In the Int. of: K.N.L. Apl of: L.B. a/k/a T.B.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 2022
Docket1 EAP 2022
StatusPublished

This text of In the Int. of: K.N.L. Apl of: L.B. a/k/a T.B. (In the Int. of: K.N.L. Apl of: L.B. a/k/a T.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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 the Int. of: K.N.L. Apl of: L.B. a/k/a T.B., (Pa. 2022).

Opinion

[J-33-2022] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

BAER, C.J., TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.

IN THE INTEREST OF K.N.L., A MINOR : No. 1 EAP 2022 : : Appeal from the Judgment of APPEAL OF: L.B. A/K/A T.B. : Superior Court entered on : September 28, 2021 at No. 409 EDA : 2021 affirming in part, vacating in : part and remanded in part the Order : dated January 26, 2021 in the Court : of Common Pleas, Philadelphia : County, Juvenile Division at No. CP- : 51-AP-0000172-2017. : : ARGUED: May 18, 2022

OPINION

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: October 19, 2022 We granted discretionary review to examine whether the lower courts applied

appropriate standards for evaluating, and rejecting, a former caregiver’s asserted in loco

parentis status for purposes of standing to intervene in a proceeding to adopt a child in

the custody of a foster care agency, pursuant to the Adoption Act, 23 Pa.C.S. §§2101-

2938. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand with instructions for a hearing

in the juvenile court de novo.

Background

History of the case

K.N.L. (the child), born in March of 2010, was adjudicated dependent and

committed to the custody of the Philadelphia Department of Human Services (DHS) in

2015; she has resided in various foster homes for seven years, since just after turning five years old. The parental rights of the child’s biological parents were terminated

involuntarily on March 6, 2017, and on the same date, the juvenile court vacated the

custodial and visitation rights of the child’s former caregiver, R.B.P., who had been the

legal guardian at the time she entered foster care.1 With the child’s parents and guardian

removed as parties, custody of the child transferred to DHS, and further review of the

dependency matter proceeded on the juvenile court’s adoption docket.2 See 23 Pa.C.S.

§§2521(b) (decree of termination “shall award custody of the child to the agency or . . .

the petitioner in the . . .proceeding . . . for involuntary termination”) and (c) (agency

receiving custody “shall stand in loco parentis to the child” and “shall have [such] authority

. . . concerning the child as a natural parent could exercise”). In 2018, with the support

and consent of DHS, the child’s foster parent filed a report of intention to adopt and

petition to adopt the child, and completed all investigations and evaluations required to

finalize the adoption. Prior to the finalization, the child’s biological maternal aunt, D.M.,

filed a motion to intervene in the adoption matter as well as a petition to adopt the child.

Thereafter, the child was removed from the pre-adoptive foster home and the foster

parent requested to withdraw her pending adoption petition, which the court granted on

September 17, 2019.

1 R.B.P. appealed the juvenile court’s orders dated August 3, 2015 (adjudicating child dependent and committing her to the legal custody of DHS); November 14, 2016 (suspending visits contingent upon a trauma therapist’s recommendation to reinstate them); and March 6, 2017 (vacating guardianship and changing the permanency goal to adoption). The Superior Court affirmed these decisions, and this Court denied allowance of appeal. See In re K.L., 2767 EDA 2015, 2016 WL 2353033 (Pa. Super., May 4, 2016) (unpublished memorandum); Interest of K.L., 3886 EDA 2016, 1185 EDA 2017, 2018 WL 1322572 (Pa. Super., Mar. 15, 2018) (unpublished memorandum), alloc. denied, 194 A.3d 119 (Pa. 2018) (Table). 2 In Philadelphia County, jurisdiction over adoptions is exercised through the juvenile division of family court, rather than through the orphans’ court division as is the case in all other counties. See PA. CONST. art. V, §16(q)(iii); 20 Pa.C.S. §§711, 713.

[J-33-2022] - 2 Subsequently, appellant T.B.,3 who is the adult child of former guardian R.B.P.,

also sought to intervene in the proceeding to adopt the child. By motion to intervene filed

December 12, 2019, appellant claimed he had been a romantic partner and longtime

friend of the child’s biological mother, as well as a live-in parental caregiver for the child

from the time she was four days old until her removal from R.B.P.’s home, and has since

maintained contact and a strong parental bond with the child; these factors, he asserted,

demonstrated in loco parentis status4 and established his standing to intervene in the

adoption. See Motion to Intervene of [T].B., 12/12/2019, at 1-2. On January 3, 2020,

appellant also filed a petition to adopt the child.

The established facts indicate the child’s biological mother was incarcerated at the

time of her birth in March of 2010, and has been incarcerated for all but a few months of

the child’s life. Biological mother relinquished care and custody of the newborn to R.B.P.,

and a few days later appellant, who had also been in jail on the day the child was born,

joined his own mother and the child in R.B.P.’s home. Juvenile Court Op., 3/24/2021, at

2, 6, citing Testimony of [T].B., N.T. 1/26/2021 at 30. They resided and cared for the child

together for the next five years. Id., citing N.T. at 16. The child’s biological mother also

lived with them for approximately five months, after which she ultimately returned to

3 The initials “T.B.” reflect the functional name of appellant, also known by “L.B.” corresponding to his legal name and sex assigned at birth. Throughout the record, appellant is referenced using both male and female prefixes and pronouns, and intermittently as R.B.P.’s “daughter.” Herein, we refer to appellant as “appellant” or “T.B.” and by “he/him” pronouns. 4 Explained in greater detail infra, “in loco parentis,” meaning “in the place of a parent,” refers to a person who “acts in place of a parent, either temporarily (as a schoolteacher does) or indefinitely (as a stepparent does); a person who has assumed the obligations of a parent without formally adopting the child.” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“person in loco parentis”). See generally Peters v. Costello, 891 A.2d 705, 710 (Pa. 2005) (explaining common law doctrine conferring standing based upon in loco parentis status).

[J-33-2022] - 3 prison. Id., citing N.T. at 18. The child identified R.B.P. as “Mama” and appellant as

“Dada.” See In re K.L., 2016 WL 2353033, at *1 n.2. The child’s removal from R.B.P.’s

home in 2015 occurred during DHS’s investigation of a child protective services (CPS)

report raising abuse allegations against R.B.P., which later included allegations against

appellant as well. Juvenile Court Op., 3/24/2021, at 1- 2, citing N.T. at 19, 21. Appellant

was not named as a party in the dependency petition, is not on the child’s birth certificate,

and has never been a legal guardian. Id., citing N.T. at 22-23.

The record5 further reveals the abuse allegations were unfounded.6 See In re K.L.,

2016 WL 2353033, at *1, 4. However, during the investigation, it became apparent the

five-year-old child had significant, aggressive and sexualized behavioral health issues

which, in the court’s view, R.B.P. was not adequately addressing. Id. The juvenile court,

5 In relation to the underlying dependency matter, the certified adoption court record includes the full dependency court docket with entries containing texts of orders from each court listing, the Superior Court’s memorandum affirming the adjudication of dependency, and petitions and exhibits from the proceeding to terminate parental and custodial rights.

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