K.D. v. E.D.

2022 Pa. Super. 224, 267 A.3d 1215
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 2021
Docket1883 EDA 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2022 Pa. Super. 224 (K.D. v. E.D.) 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
K.D. v. E.D., 2022 Pa. Super. 224, 267 A.3d 1215 (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-A15003-21

2022 PA Super 224

K.D. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : E.D. : No. 1883 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Order Entered October 5, 2020 In the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County Domestic Relations at No(s): 336-2015 DR

BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

OPINION BY BOWES, J.: Filed: November 16, 2021

K.D. (“Mother”) appeals from October 5, 2020 order that modified the

custody arrangement with E.D. (“Father”) to provide him supervised

therapeutic visitation1 with their three youngest children. We affirm.

The relevant facts and procedural history as follows:

The instant custody case has a lengthy and complicated history. [K.D] and [E.D.] are the natural parents of four (4) children, [Jo].D., age 18, J.D., age 14, [Sh].D., age 11, and S.D., age 7. The only children applicable to the instant matter are the three minor children[.] The parties have been separated since April of 2015, and Father has not seen the three minor children since that time. [Pursuant to an order entered on July 2015, Mother exercises sole legal and primary physical custody of the children.] ____________________________________________

1 Pursuant to the Child Custody Act, “visitation” is subsumed by the definitions

of partial physical custody, shared physical custody, and supervised physical custody. See 23 Pa.C.S. § 5322(b). As the parties and the trial court periodically utilize the term in their respective briefs and opinions, we refer to “visitation” where it is necessary to maintain continuity. J-A15003-21

. . . Mother has made many allegations of physical, mental, and sexual abuse by Father with regards to the children. The eldest child, [Jo].D., . . . has resided primarily with Father since January of 2020 and has recanted all of his allegations regarding sexual abuse by Father.

Trial Court Opinion, 12/4/20, at 1.

Two of the foregoing points require further discussion. First, the

allegations of physical and emotional abuse relate to Father’s use of corporal

punishment as a means of disciplining the children in accordance with the

practices of No Greater Ministries, also referred to as the Pearl Family

Ministries, which Mother and Father followed as active members. Second,

while Father initially informed Mother that he viewed child pornography on the

Internet, he subsequently learned that the website disclosure statement

indicated that the actors were at least eighteen years old. In this vein, we

note that the police ultimately closed their child pornography investigation,

which included the confiscation of the family’s computer, without filing any

pornography-related charges against Father.

On April 5, 2016, Father filed a petition to modify the July 2015 custody

order so that he could exercise supervised partial physical custody with the

three youngest children. A custody master was appointed, and during the

ensuing evidentiary hearings, the parties presented, inter alia, the testimony

of one mental health professional, Robert Gordon, Ph.D., two social workers,

Heather Evans and Chris Charleton, and Leatrice Anderson, Esquire, the

-2- J-A15003-21

guardian ad litem (“GAL”). By stipulation, the master also considered a prior

evaluation prepared by then-court-appointed custody evaluator Judith Munoz.

Dr. Gordon recommended supervised visitation, but the remaining

professionals did not believe that supervised visitation was appropriate at that

time. Except for one social worker, Ms. Evans, who viewed supervised

visitation as the re-victimization of the children, none of the remaining

professionals opined that supervised visitation should be precluded outright.

As the Honorable Raymond Hamill subsequently summarized in granting

Mother’s exceptions to the master’s recommendation for supervised physical

custody, the qualified objections to Father’s supervised visitation with the

three youngest children were as follows: (1) Ms. Munoz was “open to

reunification counseling” but recommended that Father participate so that the

children do not feel that their concerns were unheeded; (2) Mr. Charleton

“estimated that it would take one and one-half to two years before supervised

visitation might be helpful;” and (3) noting the “unity and solidarity” among

the children, the GAL pronounced “I cannot conclude that separating the two

or three youngest children to implement visitation is in any of their best

interests at this time.” Trial Court Opinion, 1/11/18, at 5-6 (cleaned up).

Following the evidentiary hearings and the submission of briefs by

Mother and Father, the master filed a report and recommendation granting

partial relief. Specifically, the custody master recommended that Father

participate in clinically-supervised visitation with the two youngest children.

-3- J-A15003-21

As noted supra, Mother filed exceptions to the master’s

recommendation, which Judge Hamill granted. Essentially, Judge Hamill

concluded that, “[w]hile the allegations of sexual abuse were deemed

unfounded,” in light of Father’s failure to address his severe mental and moral

deficiencies and lack of insight into how those deficiencies affected his

children, it was not appropriate for Father to engage in clinically supervised

visits with the two younger children at that juncture. Trial Court Opinion,

1/11/18, at 13. He reasoned,

The professionals who have been involved since the onset of this matter in 2015, Heather Evans, Chris Charleton, and Attorney Leatrice Anderson, all concluded that supervised visitation would not be in the children’s best interest at this time. Ms. Munoz testified that to do this reunification counseling sought, Father must take responsibility or we are putting the children in a situation where they will feel like what they have said does not matter. Additionally, evidence from trial established that now, after years of therapy, the older two children are getting to the point where they are starting to recover from the trauma. The fact that Father would even propose that the children be taken out of the care of these professionals who have been treating them for years demonstrates his moral deficiency and his lack of concern for the children’s best interests.

It is the opinion of this Court that, after taking into consideration all of the evidence – the allegations of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse, Father’s confirmed use of corporal punishment, and threats to endanger himself and family members to keep such punishment secret — the record rises to a showing that Father is severely mentally or morally deficient as to constitute a grave threat to the welfare of the children. Further, Father has shown no insight into how his conduct has affected and harmed his children. While the allegations of sexual abuse were deemed unfounded, and therefore makes the case at bar fall somewhere between the factual analyses employed in In re C.B. [861 A.2d 287 (Pa.Super. 2004)] and Rosenberg, [504 A.2d 350 (Pa.Super. 1986)], this fact alone is not dispositive that it is

-4- J-A15003-21

an appropriate time for Father to engage in clinically supervised visits with the two younger children.

Id. (emphases added). We affirmed. K.D. v. E.D., 195 A.3d 1020 (Pa.Super.

2018) (unpublished memorandum).

More than three years after filing his first modification petition, on July

26, 2019, Father filed a second petition for the modification of the existing

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Bluebook (online)
2022 Pa. Super. 224, 267 A.3d 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kd-v-ed-pasuperct-2021.