In the Int. of: V.E.H., Appeal of: C.A.M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 24, 2025
Docket2284 EDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Int. of: V.E.H., Appeal of: C.A.M. (In the Int. of: V.E.H., Appeal of: C.A.M.) 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 the Int. of: V.E.H., Appeal of: C.A.M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S05028-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

IN THE INTEREST OF: V.E.H., A : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MINOR : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: C.A.M. AND R.B.M. : : : : : No. 2284 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Order Entered August 1, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Juvenile Division at No(s): CP-51-AP-0000145-2021

BEFORE: BOWES, J., MURRAY, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY MURRAY, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 24, 2025

C.A.M. and R.B.M. (Petitioners) appeal from the order denying their

petition to adopt V.E.H. (Child), a minor girl born in November 2020, and

directing Child to remain in the care of B.R. and N.R. (Adoptive Parents). After

careful review, we affirm.

The trial court summarized the relevant factual and procedural history:

[Child] was placed in the [neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)] at birth because she was born prematurely and had cannabis and methadone in her system. On December 3, 2020, the Philadelphia Department of Human Services (“DHS”) met with [Child’s] biological parents[, B.L. (Mother) and C.H. (Father),] who both agreed they were not able to provide [Child] with sufficient proper

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S05028-25

care.1 [Mother and Father] suggested placing [Child] with [Adoptive Parents] as kinship resources.2 [Child] was subsequently placed with [Adoptive Parents] after her discharge from the NICU.

[Mother] had three other children prior to [Child] being born. All three of those children were adopted by [Petitioners 3] and have remained in their care since then. [On April 19, 2021, Adoptive Parents filed a report of intention to adopt Child.] On May 7, 2021, DHS filed a motion for change of placement for [] Child in an attempt to have [Child] removed from [Adoptive Parents’] home and placed with [Petitioners]. On March 31, 2022, the [trial] court ruled that [Child] was to remain with [Adoptive Parents]. After … the court ruled that [Child] was to remain with [Adoptive Parents], [Petitioners] stopped bringing [Child’s] siblings to visitations, despite [Child’s] social worker’s attempts to contact [Petitioners].

On December 7, 2022, [Mother’s and Father’s] parental rights [were] involuntarily terminated, and [Child’s] goal was changed to adoption. … On May 1, 2023, DHS provided consent to adopt paperwork [pertaining to Adoptive Parents]….

Trial Court Opinion, 10/30/24, at 1-2 (original footnotes omitted; footnotes

and paragraph break added; some capitalization altered).

On June 5, 2023, Adoptive Parents filed a petition to adopt Child.

Adoptive Parents attached thereto a “report of intermediary” prepared by

1 DHS also filed a dependency petition as to Child in late December 2020. The dependency action is not at issue in the instant appeal. In fact, the trial court denied Petitioners’ motion to consolidate the dependency and adoption cases.

2 Adoptive Parents each testified Mother is a family friend. See N.T., 5/16/24, at 39, 41, 84-85, 104.

3 Petitioner R.B.M. (Cousin) is Child’s maternal cousin. See N.T., 5/30/24, at 130.

-2- J-S05028-25

Delta Family Services (Delta). See Adoptive Parents’ Petition to Adopt,

6/5/23, Exhibit C (report of intermediary).

On July 14, 2023, Petitioners filed a petition to adopt Child.

The trial court conducted hearings on the competing petitions to adopt

on May 16, May 30, and August 1, 2024. Child’s interests were represented

by her guardian ad litem (GAL). During these hearings, the trial court heard

testimony from both Petitioners, both Adoptive Parents, two of Child’s

biological siblings, and various professionals who worked with Child or one of

the families throughout the history of this case.

At the start of the May 16, 2024, hearing, DHS attorney Michael Mon,

Esquire, stated DHS would consent to Child’s adoption by either Petitioners or

Adoptive Parents. N.T., 5/16/24, at 30.

Significantly, Child’s GAL testified that permitting Child to remain with

Adoptive Parents, and to allow them to be adoptive resources, would be in

Child’s best interests:

[E]very witness, for the three[-]and[-]a[-]half years that I’ve been on this case, from [the community umbrella agency (CUA)] has always come in and said that … [Adoptive Parents’] house is appropriate, [C]hild is loved, well cared for, bonded.

Frankly, as a matter [of] fact, I’ve been to [Adoptive Parents’] home and I’ve seen [Child] with them in public, and if I didn’t know they were in foster care, I simply just would think that [Child is] their daughter. That’s exactly the home we need.

… [F]or three[-]and[-]a[-]half years, [Child] has been bonded with [Adoptive Parents].

-3- J-S05028-25

And it’s going to be absolutely devastating if the [c]ourt was to remove [C]hild from [her] home because … [Child] was born [in November] 2020. 30 days later, [Child was placed with Adoptive Parents and] has been with [Adoptive Parents continuously].

….

… [F]rankly, this is a very clear-cut case, and [Child] really needs and deserves to stay with [Adoptive Parents], and [they] should really be the adoptive resources.

Id. at 34-36 (emphasis added).4

During the adoption hearing, Adoptive Parents testified on their own

behalf. Adoptive Parents also offered the testimony of Kanesha White (Ms.

White), a case manager for CUA Bethanna; Dr. Erica Williams (Dr. Williams); 5

and Erin Hagenbuch (Ms. Hagenbuch), a permanency worker at Delta.

N.R. (Adoptive Father) testified Child has lived in Adoptive Parents’

home since December 2020. Id. at 38. Adoptive Father testified sibling

visitation began in February 2022, and the visits took place once a week for

approximately six weeks. Id. at 46. According to Adoptive Father, he did not

interact with Petitioners during the sibling visits. Id. at 46-47; see also id.

4 During his closing statements, Child’s GAL reiterated his position that it would be in Child’s best interest to remain with Adoptive Parents. See N.T., 8/1/24, at 108-13; see also id. at 108 (GAL stating, “[Child] has been [with Adoptive Parents] for three and a half years. That’s her entire life. And [Child] doesn’t see a foster parent or kinship parent; what she sees is a mother and a father.”).

5 Dr. Williams was not permitted to testify as an expert because her curriculum

vitae and expert report were not properly disclosed prior to the close of discovery. See N.T., 5/30/24, at 14-30.

-4- J-S05028-25

at 47 (Adoptive Father stating he did not prevent the visits from occurring),

51 (Adoptive Father testifying he never interacted with Child’s siblings).

Adoptive Father testified that, beginning in December 2023, Adoptive Parents

and Petitioners were not permitted inside the visitation room during the sibling

visits, pursuant to a court order. Id. at 48. By that time, Adoptive Father

stated, the visits took place once per month. Id. at 48-49.

Adoptive Father testified he is amenable to continuing the sibling visits

if Adoptive Parents are permitted to adopt Child:

Your Honor, we have no problem with [Child] knowing she has siblings, and [keeping] the siblings in her life. … So, we still do the visitations. We have no problem with the visitations. [Child] has … siblings in her life, and we understand that. There’s nothing we can change about that….

Id. at 50 (paragraph break omitted). Additionally, Adoptive Father testified

Child has contact with Mother and Father “at least three or four times a

month[.]” Id. at 43.

B.R.

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