Giammatteo v. York

32 Pa. D. & C.5th 129
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lawrence County
DecidedJuly 31, 2013
DocketNo. 11377 of 2011
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Pa. D. & C.5th 129 (Giammatteo v. York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lawrence County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giammatteo v. York, 32 Pa. D. & C.5th 129 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

HODGE, J.,

This matter was before the court for a custody trial. The plaintiff, Alyssa J. Giammatteo (hereinafter, “mother”), and the defendant, Robert J. York (hereinafter, “Father”), are the natural parents of two minor children, Chase York (hereinafter, “C.Y.”), bom May 4, 2002, and Ian York (hereinafter, “I.Y.”), bom January 11, 2006. Mother and father each desire primary custody of their minor children. The relevant procedural and historical background of this case is summarized as follows:

Mother and father began dating in 2001. They lived together at the maternal grandparents’ residence in 2002 when their oldest child, C. Y, was bom. Mother and father married on June 22, 2004. At that time, mother was going to school to become an x-ray technician, and father was employed at Wal-Mart. Later that year, mother and father moved to Hillsboro, Ohio because father was transferred to a Wal-Mart facility in that area. Mother and father both worked, and they shared the responsibility of caring for C.Y. When both parties worked, C.Y. went to daycare. When the parties’ second child, I.Y., was bom in 2006, the parties continued to work and share the parental responsibilities associated with caring for two young children.

[131]*131In January, 2008, the parties returned to Edinburg, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania. Father’s own father passed away, and the parties decided to return to father’s mother’s (hereinafter, “paternal grandmother”) residence. Mother and father remained at paternal grandmother’s residence until November 2008 when the parties separated, and mother left paternal grandmother’s residence. Mother stated that she did not feel comfortable remaining at paternal grandmother’s residence after the parties’ separation, but she did not want to remove the children from their school in the middle of the school year. Mother permitted the children to remain primarily with father until she obtained her own residence; mother believed her decision was in the children’s best interests. Mother was additionally suffering from depression following her separation from father. Mother believed that until she got herself settled, it was in the children’s best interest to remain with father at paternal grandmother’s residence. Father was not working at the time, and he agreed to care primarily for the minor children.

Following the parties’ separation, mother regularly visited with the minor children. Although C.Y. began kindergarten, mother went to paternal grandmother’s residence almost every day to spend time with I. Y. Mother purchased her own residence in February, 2009, and began bringing the children to her residence on a weekly basis. During the summer of 2009, mother had primary custody of the children. When the 2009 school year began, father resumed primary custody. The parties continued to share custody of the minor children in this manner, and without court intervention for approximately two years.

During those two years, father remained at paternal [132]*132grandmother’s residence. Father helped paternal grandmother adjust after the loss of her husband, and paternal grandmother helped father care for the minor children. After a period of time, father obtained new employment, and his family continued to assist him in caring for the minor children. Despite the parties’ personal problems, the minor children were well cared for, and they adjusted to the parties’ separation.

While employed at Wal-Mart in Cortland, Ohio, father became acquainted with Tina Kordes. Father and Tina became intimately involved, and Tina stated that she did not want to further their relationship while father and mother were still married. Father’s relationship with Tina was the basis for mother’s leaving father and their subsequent separation and divorce. Once the parties were separated, father introduced the minor children to Tina at the paternal grandmother’s residence. Tina moved into paternal grandmother’s house in 2009. Tina became involved in caring for the children on a daily basis; she was an integral part of father’s support system because she assisted with meals, scheduling, schoolwork, potty-training, and playing games with the children.

In October 2011, father obtained anew job in Ohio. He informed mother that he was moving with the children. Mother stated that the children told her that father was talking about moving, but father never discussed his move with Mother until a week prior to moving.

Prior to father’s move, C.Y. was enrolled in fourth grade in the Mohawk Area School District, and I.Y. was enrolled in Lawrence County HeadStart. Father was unable to enroll I.Y. in a preschool program in Ohio [133]*133because the school year already started. Father also had trouble enrolling C.Y. in the Howland School District in Warren, Ohio, because father needed to have an order of the court stating that he was the primary custodian of C.Y. Father and mother had never needed the court to make a decision about custody, and father therefore did not have an order to give to the school. C.Y. consequently missed one month of school due to father’s inability to obtain the entirety of the necessary paperwork. Mother subsequently initiated the instant custody action.

The court entered a temporary custody order granting the parties shared legal custody. The court granted father primary custody, subject to mother’s partial custody every weekend. The custody schedule converted to mother enjoying primary custody in the summer months, with father exercising custody on weekends. The parties appeared before the court on March 2, 2012 and May 22, 2012 for a custody trial without completing the evidentiary phase of the trial.

On June 15,2012, mother filed a petition for protection from abuse order against father’s fiancée, Tina, on behalf of the minor children. In her petition, mother alleged that Tina disciplined the children in an abusive manner, and the children were afraid to remain at father’s residence.

Following a final protection from abuse hearing, the Honorable Senior Judge Eugene E. Fike denied mother’s petition, and the parties were directed to comply with the temporary custody order issued on December 19, 2011. Given the contentious relationship that subsequently developed between the parties, the court appointed a guardian ad litem for the minor children. The custody [134]*134trial was continued to December 18, 2012, and the court completed the same on June 12, 2013. This case is now before the court for a determination regarding the parties’ completing requests for primary physical custody.

In any custody proceeding, the court’s main concern is the most appropriate custody arrangements for the minor children. 23 Pa.C.S.A. §5327(a); KB. v. C.B.F., 833 A.2d 767, 771 (Pa.Super. 2003). In a custody contest, such as the case now before the court, where the dispute arises between two parents, the burden of proof is shared equally between the parties, as the court will not presume that custody should be awarded to a particular parent. Id.

In making a determination, the court bases its findings on how the best interests of the child may be served. Arnold v. Arnold, 847 A.2d 674, 677 (Pa.Super. 2004).

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Related

Arnold v. Arnold
847 A.2d 674 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2004)

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32 Pa. D. & C.5th 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giammatteo-v-york-pactcompllawren-2013.