Tarn, J. v. Baker, K.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 2022
Docket115 WDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tarn, J. v. Baker, K. (Tarn, J. v. Baker, K.) 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
Tarn, J. v. Baker, K., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A15044-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

JESSICA E. TARN N/K/A JESSICA E. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF NOVAK : PENNSYLVANIA : Appellant : : : v. : : : No. 115 WDA 2022 KENNETH BAKER :

Appeal from the Order Entered December 22, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Domestic Relations at No(s): No. 1103 of 2010-D

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

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED: October 20, 2022

Jessica E. Tarn, n/k/a Jessica E. Novak (“Mother”), appeals from the

trial court’s order which relinquished jurisdiction of this child custody action to

a Missouri court, where Kenneth Baker (“Father”) now resides. We affirm.

Mother and Father are the parents of B.B. (“Child”), a son who was born

in Pennsylvania in August 2007. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 7. In 2010, Mother

and Father, who never married, stopped living together. See id. at 46.

Mother obtained a Protection from Abuse (“PFA”) order against Father and

filed a custody complaint. See id. at 34. Mother and Father entered into a

consent order that granted Mother primary physical custody of Child. See

Trial Court Order, 10/4/10. Mother and Father later reconciled and despite

the custody order lived together with Child on and off at Mother’s parents’

(“Maternal Grandparents’”) residence. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 6-7. J-A15044-22

Mother and Father separated again in 2016. See id. at 8. Father filed

a motion to modify the consent order. See Father’s Petition to Modify Custody

Order, 12/22/15. Following conciliation, the trial court entered an order (“the

custody order”) maintaining Mother’s primary physical custody of Child during

the school year and Father’s partial physical custody of Child on most

weekends and other agreed-upon periods. During the summer, Mother and

Father shared custody in alternating week-long blocks. The custody order

prohibited either parent from relocating with Child without the agreement of

the other or approval of the trial court, but permitted them to agree upon

different periods of custody or parenting arrangements. See Custody Order,

2/10/16, at 3-4.

After the entry of the custody order, the parties reconciled and lived

with Maternal Grandparents. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 9. Mother and Father

dispute what occurred next. Mother claimed that Father took Child to his

parents’ (“Paternal Grandparents’”) residence for a week in June 2019, as the

custody order permitted, but refused to return Child when the week ended.

See id. at 10. Father claimed that he moved out of Mother’s parents’ home

in June 2019, due to Mother’s drug abuse,1 and volatility between him and

Maternal Grandfather, and between Mother and Maternal Grandmother. See

id. at 57-58, 69, 73-76, 82. He said that when he told Maternal Grandmother

____________________________________________

1Mother testified that she and Father were both heroin users. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 19.

-2- J-A15044-22

he was leaving, Child insisted upon leaving with him, and they moved to live

with Paternal Grandparents. See id. at 57-58, 74-75. Regardless which

version of events was more accurate, the parties agree that Mother has not

seen Child since Father took Child from the home in June 2019. See id. at

22, 61.

Mother and Father blamed each other for Mother’s lack of contact with

Child. Mother admitted that she did not call Father, Child, or Paternal

Grandparents after Child left, see id. at 25, but asserted she was afraid of

Father and has been since she obtained a PFA order against him in 2010. See

id. at 13. To avoid dealing with Father, Mother testified that she messaged

Child on Facebook, but never got a response. See id.2 Father claimed that

Mother was on drugs at the time,3 changed cell phones frequently, making her

difficult to contact, and she made no attempts to contact him or Child. See

id. at 57-58, 69, 73-76, 82.

In July 2019, Maternal Grandmother drove to Paternal Grandparents’

residence and attempted to pick Child up to take him to an eye doctor’s

appointment. She testified that Father prevented Child from leaving with her.

See id. at 40-41. Father testified that when Maternal Grandmother came in

2Father testified that Child does not have a Facebook account. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 63.

3Mother testified that she had been sober for seven months at the time of the hearing, i.e., since approximately May 2021. See N.T., 12/22/21, at 19.

-3- J-A15044-22

July 2019 to take Child to the eye doctor, Child said he did not want to go

because he was afraid Maternal Grandmother would not return him to Father.

See id. at 80.

Father testified that Child called Mother multiple times to try to visit her

after they moved out but Mother did not answer. See id. at 60, 75. Father

asserted that he also tried to call Mother several times, but she did not answer,

nor did she attempt to call him or Child by phone or reach out to Father on

his Facebook account. See id. at 60-62, 75-76.

In August 2020, Father, Child, and Paternal Grandparents moved to

Pulaski County, Missouri without notifying Mother or notifying the trial court

as required by the consent order4 (although Father said he tried to call her).

See id. at 57, 65-66, 71, 76-77. Father testified that Child has since attended

eighth grade and part of ninth grade in Missouri, where he has an eye doctor,

friends, and many relatives with whom he is close. See id. at 47-50, 54-55,

61-62, 85. Father testified that Child does not want to return to Pennsylvania

and has threatened to run away if forced to return. See id. at 60-62, 65-66,

75-76. Father testified that Mother did not attempt to contact him between

the time he moved out with Child in June 2019 and the time he moved to

Missouri in August 2020. See id. at 62.

4The consent order required a party proposing relocation to comply with 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5337(c)(1), (2)(i), which requires notification of relocation to every other individual who has custody rights to a child by written notice sent by certified mail, return receipt requested.

-4- J-A15044-22

In September 2020, Maternal Grandmother saw a notice in the

newspaper that Paternal Grandparents sold their house in Pennsylvania. See

id. at 39. She told Mother about the notice in late December 2020. See id.

at 22. With research help from family members, Mother learned in August

2021, that Father and Child had moved to Missouri. See id. at 15, 26, 39.

As of December 2021, neither Mother nor Maternal Grandparents had

seen Child since he and Father left the shared family home in June 2019, other

than the time Maternal Grandmother attempted to take Child to a doctor’s

appointment. See id. at 21-22, 42, 61, 81. Mother testified that Child called

her sometime after he left Paternal Grandparents’ home, but Father

interrupted the call and screamed at her.5 See id. at 13-14. Mother did not

call Father, Child, or Paternal Grandparents after Child left in June 2019, and

did not go to see Child at the karate studio where she knew he studied. See

id. at 21-22, 25, 30-31.

On October 27, 2021, Mother filed an “Emergency Petition for Special

Relief for Custody/Motion for Contempt” (“Emergency Petition”), stating that

Father took Child to Missouri without her consent or court approval in violation

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