J.A.L. v. E.P.H.

682 A.2d 1314
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 19, 1996
StatusPublished

This text of 682 A.2d 1314 (J.A.L. v. E.P.H.) 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
J.A.L. v. E.P.H., 682 A.2d 1314 (Pa. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

BECK, Judge:

We are asked to decide whether appellant J.A.L., the former lesbian life partner of appellee E.P.H., has standing to petition for partial custody of the child born to E.P.H. during their relationship. We conclude that the trial court erred in denying standing to J.A.L. Therefore, we reverse and remand for consideration of appellant’s petition for partial custody.

Appellant J.A.L. and appellee E.P.H. entered into a lesbian relationship in 1980 and began living together as life partners in 1982, purchasing a home together in 1988. From quite early in the relationship, E.P.H. wished to have a child. Following several years of discussion, the parties agreed that E.P.H. would be artificially inseminated to attempt to conceive a child whom the parties would raise together. Together, E.P.H. and J.A.L. selected a sperm donor and made arrangements for a contract between E.P.H. and the donor whereby the donor relinquished his parental rights in any child E.P.H. might bear.

In August 1989, the insemination process began. The inseminations occurred in J.A.L.’s and E.P.H.’s home. For each insemination, the donor would produce the sperm in one room and J.A.L. would receive the sperm and take them to E.P.H. in another room, where J.A.L. would perform the insemination. This procedure was repeated several times each month until E.P.H. became pregnant in October, 1989, then resumed in 1990 after E.P.H. had a miscarriage in December, 1989. In September, 1990, E.P.H. again became pregnant. During the pregnancy, J.A.L. accompanied E.P.H. to doctor’s visits and attended childbirth classes with her. E.P.H. successfully carried the child to term, and J.A.L., as well as two friends of E.P.H., was present at the birth of the child, G.H., in June, 1991. In registering the child’s birth, E.P.H. gave J.A.L.’s surname as the child’s middle name; E.P.H. subsequently had the child’s middle name legally changed.

During E.P.H.’s pregnancy, E.P.H. and J.A.L. consulted with an attorney regarding the status of the child. The attorney prepared drafts of several documents for the parties’ consideration. The first document was a Nomination of Guardian in which E.P.H. named J.A.L. as the guardian of the child in the event of E.P.H.’s death or disability. The document included the following statement:

[1317]*1317This nomination is based on the fact that [JAL.] and I jointly made the decision that I should conceive and bear a child that we would then jointly raise. It is our intention that [J.A.L.] will establish from birth a loving and parental relationship with the child. Furthermore, my child will live with this adult from birth and will look to her for guidance, support and affection. It would be detrimental to my child to deprive my child of this established relationship at a time when I am unable to provide the security and care necessary to my child’s healthy development.

The second document prepared for the parties was an Authorization for Consent to Medical Treatment of Minor, permitting J.A.L. to consent to medical or dental treatment of the child. The attorney also prepared a Last Will and Testament for each party, providing for the other party and the child. E.P.H.’s will also included a clause appointing JAL. as the guardian of the child, stating:

I have specifically and purposefully named [J.A.L.] as primary guardian of my child as I intend for the bond between my partner, [J.A.L.], and my child to be of primary importance and strength. [J.A.L.] and I jointly decided that I would conceive and bear my child. We intend to raise the child together as a family. It is my belief that the continuation of the parent-child relationship between [J.A.L.] and my child will be essential to my child’s well-being, and that it will be in the child’s best interests to remain with [JAL.].

The final document prepared by the attorney was a co-parenting agreement which set forth the parties’ intention to raise the child together, to share the financial responsibility for the child, to make decisions about the child jointly, and for JAL. to become a de facto parent to the child. The agreement also provided that in the event of the parties’ separation, they would share custody, continuing to make major decisions about the child jointly and splitting the financial responsibility for the child’s support.

Shortly before the child’s birth, the parties executed the nomination of guardian, the authorization for consent to medical treatment and the wills.1 JAL. refused to execute the co-parenting agreement, which the attorney advised the parties was not enforceable in Pennsylvania.

After the birth, E.P.H., J.A.L. and the child lived together in the house owned by E.P.H. and J.A.L. E.P.H. was the primary caregiver to the child, but JAL. assisted with all aspects of the care of the baby, particularly during the first few weeks after the birth while E.P.H. recovered from a caesarean section. JAL. also cared for the baby alone from time to time when E.P.H. went out. During E.P.H.’s maternity leave, J.A.L. provided the primary financial support for the household, and throughout 1991 she continued to provide the majority of the household’s income because E.P.H. initially returned to work only part-time.

In late 1991, serious problems developed in the relationship between E.P.H. and J.A.L., and in the spring of 1992, E.P.H. left the parties’ home, taking the child with her and informing J.A.L. that she intended to raise the child as a single parent. For the first year of the separation, by agreement of the parties, JAL. took the child for visits twice a week, one on a weekday afternoon and the other for a full day on the weekend. During the second year of the separation, E.P.H. reduced the visits, still allowing one afternoon visit per week, but limiting the full-day weekend visits to once every two weeks. On the days of her visits, J.A.L. would pick up the child, who was then one to two years old, either from day care (for the weekday visits) or E.P.H.’s residence (for the weekend visits) and would return the child in the evening. During the visits, J.A.L. would feed the child, arrange for naps, provide toys and activities, and generally care for the child. Both parties testified that the child enjoyed and looked forward to these visits and felt an attachment to J.A.L. E.P.H. also testified that the child has similar visits and relationships with other adult “special friends.”

[1318]*1318In April, 1994, E.P.H. advised J.A.L. that she no longer wished to have any contact whatsoever with J.A.L. and that she also wished to end the visits between J.A.L. and the child. E.P.H. testified that she took this action because she felt that J.A.L. was trying to establish a parental relationship with the child and to undermine E.P.H. as parent and that this could be harmful to the child. Although J.A.L. sought to continue seeing the child, the parties were unable to come to any agreement to continue J.A.L.’s visits, and in February, 1995, J.A.L. initiated this action for partial custody.

In response to J.A.L.’s complaint for partial custody, E.P.H. filed preliminary objections challenging J.A.L.’s standing. Following a hearing at which both parties and several other witnesses testified, the trial court granted the preliminary objections and dismissed the complaint for partial custody based upon J.A.L.’s lack of standing to bring such an action. This appeal followed.

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