D.J.S. v. J.D.S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 22, 2018
Docket1445 MDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of D.J.S. v. J.D.S. (D.J.S. v. J.D.S.) 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
D.J.S. v. J.D.S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A04008-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

D.J.S. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

J.D.S.

Appellant No. 1445 MDA 2017

Appeal from the Order Entered August 16, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Civil Division at No: 2015-FC-000259-12A

BEFORE: STABILE, NICHOLS, AND RANSOM,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED MAY 22, 2018

Appellant, J.D.S. (“Father”), appeals from the Court of Common Pleas

of York County’s order granting a final protection from abuse (“PFA”) order in

favor of Appellee, his daughter, D.J.S. We affirm.

The trial court summarized the procedural history as follows:

On July 21, 2017, [Mother] filed petitions seeking temporary PFA orders on behalf of her minor daughters, [D.J.S.] and S.S. Following an ex parte proceeding, Honorable Todd J. Platts entered temporary PFA orders against [Father] which directed, in part, that [Father] [] was to have no contact with either child. A hearing whether permanent PFA orders should be entered was scheduled for August 16, 2017.

Following that hearing, [the trial court] granted the petition for a PFA order against [Father] related to [D.J.S.] but denied the requested PFA order related to S.S. As to the order protecting ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A04008-18

[D.J.S.], the trial court directed that [Father] was to have no contact with her, direct or indirect, through third parties, or through social media for a period of 18 months. The order further directed [Father] to obtain a psychological evaluation, follow through with resulting recommendations, and pay court costs.

On August 25, 2017, [Father] filed a Motion for Reconsideration[,] which the trial court denied in an order filed September 13, 2017.

On September 15, 2017, [Father] filed a Notice of Appeal and a [Pa.R.A.P.] 1925(a) statement.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/4/17, at 1-2 (citations to record and footnotes

omitted).

The trial court summarized the relevant factual background as follows:

During the hearing held August 16, 2017, Molly McCaughey testified that she is a nurse practitioner employed by WellSpan Pediatrics and that 13-year old [D.J.S.] is a patient in the practice. McCaughey initially treated [D.J.S.] for depression. On July 5, 2017, [D.J.S.] presented with “worsening depression and thoughts of self-harm” and “suicidal ideation.” McCaughey also noted that [D.J.S.] displayed superficial lacerations caused by cutting.

[D.J.S.] was immediately referred to crisis intervention and was admitted to Roxbury Treatment Center that same day. She remained in the mental health facility between July 5 and July 20, 2017. There, she was treated for depression, anxiety, and anorexia. Following her release from Roxbury, [D.J.S.] was referred to an eating disorder clinic at Hershey Medical Center.

Mother testified that she is the mother of [D.J.S.] and S.S. and the wife of [Father]. Mother sought an emergency PFA order contemporaneously with [D.J.S.] being hospitalized at Roxbury. Mother had learned that following a conversation with her father, [D.J.S.] wanted to kill herself. Further, “[e]ach and every time her father contacted her[, D.J.S] would try to cut herself or scratch herself and she would go to one of the mental health specialists and get help.” As a result, Roxbury disallowed contact between [D.J.S.] and [Father].

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Leading up to [D.J.S.]’s admission to the psychiatric facility, Mother noticed cuts on [D.J.S.]’s wrists the Sunday [D.J.S.] returned from vacation with her father.

Mother filed the petition for a PFA order “[b]ecause [D.J.S.] is suicidal, she self-harms and she’s starving herself to death.” Mother testified that [D.J.S.]’s weight has dropped to 84 pounds “in the span of just a couple of months.” At the time of the hearing, [D.J.S.] had a “team of about 5 medical professionals that deal with her every day.”

Based on the many years that she lived with [Father], [Mother] attributes the causes of [D.J.S.]’s problems to be “her relationship with her father.”

Asked why she refuses to eat, [D.J.S.] testified that her father and others, “have told me that I needed to lose weight so I decided I would act on that and stop eating.” According to [D.J.S.], her father also caused her depression because he “tells me that I’m lying all the time and there is nothing wrong with me.” She further described that when she was prescribed medication for [gastric esophageal reflux (“GERD”)] and depression, [Father] “said that . . . I didn’t acutally have GERD or depression, and I was just making it up because it didn’t seem like I had any of those things and he tried to stop me from taking my medication.”

[D.J.S.] displayed to the trial court marks on her arm and hands and described marks on her upper right leg and stated the scar resulted from her cutting herself with her “fingers, paper, scissors, eraser and pencil sharpeners.” [D.J.S.] testified she cut herself during her vacation with [Father] because “my dad was telling me that whole day Saturday that he doesn’t want me to take my medication because I was lying about all of it and he doesn’t think that I was depressed[.]” Further, [Father] said she did not need to be admitted to the mental health facility because “I was faking the whole thing” and that it was too expensive for her to stay at the facility.

While she was a patient at Roxbury, [D.J.S.] asked [Father] whether he was engaged. According to [D.J.S.], [Father] responded that he had been engaged for some time but “he wasn’t going to tell . . . me because he wanted to keep me in the dark about all of this stuff that was going on because I wasn’t trustworthy enough for that information.” [Father] also told

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[D.J.S.] that “he was happier with [his fiancée] and her daughter . . . than he ever was with us.”

When [Father] told her those things, [D.J.S.] “wanted to hurt” herself.

Id. at 3-6 (citations to the record, and footnotes omitted).1

Appellant argues the evidence was insufficient to show that Father

“abused” D.J.S., as the term is defined in the Protection From Abuse Act, 23

Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6101–6117.2 We disagree.

We review the propriety of a PFA order for error of law or abuse of

discretion. See, e.g., Ferko–Fox v. Fox, 68 A.3d 917, 920 (Pa. Super.

2013). We have described this standard as “not merely an error of judgment,

but if in reaching a conclusion the law is overridden or misapplied, or the

judgment exercised is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality,

prejudice, bias or ill-will, as shown by the evidence or the record, discretion is

abused.” Depp v. Holland, 636 A.2d 204, 205–06 (Pa. Super.

1994) (citation omitted).

“When a claim is presented on appeal that the evidence was not

sufficient to support an order of protection from abuse, we review the evidence

in the light most favorable to the petitioner and granting her the benefit of all

____________________________________________

1 Father also testified at the same hearing. Father essentially denied all of D.J.S.’s allegations. However, the trial court found D.J.S’s testimony credible. Trial Court Opinion, 10/4/17, at 7.

2 See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6102.

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reasonable inference, determine whether the evidence was sufficient to

sustain the trial court’s conclusion by a preponderance of the evidence.”

Fonner v.

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Related

Raker v. Raker
847 A.2d 720 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2004)
Fonner v. Fonner
731 A.2d 160 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1999)
Ferko-Fox v. Fox
68 A.3d 917 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Depp v. Holland
636 A.2d 204 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)

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Bluebook (online)
D.J.S. v. J.D.S., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/djs-v-jds-pasuperct-2018.