Middleton, D. v. Middleton, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 3, 2025
Docket1357 WDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Middleton, D. v. Middleton, S. (Middleton, D. v. Middleton, S.) 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
Middleton, D. v. Middleton, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-A13023-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

DYLAN E. MIDDLETON : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : SARAH N. MIDDLETON : : Appellant : No. 1357 WDA 2024

Appeal from the Order Dated October 15, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Mercer County Civil Division at No(s): No. 2020-1983

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and BENDER, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.: FILED: July 3, 2025

Sarah N. Middleton (“Mother”) appeals the October 15, 2024 order

modifying the existing custody order and granting Dylan E. Middleton

(“Father”) primary physical custody of the parties’ biological son, G.M., born

in October of 2019. After careful review, we affirm.

The certified record reveals the relevant factual and procedural history

of this matter. The parties are veterans. Father served in the United States

Marine Corps from September of 2001, until his honorable discharge in

September of 2005. As a result of his service, Father suffered from

post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) and multiple dislocations of his left

shoulder. Father developed an addiction to opiates from his prescribed pain

medication for his shoulder injuries. See N.T. Custody Trial, 6/26/24, at

111-112. Father entered and successfully completed rehabilitation through J-A13023-25

the Veterans’ Administration (“VA”) in February of 2014, and has since

maintained his sobriety. See id. at 112-114, 185, and 220; see also Father’s

Exhibit 1.

Mother served in the United States Air Force from 2005 to 2007.1

Mother suffered from PTSD as a result of her service as well. See N.T. Custody

Trial, 7/8/24, at 150-151. Mother voluntarily admitted herself to a VA hospital

for mental health treatment for several days in September of 2017. See id.

at 90-91.

Father has been a state correctional officer since 2016 and is currently

employed at State Correctional Institution (“SCI”)-Mercer, working the

overnight shift. Mother was also a state correctional officer. Mother’s last

position was also at SCI-Mercer, which she left sometime after the parties’

separation. Mother is currently self-employed as a dog groomer, and she

works out of her home during the mornings.

The parties have a total of four children, three of whom are not subject

to this appeal. Father has a ten-year-old daughter, M.M., and a nine-year-old

son, Ka.M., from prior relationships. Mother has a fifteen-year-old daughter,

Ki.M., also from a previous relationship. The parties married in 2017 and G.M.

____________________________________________

1 The record does not reveal the circumstances surrounding Mother’s separation from her service.

-2- J-A13023-25

was born two years later. The parties resided together with their blended

family in Mercer County until their separation in approximately June of 2020.

On June 23, 2020, the court granted the parties’ petitions for

cross-adoptions of M.M. and Ki.M.2 Five days later, the parties separated after

Mother absconded to Washington County with the children. On July 7, 2020,

Father filed a divorce complaint, which included a count for custody of G.M.

The court entered an agreed-upon final custody order on October 22, 2020

(“existing custody order”), which granted the parties shared legal and physical

custody of G.M. on a rotating weekly basis. The exchanges were ordered to

occur at a location equidistant between the parties’ homes, as they lived two

hours apart from each other. On December 3, 2020, the court entered an

agreed-upon order that vacated the cross-adoptions of M.M. and Ki.M. The

parties’ divorce was finalized on June 27, 2022, after which contentious

custody litigation continued.

The parties filed multiple emergency petitions for special relief and

contempt in 2023. Father filed two emergency petitions around early March

of 2023, which alleged that Mother refused to release G.M. for Father’s

custodial time. The court entered an order on March 10, 2023, directing

2 Mother adopted M.M., whose biological mother is deceased. Father adopted Ki.M., whose biological father had his parental rights involuntarily terminated several years earlier. Mother could not adopt Ka.M. because Father shares custody of him with his biological mother.

-3- J-A13023-25

Mother to release G.M. to Father the following Tuesday, which was March 14,

2023. Mother did not comply. Mother filed an emergency petition on March

17, 2023, alleging that Father continued to abuse drugs, that he posed a

threat of physical harm to G.M., and that he refused to consent to G.M.’s

participation in trauma therapy.

On March 31, 2023, following a hearing, the court found Mother in

contempt for intentionally withholding G.M. from Father, which began on

February 14, 2023, and her ongoing refusal to relinquish G.M. to Father after

it ordered her to do so. The court ordered Mother to serve five days in the

Mercer County Jail as a sanction for her contempt. The court also granted

Father sole physical custody of G.M. until further order of the court.3

On August 4, 2023, Mother filed another emergency petition, which

renewed the arguments from her March filing and requested, inter alia,

temporary sole legal and physical custody of G.M. Father filed a pro se petition

for emergency relief and modification of the existing custody order on August

14, 2023. In his petition, Father alleged that Mother was coaching G.M. to

report that he is physically abused, that Mother needed mental health

treatment, and requested permanent sole physical custody of G.M.

On September 8, 2023, the court heard the parties’ competing petitions

for special relief. The court entered an interim order that reinstated the

3 The court granted Mother two three-day periods of temporary physical custody during this time, one in April of 2023, and one in May of 2023.

-4- J-A13023-25

parties’ rotating weekly physical custody of G.M. pursuant to the existing

custody order. Father’s modification request was outstanding. The court

further appointed Annette Dohanics, Esquire, as guardian ad litem (“GAL”) for

four-year-old G.M. On December 15, 2023, the GAL submitted a report to the

court, wherein she recommended shared legal and physical custody of G.M.

Thereafter, the court ordered that the parties participate in a custody

evaluation, which they completed with Eric Bernstein, Psy.D. The GAL then

submitted an updated report on June 24, 2024, wherein she recommended

that primary physical custody be awarded to Mother.

On June 26 and July 8, 2024, the Honorable D. Neil McEwen held

hearings on Father’s pro se petition, during which the court interviewed G.M.

in camera in the presence of the parties’ counsel.4 Father testified on his own

behalf and presented the following witnesses: M.M. and Ka.M., who testified

in camera; Layla Bocook, Father’s live-in babysitter; Ronald Middleton (“Mr.

Middleton”), G.M.’s paternal grandfather; Anthony Corvino, Father’s friend

and former co-worker; Nancy Middleton (“Mrs. Middleton”), G.M.’s paternal

grandmother; and Pamela McGirr, the parties’ former babysitter. Mother

testified on her own behalf and presented the following witnesses: Ki.M., who

testified in camera; Dr. Bernstein; Paula Millsaps, Mother’s spiritual counselor;

and Laurie Franco, G.M.’s home educator.

4 The Honorable D.

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