K.R. v. E.S.C., Sr.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 2017
Docket612 EDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of K.R. v. E.S.C., Sr. (K.R. v. E.S.C., Sr.) 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.R. v. E.S.C., Sr., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-A22010-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

K.R. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

v.

E.S.C., SR. AND J.C.C.

Appellants No. 612 EDA 2017

Appeal from the Order Entered January 10, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Civil Division at No(s): 2014-28814

BEFORE: BOWES, LAZARUS AND PLATT,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED OCTOBER 02, 2017

E.S.C., Sr. (“Father”) and J.C.C. (“Mother”), (collectively “Parents”),

appeal from the January 10, 2017 order denying their petition to relinquish

jurisdiction, which requested that the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery

County relinquish jurisdiction and transfer this matter to the State of

Connecticut.1 We affirm.

____________________________________________

1 We note that, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 311(b), an order sustaining venue is appealable as of right only if:

(1) the plaintiff, petitioner, or other party benefiting from the order files of record within ten days after the entry of the order an election that the order shall be deemed final; or

(Footnote Continued Next Page)

* Retired Senior Judge specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A22010-17

We set forth the salient factual and procedural history as follows:

This case concerns C.C., born on December 17, 2010. The child lived in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, as did his mother and father. The child’s father died on July 10, 2012[,] and the child’s mother had her parental rights terminated on October 22, 2013. The child’s paternal grandparents adopted the child on August 20, 2014, and they are now his mother and father. On September 1, 2014, mother and child moved from Souderton, Pennsylvania to Norwich, Connecticut, while father stayed behind in Pennsylvania because of his employment schedule. Father commuted from Souderton, Pennsylvania to his job at Pfizer, Inc., in West Trenton, New Jersey during the week. Father would commute to Connecticut on weekends.

On October 27, 2014, shortly after mother and child relocated to Connecticut, the child’s maternal grandmother [(“Grandmother”)], as plaintiff, commenced this custody action against the parents, as defendants, seeking shared legal and partial custody of the child. . . . On April 8, 2015, the parties appeared before the [trial court] and presented evidence during a full-day hearing on grandmother’s custody complaint. The parties on that date reached an agreement by which grandmother would have partial physical custody, and that agreement was recited on the record and made an order of this court. That agreed order was amended, by agreement of the parties, by the “Stipulated Order to Clarify Order” filed on December 9, 2015. The result was an agreed custody order by _______________________ (Footnote Continued)

(2) the court states in the order that a substantial issue of venue or jurisdiction is presented.

Pa.R.A.P. 311(b). Neither of these requirements has been met herein. Nevertheless, this Court has allowed an appeal from an order denying a petition to change venue when there were no other claims pending before the trial court. See Galgon v. Martnick, 653 A.2d 44, 46 n.1 (Pa.Super. 1995) (finding order denying petition to transfer venue was final where all that remained before court was pending support order). As there are no other outstanding matters pending before the trial court, this appeal is properly before us.

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which grandmother would have physical custody of the child one weekend every month (three overnights), with an extra day or days appended during the three summer months and some holidays.

On October 4, 2016, the parents commenced an action against grandmother in Connecticut. It was an action for an order of protection, which is Connecticut’s version of Pennsylvania’s Protection from Abuse. Parents sought relief from the Connecticut court based on their claim that the child’s seven year old cousin had committed an act of sexual abuse upon him while both children were in grandmother’s care in Pennsylvania. Temporary relief was denied as final relief.

On November 7, 2016, the parents filed to the Superior Court, Judicial District of New London at Norwich, Connecticut, a “Post-Judgment Motion to Modify, Suspend and/or Provide Supervised Access.” By that motion, the parents asserted that “it is no longer in the child’s best interest to have unsupervised contact with the plaintiff.” The parents asked Connecticut to terminate grandmother’s right to partial custody[.]

In support of their request made to the Connecticut court, the parents leveled two charges against grandmother. The first was that the child was being exposed to knowledge of the existence of his biological mother while in grandmother’s care. The second was that the child was being physically endangered while in grandmother’s care. More specifically, the parents accused grandmother of: (1) failing to “adequately supervise” the child while in her care; (2) permitting the child to be “in the presence” of the biological mother; (3) permitting the other children in grandmother’s custody to “mak[e] statements to the [child] about his adoption”; (4) failing to “provide adequate arrangements” for the child; (5) having on display in grandmother’s home “prominent pictures” of biological mother; and (6) permitting all children in grandmother’s custody “to go to a local park without an adult.”

....

On December 9, 2016, per the [trial court’s] directive, the parents filed with this court a prayer for relief styled as a “Petition to Relinquish Jurisdiction.” By their petition, the

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parents asked this court to “relinquish jurisdiction and transfer jurisdiction to the State of Connecticut.”

Trial Court Opinion, 4/13/17, at 1-4 (internal citations omitted).

Following a hearing on the matter, the trial court denied Parents’

petition. Parents filed a timely notice of appeal and complied with the

court’s order to file a Rule 1925(b) concise statement of errors complained

of on appeal. The court authored a Rule 1925(a) opinion. This matter is

now ready for our review.

Parents raise three questions for our consideration:

(1) Where the child and the parents do not have a significant connection with this Commonwealth and substantial evidence is no longer available in this Commonwealth regarding the child’s care, protection, training, and personal relationships, under 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422, including because (a) [Parents] and the child now live in Connecticut and neither of the parents reside and exercise parenting time with the child in Pennsylvania, and accordingly, there is no basis to find that a significant connection with Pennsylvania exists; and (b) the parents and the child all live in Norwich, Connecticut, where the child’s teachers, counselor, school, and healthcare providers are located, as well as all other witnesses regarding the child’s care, protection and training, and accordingly there is no basis to find that substantial evidence relating to the child’s care, protection, training, and personal relationships remains present within Pennsylvania;

(2) Where the child and his parents do not presently reside in this Commonwealth, under 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422, including because: (a) the child and his parents do not presently reside in Pennsylvania and instead have lived in Connecticut for over two years; (b) parent E.S.C.’s merely sleeping overnight in Pennsylvania at most three times per week when he is working in New Jersey does not constitute

-4- J-A22010-17

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Related

Galgon v. Martnick
653 A.2d 44 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1995)
S.K.C. v. J.L.C.
94 A.3d 402 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2014)
B.L. v. T.B.
152 A.3d 1014 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
K.R. v. E.S.C., Sr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kr-v-esc-sr-pasuperct-2017.