In Re JC

603 A.2d 627, 412 Pa. Super. 369
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 24, 1992
StatusPublished

This text of 603 A.2d 627 (In Re JC) 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 JC, 603 A.2d 627, 412 Pa. Super. 369 (Pa. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

412 Pa. Superior Ct. 369 (1992)
603 A.2d 627

In re J.C., T.C., H.C., K.K. & E.K.
Appeal of L.C.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued October 10, 1991.
Filed February 24, 1992.

*370 Deborah L. Barr, Towanda, for appellant.

Robert G. Dean, Montrose, for Children & Youth Service, participating party.

Before CAVANAUGH, McEWEN and OLSZEWSKI, JJ.

CAVANAUGH, Judge:

Two issues are asserted on appeal. First, the appellant asserts that a finding of dependency cannot be made until "reasonable" efforts are made to locate an absent, non-custodial parent whose whereabouts are unknown. Second, appellant claims that the trial court erred by failing to *371 grant her request to view the Susquehanna County Children and Youth Services file dealing with allegations of abuse to her children in preparation for a dependency hearing. Although we find the first argument without merit, we agree with the substance of the latter argument. We reverse.

The following facts are uncontested.[1] On November 30, 1990, appellee Susquehanna County Children and Youth Services (hereafter CYS) took appellant's five minor children into protective custody because of her alleged abuse. On December 20, 1990, the trial court heard argument on the motion of appellant to view the CYS file. The trial court, after initially granting the motion, rescinded the order after further argument. On December 21, 1990, appellant filed a motion in limine for access to the CYS file by her counsel. This motion was denied. On this same date, the Court conducted the dependency hearing. During the hearing, appellant requested the trial court to enforce a subpoena issued on December 20, 1990, requiring the CYS to produce the file. The trial court refused. Appellant also argued at the hearing that a dependency finding could not be made because the CYS must join an absent father to the proceedings. The trial court did not agree with her contention, and found based on the testimony of Forest City Assistant Police Chief Lucas and CYS caseworker Carol Newhart that there existed clear and convincing evidence that the children were dependent.

The first argument of appellant's we address is that a finding of dependency cannot be made until "reasonable" efforts are made to locate an absent, non-custodial parent whose whereabouts are unknown. Appellant claims that this proposition can be derived from our decision in In Interest of Justin S., 375 Pa.Super. 88, 543 A.2d 1192 (1988). Appellant's argument claims that Justin S. established the principle that the non-custodial parent is a necessary *372 party to a dependency hearing, such that a court lacks jurisdiction to make a finding of dependency when an absent father is not notified of the hearing. Our reading of that case suggests otherwise. The relevant facts of that case are as follows.

In Justin S., Justin S. and Matthew S. resided with their natural mother and her paramour. After receiving a report of child abuse and investigating the allegations, the Westmoreland County Children's Bureau initiated the case by filing a petition claiming "dependency and abuse." Initially, the natural father, who visited the children on weekends, was suspected of abuse. However, exculpatory evidence soon thereafter eliminated the children's natural father as a suspect. The Common Pleas court believed that the abuser was either the mother or someone who gained access to the children through their relationship to her, such as her paramour and her brother. It determined, without a finding of dependency, that the father would be awarded custody of the children.

In affirming the Common Pleas court's order, the Superior Court held that a finding of dependency could not be made where the non-custodial parent "is ready, willing, and able to provide the child with proper parental care and control, especially when the lower court finds that the child was abused while under the custodial parent's care and control." Id., 375 Pa.Superior Ct. at 103, 543 A.2d at 1199. Although the court did not specifically elaborate on its reasoning, it did declare that "[t]he fundamental purpose of proceedings under the Juvenile Act is to preserve the unity of the family." Id., 375 Pa.Superior Ct. at 103, 543 A.2d at 1199.

Appellant apparently wants us to extrapolate from this case the general proposition that before a finding of dependency can be made, the local CYS has to make "reasonable" attempts to find the non-custodial parent. Appellant ignores that in Justin S., the father was, as the decision notes, "ready, willing, and able" to provide the children with a proper nurturing atmosphere. Id., 375 Pa.Superior Ct. at 103, 543 A.2d at 1198. The father had close contact *373 with the children, having weekend visitation rights, and the trial court specifically found that "the father could provide proper care for the children." Id., 375 Pa.Superior Ct. at 101, 543 A.2d at 1198. Given these facts, the decision furthered the fundamental purpose of Juvenile Act proceedings: to preserve family unity. In sharp contrast are the facts of this case. The whereabouts, let alone the fitness, of the non-custodial father is unknown. He has had several different aliases, and he has had no contact with his children since they were a few weeks old.

The Juvenile Act defines a dependent child as one who "is without proper parental care or control...." 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302. We have long held that the proper inquiry to decide whether a child lacks proper care and control encompasses two discrete questions: (1) Is the child at this moment without proper care and control?; (2) If so, is such care and control immediately available? (emphasis ours) In the Interest of Anita H., 351 Pa.Super. 342, 344-5, 505 A.2d 1014, 1015 (1986); In re Barclay, 321 Pa.Super. 417, 422, 468 A.2d 778, 781 (1983); In the Matter of Mark T., 296 Pa.Super. 533, 535, 442 A.2d 1179, 1180 (1982). Here, it is clear that "at this moment" the children, if the substance of the allegations are correct, are without proper care and control. Moreover, the non-custodial parent is not "immediately available." Appellant would have us totally undercut the immediacy implicit in the standard used to determine dependency by placing the onerous burden on the local CYS of attempting to locate an absent father. While it is true that the fundamental purpose of the Juvenile Act is to preserve family unity, cf. Justin S., supra, 375 Pa.Superior Ct. at 103, 543 A.2d at 1199, the above standard reflects a concern that the child be taken out of an abusive environment with dispatch and placed in a more favorable one.

We are especially reluctant to require a local CYS to investigate the whereabouts of an absent non-custodial parent where our legislature has not provided guidance. Judicial restraint demands that we not place on a local CYS a requirement that has no explicit or implicit statutory origin. Investigating the whereabouts of an absent non-custodial *374 parent can be time consuming and costly.

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603 A.2d 627, 412 Pa. Super. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jc-pasuperct-1992.