order

dated March 30, 2022 (“interim order”). The trial court docket reveals that

no record was made of the March 30, 2022 proceeding.

The interim order modified the original order by permitting either party,

when Child was in the weekly custody of the other, to exercise custody for two

hours after school until 6:00 p.m. on two separate occasions during the week

and to pick Child up from school on those occasions. With respect to Mother’s

request that the court suspend Father’s travel with Child to Italy until age ten,

the order provided that neither party shall travel with Child “until the [s]tatus

-3- J-A12003-23

hearing on April 13, 2022.”2 Interim Order, 3/30/22, at ¶ 6. The terms of

the original order otherwise remained in effect.

Prior to the scheduled status hearing, on a date not revealed in the

record, Father submitted a proposed order to travel with Child to Italy from

August 24, 2022, until September 7, 2022.

The trial court held the status conference with the parties’ counsel as

scheduled, during which it signed the proposed order allowing Father to travel

to Italy with Child from August 24, 2022, until September 7, 2022. The April

13, 2022 order (“final order”) also directed Mother to provide Father with

Child’s U.S. passport within fifteen days; directed Father to provide copies of

his driver’s license, green card, and passport to be kept on file with the trial

court; and it set forth the itinerary for the proposed trip. Mother timely

appealed pro se from the final order, which this Court docketed at 1012 EDA

2022.

Thereafter, the parties filed the following pleadings which gave rise to

the order which is the subject of this appeal (also referred to as “subject

order”). On June 3, 2022, Father filed an emergency petition incorporating

two requests, one for contempt of the final order and the other to modify the

2 Mother, acting pro se, filed a notice of appeal from the interim order, which

this Court docketed at 1174 EDA 2022. By order filed on June 21, 2022, we quashed the appeal as interlocutory.

-4- J-A12003-23

final order. At the time Father filed these petitions, Mother’s appeal at 1012

EDA 2022 remained pending.

Father asserted that Mother had contravened the final order by failing

to provide Child’s passport. In addition, Father requested that Child’s

two-hour visits with the noncustodial parent be eliminated. He alleged that

those visits had caused Child “extreme distress” and confusion “about who is

picking him up [from school] and where he will be staying in the evening.”

Emergency Petition to Modify, 6/3/22, at ¶ 5(b)(xii)-(xiii). Father requested

that the court modify the final order by returning to an alternating weekly

custody schedule.

On August 11, 2022, Mother filed an amended answer to Father’s

emergency petition for contempt, wherein she asserted, inter alia, that the

passport issue was moot due to this Court’s order in her appeal at 1012 EDA

2022. Indeed, in an order filed on June 22, 2022, this Court granted Mother’s

request for a stay of the final order and directed Father to post $50,000.00 as

security for Child’s return from Italy on September 7, 2022. After Father

complied with that order, this Court removed the stay on July 20, 2022, and

directed Mother to provide Child’s passport to Father no later than August 1,

2022.3 As such, Father and Child had returned to the United States from Italy

3 This Court “ordered Father to post $50,000.00 as security, noting that he

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