Powell, A. v. Sanford, N.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 28, 2023
Docket707 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Powell, A. v. Sanford, N. (Powell, A. v. Sanford, N.) 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
Powell, A. v. Sanford, N., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-S36031-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

ALFONZO A. POWELL, ON BEHALF OF : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF M.P. : PENNSYLVANIA : Appellants : : v. : : NADIA SANFORD : : Appellee : No. 707 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered February 28, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Domestic Relations at No(s): 2211V7016

BEFORE: BOWES, J., NICHOLS, J., and KING, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KING, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 28, 2023

Appellant, Alfonzo A. Powell (“Father”), on behalf of M.P. (“Child”),

appeals from the order entered in the Philadelphia County Court of Common

Pleas, under the Protection from Abuse (“PFA”) Act,1 in favor of Appellee,

Nadia Sanford (“Mother”). We affirm.

The relevant facts and procedural history of this appeal are as follows.

The parties are the parents of Child, who was born in October 2015. After

Child’s birth, the parties divorced. Mother obtained primary physical custody

of Child, and Father received partial physical custody on weekends. On

November 7, 2022, Father filed a PFA petition, on behalf of Child, against

Mother. In the PFA petition, Father alleged that Child told him that Mother

____________________________________________

1 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6101-6122. J-S36031-23

had hit Child on the arm, and Child was afraid of Mother. Based upon these

allegations, the court issued a temporary PFA order and scheduled a hearing

on the matter.

On February 28, 2023, the court held the PFA hearing. The court

summarized Father’s testimony as follows:

[Father] testified that on November 6, 2022, [Child] told him that [Mother] had hit him on the arm that day and that he was afraid of [Mother]. [Father] testified that in the past he has seen bruises on his son “numerous times” and that he has “called DHS a lot of times” even though prior to November 6th, [Child] “wouldn’t come forward and tell [Father] what happened, and so prior to that, [Father] couldn’t do anything.” [Father] introduced photos of [Child’s] arm, which were later admitted into evidence. When asked if the photos of [Child’s] arm were taken on November 6th, [Father] stated that the photos were taken on August 29, 2022, and were unrelated to the filing incident. The first image, marked P-1, shows a close-up of a bruise on [Child’s] forearm. The second photo, marked P- 2, shows a full body image of [Child] standing with his arm outstretched with what appears to be the same bruise as P- 1.

[Father] testified about a text message he received from [Child] in January 2023. [Father] stated that the text message said, “Daddy, please help me,” with crying emojis. … [Father] stated that [Child] told [Father] that he was scared [Mother] was going to “get him” when she got home because he broke a mirror when kicking a ball in the house. [Father] testified that when he picked up [Child] for his custodial time that week, he asked [Child] if [Mother] had hit him. [Father] testified that [Child] told [Father] that [Mother] had not hit him.

[Father] testified that [Child] texted him on January 24, 2023 that he was leaving [Mother’s] house and never coming back. [Father] testified that [Child] sent [Father] a video of [Child] leaving [Mother’s] house walking alone with no coat on. This video was admitted into evidence. [Father]

-2- J-S36031-23

testified that he called [Child] and asked him what was wrong and told [Child] that he was coming. [Father] stated that [Child’s] half-sister[, M.A.-R.,] had, by that time, come out of [Mother’s] house and had taken [Child’s] phone, so [Father] went to [Mother’s] house and knocked on the door. [M.A.-R.] would not let [Father] in, so [Father] called the police. When the police arrived, [Father] asked them to check on [Child]. The police spoke to [Child] and let [Father] speak to [Child]. [Father] testified that [Child] told [Father] that he was afraid [Mother] was going to beat him because he did not zip up his coat after getting off of the school bus. [Father] claimed that when he picked [Child] up for [Father’s] custodial time that Friday, [Child] told [Father] that when [Mother] arrived home on January 24th “she kept hitting him, and smacking him, and hit him in his head” and beat him with a wooden brush. [Father] did not testify to or offer any evidence of physical injury to [Child] as a result of this incident. [Father] testified that he filed a police report the next day. [Mother] objected to the police report being entered into evidence, and the objection was sustained.

[Father] testified that he had a PFA order against [Mother] while they were married. [Father] testified that [Mother] tried to hit [Child] during [the parties’] marriage. [Father] recalled that, more than four years ago, [Mother] “almost smashed [Child’s] arm out of his socket trying to get him away from me when I was protecting [Child] from her.”

(Trial Court Opinion, filed 6/5/23, at 2-4) (internal footnote and record

citations omitted).

Father then called Child to testify. The court began by questioning Child

to determine whether he was competent.

The [court] established that [Child] knew a truth from a lie. The [court] then asked, “So when your mom told you that you wouldn’t be going to school, and you would be coming here; did she tell you why you were coming here?” [Child] answered, “I forgot.” The [court] continued to ask if [Child] knew why he was in court today, and again [Child] responded, “I really don’t remember.” The [court] asked

-3- J-S36031-23

[Child], “Do you think that we’re here to talk about school?” [Child] responded, “Yeah.” The [court] asked [Child] a few more questions, and [Child] continued to indicate that he thought he was in court to talk about school.

(Id. at 4) (internal record citations omitted).

The court found Child incompetent to testify. Nevertheless, the court

gave Father a last chance to establish competence. Father’s counsel asked

Child if Child knew where he was, and Child shook his head to indicate that he

did not know. (See N.T. PFA Hearing, 2/28/23, at 57). Counsel asked if Child

knew if he was in a courtroom, and Child nodded his head to indicate that he

did know. (Id. at 57-58). Counsel asked if Child knew why he was in the

courtroom, and child shook his head to indicate that he did not know. (Id. at

58). Counsel asked if anyone told Child why he was in court, and Child said,

“No.” (Id.) Following counsel’s questions, the court excused Child from the

courtroom. Before Child left the courtroom, the court permitted counsel to

ask Child one more question, and counsel asked whether Child was afraid

“right now.” (Id. at 59). Child shook his head to indicate he was not afraid.

(Id.)

Thereafter, Mother testified that she “never struck [Child].” (Id. at 65).

When asked if she knew how Child got bruises on his arm, Mother noted that

“[Child] is a wild child. He jumps off things and, you know, jumps around.

This is how he got those bruises, I’m assuming.” (Id. at 60). Mother admitted

that she suffers from a “mood disorder,” but she insisted that it does not cause

her to “go into a fit of rage.” (Id. at 63-64). Mother then called M.A.-R., her

-4- J-S36031-23

13-year-old child from another relationship, who denied seeing any conduct

by Mother that threatened Child’s safety. At the conclusion of the hearing,

the court found that Father had not met his burden of proof. Consequently,

the court vacated the temporary PFA order and dismissed the action without

prejudice.

On March 20, 2023, Father timely filed a notice of appeal. That same

day, the court ordered Father to file a Pa.R.A.P.

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