In Re: Adoption of: S.A.S., a Minor

2025 Pa. Super. 91
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 2025
Docket1372 MDA 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Pa. Super. 91 (In Re: Adoption of: S.A.S., a Minor) 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
In Re: Adoption of: S.A.S., a Minor, 2025 Pa. Super. 91 (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A04042-25 2025 PA Super 91

IN RE: ADOPTION OF: S.A.S., A : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MINOR : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: D.S. : : : : : No. 1372 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Order Entered August 22, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Orphans' Court at No(s): 2017-0057a

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., NICHOLS, J., and SULLIVAN, J.

OPINION BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED: APRIL 23, 2025

D.S. (“Maternal Grandmother”) appeals from the order terminating the

post-adoption contact agreement1 (“PACA”) between her and J.H. (“Adoptive

Mother”)2 concerning S.H.3 (“Child”), who is now thirteen years old. In this

matter of first impression, we affirm.

We take the underlying facts and procedural history in this matter from

the Orphans’ Court opinion:

This case involves Child, [], who was adopted on January 23, 2018[,] by [Adoptive Mother] when she was six years old, after [both] her parents’ parental rights were involuntarily terminated. [] Adoptive Mother[] and Maternal Grandmother ____________________________________________

1 See 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2731-2742.

2 Adoptive Mother is Child’s paternal grandmother. Child was adopted by both paternal grandparents; however, adoptive father committed suicide in 2023. See N.T., 8/21/24, at 32.

3 This case is captioned under the original adoption caption. Post-adoption, the child’s name changed from S.A.S. to S.H. Therefore, we use the Child’s current name in the body of this opinion. J-A04042-25

entered [] a PACA, which the court approved on January 23, 2018, enabling Maternal Grandmother to have visits with Child. Under the agreement, Maternal Grandmother was granted [visitation with] Child every other weekend from Saturday at 10:30 a.m. to Sunday at 11:00 a.m.[4] The agreement provided that Maternal Grandmother was not to allow any contact with Biological Mother, B.S. [(“Biological Mother”)]. The PACA did not restrict Adoptive Mother from permitting contact with Biological Parents in the future.

Child is autistic and was largely non-verbal at the time of adoption. Child’s ability to communicate has greatly improved over the years. As required by the PACA, Child visited Maternal Grandmother on alternating weekends from January 2018 until January 2024 when at the age of . . . 12, Child no longer wanted to visit Maternal Grandmother. On March 27, 2024, Adoptive Mother filed a petition to terminate the PACA, alleging that visits with Maternal Grandmother were causing Child stress because Maternal Grandmother discussed Biological Mother with Child and had recorded [Child]. At a hearing on May 3, 2024, the Parties reached a tentative agreement to allow Maternal Grandmother to continue seeing Child with reduced times. The court noted that Child is autistic and that no one had quite ascertained what her concerns [were] regarding seeing Maternal Grandmother. Thus, the [p]arties agreed to continue the matter until August 21, 2024, and the court ordered Adoptive Mother to have Child work with a therapist to ascertain Child’s concerns and to see if therapeutic visits might be accomplished by August 21, 2024. The PACA remained in effect although [the p]arties agreed not to force Child to see Maternal Grandmother. When no therapeutic visits had been arranged by August 12, 2024, Maternal Grandmother filed a petition for contempt and for special relief, seeking family counseling with Maternal Grandmother and Child in cooperation with Child’s therapist with a goal of working toward reinstatement of Maternal Grandmother’s [visitation rights].

On August 21, 2024, the court held a hearing on Maternal Grandmother’s contempt petition and on Adoptive Mother’s petition to terminate the PACA. Regarding the contempt petition, ____________________________________________

4 At some point, by agreement of the parties, the visits were extended until

6:00 p.m. on Sundays. See N.T., 8/21/24, at 29.

-2- J-A04042-25

the court found [Adoptive] Mother in contempt for having stopped the Child’s visits since January 7, 2024.[5] However, the court terminated the PACA.

Orphans’ Court Opinion, 10/22/24, at 1-3 (record citations omitted, footnotes

added).

At the August 2024, hearing, the court heard the testimony of Child’s

therapist, Kristina Crippen (“Crippen”), Adoptive Mother, and Maternal

Grandmother, and interviewed Child in camera outside the presence of

counsel.6 The court subsequently issued an order terminating the PACA.

Maternal Grandmother filed a motion for reconsideration, which the court

denied. This timely appeal followed.7

On appeal, Maternal Grandmother raises four issues for our review:

1. Whether the [Orphans’ C]ourt abused its discretion and/or erred as matter of law when it terminated the PACA in that Adoptive Mother failed to establish any of the facts pleaded in her Petition to Discontinue PACA[?]

2. Whether the [Orphans’ C]ourt abused its discretion and/or erred as matter of law when it terminated the PACA in that Adoptive Mother failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that discontinuing the PACA serves the needs, welfare, and best interest of Child[?]

____________________________________________

5 Adoptive Mother did not appeal the finding of contempt.

6 It is not apparent whether the Orphans’ Court recorded the interview. The certified record does not include any transcription of it. However, neither party has disputed the Orphans’ Court’s summarization of Child’s remarks, and therefore the lack of a transcript does not hamper our review.

7 Maternal Grandmother and the Orphans’ Court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

-3- J-A04042-25

3. Whether the [Orphans’ C]ourt abused its discretion [in terminating the] PACA in that Adoptive Mother and Grandmother had reached an agreement to continue contact, which agreement was made of record on May 3, 2024[?]

4. Whether the [Orphans’ C]ourt abused its discretion and/or erred as a matter of law when it terminated the PACA in failing to grant reconsideration?

Maternal Grandmother’s Brief at 5-6.

Maternal Grandmother’s first three issues concern the Orphans’ Court’s

decision to terminate the PACA. Accordingly, we address them together.

We begin by noting there is a paucity of law in Pennsylvania concerning

PACAs, and the parties provide competing assertions of our standard and

scope of review. Maternal Grandmother asserts this case involves a pure

question of law and, therefore, our standard of review is de novo and our

scope of review is plenary. See Maternal Grandmother’s Brief at 3. By

contrast, Adoptive Mother asserts we must apply the abuse of discretion

standard of review this Court uses to assess an Orphan’s Court decree. See

Adoptive Mother’s Brief at 1-2.

After a review of the pertinent law, we find that the abuse of discretion

standard of review applies. In In re Adoption of B.G.W., 206 A.3d 576 (Pa.

Super. 2019), this Court recognized no case had addressed the appellate

standard of review of a PACA and, after consideration, determined an abuse

of discretion standard applies to determining whether the Orphans’ Court

-4- J-A04042-25

erred in enforcing a PACA. See id. at 581-82.8 Similarly, in In re Adoption

of A.M.C., 321 A.3d 973 (Pa. Super. 2024) (unpublished memorandum), 9 this

Court again applied the abuse of discretion standard to review the Orphans’

Court’s denial of a biological mother’s petition to enforce a PACA. See id. at

*2. We see no reason to apply a different scope and standard of review to a

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Pa. Super. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-sas-a-minor-pasuperct-2025.