Langendorfer v. Spearman

797 A.2d 303
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 3, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 797 A.2d 303 (Langendorfer v. Spearman) 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
Langendorfer v. Spearman, 797 A.2d 303 (Pa. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

BENDER, J.

¶ 1 Caro Spearman (Father) appeals from two orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County that granted Tammy Langendorfer’s (Mother) petition for contempt and ordered a change in legal *305 and primary physical custody of the parties’ child from Father to Mother. 1 We vacate the orders and reinstate the May 5, 1998 final custody order.

¶ 2 The parties are the parents of Sidney Patrick Spearman, born December 19, 1988. Father, who resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Mother, who fives in Alaska, are not and have never been married. The initial custody litigation began in 1993. The court issued a number of custody orders over the years, namely, in 1994 when Mother was awarded primary physical custody 2 and then again in 1998 when Father was awarded primary physical custody.

¶ 3 In addition to the provisions granting primary physical custody to Father, the 1998 order granted partial physical custody to Mother each year for a period of eight weeks in the summer, beginning three days after the school year ended. The parties were to share the costs of transportation and were directed to allow unrestricted telephone and written communication between the child and the noncustodial parent. The order also required that each parent apprise the other of the whereabouts of the child, including residential address and phone number; a 48-hour advance notice of any change in residence had to be communicated. 3

¶ 4 On January 26, 2001, Father filed a petition to temporarily modify custody, seeking an order to prevent contact by all family members with the child. Father made this request as a result of the child’s enrollment in a therapeutic foster care program called “Mentor.” The child has had a history of emotional problems, dating back to at least 1994, when Father arranged for counseling for Sidney at a mental health facility in Philadelphia. Mother also sought treatment for the child in 1995, when she admitted Sidney to a mental health hospital following his threats to kill himself.

¶ 5 In the fall of 2000, Father admitted the child to the Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute (EPPI), following several attempts by Sidney to run away after he was disciplined at school. At EPPI’s suggestion, Father enrolled Sidney in the Mentor program and Father’s petition for temporary modification ensued. 4

¶ 6 On February 2, 2001, Mother filed the contempt petition presently at issue before this Court. The petition alleges that Father willfully violated the 1998 custody order and requests that the court find that:

(a) Father is in Contempt of Court for failure to comply with the Custody Order dated May 5,1998; and
(b) Father is ordered to timely comply with all aspects of the Court’s May 5, 1998 Order, including the following[:]
(1) Father is ordered to apprise Mother of the whereabouts of Sidney;
(2) Father is ordered to provide Mother with an address and phone number at which Sidney may be reached;
*306 (3) Father is ordered to refrain from interfering with Mother’s and Mother’s family members’ attempts to contact Sidney;
(4) Father is ordered to refrain from interfering with Mother’s right to partial physical custody of Sidney; and
(5) Father is ordered to split the cost of Sidney’s travel in order to effectuate Mother’s partial physical custody rights.

Mother’s Petition for Contempt, 2/2/01, at 3-4.

¶ 7 The facts underlying Mother’s allegations concern the failure of the parties to coordinate travel arrangements for the summer of 1999 and 2000. There is no dispute that Father purchased a return ticket from Alaska to Philadelphia for Sidney for the end of the 1999 summer vacation period. There is also no dispute that Mother did not purchase a ticket for Sidney to make the trip from Philadelphia to Alaska at the beginning of the summer. At the contempt hearing the parties disputed who in fact tried to contact the other, how many times and who failed to return calls after messages were left. The record also reveals that Father attempted to introduce correspondence from his attorney to Mother’s attorney showing his attempts to arrange transportation, but the court held that the letters were inadmissible hearsay.

¶ 8 Another area of contention between the parties concerns Mother’s alleged inability to contact Sidney by telephone. As part of his response, Father attempted to place in evidence recordings of telephone calls between Mother and Sidney to disprove Mother’s allegation that she was denied telephone access. These recordings were not admitted by the court on the basis that they were cumulative. Father did admit that he has no long distance phone service at home and uses a cell phone or phone cards instead. Also Mother refuses to supply a direct phone number to Father. Rather Father calls Mother’s mother and leaves messages to be relayed to Mother.

¶ 9 The parties also are at odds over whether or when Father advised or attempted to advise Mother about Sidney’s admission to EPPI and his subsequent placement into the Mentor program. Father acknowledges that he informed Mother six weeks after Sidney’s initial admission to EPPI, but Mother contends that she only found out about Sidney’s placement into the Mentor program one week prior to the contempt hearing and only learned of the admission to EPPI at the hearing.

¶ 10 Following the March 5, 2001 hearing, the • court issued its order granting sole legal and physical custody to Mother and restricting Father’s visitation. No other “sanction” was imposed. The court’s order, dated March 5, 2001, states in its entirety:

AFTER HEARING MOTHER’S PETITION FOR CONTEMPT QF CUSTODY AND FATHER’S RESPONSE THERE TO [sic] IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND DECREED AS FOLLOWS: MOTHER’S PETITION FOR CONTEMPT IS GRANTED; MOTHER, TAMMY W. LANGENDORFER SHALL, AS OF THIS DATE, HAVE SOLE LEGAL AND PRIMARY PHYSICAL CUSTODY OF THE CHILD, SIDNEY SPEARMAN. ALL DECISIONS REGARDING SIDNEY SPEARMAN SHALL BE IN THE SOLE DISCRETION OF MOTHER. FOR THE BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILD, THIS COURT FURTHER ORDERS THAT FATHER MAY HAVE SUPERVISED VISITS WITH THE CHILD AT THE MENTOR *307 AGENCY OR ANOTHER SUITABLE PLACE AS AGREED TO BY MOTHER.

¶ 11 In its opinion supporting the order, the court stated that the hearing was held on Mother’s contempt petition and that it “took this action to remedy Father’s contemptuous conduct towards Mother’s legal and physical custody right to the child.” Trial Court opinion (T.C.O.), 5/22/01, at 1. Notably, the “NOTICE AND ORDER TO APPEAR PETITION FOR CONTEMPT” issued by the court made no mention that custody of Sidney was at issue. Rather it required attendance at the scheduled hearing, only referencing that legal proceedings would take place concerning the allegations of willful disobedience of a custody order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
797 A.2d 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langendorfer-v-spearman-pasuperct-2002.