In Re: I.D. Appeal of: C.R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 19, 2020
Docket1418 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: I.D. Appeal of: C.R. (In Re: I.D. Appeal of: C.R.) 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: I.D. Appeal of: C.R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-S03042-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

IN RE: I.D., A MINOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : APPEAL OF: C.R., MOTHER : : : : : : No. 1418 WDA 2019

Appeal from the Order Entered August 14, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County Juvenile Division at No(s): 3014 of 2019

BEFORE: McLAUGHLIN, J., McCAFFERY, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 19, 2020

C.R. (Mother) appeals from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of

Beaver County (trial court) involuntarily terminating her and B.D.’s (Father,

collectively Parents) parental rights to I.D. (Child).1 We affirm.

I.

A.

We take the following background facts and procedural history from our

independent review of the record. Upon Child’s birth in November 2018, Beaver

County Children and Youth Services (BCCYS) filed an Application for Emergency

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 Father has appealed separately at docket number 1421 WDA 2019. J-S03042-20

Protective Custody and Dependency Petition based on a referral from Florida

where, before Child’s birth, Mother and Father voluntarily terminated their

parental rights to Child’s two older siblings.2 One of the siblings, A.D., was the

victim of serious physical injuries determined to have been caused by the

Parents. The injuries included 28 fractures within the first 30 days of her life.

(See N.T. Hearing, 7/01/19, at 27-28). P.D., Child’s other sibling, suffered from

failure to thrive. (See id. at 26).

After a shelter hearing, Child was placed in a foster home on November

21, 2018. At the adjudicatory hearings, BCCYS presented the testimony of Dr.

Shilpa J. Sulochana, the Florida pediatrician who treated A.D. and P.D.; a Florida

caseworker; and S.M and T.M., the family that adopted A.D. and P.D. and was

the adoptive resource for Child as well as another treating pediatrician. (See

id. at 9). The court left the record open for Parents to obtain medical records

and an expert witness, but they failed to do so. The record was closed in January

2019.

On February 28, 2019, the court filed an Aggravated Circumstances Order

that found that Child was the sibling of a victim of physical abuse and that no

services were to be provided for reunification other than visitation. On April 25,

2Mother and Father moved from Florida in July 2018 when Mother was pregnant with Child. (See Trial Ct. Op., 10/11/19, at 8).

-2- J-S03042-20

2019,3 the court entered an Order of Adjudication and Disposition finding the

Child to be dependent, set the initial goal as adoption, and directed that no

BCCYS services were to be provided other than visitation due to the finding of

Aggravated Circumstances. The orders contained detailed findings of fact

regarding the injuries suffered by Child’s siblings and specifically found that

Mother and Father were the perpetrators of the abuse. On March 28, 2019, the

court denied the motion for reconsideration filed by Mother and Father. Neither

Mother nor Father appealed from the Aggravated Circumstances Order or the

Order of Adjudication and Disposition.

B.

BCCYS filed a Petition for the Involuntary Termination of Parental Rights

(TPR) pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 2511(a)(2). At the TPR hearing, BCCYS moved

to admit all of the previously entered orders, including their extensive findings

of fact, and the trial court expressly identified each one and admitted it into the

record. (See N.T. Hearing, at 9-11). BCCYS family caseworker, Jennifer

Gengarella, and foster caseworker, Erin Clark, testified on behalf of BCCYS.4

Mother and Father testified on their own behalf and presented the testimony of

3An amended Order of Adjudication and Disposition was filed on March 11, 2019, due to a technical error.

4 The testimony presented by BCCYS was limited because of the trial court’s order that previously set the permanency goal to adoption and directed BCCYS not to provide services to the family other than visitation. (See BCCYS’s Brief, at 5).

-3- J-S03042-20

Shannon Best, the Project Star employee who supervised their visitation with

Child and Paternal Grandmother.

Ms. Gengarella testified that neither Mother nor Father had ever provided

an explanation to her to explain the injuries sustained by A.P. (See id. at 15-

16). She stated that BCCYS believed Child would not be safe in the care of

Mother and Father because she was too young to protect herself and the

“egregious nature” of A.D.’s injuries. (Id. at 16). The caseworker explained

that if BCCYS had been ordered to provide services, it would have been difficult

to determine what services would be necessary to address the safety concerns

with Mother and Father because they never explained the injuries. (See id.).

She was not aware of any services that Parents had sought on their own other

than the initial evaluation offered by BCCYS. (See 39-42).

As to the family finding efforts for Child’s placement, Ms. Gengarella

testified that prior workers did extensive searches and had spoken to many

Florida relatives who were unable to take Child. (See id. at 19-20). Mother and

Father only provided her with Paternal Grandmother as a possible placement

resource but BCCYS ruled her out because Parents lived with her, and she did

not complete the requirements of an interstate investigation relative to A.D. and

P.D. (See id. at 29-30). In addition, the court previously had ruled Child was

not to be placed with Paternal Grandmother absent a subsequent order, and

Mother and Father neither appealed that ruling nor brought a subsequent motion

to place Child with Paternal Grandmother. (See id. at 62-63, 141-42).

-4- J-S03042-20

Ms. Gengarella testified that she went to Florida and personally

investigated S.M. and T.M., the adoptive parents of Child’s siblings. (See id. at

22). She testified to the appropriate nature of the home as well as her

observations of the interactions between Child, S.M. and T.M., and Child’s

biological siblings, A.D. and P.D. (See id. at 22-23). She found that S.M., T.M.

and Child’s siblings were loving toward Child and that Child responded well to

them. (See id.). S.M. and T.M. are willing and have expressed a desire to adopt

Child. (See id. at 17).

As to the bond between Child and Mother and Father, Mother and Father

acted lovingly towards her at visitations. (See id. at 21). Ms. Gengarella

testified that Child is a very happy baby who smiles at everyone, including her

Parents. (See id.). She was unable to testify as to whether there is a specific

bond between Child and either Mother or Father. (See id.).

The foster care caseworker, Erin Clark, testified that Child is doing

“remarkably well” in her Pennsylvania foster home and that she has bonded with

her foster family. (Id. at 58; see id. at 60-61). She also testified that in her

limited observations of Child with Mother and Father, the Parents had been

appropriate and loving. (See id. at 61).

S.M., the adoptive mother of Child’s siblings and Child’s permanency

resource, testified that she and her husband, T.M., are willing and able to adopt

Child and are excited to do so. (See id. at 73-75).

-5- J-S03042-20

Project Star employee Shannon Best testified that Parents attend nearly

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