M.J.R. v. K.S.U.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 2018
Docket1333 WDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of M.J.R. v. K.S.U. (M.J.R. v. K.S.U.) 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
M.J.R. v. K.S.U., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A02045-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

M.J.R., IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellant

v.

K.S.U

Appellee No. 1333 WDA 2017

Appeal from the Order entered August 21, 2017, in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Family Court, at No(s): FD 12-08295-008

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED: March 1, 2018

Father, M.J.R., appeals from the order granting Mother, K.S.U., primary

physical and primary legal custody of the parties’ seven-year-old son, V.R.1

Because the trial court’s findings of fact and custody analysis were not abuses

of discretion, and therefore, the trial court did not otherwise err in its custody

decision, we affirm.

The trial court summarized the relevant facts as follows:

____________________________________________

1 The trial court ordered that the parties shall share legal custody of the child “except that Mother shall have legal custody as [it] relates to medical decisions. She should inform and consult Father with an eye toward agreement first. If the [p]arties are unable to agree, Mother may make the decision. Father has the right to participate if he chooses.” The effect of a so- called tie-breaker clause is an award of legal custody, per se. We note that Father has not appealed this legal custody award. J-A02045-18

The parties never married but moved in together before the child’s birth [in 2010]. Their relationship was often volatile, and the parties ceased living together in 2012. Mother claims Father was controlling and abusive. Father claims Mother was violent and that she abandoned the child when she left him.

Mother has a daughter from a previous relationship, the child’s [ten-year-old half-sister, T.]. Mother and her fiancé currently live in Pittsburgh’s North Hills. [Also, in the home are the fiancé’s children, the child’s soon-to-be step siblings.] Father is married, and he and his wife are expecting a baby. They currently live in the Elizabeth Forward School District, which is where the subject child attended school previously. Father is a chiropractor with a chiropractic business which operates locally and in Chicago. Mother is a registered nurse.

Both parties filed for primary custody in 2012. A consent custody order was filed on June 17, 2014, but the parties’ custody arrangements have been fraught with difficulty, with both Parties again seeking primary custody of the child. Throughout the custody matter, the parties have been involved in contentious support litigation. In January of 2016, Father filed for modification of custody, seeking primary custody and on July 18, 2016, he filed a Motion for Status Quo, asking that the child stay in the Elizabeth Forward School District. The trial court granted that relief on an interim basis since a School Choice hearing could not be scheduled until October of 2016. That hearing was subsequently cancelled, and the child remained in Elizabeth Forward for first grade.

On March 10, 2017, Mother filed a petition seeking legal custody regarding medical decisions and the right of first refusal. Mother alleged that the child had become very ill with a high fever during Father’s custody time, but that Father was in Chicago and so the child was cared for by various family members. She alleged Father forbade his family from administering any medicines to aid the child or reduce his fever. She also claimed she was not informed that the child would not be with Father during his custody time or of the child’s illness for days. Upon taking custody of the child, Mother took him to the hospital as she could not take him to a pediatrician because the child was

-2- J-A02045-18

unvaccinated at the time and exhibiting signs of serious illness. In response, Father, essentially, denied Mother’s allegations and indicated that she was blowing the matter out of proportion. [The trial court] gave Mother right of first refusal, but it reserved the question of legal custody regarding medical decisions for trial.

A three-day custody trial was scheduled before the trial court for August 1, 3, and 14, 2017. An additional hour was scheduled for August 21, 2017 in order to obtain the testimony of Mother’s 10-year-old daughter, T., who was not available on any of the other days of trial.

At trial, the court heard from both parties, Father’s wife, Mother’s fiancé, and members of Father’s family. The trial court also heard the psychological evaluator, Dr. Jan Marlan of Allegheny Forensic Associates, whose report was entered into evidence by Mother. The trial court interviewed the child, as well as Mother’s daughter.

The trial court often found Father’s testimony not to be credible. Instead, the court found that he attempted to manipulate the facts to present whatever picture of himself he believed would win favor with the trial court. This was especially evident relating to two aspects of the child’s life – the child’s medical treatment including vaccinations, and the child’s involvement in athletics. Instead of focusing on the best interests of the child, Father was more concerned with his own views as to the child’s athletic performance and his own prowess as a medical care provider.

In general, the trial court found Mother’s testimony to be much more truthful, and she presented as being more concerned with [the child’s] well-being. The trial court’s impressions were in line with and bolstered by the similar findings of the psychological evaluator.

Accordingly, the trial court found Mother to be the more appropriate party to have primary custody during the school year as well as the parent who should have legal custody over medical decisions.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/13/17, at 1-3 (footnote omitted).

-3- J-A02045-18

The trial court issued its custody order and findings of fact on August

21, 2017. Among other critical factors was that the parties lived

approximately 50 minutes from each other. The trial court determined that

the distance was simply unworkable for shared physical custody during the

school year. However, shared custody would revert back on a week-on-week-

off basis during the child’s summer break. Father appealed.

He raises the following claims:

1. Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in failing to award Father primary physical custody of the child, contrary to the best interest of the child where the totality of the facts and evidence of record elicited at trial support an award of primary custody to Father, when considering the same in light of the factors identified in 23 Pa.C.S.A. §5328?

2. Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in ordering a schedule which will serve to damage and substantially, but negatively, impact the relationship between Father and the child, creating periods where the child will go without contact with Father for up to twelve (12) days?

3. Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in considering statutory factors and evidence regarding a child not at issue in this case, and in considering unsworn testimony of visitors in those factors?

Father’s Brief at 12.

Our scope and standard of review of child custody orders are as follows:

[O]ur scope is of the broadest type and our standard is abuse of discretion. We must accept findings of the trial court that are supported by competent evidence of record, as our role does not include making independent factual determinations. In addition, with regard to issues of credibility and weight of the evidence, we must defer to the presiding trial judge who viewed and assessed the witnesses

-4- J-A02045-18

first-hand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
M.J.R. v. K.S.U., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mjr-v-ksu-pasuperct-2018.