In Re: Adoption of: B.N.M., a Minor ( 2016 )


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  • J-S66001-16
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: ADOPTION OF: B.N.M., A MINOR            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    APPEAL OF: D.M.M.
    No. 336 MDA 2016
    Appeal from the Decree January 29, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County
    Orphans' Court at No(s): 83789
    BEFORE: BOWES, PANELLA AND JENKINS, JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                        FILED OCTOBER 19, 2016
    D.M.M. (“Great Aunt”) appeals pro se from the January 29, 2016 order
    denying her petition to adopt her now-five-year-old niece, B.N.M.1      We
    affirm.
    B.N.M. was born during October 2011.        She was premature and
    addicted to methadone as a consequence of her mother’s drug use during
    pregnancy.2 T.M. (“Mother”) inaccurately identified her long-term paramour
    ____________________________________________
    1
    On the same date, the orphans’ court entered a separate order denying a
    competing petition for B.N.M.’s adoption filed by the child’s paternal
    grandmother. We address that appeal in a separate writing.
    2
    B.N.M. suffers from Bell’s palsy, exotropia, and delayed speech and motor
    development.
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    (“Legal Father”) as B.N.M.’s father on the child’s birth certificate; however,
    subsequent DNA tests results confirmed that A.L. (“Father”) was the birth
    father.   Although the pair have never been in a committed relationship,
    Mother and Father have two children: B.N.M. and E.M., a now-seven-year-
    old boy born during May 2009. Father’s mother (“Grandmother”), assumed
    custody of E.M. when the child was one year old.
    Berks County Child and Youth Services (“BCCYS”) became involved
    with the family during July 2013, in response to the drug use and
    homelessness of Mother and Legal Father.           Mother and Legal Father
    consented to B.N.M.’s thirty-day placement with BCCYS and requested that
    the child be placed with Legal Father’s acquaintances, C.M. and T.M. (“Foster
    Parents”), who are the adoptive parents.
    On September 4, 2013, the juvenile court adjudicated B.N.M.
    dependent and continued placement with Foster Parents.         While there is
    some dispute about Grandmother’s initial commitment to care for B.N.M.
    when BCCYS first interceded, the record reveals that, when Grandmother
    presented as a kinship resource, Great Aunt supported her sister’s claim.
    Great Aunt, an experienced foster parent who is affiliated with a support
    group that BCCYS considers adversarial, did not present herself as a kinship
    resource until after it became obvious that BCCYS had formed its preference
    that Foster Parents act as B.N.M.’s placement resource. Great Aunt is known
    to BCCYS and has a history of contentious litigation with the agency.
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    During the subsequent dependency proceedings, the juvenile court
    reaffirmed B.N.M.’s placement with Foster Parents “as she was thriving in
    that environment and Mother continued to move from rehab to jail to a
    psychiatric hospital.” Trial Court Opinion, 4/15/15, at 4.      Great Aunt
    accompanied Grandmother to some of the permanency hearings and
    attended at least one of the supervised visitations with B.N.M. in
    Grandmother’s stead.
    On December 7, 2013, Father relinquished his parental rights to
    B.N.M., and informed the court of his preference that Foster Parents adopt
    his daughter.   On November 26, 2014, the orphans’ court terminated the
    parental rights of Mother and Legal Father. Thereafter, Grandmother, Great
    Aunt, and Foster Parents filed competing petitions to adopt B.N.M. Following
    separate hearings on each of the petitions, during which BCCYS and the
    guardian ad litem tendered their respective preferences for Foster Parents,
    the orphans’ court entered separate orders denying Grandmother’s and
    Great Aunt’s petitions. The orphans’ court granted Foster Parents’ petition
    and subsequently entered an adoption decree in their favor.
    On February 24, 2016, Great Aunt filed a timely appeal from the order
    denying her adoption petition contemporaneously with a concise statement
    of errors complained of on appeal leveling six issues. On appeal, she pares
    those complaints down to the following three questions for our review:
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    A. Whether the [trial] court committed an abuse of discretion by
    denying [Great] [A]unt's petition to adopt [B.N.]M. where [she]
    is a licensed therapudic [sic] foster parent in the state of
    Pennsylvania, and all evidence the agency used against appellant
    was previously dismissed by the Commonwealth Court with
    prejudice.[3]
    B. Whether the [trial] court improperly refused to consider the
    countless errors on the part of the agency where the agency had
    been cited for these errors by DHS and where these errors will
    have [lifelong] consequences for the minor child.
    C. Whether the [trial] court placed undue weight upon the
    opinion of the guardian ad litem . . . without considering the long
    history of [her] errors and strong evidence of court-documented
    bias [that was] stipulated on the record . . . and where [the
    guardian ad litem] intentionally interfered with the relationship
    between the child’s extended family and child.
    Appellant’s brief at 3.
    Appellate review of an adoption decree is as follows:
    When reviewing a decree entered by the Orphans’ court, this
    Court must determine whether the record is free from legal error
    and the court's factual findings are supported by the evidence.
    Because the Orphans’ court sits as the fact-finder, it determines
    the credibility of the witnesses, and on review, we will not
    reverse its credibility determinations absent an abuse of that
    discretion.
    ____________________________________________
    3
    Notwithstanding her reference to an unidentified Commonwealth Court
    case decision, Great Aunt does not discuss the case in the argument section
    of her brief corresponding to this issue. To the extent that Great Aunt
    intended to refer to our decision in In the Interest of D.P., 
    87 A.3d 876
    (Pa.Super. 2013) (unpublished memorandum, filed October 4, 2013), Great
    Aunt’s successful appeal from a pro-BCCYS order in an unrelated case, we
    discuss that case briefly in addressing her law-of-the-case argument in the
    third issue.
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    In re E.M.I., 
    57 A.3d 1278
    , 1284 (Pa.Super. 2012) (citation omitted). Our
    scope of review of the order denying a petition for adoption is limited to the
    testimony and evidence adduced during the evidentiary hearings relating to
    the competing petitions for adoption.      In re Adoption of Farabelli, 
    333 A.2d 846
    , 849 (Pa. 1975) (“scope of our review on this issue is limited to
    consideration of the testimony and the determination as to whether the
    Court's findings are supported by competent evidence”).
    The polestar of adoption proceedings is the best interest of the
    adoptee. Pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 2902(a), the trial court must determine
    whether the proposed adoption would promote the child’s needs and welfare.
    That proviso is as follows:
    If satisfied that the statements made in the petition are
    true, that the needs and welfare of the person proposed to be
    adopted will be promoted by the adoption and that all
    requirements of this part have been met, the court shall enter a
    decree so finding and directing that the person proposed to be
    adopted shall have all the rights of a child and heir of the
    adopting parent or parents and shall be subject to the duties of a
    child to him or them.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 2902(a).         Moreover, in § 2724, relating to testimony and
    investigations, the Adoption Act further highlights that the child’s best
    interest is the only relevant factor in determining whether to grant or deny
    an adoption petition. Specifically, § 2724(b) provides in pertinent part, “In
    any case, the age, sex, health, social and economic status or racial, ethnic or
    religious background of the child or adopting parents shall not preclude an
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    adoption but the court shall decide its desirability on the basis of the
    physical, mental and emotional needs and welfare of the child.
    Instantly, Great Aunt’s first two claims assail BCCYS for what she
    characterizes as the “agency’s neglect of clear and unambiguous laws”
    regarding the placement of dependent children. Appellant’s brief at 12. She
    also paraphrases literature regarding the purported benefits gained from
    children knowing their biological family and interprets those articles as
    endorsing her generalized proposition that adopted children “fear rejection,
    have trouble making commitments, and avoid intimacy.” Id. at 16. In sum,
    Great Aunt chastises BCCYS and the juvenile court for failing to prioritize her
    or Grandmother’s placement applications during the dependency proceeding.
    She concludes, “ignoring all the literature . . . and . . . the law favoring
    keeping [children] with [their] family whenever possible, [BCCYS] placed
    [B.N.M.] with [strangers] . . . [a]nd then, spent the [next] year refusing to
    consider placement with relatives[.]” Id. at 19. For the reasons that follow,
    no relief is due.
    Great Aunt’s arguments regarding the agency’s missteps during the
    dependency proceedings miss the mark. First, since our scope of review is
    limited to the testimony and evidence adduced during the adoption hearings,
    the agency’s stewardship of the dependency action is not before us at this
    juncture.   See Farabelli, supra.    Accordingly, the assertions that do not
    implicate the orphans’ court hearing or its determination whether the
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    proposed adoption would promote B.N.M.’s best interest fail as a matter of
    law.
    Moreover, Great Aunt’s position is premised upon the purported
    principle that she is entitled to adopt B.N.M. as a consequence of her status
    as a biological relative. A petitioner’s genetic relationship with the child is a
    relevant consideration that the orphans’ court must address in deciding to
    grant or deny a petition for adoption. In re Adoption of D.M.H., 
    682 A.2d 315
    , 319 (Pa.Super. 1996) (“the trial court properly evaluated the familial
    relationship between grandmother and child by making the relationship a
    relevant, but not a controlling, consideration.”). Notwithstanding the respect
    that the orphans’ courts must have for the biological relationship, the best
    interest of the child remains the guiding principle of adoption proceedings.
    This reality severely undercuts Great Aunt’s premise that, as a genetic
    relation to B.N.M., her adoption petition was ideal, or at least superior to
    Foster Parents’ petition.
    In rejecting Great Aunt’s petition, the trial court considered the degree
    of consanguinity between Great Aunt and B.N.M. and determined that the
    evidence adduced during the hearing demonstrated that the proposed
    adoption was not in the child’s best interest. The court explained,
    Although Great Aunt may have been willing and ready to
    adopt B.N.M. there was little credible evidence and testimony
    presented to allow this [c]ourt to determine that Great Aunt is
    capable of caring for B.N.M., nor that it is in the best interest of
    B.N.M. to be adopted by her. The fact that Great Aunt is or is not
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    a licensed therapeutic foster parent is but one piece of evidence
    in the overall determination as to B.N.M.'s best interest. In this
    case, the [c]ourt found substantial and compelling reasons to
    grant the petition of the Foster Parents for adoption over Great
    Aunt's petition. Great Aunt’s blood relationship to B.N.M. while
    relevant, was not enough to overcome major concerns over her
    suitability to raise B.N.M. in her home.
    Trial Court Opinion, 4/15/16, at 26.
    The certified record sustains the orphans’ court’s determination that
    Great Aunt’s evidence was lacking. During the adoption hearing, Great Aunt
    neglected to proffer evidence to demonstrate that the proposed adoption
    would promote B.N.M.’s physical, mental, and emotional needs and welfare.
    The certified record reveals that Great Aunt dedicated her case-in-chief to
    degrading BCCYS, the guardian ad litem, and the juvenile court for their
    respective shortcomings. She failed to present any evidence regarding her
    relationship with B.N.M. or provide a plan to assimilate the young child into a
    family that, if she ever knew, she had not seen in more than one year.
    Likewise, Great Aunt did not discuss the conditions of her home, inform the
    orphans’ court about prior allegations of abuse leveled against her husband,4
    ____________________________________________
    4
    BCCYS introduced evidence during the adoption hearing that Great Aunt’s
    daughter and two of Great Aunt’s former stepchildren previously claimed to
    be victims of abuse. N.T., 4/15/16, at 44; CYS Exhibit 3 at 3, 12-21. Great
    Aunt vehemently denied the veracity of those allegations and noted that this
    Court subsequently vacated the juvenile court order granting BCCYS’s
    request for an offender evaluation in an unrelated case that implicated those
    allegations. Great Aunt also disputed the authenticity of a police report that
    BCCYS introduced to establish that she filed a petition for protection from
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    or explain how she intended to satisfy B.N.M.’s special needs. At most, Aunt
    referenced her license for therapeutic foster care and noted that she
    possessed a home study that was completed in conjunction with the 2014
    adoption of her son. Significantly, however, that home study, which was not
    performed by BCCYS, indicated that Great Aunt’s home was an appropriate
    placement resource for a non-special-needs boy under five years old.         In
    contrast, B.N.M. is a girl with special needs insofar as she suffers from Bell’s
    Palsy and delayed speech and motor development. Thus, the home study
    that Great Aunt relied upon was not only stale, but also of questionable
    value in relation to her proposed adoption of B.N.M.          For all of these
    reasons, Great Aunt’s first two arguments are unpersuasive.
    The crux of Great Aunt’s final argument is unclear. Her statement of
    questions presented declares that the trial court improperly deferred its
    judicial decision-making authority to the guardian ad litem; however, her
    argument is replete with partial references to citations that the Department
    of Human Services purportedly issued against BCCYS, the orphans’ court’s
    credibility determinations, and the juvenile court’s supposed dismissal of
    allegations relating to an emergency PFA order that she filed against her
    husband during 2002. Great Aunt does not fashion these jumbled assertions
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    abuse against her husband during 2002.            N.T., 4/15/16, at 46-47; CYS
    Exhibit 3 at 2.
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    into a cogent argument. Instead, she invokes principles of stare decisis and
    baldly asserts, “The very courts that spent extensive time examining all of
    the same allegations and same evidence against [her] determined [that]
    there was no merit to the allegations.” Appellant’s brief at 20.
    To the extent that Great Aunt continues to maintain that the orphans’
    court was too deferential toward the guardian ad litem, we observe that the
    court explained that it considered the guardian ad litem credible and “[a]ny
    bias perceived by Great Aunt appears to the [c]ourt to be due to the fact
    that the Guardian’s Report . . . did not recommend that Great Aunt’s
    [p]etition for [a]doption be granted. The Great Aunt, herself, has an obvious
    bias against BCCYS.” See Trial Court Opinion, 4/15/16 at 25. In sum, the
    orphans’ court concluded, “[w]hile . . . [it] . . . incorporated the Guardian’s
    opinions and reports into its decision, the [c]ourt was not unduly influenced
    by the Guardian and did not blindly follow her recommendation. The [c]ourt
    granted Foster Parents’ petition after much careful consideration and
    weighing of all the relevant evidence.”       
    Id.
     As our review of the certified
    record supports the orphans’ court’s characterization of its deliberations, we
    reject Great Aunt’s claim that it delegated its judicial authority.
    Furthermore, as to the merits of the orphans’ court’s decision-making,
    we note that, to the extent that Great Aunt’s unexplained references to res
    judicata, collateral estoppel, and stare decisis invoke this Court’s 2013
    memorandum opinion discussing the prior abuse allegations raised against
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    her husband, she misstates our holding in that case.     In the Interest of
    D.P., 
    87 A.3d 876
     (Pa.Super. 2013) (unpublished memorandum), involved
    Great Aunt’s appeal from a juvenile court order that directed her husband to
    undergo a sexual offender evaluation based upon a July 2012 report that
    alleged he committed inappropriate physical discipline and sexual conduct
    against the family’s children ten to twenty years earlier. While Great Aunt
    proclaims that this Court determined that the underlying allegations of abuse
    were unfounded, in reality, we held that the juvenile court order was legally
    unsupportable.   Specifically, we determined that, in light of the applicable
    statutory framework, the allegations of physical abuse were stale and the
    juvenile court neglected to specifically identify the alleged sex abuse in the
    order directing the evaluations.   We stated, “in light of the [fact that the]
    trial court’s finding of probable cause [refers] only [to] inappropriate
    physical discipline . . . [,] there is no basis for the trial court to order a
    sexual offender evaluation.   . . .    A sexual offender evaluation certainly
    would not reveal any information about whether inappropriate physical
    discipline did in fact occur.” In the Interest of D.P., supra, (unpublished
    memorandum at 11-12) (footnote omitted).          As this Court vacated the
    juvenile court order for reasons unrelated to the veracity of the underlying
    allegations of physical and sexual abuse, we did not make a merits
    determination regarding the factual accuracy of those assertions. Thus, we
    reject Great Aunt’s claim that our holding in In the Interest of D.P., is the
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    law of the case regarding whether the allegations of abuse were unfounded.
    No relief is due.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/19/2016
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Document Info

Docket Number: 336 MDA 2016

Filed Date: 10/19/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021