In Re Adoption B.E.W.G.

513 A.2d 1061, 355 Pa. Super. 554, 1986 Pa. Super. LEXIS 11824
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 12, 1986
Docket00146
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 513 A.2d 1061 (In Re Adoption B.E.W.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Adoption B.E.W.G., 513 A.2d 1061, 355 Pa. Super. 554, 1986 Pa. Super. LEXIS 11824 (Pa. 1986).

Opinion

BECK, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order of the York County Common Pleas Court denying without a hearing a petition to unseal and inspect adoption records and to vacate an adoption decree. The appellant-petitioners, Howard West and Kay West (the Wests), are the natural maternal grandparents of the adoptees.

The basis of the trial court’s order was that the Wests lacked standing to obtain the requested relief. We find the Wests have standing and remand for a hearing as to whether the adoption records should be unsealed and inspected. We also find that the Wests have standing as to whether the adoption decree should be vacated. Since the court must determine at the initial hearing whether to unseal the adoption records, we conclude that a decision as to whether the court should hold a hearing on the petition to vacate the adoption decree is premature; and therefore we do not decide that question. The facts of this case are complex. B.E.W.G. is now three years old and S-L.W.G. is now seven years old. They are the natural children of P.J.G. (Father) and L.G. Father stabbed and killed his wife L.G. on December 4, 1983, in Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York. At that time, S-L.W.G. was visiting her paternal grandfather, in the New York City area; B.E.W.G. was present at the marital residence in a trailer park in Brook-tondale, New York. After the stabbing, Father was arrest *556 ed and incarcerated in the Tompkins County jail. B.E.W.G. was taken into physical custody by a neighbor at the trailer park. On December 6, 1983, the paternal grandfather apparently obtained physical custody of B.E.W.G. from the neighbor and brought him to his residence where S-L.W.G. was staying.

On December 21, 1983, the Wests, after several unsuccessful efforts at locating the children, filed a petition for custody in the Family Court, State of New York, County of Tompkins. On March 26, 1984, Judge William C. Barrett directed that custody of the children be placed with Father who had been released on bail; granted the Wests visitation privileges; and further directed “that this order will remain in effect until the disposition or resolution of the criminal charges currently pending against [Father] in Tompkins County Court, or until further order of this Court.”

Approximately two months later on May 15, 1984, the Tompkins County Family Court entered an order (May 15 order) which again granted custody of the children to Father and extended the visitation privileges of the Wests. Prior to the May 15 order and pursuant to the prior agreement of the parties, the Wests delivered on May 10, 1984 the two children to Father in the presence of his attorneys in Ithaca, New York. From the time they turned over the children on May 10, 1984 until they discovered their whereabouts in York County sometime in September 1985, the Wests lost track of and had no contact with the children.

It appears that on or about May 13, 1984, Father removed the children from New York. He took them to the Tressler Lutheran Service Associates (Tressler), York County, Pennsylvania, where he reportedly relinquished the children to the Tressler agency. The record contains an affidavit by a Millie Bull of York County, who states that between May 13, 1984, and July 8, 1984, she taught B.E.W.G. and S-L. W.G. at the Christ Lutheran Church Bible School and that, at the time, the children were in a foster home in Shrews-bury with a couple named in the affidavit. The affidavit continues: “After that they were adopted by another couple.”

*557 Not knowing that the children had been removed from New York State, Kay West drove to Brooklyn, New York on May 21, 1984 to pick them up for a week’s visitation pursuant to the May 15 order. The children were missing, and on the following day Father communicated through his attorney that he would not reveal their whereabouts. On May 22, the jury returned a guilty verdict in Father’s criminal trial. Judgment of sentence was entered on June 23, 1984 on conviction of a reduced charge of first degree manslaughter, upon Father’s affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance. Father is currently serving a sentence of 8Vs to 25 years in the New York state prison system.

On May 24, 1984, the Wests, still unaware of the whereabouts of the children, filed a new petition for custody in the Tompkins County, New York Family Court. In response to that petition, on May 29, 1984, (May 29 order) the Tompkins County Court entered three orders. The first ordered Father to show cause why custody should not be granted to the Wests. The second order directed that temporary custody of S-L.W.G. and B.E.W.G. be placed with the Wests. The third order provided for service of the orders on Father.

In response to the Rule to Show Cause, Father appeared at a fact-finding hearing on June 11. He refused to divulge any information concerning the whereabouts of the children; he asserted his fifth amendment rights repeatedly. On July 5, 1984, the Tompkins County Family Court issued a continuation of its prior order of May 29, granting temporary custody to the Wests.

As noted above from the affidavit of Millie Bull, on July 8, 1984, the children were in foster care and she was instructing them. Therefore, we conclude that when temporary custody was initially awarded to the Wests on May 29, 1984, the adoption decree in York County was not final.

The Tompkins County Family Court issued its formal decision and order on the Wests’ May 24 petition on Novem *558 ber 9, 1984. The decision and order directed that legal custody of the children be placed with the petitioners, Howard L. West and Kay West. Thus, the Wests have had legal custody of B.E.W.G. and S-L.W.G. from May 29, 1984; albeit for the period from May 29, to November 9, 1984 their legal custody was described as temporary.

On April 19, 1985, the district attorney of Tompkins County petitioned the court for an order unsealing the adoption records of B.E.W.G. and S-L.W.G. and to permit him to inspect the adoption records. On April 30, 1985, the Wests filed a similar petition with the Court of the County of Richmond, New York. On June 17, 1985, the Surrogate’s Court of the State of New York, County of Richmond, ordered that the adoption records of the children be sent to the district attorney and the Wests’ attorney. The court found that the petitioners had demonstrated the requisite “good cause” to open the adoption records. A review of the Richmond County records reveals that the adoption proceeding in the county was abandoned in April of 1984. The record is incomplete as to what if any adoption proceedings took place in Tompkins County.

On September 6, 1985, the Wests traveled to York County Pennsylvania. They learned that the children had been at Tressler Lutheran Services Associates from sometime in May to sometime in July 1984 and were subsequently adopted by unknown parties. The Wests then filed with the Orphan’s Court Division of the York County Common Pleas Court a petition in two counts:

(1) to unseal and inspect the adoption records of [B.E. W.G.] and [S-L.W.G.] to determine:
(a) if the adoption proceedings were commenced and completed during the period that the children were under the jurisdiction of the Family Court of the State of New York, Tompkins County;

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Bluebook (online)
513 A.2d 1061, 355 Pa. Super. 554, 1986 Pa. Super. LEXIS 11824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-bewg-pa-1986.