In Re Leskovich

385 A.2d 373, 253 Pa. Super. 349, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2582
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1978
Docket566
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 385 A.2d 373 (In Re Leskovich) 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 Leskovich, 385 A.2d 373, 253 Pa. Super. 349, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2582 (Pa. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, Judge:

Appellant contends that the lower court improperly denied her habeas corpus petition in which she sought to regain custody of her two children from appellee, her ex-husband and father of the children. We agree and, therefore, reverse the order of the lower court.

On June 3, 1976, appellant filed a petition for habeas corpus in the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County seeking to regain custody of her two sons. At hearings on *352 August 9, and 10,1976, and September 14,1976, the evidence showed that appellant and appellee were married on August 3, 1968, and divorced on May 31, 1973. A son, Ronald, was born of the marriage. Adam, appellant’s other son, was born during her previous marriage. Appellee adopted Adam following an adoption proceeding held in the Orphans’ Court Division of the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas on November 29, 1971. At the time of their divorce, appellant and appellee entered into a “Property Settlement Agreement” which dealt, in part, with the custody of their sons. The agreement stated:

“1. The parties hereto agree that each of them shall have partial custody of the children of the marriage and during the period that said party had partial custody, the other party shall be entitled to unlimited visitation rights with said children. It is further understood and agreed that the partial custody of the father shall not exceed six (6) months during any one (1) year and shall not be exercised in any manner which will disrupt the children’s attendance at school.”

Following the separation of the parties in January, 1973, the children lived with appellant in the marital residence in Bellvue, Pennsylvania. In April, 1973, appellant sold the house and moved with the children into an apartment a half block away from the house. At that time, appellant worked as a display manager for a furniture store in Corapolis. A year and a half later in August, 1974, appellant purchased a house in Monroeville. The move was necessitated by a job promotion which required appellant to work at the Monroe-ville branch of the furniture store. She enrolled her children at an elementary school in Monroeville. Toward the close of 1975, appellant’s employer, in response to financial reverses, changed the store hours and required appellant to work until 10:00 p. m., five days per week. Because these new working hours left appellant with little or no time with her children, she secured new employment in December, 1975. However, because her new place of employment was *353 55 miles from her home in Monroeville, appellant sold her house and moved, in April of 1976, to a condominium in Pennsbury Village, a section of Pittsburgh, situated within convenient commuting distance to her new employment.

During the period following the separation, appellee resided in Burgettstown, Washington County. He visited the children almost every weekend and, pursuant to an agreement of the parties, took, the children during the summer of 1974 and 1975. 1 Following a domestic dispute between the parties in March, 1974, the children lived with appellee who enrolled them in a Burgettstown school. They remained with appellee until the beginning of the 1975-1976 academic year when they returned to appellant. During the period when the children resided with appellee, appellant visited approximately every third weekend. Appellee testified that following the summer of 1975, he visited appellant and the children much less frequently. He attributed this change to his desire for the children “to develop roots and permanence somewhere and develop a life somewhere . . . .”

Soon after moving into Pennsbury Village in April, 1976, appellant grew disenchanted with the condominium development and with the neighborhood. 2 The management of the condominium told her that if she forfeited her downpayment and relinquished possession on or before May 24, 1976, she could terminate her agreement to purchase the condominium unit. Appellant decided to take advantage of the management’s offer.

Appellant had planned to remarry in November, 1976. However, because of the necessity of vacating her condominium unit, she and her fiance decided to get married on May *354 29, 1976, 3 and move to Alexandria, Virginia, where her fiance lived and worked. Realizing that a move to Virginia would cause a disruption in her sons’ education, appellant contacted appellee and asked him if he would transport their children to and from school for the balance of the academic year and then deliver them to Virginia when appellee, his wife, and the children returned to the Pittsburgh area following a vacation. 4 Appellant then transferred the children to appellee with the understanding that appellee would return them to appellant during the beginning of July, 1976. Two days after appellee took the children, appellant found a hand-written letter from appellee inside of her front door which stated that appellee did not intend to return the children. In response to a question on direct examination as to why he took this action, appellee responded: “Okay. The original agreement may have been okay at that time when it was signed, the children were younger, six and three and it wasn’t bad, but things have changed since then. There have been, I think, two major developments. One is, that I’m now remarried and can offer the children a mother and a home and just a total family.” Appellee later explained: “What precipitated the whole thing, it was the end of April, she moved from Monroeville to Pennsbury Village. All I had done; not seeing them and wanting to give them a better home and that type of thing was all for waste, all for naught. So nothing happened then until I thought they were going to live there and I would have to make another adjustment, then, weeks later, in the middle of May, I got a phone call that she was getting married and moving to Virginia and wanted me to take the children and put them in school in Burgettstown. That was the straw that broke the camel’s back. I couldn’t let that go on and on. Being a *355 father I have to do what is best, what’s in the best interest of my children.” 5

On June 3, 1976, appellant petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus requiring appellee to produce the children in court for a hearing so that the question of their custody could be resolved. After conducting a hearing, interviewing the children, and ordering the Child Welfare Services of Washington County to conduct an investigation, the lower court found that both parties could offer adequate physical and financial conditions for the custody of the children and that both parties love them and have the desire to assume the responsibility of raising them. However, the court considered that there were compelling reasons indicating that the children’s best interests would be promoted by permitting them to remain with appellee. Accordingly, the court denied appellant’s petition and placed the children in the permanent custody of appellee with reasonable visitation privileges to appellant. This appeal followed.

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Bluebook (online)
385 A.2d 373, 253 Pa. Super. 349, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-leskovich-pasuperct-1978.