In Re: N.A.S., Appeal of: D.L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 2025
Docket787 WDA 2025
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: N.A.S., Appeal of: D.L. (In Re: N.A.S., Appeal of: D.L.) 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: N.A.S., Appeal of: D.L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S36033-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

IN RE: N.A.S, A MINOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : APPEAL OF: D.L., MOTHER : : : : : : No. 787 WDA 2025

Appeal from the Order Entered May 22, 2025 In the Court of Common Pleas of Jefferson County Orphans’ Court at No(s): 4A OC 2025

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., NICHOLS, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED: NOVEMBER 21, 2025

D.L. (Mother) appeals from the order involuntarily terminating her

parental rights to her biological child,1 N.A.S. (born 1/2023) (Child), pursuant

to Sections 2511(a)(2), (5), and (8), and Section 2511(b) of the Adoption

Act.2 See 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 2101-2938. After careful review, we affirm.

The orphans’ court set forth the facts of this case as follows:

[Jefferson County Children & Youth Services (CYS)] became acquainted with the subject family on January 24, 2023, when a caseworker made an unannounced home visit[, days after Child ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 The orphans’ court appointed Lauren Brennen, Esquire, to represent Child’s

legal interests and appointed Greg Sobol, Esquire, as guardian ad litem, to represent Child’s best interests. See Orphans’ Court Opinion, 5/22/25, at 1 n.1; see also 23 Pa.C.S. § 2313(a).

2 The orphans’ court also terminated Children’s biological father’s (Father) parental rights. We consider his appeal at 786 WDA 2025. J-S36033-25

was born,] in response to a referral. The caller reported concerns about Father’s aggressiveness, Mother’s ability to parent their child given her intellectual deficits and seizure disorder, and concerns that the couple lacked adequate material resources to properly provide for their newborn.[3]

At the time of that first encounter, the family was facing eviction but was waiting to receive word that they were able to move into the apartment they had been approved to occupy at Sycamore Apartments in Punxsutawney. [CYS] paid for them to stay two nights at a motel during the transition and implemented remedial services[4] designed to forestall taking custody of [Child]. [CYS] closed the case approximately two months later.

A CYS caseworker [returned to] the apartment within days [of closing the original case] to investigate a report that Mother did not feel safe with Father, who would not permit her to leave the residence.[5] The caseworker confirmed as much when she arrived, as Father would not allow her to enter or Mother to exit. Only when the police arrived did he relent, removing the chain lock and allowing Mother to leave with [Child]. [Mother and Child] went to stay with a relative, and Mother was expressly advised that [CYS] would seek emergency custody of [Child] if she

____________________________________________

3 The allegations included that, while at the hospital during childbirth, Mother

“needed an emergency [cesarian] section[,] and [Father was] upset because that wasn’t the birth plan[; Father] had to be removed from the hospital at that time.” N.T. Involuntary Termination Hearing, 5/9/25, at 6. Father was permitted to return into the hospital building after Child’s birth. See id.

4 The remedial services provided to Mother and Father included “working on

setting up social security [payments] for [Mother], getting a blended case manager for [Mother], setting up [transportation services], finding employment, and [parenting resources.]” N.T. Involuntary Termination Hearing, 5/9/25, at 8.

5 See N.T. Involuntary Termination Hearing, 5/9/25, at 9 (CYS Caseworker

Emily Mescall testifying that Mother reached out to family because she did not feel safe in apartment with Father on two consecutive days, and on second day, Father essentially barricaded himself, Mother, and Child in apartment behind chain-locked door, and when Father finally permitted Mother and Child to leave, Mother sought refuge with Child away from Father, with her family).

-2- J-S36033-25

returned to Father. That warning did not stop Mother from returning to the apartment [to stay with Father] a few days later.

At the outset, [Child] was placed with Ted and Pam Rake, Mother’s great aunt and uncle. The arrangement was meant to be temporary while Mother and Father completed the clearly defined objectives that would lead to reunification, including stabilization of their mental health, completion of a designated parenting program, anger management counseling, and acquisition of the physical resources that would allow them to properly care for [Child], e.g., a consistent income, adequate transportation, and stable housing.

When the court changed the goal to adoption on October 30, 2024, Mother had fulfilled most of the technical requirements of the family service plan ([]FSP[]), and Father had completed many of them. [. . .]

Their on-paper compliance notwithstanding, Mother and Father were unable to successfully implement the skills their service providers were trying to teach them. As much as she loved [Child], Mother lacked the mental capacity to retain and effectively utilize the information she was given. [. . .]

* * *

[. . . Caseworker] Mescall [. . .] credibly testified that Father and Mother became increasingly hostile and verbally aggressive toward her and the Rakes as [Child]’s dependency case progressed.

[From the October 30, 2024 goal change to the May 9, 2025 termination hearing, CYS] had almost no contact with Mother or Father.[6] At the termination hearing, therefore, [Caseworker] Mescall [testified that she] could not confirm that Father [was employed], that Mother had secured a part-time job[,] or that the ____________________________________________

6 See Orphans’ Court Opinion, 5/22/25, at 7 n.6 (observing that “After the goal change, [CYS] discontinued all efforts toward reunification, ignored most of Mother and Father’s attempts to communicate, and advised the foster parents that they had no obligation to respond should Mother or Father [attempt] contact[. . . . ]Mother and Father had no further opportunity to exercise their parenting skills and foster a relationship with [Child] after October 30, 2024.).

-3- J-S36033-25

couple had acquired reliable transportation. [. . . Caseworker Mescall] clearly remembered her extended history of interactions with both parents, however, and did not believe that any of th[eir] achievements would have rendered them fit to be parents. Having seen and heard them in the courtroom on May 9, 2025, the [orphans’] court would agree.

Mother was equally clueless. Having gone through the same parenting curricula as her fiancé and months of verified counsel[]ing, she, too, saw no cause for [Child]’s removal and continued dependency. Perhaps more concerning, she fully aligned herself with Father. Seated in the second row behind her attorney, she visibly demonstrated her full support of Father’s testimony, including his paranoid-sounding ideas and refusal to answer counsels’ “red herring” questions.[7] When she took the witness stand, moreover, Mother adamantly denied prior domestic violence, said that Father only began displaying signs of anger after [Child] was adjudicated dependent[,] affirmed that she had no concerns with [Father] being too aggressive[,] and testified that the March 2023 incident was a misunderstanding. As the saying goes, however, actions speak louder than words.

Though a sweet and likeable person. Mother is a low-functioning adult, and perhaps Father takes advantage of her disability to deliberately manipulate her. Perhaps she merely fails to understand and properly interpret human behavior. Or perhaps she forgets the bad times when things are good.

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