J.F. v. D.B.

941 A.2d 718
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 941 A.2d 718 (J.F. v. D.B.) 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.F. v. D.B., 941 A.2d 718 (Pa. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

OPINION BY

ANTHONY, J.:

¶ 1 Appellant, J.F., appeals from the March 27, 2007 order entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County denying his request for the reimbursement of child support payments made to Appellee, D.B., for the care of Appellant’s three minor sons. Upon review, we affirm. The relevant facts and procedural history follow.

¶2 Appellant and his paramour, E.D., contacted a private surrogacy agency after the couple learned that E.D. could not conceive any additional children. In 2002, the agency matched the couple with Appel-lee, a married resident of Pennsylvania, and an egg donor, a single woman residing in Texas. In August of 2002, Appellant, Appellee, Appellee’s husband, and the egg donor executed a surrogacy contract, which provided, inter alia, that Appellee would serve as the gestational carrier. Pursuant to this agreement, three of egg donor’s eggs were fertilized in vitro with Appellant’s sperm and were implanted into Appellee. Within four weeks, the parties learned that Appellee was pregnant with triplets.

¶3 On November 19, 2003, Appellee gave birth to triplets at Hamot Medical Center after thirty-five weeks of gestation. Due to this early delivery, the babies had minor medical problems, which required their placement into Hamot’s neonatal intensive care unit. Over the next several days, Appellee expressed concern about Appellant’s infrequent visits to the hospital and concluded that he and his paramour were unfit to parent the children. Appel-lee decided to take the children home with her, and on November 27, 2003, Hamot discharged the triplets to Appellee and her husband without Appellant’s consent.

[720]*720¶4 When efforts to contact Appellee failed, Appellant filed a Complaint for Custody and a Motion for Emergency Special Relief against Appellee. Promptly thereafter, a consent order was filed awarding temporary legal and physical custody of the triplets to Appellee, granting visitation to Appellant, and preserving Appellant’s right to assert that Appellee lacked standing to pursue custody. Appellee filed an answer and counterclaim for custody. Appellant filed preliminary objections to the answer claiming that Appellee lacked standing to seek custody. On April 2, 2004, after a number of hearings, the trial court determined that Appellee had standing to pursue custody and child support. The trial court held two additional custody hearings, and on January 7, 2005, the trial court entered an order directing the parties to share legal custody and awarding primary physical custody to Appellee. The trial court granted Appellant partial physical custody/visitation and directed Appellant to pay child support.

¶ 5 Appellant filed a timely appeal. Therein, Appellant raised a number of challenges to the trial court’s order including: (1) the trial court erred when it determined that Appellee possessed standing to pursue custody; (2) the trial court erred in finding that Appellee had standing to pursue child support; and (3) the trial court erred when it found that awarding custody to Appellee was in the children’s best interests. J.F. v. D.B., 897 A.2d 1261 (Pa.Super.2006). Upon review, our Court concluded that the trial court erred when it determined that Appellee had standing to pursue custody. Id. As such, our Court vacated the order of the trial court that awarded primary physical custody and child support to Appellee and directed that the trial court award Appellant full physical and legal custody of his biological children. Id.

¶ 6 On May 24, 2006, Appellant filed a Complaint for Support in which he sought to recover all child support paid to Appel-lee. The trial court ordered both parties to appear at a support conference, and on July 18, 2006, the support officer remanded the case to the trial court for testimony on this issue. The trial court held a hearing on this complaint on February 27, 2007. On March 27, 2007, the trial court denied the relief requested by Appellant. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal and a timely concise statement of matters complained of on appeal pursuant to Rule 1925(b) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure.

¶ 7 In his brief, Appellant raises two issues for our review:

[1.] The trial court erred in finding that, after the Superior Court vacated an order awarding child support to a gestational surrogate upon a finding that the gestational surrogate lacked standing to pursue an action for custody of the children, the biological father cannot recover from the gestational surrogate child support payments he was compelled to make pursuant to the vacated order awarding child support.
[2.] The trial court erred in finding that a gestational surrogate, whom the Superior Court has ruled lacked standing to pursue custody of the children because she obtained physical custody of the children in defiance of the biological father’s wishes and the parent/child relationship, nevertheless has standing to pursue an action for and receive child support.

Appellant’s Brief, at 3.

¶ 8 Preliminarily, we observe:

When evaluating a support order, this Court may only reverse the trial court’s determination where the order cannot be sustained on any valid ground. We will not interfere with the broad discre[721]*721tion afforded the trial court absent an abuse of discretion or insufficient evidence to sustain the support order. An abuse of discretion is not merely an error of judgment; if, in reaching a conclusion, the court overrides or misapplies the law, or the judgment exercised is shown by the record to be either manifestly unreasonable or the product of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will, discretion has been abused. In addition, we note that the duty to support one’s child is absolute, and the purpose of child support is to promote the child’s best interests.

Bulgarelli v. Bulgarelli, 2007 PA Super 295, ¶ 5, 934 A.2d 107 (quotations omitted).

¶ 9 In his first issue, Appellant argues that the trial court erred when it concluded that Appellant could not recover the child support payments that he made pursuant to the vacated trial court order. Appellant’s Brief, at 9. Appellant maintains that the Superior Court’s vacation of the order entirely annulled it, thereby requiring the trial court to return the parties to the positions that they would have occupied had the trial court never entered the support order. Id. Upon review, we do not find that the trial court committed an error of law.

¶ 10 Initially, we agree with Appellant that “[w]here a judgment is vacated or set aside (or stricken from the record) by valid order or judgment, it is entirely destroyed and the rights of the parties are left as though no such judgment had ever been entered.” Fitzpatrick v. Fitzpatrick, 811 A.2d 1043, 1045 (Pa.Super.2002); see also In re Higbee’s Estate, 372 Pa. 233, 237, 93 A.2d 467, 469 (1953) (stating “[w]hen the judgment was taken off, the action stood as before judgment was entered ...”).

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941 A.2d 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jf-v-db-pasuperct-2008.