Zoccole v. Zoccole

751 A.2d 248, 2000 Pa. Super. 128, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 751 A.2d 248 (Zoccole v. Zoccole) 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
Zoccole v. Zoccole, 751 A.2d 248, 2000 Pa. Super. 128, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391 (Pa. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

TODD, J.:

¶ 1 Patrick Zoccole (Father) appeals the trial court’s order granting Michelle Zoccole (Mother) the right to relocate with the parties’ children to her new husband’s home twenty-five miles away but within the same county as Father’s residence. This case presents the question of whether an intra-county move by a parent who has primary physical custody, which does not involve a modification to an existing custody order, triggers this court’s analysis under Gruber v. Gruber, 400 Pa.Super. 174, 583 A.2d 434 (1990). For the reasons that follow, we conclude that a Gruber analysis is not triggered in this situation and we affirm.

¶2 Michelle and Patrick Zoccole separated following eleven years of marriage. The parties ultimately divorced five years later, after protracted and acrimonious litigation. A 1997 custody order granted Mother primary physical custody of the parties’ two daughters, Rachel, born August 7, 1988, and Elizabeth, born July 16, 1990. The order granted Father partial physical custody of the girls for approximately the first third of each month, as well as certain enumerated holidays. At that time, the parties lived within less than one mile of each other in Sharpsville, Mercer County. Mother and the girls lived in a small rental property. It is undisputed [250]*250that Father remained involved in the lives of his daughters, attending school meetings and sports activities regularly. It is further undisputed that despite a difficult relationship between the parents, they kept their conflicts between themselves and shielded the children well.

¶ 3 After the parties separated, Mother enrolled in and completed a two-year physical therapist assistant program at Penn State University. During this time, she began a relationship with Thomas L. Randall, whom she intended to marry once her divorce from Father was final. Randall lived in Jamestown, also in Mercer County, twenty-five miles from Sharps-ville. Mother openly expressed that she and the children planned to move into Randall’s residence following her marriage to him.

¶ 4 Following entry of the Divorce Decree in April of 1998, Mother petitioned the trial court for permission to relocate to Randall’s residence in Jamestown. Father opposed the Petition, alleging that Mother’s request would not be in, the best interest of the children and that his contact with them would be negatively impacted by such a move. He further argued that the girls should not be uprooted from their community, friends and school system.

¶ 5 At the hearing on this Petition, Mother testified that she had been working as a physical therapy assistant at Sharon General Hospital, but had secured new, more advantageous private employment in Greenville, near Jamestown. The new position afforded her better hours to accommodate the girls’ school schedule. She further testified that Randall was conducting extensive renovations on his residence tq accommodate her and the girls.

¶ 6 The trial judge, in granting Mother’s petition, suggested a compromise that would continue to afford the children a Catholic education, which was important to both parties, and would prevent a lengthy commute for the children or either parent. He proposed that the girls be enrolled in St. Michael’s School in Greenville, located halfway between Sharpsville and Jamestown. In this way, the custody order in effect could remain intact and Father’s partial custody would remain undisturbed.1

¶ 7 Our scope of review of child custody orders is broad:

[T]he appellate court is not bound by the deductions or inferences made by the trial court from its findings of fact, nor must the reviewing court accept a finding that has no competent evidence to support it.... However, this broad scope of review does not vest in the reviewing court the duty or the privilege of making its own independent determination .... Thus, an appellate court is empowered to determine whether the trial court’s incontrovertible factual findings support its factual conclusions, but it may not interfere with those conclusions unless they are unreasonable in view of the trial court’s factual findings; ■ and thus, represent a gross abuse of discretion.

Kaneski v. Kaneski, 413 Pa.Super. 173, 604 A.2d 1075, 1077 (1992) (citing McMillen v. McMillen, 529 Pa. 198, 602 A.2d 845 (1992)).

¶ 8 In any analysis of a change in custody, the paramount concern must be the best interest of the children. The parties, as well as the trial judge, state that the standard to be applied by a trial court in determining under what circumstances a parent who has primary physical custody may relocate with the children was enunciated by this Court in the three-pronged test set forth in Gruber, 400 Pa.Super. 174, 583 A.2d 434. Under Gru-ber, we specified the following factors for consideration:

(1) the potential advantages of the proposed move and the likelihood that [251]*251the move would substantially improve the quality of life for the custodial parent and the children and is not the result of a momentary whim on the part of the custodial parent;
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(2) the integrity of the motives of both the custodial and non-custodial parent in either seeking the move or seeking to prevent it; [and]
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(3) the availability of realistic, substitute visitation arrangements which will adequately foster an ongoing relationship between the child and the non-custodial parent.

Id. at 439. This test has been widely applied. See, e.g., Zalenko v. White, 701 A.2d 227, 228 (Pa.Super.1997); Kaneski v. Kaneski, 413 Pa.Super. 173, 604 A.2d 1075, 1077 (1992).

¶ 9 While noting that this case involved an intra-county relocation, the trial court nonetheless applied Gruber in approving Mother’s proposed move. Appellant argues, citing Gruber, that the lower court erred in permitting Mother to relocate a distance of twenty-five miles to Jamestown, despite the fact that the children would remain within the same county and under the jurisdiction of the same trial court. He argues that there will be no distinct and separate advantages to the children from the move, as defined in Gru-ber, and that, in fact, detrimental effects will flow from the relocation. Father lists as such effects the loss of extended family and community, familiar schools, friends and accessibility to him.

¶ 10 We have examined Gruber and its progeny to determine whether a Gruber analysis is triggered in this case. We note that a pervasive theme throughout the published decisions of this Court relying on Gruber is the desire of the custodial parent to remove the children, at minimum, outside the county where the noncustodial parent resides, thereby also removing them from the trial court’s jurisdiction.

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Zoccole v. Zoccole
751 A.2d 248 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
751 A.2d 248, 2000 Pa. Super. 128, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zoccole-v-zoccole-pasuperct-2000.