S.B. v. S.S. Apl of: S.S.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 22, 2020
Docket39 WAP 2019
StatusPublished

This text of S.B. v. S.S. Apl of: S.S. (S.B. v. S.S. Apl of: S.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.B. v. S.S. Apl of: S.S., (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-29-2020] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

S.B. : No. 39 WAP 2019 : : Appeal from the Order of the v. : Superior Court entered December : 24, 2018 at No. 753 WDA 2018, : affirming the Order of the Court of S.S. : Common Pleas of Allegheny County : entered April 27, 2018 at No. FD-15- : 008183-10. APPEAL OF: S.S., RICHARD DUCOTE, : ESQUIRE, AND VICTORIA MCINTYRE, : ARGUED: May 27, 2020 ESQUIRE :

OPINION

JUSTICE BAER DECIDED: DECEMBER 22, 2020 In this appeal, we examine an order entered in a custody matter that places

restrictions on the speech of a parent and her counsel to determine whether the order

violates the right to free speech as guaranteed by the First Amendment to the United

States Constitution and Article I, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Finding that

the order restricted only the manner of speech and not the content, the Superior Court

upheld the order, concluding that the restriction of speech furthered the important

governmental interest of protecting the psychological well-being and the privacy of the

child at the center of the custody dispute. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the

judgment of the Superior Court. I. Background

At the heart of this case is a protracted and contentious battle between S.B.

(“Father”) and S.S. (“Mother”) over the custody of their son, F.B.H. (“Child”), who was

born in 2006.1 In 2007, Father adopted Child with his first wife, who died in 2008, when

Child was two years old. For the next four years, Father raised Child on his own, with

continued support from his first wife’s extended family.

In September of 2012, Father married Mother, who adopted Child in 2013. The

marital union was short-lived, as later that year, Mother and Father separated and entered

into a custody agreement.2 In June of 2015, Father filed an action seeking custody of

Child, and Mother later counterclaimed for primary custody. Following a hearing on

October 9, 2015, an interim custody order was entered, which expanded Father’s custody

time. Five days later, Mother filed a protection from abuse (“PFA”) petition on behalf of

herself and Child, alleging that Father had sexually abused Child. Accordingly, the trial

court entered a temporary PFA order, limiting Father’s contact with Child.

The trial court subsequently conducted a five-day trial to address the claims set

forth in the PFA petition. Discrediting the allegations of sexual abuse, the trial court

dismissed Mother’s PFA petition, vacated the temporary PFA order, and granted Father

supervised partial custody. On February 2, 2016, a few weeks after the trial court

scheduled a custody trial for later that year, Mother filed a second PFA petition, again

alleging Father’s sexual abuse of Child. The trial court subsequently denied the second

PFA petition.

1 In an effort to protect Child’s identity, we set forth only those facts necessary to resolve this appeal. 2 The precise details of the custody agreement are not relevant to this appeal.

[J-29-2020] - 2 On May 20, 2016, the trial court commenced the custody trial, which spanned over

twenty-three days, and ultimately concluded on November 18, 2016. At trial, the parties

presented twenty-four witnesses, including Mother, Father, Child, and Child’s Guardian

ad litem, and the trial court also admitted nearly two hundred exhibits. On December 12,

2016, the trial court entered an order, which the court amended on December 14, 2016,

granting Father sole legal and physical custody of Child.3 The orders also directed Father

and Child to participate in the Family Bridges Workshop for Troubled and Alienated

Parent-Child Relationships, and ordered Mother not to have any contact or partial custody

with Child for a period of ninety days.

In an opinion dated December 22, 2016, the trial court explained its ruling and set

forth detailed findings of fact. Relevant here, the trial court concluded that Father did not

sexually abuse Child. The court reached this conclusion after evaluating Child’s

testimony in open court; reviewing videos of forensic interviews in which Child made

detailed allegations of purported sexual abuse; reading Child’s testimony in the PFA

proceeding, which had been introduced into the record of the custody trial; listening to the

testimony of experts who evaluated Father; and considering the testimony of witnesses

who had observed the nature of the relationships between both Father and Child and

Mother and Child, before and after the allegations were made. The trial court explained

that the details of Child’s in-court descriptions of the alleged sexual abuse were not

credible and that the timing of the allegations were suspect, i.e., they arose shortly after

Father’s partial custody time had been expanded.

To be precise, the trial court did not believe that Child deliberately lied. Rather,

the court reasoned that Child may have believed that abuse occurred years earlier, but

3 At the time the trial court entered its final custody order, it had been almost one year since Father was able to have contact with Child. See Trial Court Opinion, 1/30/2017, at 6.

[J-29-2020] - 3 Child’s testimony contained statements that were “simply not true and which [were]

contradicted by other credible evidence.” Trial Court Opinion, 12/22/2016, at 7. The trial

court further relied upon expert testimony, establishing that Father “is a low risk to

perpetrate physical, psychological, emotional, or sexual abuse.” Id. at 8. Finally, the trial

court concluded that Mother had isolated Child from everything he knew before she

adopted him, and alienated Child from Father, as well as Child’s extended family. Id. at

53, 55.

The Superior Court affirmed the trial court’s custody order in a memorandum

opinion filed on October 20, 2017, holding that the record supported the trial court’s

findings that Mother alienated Child from Father, and that Father did not sexually abuse

Child. Mother filed a petition for allowance of appeal in this Court, which we denied on

February 22, 2018. S.B. v. S.S., 182 A.3d 430 (Pa. 2018).

Meanwhile, on February 7, 2018, a few weeks prior to this Court’s denial of

allocatur in the custody matter, Mother’s attorney Richard Ducote, Esquire, held a press

conference on the online video-sharing platform, YOUTube, expressing Mother’s fervent

disagreement with the trial court’s findings and orders in the custody matter. Mother has

described the press conference as a means to draw “attention to child sexual abuse

victims everywhere and the role of the courts in granting custody of children to their

identified abusers.” Brief for Appellant at 5. According to Mother, “[a]dvocates and

parents from various organizations around the country gathered at the press conference

to shed light upon and to educate the public about the ways that family courts nationwide

have been failing child abuse victims, as well as to highlight pending legislation in the

United States House of Representatives and the Pennsylvania legislature.” Id. at 5-6.

While Child was not named during the press conference, Attorney Ducote

identified Mother by name and, notably, included a link providing access to a reproduction

[J-29-2020] - 4 of Child’s in-court testimony and forensic interview, during which Child sets forth detailed

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