Y.A. v. Z.L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
Docket504 MDA 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Y.A. v. Z.L. (Y.A. v. Z.L.) 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
Y.A. v. Z.L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A22022-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

Y.A. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

Z.L.

Appellant No. 504 MDA 2015

Appeal from the Order Entered February 25, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Civil Division at No(s): CI-14-06413

BEFORE: BOWES, J., JENKINS, J., and PLATT, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY JENKINS, J.: FILED AUGUST 31, 2015

Appellant Z.L. (“Mother”) appeals from the order entered February 25,

2015 in the Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas, which denied her

relocation petition. We quash this appeal as interlocutory.

The trial court sets forth the relevant facts and procedural history of

this appeal as follows:

[Y.A. (“Father”)] and [Mother] are former romantic partners that have one child together, [Y.A.] (DOB:[2]/14) (“Child”). The parties became a couple when they were both young and Mother began living with Father while she was still in high school. The parties began living with each other in December 2012, living with Father’s family for a

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A22022-15

month and then Mother’s family for a month[1] before they were able to get their own place in February 2013.

Mother became pregnant shortly after they moved out on their own. Father then lost his job and they decided to move to Lackawanna County because both Mother and Father were able to find full-time employment in the Scranton area with the help of Mother’s step-father’s niece. Prior to [Child’s] birth, Mother stopped working. Both parties testified that this loss of income created a financial struggle for the family. Mother blames Father for struggling to pay the household bills; however, Father testified that he worked long hours at his job, but could not make ends meet.

Mother had [Child] in February 2014. The relationship continued to deteriorate and Mother left Father in March 2014, filed a [protection from abuse (“PFA”)] action in Lackawanna County, and went to go live in a women’s shelter in Lackawanna County. Mother testified that she didn’t immediately go back to her family’s house in Lancaster County because she wanted to try to make it on her own without them. Mother lived in the women’s shelter from March 2014 until May 2014, but eventually, Mother did return to Lancaster County to live with her family.

Both parties introduced evidence that they believe the other party is mentally unstable. Both parties agree that Mother and Father’s relationship deteriorated greatly after they moved to Scranton. Mother testified that Father was mentally and physically abusive when they were in a relationship together and that he threatened to commit suicide after Mother filed the PFA. Father elicited testimony from Mother regarding her mental health diagnoses when she was a teenager. Mother testified that the mental health diagnoses are no longer an issue because she received counselling at that time and is an adult and more mature now.

1 The transcript reflects that the parties lived with Mother’s family first.

-2- J-A22022-15

Mother alleged that the final incident leading up to the PFA occurred as follows:

The last argument that we had, he came from work, he was upset already. And I was mad at him because he was not leaving the bathroom clean. He started throwing diapers to me. And by that time, I have my baby with me on the bed so the diaper was hitting her, too. The diaper wasn’t clean so I started throwing the diapers, I tried to, like, cover myself and I kick him by accident. And he start punching me on my legs. After that, he wanted to take the baby. He didn’t want me to, like, have my baby. He was, like, oh, I want to be with my baby. I’m like, no, you’re being really aggressive right now. I don’t want you with the baby. And he started pulling my hair and grabbing my arm, and I have my baby in my arms to like to let me go with the baby. He just wanted to use her to keep me there. I did, you know what, you can have her. I got into the other bathroom of the house and I called the police. And the police ask him to stay out for the night. He came back, and when he left to work, I called a program that is for women who have been abused and they took me there and I spent there, like, a month.

A final PFA was entered against Father by agreement and without admission. Father sent text messages to Mother in violation of the terms of the April 9, 2014 PFA and was subsequently convicted of an ICC[2] on May 7, 2014. Father’s conviction resulted in being placed on probation for six months in addition to other conditions, such as undergoing a psychological evaluation and attending domestic violence courses. Father began his counseling services in January 2015, directly after his release from incarceration.

In the final PFA dated May 7, 2014, Mother agreed that Father could have supervised physical custody of [Child] ____________________________________________

2 Indirect criminal contempt.

-3- J-A22022-15

for three months and then after three months Father would have unsupervised custody of [Child] every other weekend. Father never started the three months of supervised custody. Father testified that he was never able to exercise supervised custody of [Child] during those first three months because Mother would not do her part to coordinate with the supervisor. Mother maintains that she did her part and that it was Father that did not coordinate with [the supervised visitation center] for supervised custody.

Mother maintains that Father was willfully absent from [Child’s] life. Father maintains that he was precluded from seeing his daughter because of terms of the PFA, Mother’s lack of coordination with the [supervised visitation center] supervisor, and his subsequent incarceration for approximately six months for violating his probation. The court allowed Mother to temporarily relocate to Florida in November 2014, pending this relocation hearing; at that time, Father was incarcerated in Pennsylvania. Mother testified that she wants [Child] to have a meaningful relationship with Father, but seeks to relocate to Florida from Pennsylvania. Mother testified that traveling to Pennsylvania on a regular basis to allow Father to exercise periods of custody would be a great financial hardship for her. Similarly, Father testified that traveling to Florida would be a great financial hardship for him.

Mother testified that living in Florida is better for her and [Child] because Mother was able to secure two jobs in under a month after moving to Florida-the first being a luggage handler at Disney Resorts and the second [is] a part-time position at Golden Corral. Mother testified that she struggled to obtain and/or maintain comparable employment in Lancaster County. Prior to moving to Florida, Mother worked as a housekeeper in a hospital. In Florida, Mother lives with [Child], maternal grandmother, maternal step-grandfather, and Mother’s younger [3] brother. Both maternal grandmother and step- ____________________________________________

3 Mother’s parents and ten-year-old brother decided to move to Florida because of the climate and maternal grandmother’s health. They moved to (Footnote Continued Next Page)

-4- J-A22022-15

grandfather receive social security disability and do not work outside of the home.

Now that Father has been released from incarceration, he is working to regain employment and get back on his feet. Father was unable to pay support for [Child] while he was incarcerated, but will be able to now. Father currently lives with his father and his father’s girlfriend. Father has relatives in Lancaster County, none of which have had the opportunity to form a relationship with [Child].

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Y.A. v. Z.L., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ya-v-zl-pasuperct-2015.