In Re Adoption of S.P.T.

783 A.2d 779, 2001 Pa. Super. 252, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 29, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 783 A.2d 779 (In Re Adoption of S.P.T.) 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.P.T., 783 A.2d 779, 2001 Pa. Super. 252, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617 (Pa. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.:

¶ 1 H.A.M. and B.T.M. (Appellants) appeal the order of the Lackawanna County orphans’ court granting preliminary objections and dismissing their petition to adopt S.P.T. The orphans’ court concluded that Appellants had faded to obtain the requisite consent for adoption from the child’s guardian, see 23 Pa.C.S. § 2711, and so did not have standing to seek the adoption. We conclude that the orphans’ court did not abuse its discretion. Accordingly, we affirm.

¶ 2 H.A.M. is the biological mother of S.P.T., born in 1988. B.T.M. is H.A.M.’s current husband whom she married in 1994, and is not the father of S.P.T. H.A.M. and S.P.T.’s biological father (Father) did not marry, and in 1989, agreed jointly to transfer custody of S.P.T. to Andrew M. Thomas. Thomas, now deceased, was S.P.T.’s paternal grandfather. S.P.T. lived with Thomas from 1989 to 1993, during which time, H.A.M. visited the child weekly during the summer and monthly during the other months of the year. In 1993, H.A.M. and Father terminated their parental rights to S.P.T. voluntarily and consented to Thomas’s petition requesting that he be allowed to adopt S.P.T. The court decreed the adoption, and from 1993 to 1996 S.P.T. and Thomas lived as a family. During that time, H.A.M. continued to visit S.P.T. in the Thomas household.

■ ¶ 3 In 1996, Thomas died, but left a will appointing his daughter Kathleen M. Thomas to be S.P.T.’s testamentary guardian (Guardian). The orphans’ court confirmed Guardian’s appointment, and S.P.T., then eight years old, moved into Guardian’s home, where she continues to reside. H.A.M. “back[ed] off’ her attempts to contact S.P.T. after Andrew Thomas’s death due, ostensibly, to disagreements with Guardian. H.A.M. last visited S.P.T. in April 1997, and thereafter, on December 23, 1997, filed a petition for court-ordered visitation. Following a hearing on preliminary objections filed by Guardian, the orphans’ court concluded *781 that H.A.M. failed to demonstrate that she had standing to seek visitation and dismissed H.A.M.’s petition. The court reasoned that H.A.M. had failed to demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, a substantial, sustained and sincere interest in the welfare of S.P.T. On appeal we affirmed the court’s order. See McNamara v. Thomas, 741 A.2d 778, 1999 PA Super 276 (unpublished memorandum).

¶ 4 Following our disposition of the visitation petition, H.A.M. filed with the orphans’ court a petition to adopt S.P.T. Again Guardian filed preliminary objections challenging H.A.M.’s standing and asserting that H.A.M. had failed to obtain the requisite consent for adoption specified by section 2711 of the Adoption Act. Guardian failed, however, to file a brief in support of her preliminary objections within the period specified by Lackawanna County Local Rule of Civil Procedure 1028(b). H.A.M. sought dismissal of Guardian’s preliminary objections on the basis of the untimely brief, but the orphans’ court refused, citing our decision in Murphy v. Armstrong, 622 A.2d 992 (Pa.Super.1993). The court reasoned that dismissal of preliminary objections on the basis of untimely filing of a brief would contravene Pa.R.C.P. 239(f) (“No civil action or proceeding shall be dismissed for failure to comply with a local rule other than one promulgated under Rule of Judicial Administration 1901.”). On appeal, we concluded that neither Rule 239(f), nor Murphy, proscribed the dismissal of preliminary objections in response to the commencement of an action, but merely proscribed dismissal of the action itself. See In re: Adoption of S.P.T., 764 A.2d 1134 (Pa.Super.2000) (table). Accordingly, we reversed the court’s order and remanded the matter to the orphans’ court “with instructions that the trial court either dismiss the preliminary objections according to Local Rule 1028(h), or if appropriate, use its discretion to disregard [Guardian’s] procedural defect under Local Rule 1028(g) and Pa.R.C.P. 126 and rule on the preliminary objections on the merits.” Id. On remand, the orphans’ court disregarded the defect of Guardian’s untimely filing and ruled on the preliminary objections. The court concluded that Appellants’ petition for adoption was deficient, as they had not, and could not, secure Guardian’s consent to the adoption. The couple then filed this appeal.

¶ 5 H.A.M. and B.T.M. raise the following questions for our review:

1. Did the trial court show a profound prejudice and bias against the Appellants; thereby dismissing the Petitions for Adoption without considering the full merits of the case? As such did it fail to abide by and follow the instructions and Order of Superior Court dated July 31, 2000[?]
2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion and commit reversible error by dismissing the Appellant’s Petition for Adoption without a fair and full impartial hearing, examining all of the facts for a determination as to the Best Interest of the Child?

Brief for Appellants at 4.

¶ 6 Appellants’ initial question poses a challenge to the orphans’ court’s exercise of discretion following our remand for disposition of Guardian’s preliminary objections. Brief for Appellant at 10. In support of their challenge, however, Appellants provide only a single reference to the substance of the court’s disposition, suggesting that the court erred in failing to address the merits of their case. Appellants contend that such failure constitutes a violation of the remand instruction in our Judgment Order disposing of the prior appeal. Appellants suggest, without citation to law, that our direction to the *782 court to “use its discretion to disregard Appellee’s procedural defect ... and rule on the ‘preliminary objections on the merits,” See In re: Adoption of S.P.T., 764 A.2d 1134 (Pa.Super.2000) (emphasis added), should properly compel the court to reach the merits of their claims and weigh the “Best Interest of the Child.” Brief for Appellants at 10.

¶ 7 Appellants misconstrue both our direction and the nature and purpose of preliminary objections. Rule of Civil Procedure 1028 prescribes preliminary objections as the appropriate method by which to challenge a petitioner’s capacity to sue and/or the legal sufficiency of the allegations he or she raises as a basis for relief. See Pa.R.C.P. 1028(a)(1), (4). Where, as here, a defendant files preliminary objections to a plaintiff’s complaint in the nature of a demurrer, see Pa.R.C.P. 1028(a)(4), the court’s review is confined to the content of the complaint. See Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Fabinyi, 437 Pa.Super. 559, 650 A.2d 895, 899 (1994). Thus, the court may determine only whether, on the basis of the allegations the plaintiff pled, he or she possesses a cause of action recognized at law. See id. The court may not consider factual matters; no testimony or other evidence outside the complaint may be adduced and the court may not address the merits of matters represented in the complaint. See id.

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Bluebook (online)
783 A.2d 779, 2001 Pa. Super. 252, 2001 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-spt-pasuperct-2001.