Raymond, K. & Hannis, B. v. Raymond, M.

2022 Pa. Super. 124, 279 A.3d 620
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 2022
Docket1186 MDA 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 2022 Pa. Super. 124 (Raymond, K. & Hannis, B. v. Raymond, M.) 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
Raymond, K. & Hannis, B. v. Raymond, M., 2022 Pa. Super. 124, 279 A.3d 620 (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A10017-22

2022 PA Super 124

KIM RAYMOND AND BRIAN HANNIS : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellants : : : v. : : : MARCY RAYMOND : No. 1186 MDA 2021

Appeal from the Order Entered August 10, 2021, in the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County, Civil Division at No(s): 2021-40327.

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and KING, J.

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED: JULY 20, 2022

In this matter, we must determine whether a third-party can assert a

claim for custody against a child’s guardian, whom the child’s parent selected

as the caregiver upon the parent’s death.

Appellants Kim Raymond and Brian Hannis, the maternal

Grandparents,1 sought custody of their five-year-old granddaughter, M.I. (the

Child). The Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas dismissed their

complaint for lack of standing under the Child Custody Act. See 23 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 5324(4). Specifically, the trial court determined that the Grandparents met

the first two prongs of the statute, but failed to establish that “[n]either parent

has any form of care and control of the child” under Section 5324(4)(iii). The

court determined the Child’s parent exercised a posthumous “form of care and ____________________________________________ 1 The Appellants are the biological maternal grandmother and the step- grandfather of the Child. J-A10017-22

control,” because he had selected Marcy Raymond (the Great-Aunt2) to be the

Child’s guardian upon his death. After careful review, we vacate the order

and remand for further proceedings.

The record discloses a complex factual and procedural history. From

the outset, we clarify that the current dispute is between the Grandparents

and the Great-Aunt. How these parties became the Child’s prospective

caregivers is as follows:

The Child came to the trial court’s attention in 2016 when the

Lackawanna County Office of Children and Family Services initiated

dependency proceedings against the biological parents. When the court

removed the Child from her parents’ care, the court initially placed the Child

with the Great-Aunt for a short time, before ultimately placing her with the

paternal grandparents, Amy and Michael Isernia, Sr. In September 2017, the

Child’s biological mother died. In March 2018, the court terminated the rights

of the Child’s biological father. Following the termination, the paternal

grandparents adopted the Child and became her legal parents. (Hereafter,

we refer to the paternal grandparents as the Adoptive Parents to reflect their

legal status.)

The Adoptive Parents and the Grandparents then entered into a

Voluntary Post-Adoption Contact Agreement pursuant to the Act of Oct. 27,

2010, P.L. 961, No. 101 codified as amended 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2731-2742

____________________________________________ 2 Marcy Raymond is the sister of the biological maternal grandfather, who is

not a party.

-2- J-A10017-22

(commonly referred to as an “Act 101 Agreement”). Under the terms of the

Act 101 Agreement, the Grandparents received eight weeks of annual

visitation, comprising of a two-week block and a six-week summer block.

Two years later, in July 2020, the Adoptive Mother passed away. In

early 2021, Adoptive Father was diagnosed with terminal cancer. This

diagnosis prompted the Grandparents to file an emergency petition for

custody and formal custody complaint against Adoptive Father.3 In their

complaint, the Grandparents sought standing under Section 5324(3)(iii)(B)

and under Section 5324(4) of the Child Custody Act, alleging that the Adoptive

Father’s illness prevented him from caring for the Child. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. §

5324(3)(iii)(B), (4). The motions judge denied the request for emergency

custody but scheduled the underlying custody complaint before a master.

The master held a hearing on April 7, 2021. During the hearing,

Adoptive Father raised the issue of standing; the master apparently then

terminated the proceeding and directed the parties to submit briefs on

standing. See Report and Recommendation, 5/6/21, at *1 (not paginated).

After reviewing the briefs, the master issued a report and recommendation on

May 6, 2021. The master determined many facts were not disputed. The

master concluded that the terms of the Act 101 Agreement governed and that

the Grandparents lacked standing. The master recommended that the ____________________________________________ 3 Typically, a child’s adoption severs the rights of grandparents to seek custody. However, when the child is adopted by another grandparent – as was the case here – the petitioning grandparents retain the right to seek custody. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5326 (“Effect of adoption”).

-3- J-A10017-22

custody complaint be dismissed. The Grandparents filed exceptions before

the trial court.

In May 2021, while those exceptions were pending, the Adoptive Father

died.4 In June 2021, the Great-Aunt filed her own petition for emergency

custody. She retained the same attorneys who represented the Adoptive

Father in the custody action with the Grandparents. The emergency petition

included the caption “In re M.M.I,” and left the docket number blank. The

Great-Aunt alleged that she stood in loco parentis, because the Adoptive

Father had asked her to care for the Child, which she had been doing since

early 2021, when the Adoptive Father was diagnosed with cancer. The Great-

Aunt further alleged that Adoptive Father named her to be the Child’s guardian

in his will.

The trial court granted the Great-Aunt’s emergency petition and

scheduled the matter for a hearing the following week. See Order of Court,

6/3/21. In doing so, the court changed the proposed “In re M.M.I.” caption

to reflect the ongoing litigation between the Grandparents and Adoptive

Father. The court effectively joined the Great-Aunt.5 The Great-Aunt then

____________________________________________ 4 The Grandparents then filed a second emergency petition for custody to reflect the changed circumstances. The court denied this second petition for lack of standing. See Order of Court, 5/21/21. The Grandparents filed for reconsideration, which the court also denied. See Order of Court, 5/24/21. Evidently, the court intended to address the impact of the Adoptive Father’s death on the custody case when it heard the pending exceptions from the Grandparents’ custody complaint.

5 We have amended the caption to reflect the true parties in interest in this

litigation.

-4- J-A10017-22

filed a formal custody complaint the next day, on the same docket as the

pending action, and she served the Grandparents. The Grandparents

contested the Great-Aunt’s complaint, and the court stayed the final hearing,

pending the resolution of Grandparents’ exceptions on the standing issue. See

T.C.O. at 4.

On August 3, the trial court held an oral argument on the exceptions.

The court ultimately concluded that the Grandparents failed to establish

standing under either Section 5324(3) or (4). On August 10, 2021, the court

dismissed the exceptions and adopted the master’s report and

recommendation. The Grandparents appealed.

On appeal, the Grandparents raise an excessive number of errors.6

Many are duplicative, or they are an inaccurate characterization of the trial

court’s rulings, or they represent hypothetical errors depending on our

decision, or they are moot in light of the Adoptive Father’s death.

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2022 Pa. Super. 124, 279 A.3d 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-k-hannis-b-v-raymond-m-pasuperct-2022.