In Re: C.E.D.H., a Minor

2025 Pa. Super. 107
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 19, 2025
Docket855 MDA 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Pa. Super. 107 (In Re: C.E.D.H., 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: C.E.D.H., a Minor, 2025 Pa. Super. 107 (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A27033-24 2025 PA Super 107

IN RE: C.E.D.H., A MINOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : APPEAL OF: C.E.D.H., MINOR CHILD : : : : : : No. 855 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Order Entered May 15, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Clinton County Orphans' Court at No(s): 2023-00004

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED: MAY 19, 2025

C.E.D.H. (the Child) appeals the order that denied N.D.H.’s and N.A.H.’s

(Adoptive Parents’) petition to involuntarily terminate W.C.M.’s (Father’s)

parental rights to him, pursuant to the Adoption Act. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. §

2511(a)(1), (6).1 After careful review, we reverse and remand for entry of an

order terminating Father’s parental rights.

The orphans’ court made the following findings of fact, which we

reproduce in relevant part:

1. Petitioners are [Adoptive Parents]. The [C]hild who is the subject of the instant Petition . . . [was] born March 2, 2023 . . . . The biological mother of the [C]hild is [A.C. (Mother)].

2. While Mother was pregnant with the [C]hild, it was decided that, because Mother could not care for the [C]hild, the [C]hild would be adopted by a member of Mother’s family. ____________________________________________

1 Although Adoptive Parents originally petitioned under Section 2511(a)(1) and (a)(6), the Child’s argument on appeal relates only to (a)(1). Thus, we need not address (a)(6). J-A27033-24

Mother is the paternal aunt of [Adoptive Mother]. [Ultimately,] Mother signed a voluntary consent to relinquish her parental rights to the [C]hild . . . .

3. Physical custody of the [C]hild was transferred to [Adoptive Parents] on March 13, 2023, eleven (11) days after the [C]hild was born. [Adoptive Parents] have retained physical custody of the [C]hild [and the Child has resided with Adoptive Parents and Adoptive Mother’s two biological children] since March 13, 2023.

4. On [March 13, 2023], the biological father of the [C]hild was unknown to [Adoptive Parents]. The biological father of the [C]hild is [Father]. Father and Mother were never married to each other.

5. Mother first advised Father that Mother was pregnant with the [C]hild in April or May of 2022, while Mother was incarcerated and Father was residing in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Prior to this contact, Mother had been staying with Father in Father’s residence and engaging in a sexual relationship with Father.

6. Father believes that, at the time the [C]hild was conceived, Mother was having sexual relations with “a lot of people,” including Father. Father testified to his belief that Mother is a “liar.”

7. When Father learned of Mother’s pregnancy, Father believed that, due to Father’s age [56 years old as of the hearing], he was not the father of the [C]hild. Father also believed that the [C]hild was not his child because Father was previously in an eleven (11) year relationship with a different woman, during which no children were conceived.

8. During Mother’s pregnancy, Father took no affirmative steps to determine paternity of the [C]hild. Father did not stay in consistent contact with Mother after contacting her in April or May of 2022, because Father was not aware of Mother’s whereabouts.

9. In November or December of 2022, Father attempted to locate Mother by reaching out to Mother’s sister. Mother’s sister spoke to Father[,] and Father asked about Mother’s

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whereabouts and activities. Father was advised by Mother’s sister that Mother was “okay” and “safe.” After this contact with Mother’s sister, Father made no additional inquiries as to Mother or Mother’s pregnancy.

10. On July 7, 2023, Father entered treatment for drug and alcohol abuse at a rehabilitation facility in Quakertown, Pennsylvania. During Father’s time at the rehabilitation facility in Quakertown, Father was not restricted or prohibited from contacting outside individuals.

11. Sometime in July or August of 2023, while Father was in treatment, Father spoke to Mother for the first time in approximately ten (10) months. The contact . . . was initiated when Mother called Father’s sister to ascertain Father’s whereabouts. After speaking to Father’s sister, Mother then called Father’s treatment facility in Quakertown, Pennsylvania and advised Father of the planned adoption of the [C]hild by [Adoptive Parents]. During this phone call, Mother informed Father that Father might be the father of the [C]hild, and suggested that Father complete a paternity test. Following the phone call with Mother, Father discussed the [C]hild with his daughter, . . . and [his daughter] encouraged Father to complete a paternity test.

12. Some time at the end of July, 2023, Father requested that his counselor at the Quakertown treatment facility assist him in contacting the Clinton County Domestic Relations office. After contact with Domestic Relations, Father decided to pursue a paternity action. Father signed a Paternity Complaint and dated it August 4, 2023. The Paternity Complaint was filed on August 7, 2023.

13. On August 14, 2023, Father appeared at a proceeding before [the orphans’ court] on the question of the [C]hild’s paternity. Pursuant to an Order issued by [the orphans’ court] . . . , Father was ordered to report to the office of Domestic Relations immediately following the August 14 proceedings and submit to DNA testing. Father did as ordered, and submitted to DNA testing on August 14, 2023.

14. After DNA testing, and as reflected in the DNA Test Report issued on September 7, 2023, the probability of Father’s

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paternity to the [C]hild was determined to be 99.9999999%. [Adoptive Parents] and Father received the results of the paternity test on September 12, 2023. On September 13, 2023, in accordance with the stipulation of the parties, [the orphans’ court] entered an Order finding Father to be the biological father of the [C]hild.

15. On or about September 23, 202[3], Father left the Quakertown treatment facility and entered a halfway house in Carbondale, Pennsylvania. Father remained in the halfway house in Carbondale for one hundred (100) days.

16. [Adoptive Parents] filed a Petition for Involuntary Termination of Parental Rights of Father on October 18, 202[3].2 [The orphans’ court], pursuant to an Order dated October 23, 2023, confirmed the Consent to Adoption and Voluntary Termination of Parental Rights of Mother.

17. Father left the halfway house in Carbondale, Pennsylvania on January 1, 2024, and moved to his present address [in] Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

18. Since learning of his parentage of the [C]hild on September 12, 2023, Father has not contacted [Adoptive Parents] to ask for custody or visitation with respect to the [C]hild.

19. Father reported that he did not contact [Adoptive Parents] because Father did not believe he was allowed to make such contact, instead believing that “[he] had to do all that through the courts.” Father, when asked why he believed he was not allowed to contact [Adoptive Parents] about the [C]hild, testified that Father []has [“]never been through this with any of [his] children, ever, in [his] life.”

20. In addition to the [C]hild that is the subject of this action, Father has six (6) other children, all of whom are over eighteen (18) years old.

____________________________________________

2 It appears that the orphans’ court made a typographical error by stating that

Adoptive Parents filed the termination petition on October 18, 2024. The record reflects that their petition was filed on October 18, 2023.

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21.

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2025 Pa. Super. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cedh-a-minor-pasuperct-2025.