C.F. v. B.D.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 2021
Docket1484 EDA 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of C.F. v. B.D. (C.F. v. B.D.) 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
C.F. v. B.D., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-A04002-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

C.F. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT : OF PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : B.D. : : Appellant : No. 1484 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Order Entered July 16, 2020 In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Domestic Relations at No: No. 2020DR00395, PACSES #097300232

BEFORE: STABILE, J., KING, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED: APRIL 23, 2021

B.D. (“Father”) appeals from the order entered July 16, 2020, declaring

him the legal father of E.D. (“Child”), a female born in November 2019, and

directing that he pay child support. After careful review, we affirm.

Although the details are not entirely clear from the record, Father began

a relationship with C.F. (“Mother”) in or before 2017. N.T., 7/16/20, at 9, 48.

Father was incarcerated for about a month starting in February 2019 because

of a probation violation.1 Id. at 18, 28-29. Once he was released in March

2019, he resumed his relationship with Mother. Id. at 29-30, 40-41. Mother

became pregnant with Child at or near this time. Id. at 44-45. Father was

present at the hospital during Child’s birth and, critical to this appeal, signed ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 Father violated his probation by moving without informing his probation officer. N.T., 7/16/20, at 17-18. J-A04002-21

an acknowledgement of paternity the day after the birth. Id. at 30, 36-37.

Three weeks later, however, Father moved out of the home he shared with

Mother and Child, and he has not seen Child since. Id. at 31.

On April 27, 2020, Mother filed a complaint for child support. The trial

court entered an interim order on June 23, 2020, following a conference, which

directed Father to pay support. Father requested a de novo hearing that same

day. Although the court and the parties indicate that Father filed a motion to

establish paternity and for paternity testing on July 2, 2020, that motion does

not appear in the certified record or on the docket. The record does contain

a motion to stay the proceedings pending the results of a paternity test, which

Father filed on July 13, 2020.

The trial court held the de novo hearing on July 16, 2020.2 In relevant

part, Father testified that Mother told him Child was his child, and that he had

initially believed her. N.T., 7/16/20, at 30, 33. He contended that he learned

Child was not his child after discovering that Mother deceived him regarding

Child’s due date. According to Father, Mother told him that Child’s due date

was the first week of September. Id. at 32. When Child was not born at that

time, Mother insisted that Child would be born “soon.” Id. at 32-33. However,

Child was not born until November 2019. Id. at 34. Father claimed that he

knew a normal pregnancy would only last about forty weeks but believed it ____________________________________________

2 The transcript of the hearing indicates that it took place on July 18, 2020. However, this appears to be a typographical error, as the trial court entered the order resulting from the hearing on July 16, 2020. The scheduling orders in the record also indicate that the hearing would occur on July 16, 2020.

-2- J-A04002-21

was possible for Child to be born two months late. Id. at 34-35. He claimed

that he first learned this was not possible while speaking with his mother, I.M.,

several weeks after Child’s birth. Id. at 35-38. Father maintained that he

now realized Child could not be his child because her conception would have

occurred while he was incarcerated in February 2019. Id. at 36.

I.M. presented a similar account of the events surrounding Child’s birth.

She testified that Child’s alleged due date changed during Mother’s pregnancy,

explaining, “we kept hearing September, then October, and then it ended up

being November.” Id. at 24. She recalled that she discussed Child’s due date

with Father “a few weeks or something” after the birth. Id. at 22. During the

discussion, Father stated that Child was born two months late, and I.M. replied

that a two-month delay “doesn’t happen. That’s impossible.” Id. at 23. I.M.

testified that Father appeared to be “starting to realize that I was right,” but

that they did not discuss the issue again. Id. at 24.

In contrast to Father’s account, Mother testified that she conceived Child

in March 2019, following Father’s release from incarceration, and that she was

induced after thirty-six weeks because it was a high-risk pregnancy.3 Id. at

43-44. Mother acknowledged that Child may not be Father’s child but insisted

that she had informed Father of that possibility prior to the birth. Id. at 51.

She explained her decision to contest his request for a paternity test despite

this possibility as follows: ____________________________________________

3 Mother did not explain clearly why the pregnancy was high-risk but noted that she “ha[s] had gestational diabetes[.]” N.T., 7/16/20, at 43.

-3- J-A04002-21

. . . . In 2017 [Father] and I were also pregnant then. I lost the child at six months. Since then, [Father] had wanted nothing but a child. I was honest, Your Honor, with [Father], from the very beginning, that there was a possibility that this was not his child, but because we had lost a baby in 2017, he never made a big deal about it. He said, no matter what, I’m going to be there, and I’m going to be there for you. I am going to be there for [Child], and that’s what it was. I’m not saying that he’s a hundred percent the father, you’re right.

***

. . . . I don’t know that, but I’m not saying that he’s not the father. All I am saying is the truth, and that he said that he would be there, so he signed the acknowledgement of the paternity and he gave her his last name.

Id. at 48.

Mother presented the testimony of M.W., a mutual acquaintance of the

parties and the father of Mother’s other child, who corroborated her testimony.

M.W. testified that he discussed the issue of paternity with Father while on a

trip in July or August 2019. Id. at 9. M.W. recalled that Father “brought up

that it’s a little stressful . . . because of . . . not knowing if he was the father,

but he did acknowledge that if . . . he wasn’t, he would still be there 100

percent because he loves [Mother.]” Id. at 10-11.

Following the hearing, the trial court entered the order on appeal, ruling

that Father was Child’s legal father and directing him once again to pay child

support.4 Curiously, the order also directed that the parties and Child undergo ____________________________________________

4 The order indicated that Father’s support obligation would cease effective August 1, 2020, because his income fell below the self-support reserve, but that he would remain obligated to pay any arrears or fees owed.

-4- J-A04002-21

paternity testing, while specifying that Father would remain Child’s legal father

“[r]egardless of the results[.]” Order, 7/16/20, at 1 (unnumbered pages).

Father timely filed a notice of appeal on August 5, 2020, and Mother timely

filed a cross appeal on August 12, 2020. The court entered an order on August

18, 2020, directing that Mother file a concise statement of errors complained

of on appeal, and she complied by filing a concise statement on September 3,

2020. Father also filed a concise statement on September 18, 2020, although

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Bluebook (online)
C.F. v. B.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cf-v-bd-pasuperct-2021.