C.P. and D.P. v. S.C. and C.P.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 19, 2020
Docket1277 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of C.P. and D.P. v. S.C. and C.P. (C.P. and D.P. v. S.C. and C.P.) 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.P. and D.P. v. S.C. and C.P., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A02027-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

C.P. AND D.P. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : S.C. AND C.P. : : : No. 1277 WDA 2019 APPEAL OF: S.C. :

Appeal from the Order Entered July 18, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Civil Division at No(s): FD-17-4317-003

BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., OLSON, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 19, 2020

Appellant, S.C. (“Mother”), appeals pro se from the July 18, 2019 order

granting C.P. (“Paternal Grandfather”) and D.P. (“Paternal Grandmother”)

(collectively, “Paternal Grandparents”) sole physical and legal custody of C.C.

(“Child”).1 We affirm.

The trial court set forth the relevant factual and procedural background

of this matter as follows.

Th[is] case originally came to the attention of the [trial] court when the Office of Children Youth and Families [(“OCYF”)] filed a dependency petition in January [] 2018. The petition alleged that [Child] was without proper parental care or control. It was alleged that Mother brought [Child] to a court hearing on January 19[,] 2018 and was incarcerated that day. [Child] [was] placed in the courthouse's daycare, and an appropriate family member could ____________________________________________

1 Child was born in November 2016. J-A02027-20

not be located to retrieve [her]. While the Dependency Petition Hearing was pending, OCYF contacted [(“Father”)], and [Child] was placed in his care.2 Ultimately, the dependency petition was withdrawn, and Father was granted primary custody of [Child], as he appeared to be a ready, willing, and able parent.

The court did not have contact with the family again until May [] 2018, at which time Mother sought custody of [Child] after her release from incarceration. [When Mother filed the custody complaint,] [she] served Father only and did not include Paternal Grandparents as [parties] to the custody action. Mother and Father were ordered to participate in the Generations Program. Father retained primary custody of [Child] until July 28, 2018, at which time he was incarcerated. Prior to his incarceration, Father made arrangements with Paternal Grandparents to care for [Child]. However, it was apparent from the court's interactions with the family that Paternal Grandparents provided daily care for [Child] from the time she was placed in Father's care in January [] 2018. Paternal Grandparents also reported that they cared for [Child] for extended periods of time prior to Mother's incarceration in January [] 2018.

Mother failed to appear for the Generations educational seminar on July 14, 2018, and her petition for modification was dismissed on July 16[,] 2018. Mother filed a petition for reinstatement of her custody action and the court granted her request on September 12[,] 2018. On September 13[,] 2018, Paternal Grandparents filed a petition for special relief custody.3 Paternal Grandparents were granted standing and permitted to proceed in ____________________________________________

2 Father lived in the house of Paternal Grandparents.

3 On January 29, 2020, Mother filed an Application for Relief with this Court in which she asserts that she was never served with Paternal Grandparents’ petition for custody and she saw it for the first time on January 29, 2020 when she found it on the court’s electronic docket. Appellant’s Application for Relief, 1/29/2020, at 2. A review of the record belies Mother’s assertions. Not only has she been actively involved in these proceedings from the beginning — including participating in the custody trial, filing a notice of appeal from the trial court’s order granting sole legal and physical custody to Paternal Grandparents, filing a brief and appearing for oral argument before this Court — but Mother also signed an acknowledgment of service of the custody pleading which was filed with the trial court on October 17, 2018. Accordingly, Mother’s Application for Relief is denied.

-2- J-A02027-20

the custody action. In September [] 2018, the court ordered all parties to proceed through the Generations Program. Pending the Generations conciliation, the court entered an interim custody order allowing Mother periods of partial visitation with [Child] on the weekends. After this hearing, Mother began filing monthly motions before [the trial] court seeking additional periods of visitation. At each motion hearing, Paternal Grandparents expressed frustration with Mother's punctuality while transporting [Child] to and from visits. Th[e trial] court entered an order on October 10[,] 2018 allowing Mother a fifteen-minute grace period to pick-up or drop-off [Child]. The court granted Mother various additional periods of visitation including [Child’s] birthday, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.

On February 26[,] 2019, a custody conciliation was held to address Mother's petitions for modification to primary custody and civil contempt and Paternal Grandparents' petition for modification for sole custody. Mother failed to appear, and her petitions were dismissed. Paternal Grandparents' petition was scheduled for a judicial conciliation on March 26[,] 2019. At the conciliation, Paternal Grandparents expressed concern for Mother's care of [Child] during her periods of visitation. Specifically, they alleged that Mother had returned [Child] to them with bed bug bites and other various illnesses on several occasions. Paternal Grandparents also reported that Mother did not have adequate supplies for [Child] during her periods of visitation and returned [Child] to them wearing a maxi pad. Mother reported to Paternal Grandparents that she did not have diapers. Mother's tardiness at drop-off and pick-up times continued to be an issue as well. The parties could not agree to any form of shared custody and as such, a custody trial was scheduled for June 12[,] 2019. The parties appeared on that date, and the court heard testimony and accepted exhibits from the parties. Mother did not allege any physical maltreatment of [Child] by Paternal Grandparents at this hearing. Due to a scheduling conflict, the court was only able to hear [90] minutes of testimony, and the hearing was continued to July 2[,] 2019. Pending the second day of trial, the court ordered Mother to return [Child] to Paternal Grandparents by 10[:00] [a.m.] on Sunday, June 16[,] 2019 for Father's Day. In exchange for shortening Mother's period of custody, the court granted her an extended period of visitation from June 20[,] 2019 until June 25[,] 2019 so that she could take [Child] on vacation. On or about June 15[,] 2019, Mother obtained a frivolous emergency protection from abuse order on behalf of [Child] alleging physical

-3- J-A02027-20

maltreatment by Paternal Grandfather. Mother did not return [Child] to Paternal Grandparents as outlined in the June 12[,] 2019 order. Paternal Grandmother appeared before the court on Monday, June 17[,] 2019 to report that [Child] had not been returned to their care. Mother failed to appear in court in a timely fashion and the emergency protection from abuse order expired on June 17[,] 2019. [The trial] court entered an order on June 17[,] 2019 ordering Mother to return [Child] to the care of Paternal Grandparents immediately. The court also suspended Mother's custodial periods as set forth in the October 10[,] 2018 and June 12[,] 2019 orders. Paternal Grandmother appeared the following day on June 18[,] 2019 and sought assistance from the court in obtaining [Child] from Mother's home. On June 18[,] 2019, [the trial] court gave the Allegheny County Sheriff's Office permission to forcibly remove [Child] from Mother's care if she was discovered at Mother's home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
C.P. and D.P. v. S.C. and C.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cp-and-dp-v-sc-and-cp-pasuperct-2020.