In Re Custody of Temos

450 A.2d 111, 304 Pa. Super. 82, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5261
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 10, 1982
Docket1893
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 450 A.2d 111 (In Re Custody of Temos) 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 Custody of Temos, 450 A.2d 111, 304 Pa. Super. 82, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5261 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

SPAETH, Judge:

On this appeal the mother of two children asks that we reverse an order awarding custody of the children to their father. The children are a IVi year old girl and a 6 year old boy. They have spent most of their lives with the mother and under her care have done well. In awarding custody of *85 them to their father the lower court particularly relied on three factors: that the mother “maintained a close relationship with a married man;” that the mother was involved in two questionable financial transactions; and that since the parties’ divorce, “the mother has become increasingly career-oriented [and] has placed heavy reliance on baby-sitters.” These factors were not a reason to order a change in custody. The married man is black and the mother and father are white. The lower court regarded this difference in race as a factor that “ought” to be considered. It ought not have been. The evidence does not show either that the mother’s relationship with a married man or her need to work has had any adverse effect on the children, or that the financial transactions were in fact questionable. We believe that the best interests of the children will be served by continuing the mother’s custody of them. We therefore reverse.

The parties were married on November 24, 1973. It was the mother’s first marriage, the father’s second. Their daughter, Jessica, was born on March 23,1975, and their son, Andrew, on August 7, 1976. The parties lived in Bath, near Allentown, Pennsylvania, although the father was required by his employment in the construction industry to be away from home for extended periods. In 1977 the mother returned to work as an operating room technician at a local hospital.

In March 1979 the mother told the father that she wanted a divorce. Shortly afterwards the father went to work in Morocco for nine weeks. Upon his return he was served with a complaint in divorce. He then left for Turkey. While the father was in Turkey, the mother, in September 1979, moved with the children to an apartment in Allentown.

In May 1980 the parties signed a separation and property settlement agreement, providing, among other matters, that the father would have “permanent custody” of the children and the mother, “temporary custody,” and that the father would buy the family home in Bath. On July 9, 1980, the parties were divorced. On July 10, 1980, the father and his *86 wife-to-be and her two children by her prior marriage moved into the home at Bath. The father obtained custody of the children but only for one week, because the mother refused to return them after a visit with her. The father and mother each filed an action in the lower court seeking custody of the children. These actions eventually resulted in an agreement that the mother would have custody of the children for ten months of the year and the father, custody for two months in the summer. The agreement was entered in the lower court as a stipulated order of December 4,1980.

The mother has not remarried. In December 1980 she bought a home in Allentown, and she continues to work at the local hospital, where she is now a supervisor of supply processing and distribution. The father remarried in August 1980. About then, his employer sent him to work in Utah, and he has remained there. In February 1981 he changed employers, going to work for a construction company in Salt Lake City, in a managerial position that does not require him to be away from home for extended periods. In June 1981 the father bought a home in Sandy, a suburb of Salt Lake City, where he lives with his wife and her two children.

In March 1981 Andrew went to live with the father in Utah; Jessica remained with the mother in Allentown. This change was with the parties’ agreement. In August 1981 the mother asked the father to return both children. Her position was that she and the father had agreed that Andrew should return if he was unhappy living with the father; that he was unhappy; and that under the stipulated order of December 4, 1980, the children were to be returned to the mother after their summer visit with the father. The father returned Jessica but refused to return Andrew. The mother filed a petition in the lower court asking that the father be held in contempt of the order of December 4,1980. The father filed preliminary objections challenging the court’s jurisdiction. On October 5, 1981, the mother flew to Utah with her mother, met Andrew on his way to school, and brought him back to Allentown. On November 23,1981, *87 the father filed a petition in the lower court asking that he be awarded custody of the children, and the mother filed a petition asking that her custody, as provided by the order of December 4, 1980, be confirmed. The lower court held a hearing on March 16 and 17, 1982, and on June 15, 1982, it awarded custody of the children to the father. On July 6, 1982, in response to the mother’s appeal, the lower court filed its opinion. On the mother’s application we entered a stay of the lower court’s order (the lower court had refused a stay). Also, it was apparent that because the children’s school year would soon start, the case should be decided as promptly as possible. We therefore ordered that argument would be heard on August 25, 1982, with the record to be transcribed and briefs submitted accordingly.

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The children’s present situation

As we have mentioned, in December 1980 the mother bought a house in Allentown, and she has continued to work at a local hospital. The home is about a block and a half from the apartment where the mother and children had been living. As a supervisor of supply processing and distribution at the hospital, the mother’s salary is $19,500 a year. She also receives $89 a week from the father for the support of the children. Her hours of employment are 8:30 to 5:00; she does not work weekends or holidays, and rarely has to work overtime, and then usually no more than an hour. The usual weekday routine is that the family gets up about seven and after breakfast the mother drives the children to school; sometimes she drops them off at the school bus stop. When Andrew was in kindergarten, he got home about 11:30. By then the baby-sitter was there to meet him and make lunch, after which he would take a nap. Jessica gets home at 3:00, which is when Andrew would get home from first grade. The mother gets home between 5:00 and 5:30, sometimes 5:45.

Incident to the hearing the lower court ordered home study reports. The report regarding the mother’s home was prepared by a case worker from the Lutheran Home of Topton. The report states:

*88 Mrs. Temos has lived in her home at the above address since December, 1980. The three bedroom townhouse, for which she pays a $392.92 monthly mortgage, is located in a development near Emmaus. The homes in the neighborhood appear well-kept, as does that of Mrs. Temos. There are many young children in the neighborhood, and Jessica and Andrew (the children in question in this custody case) name a long list of playmates and friends they have in the neighborhood. There is a good-sized fenced-in-yard behind the house, in which the children can play. There also is a park/playground about a block from the house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
450 A.2d 111, 304 Pa. Super. 82, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-custody-of-temos-pasuperct-1982.