Weliver, J. v. Ortiz, I. ( 2023 )


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  • J-A03019-23
    2023 PA SUPER 37
    JARED P. WELIVER                           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    IRIS M. ORTIZ                              :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 2347 EDA 2022
    Appeal from the Order Entered August 18, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Domestic Relations at No(s): 0C1501502
    BEFORE:      KING, J., SULLIVAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    OPINION BY SULLIVAN, J.:                                 FILED MARCH 8, 2023
    Iris M. Ortiz (“Mother”) appeals from the order granting primary physical
    custody of T.B.W.1 (“Child”) to Jared P. Weliver (“Father”).       After careful
    consideration of the record, we vacate the order and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this decision.
    The following facts are relevant to our disposition and not in dispute.
    Child was born in 2014 to Father and Mother, who never married but lived
    together with Child in Pennsylvania. In 2015, Father moved to California and
    filed a petition for primary custody and a simultaneous petition for expedited
    relief seeking primary custody of Child. Mother also sought primary physical
    custody in an answer and counterclaim to Father’s petition.        The assigned
    ____________________________________________
    *   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    1Although the trial court identifies Child as “J.B.W.,” see Trial Court Opinion,
    10/13/22, at 1, those are not Child’s initials.
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    court2 entered an interim order by agreement on Father’s petition for
    expedited relief granting Mother primary physical custody and Father partial
    physical custody. See Order, 1/15/16. The assigned court later scheduled a
    hearing on the parties’ competing requests for primary physical custody. In
    December 2016, a new court assigned to the case entered an interim order
    awarding Mother primary custody and Father partial physical custody. The
    court scheduled a hearing on the parties’ underlying requests for primary
    physical custody. See Order, 12/8/16. In July 2017 after a hearing, the court
    entered a final order awarding Mother primary physical custody and Father a
    three-week period of physical custody every other month in California. See
    Order, 7/19/17.
    In November 2018, Father filed another petition to modify custody, but
    his first since the 7/19/17 final order.         Father asserted concerns about
    Mother’s changes of residence and Child’s health and diet.         See Father’s
    Petition to Modify Custody, 11/8/18 (“the 2018 petition”).       Again, in April
    2019, Father filed an expedited petition asking for the same relief but
    amplifying his concerns in his November 2018 custody petition and adding
    facts that Mother and Child (and Mother’s other three children) now resided
    in New Jersey. See Father’s Expedited Petition, 4/8/19. In May 2019, the
    court entered an “interim agreed order” that explicitly resolved Father’s April
    2019 “expedited petition” by granting Father physical custody of Child from
    ____________________________________________
    2 We reserve the term “trial court” for the court that conducted the hearing
    that is the subject of this appeal.
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    June until one week before the end of August. See Interim Agreed Order,
    5/31/19.   The assigned court also ordered that the previously scheduled
    September 9, 2019 custody hearing, which had been listed in response to the
    2018 petition, was to remain in place. See id.
    In June 2019, prior to the September 9, 2019 hearing scheduled in
    Philadelphia, Mother filed a petition to modify custody in New Jersey. In July
    2019, the New Jersey court declined to exercise jurisdiction over Mother’s
    petition (without prejudice) because of the pending petition in Pennsylvania,
    namely Father’s 2018 petition filed on November 8, 2018. See Exhibit A to
    Mother’s Pre-Trial Memorandum, 12/10/21. In response to the New Jersey
    Court’s ruling, in August 2019 Mother filed a motion in the Philadelphia Court
    of Common Pleas requesting transfer of the case to New Jersey. See Mother’s
    Motion to Transfer Venue/Jurisdiction to Gloucester, N[ew] J[ersey], 8/1/19
    (“Mother’s Jurisdiction Motion”).   Mother stated that she had lived in New
    Jersey since December 2018. She asserted that pursuant to section 5422 of
    the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (“UCCJEA”),
    Pennsylvania no longer had exclusive, continuing jurisdiction over the custody
    matter because neither of the parties, nor the Child, resided in Pennsylvania
    and Pennsylvania no longer had substantial evidence concerning Child’s care,
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    protection, training, and personal relationships. See id.3 In September 2019,
    the court held what it called “the matter” under advisement.      See Order,
    9/9/19. It is clear from the record, and undisputed by the parties that Father
    has resided in California since 2015 and Mother has lived with Child in New
    Jersey since at least the early part of 2019.
    Later that month, the court conducted a custody hearing at which it
    interviewed Child in camera and reviewed the factors relevant to custody.4
    See Order 9/18/19.5 The court entered what it labeled a “temporary order”
    awarding Mother primary physical custody of Child and Father physical
    custody during Winter, Spring, and Summer school breaks, and relisted the
    case for June 2020. See id. Nine months later, the court entered an order
    making a small modification to its September 2019 order and continuing the
    hearing scheduled for later that month to be “relisted for status at a future
    date if another hearing is necessary.” Order, 6/9/20 (emphasis added).
    Although there is no transcript from the hearing, nothing in the record
    ____________________________________________
    3Although Mother’s Jurisdiction Motion raised a dispositive question about the
    Pennsylvania court’s jurisdiction over the custody matter, the court did not
    decide the issue until three years later in June 2022, when it determined,
    despite having been made aware that Mother and Child had not resided in
    Pennsylvania since no later than April 2019 and Father had not resided in
    Pennsylvania since 2015 and that Mother filed her Jurisdiction Motion in 2019
    before Father filed another modification petition in 2020, that a Pennsylvania
    court had jurisdiction to decide the case. See N.T., 6/2/22, at 49.
    4   See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328.
    5   The hearing does not appear to have been transcribed.
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    indicates that the assigned court addressed Mother’s Jurisdiction Motion even
    though it had clearly been filed prior to the hearing date.
    In August 2020, Father filed yet another petition to modify custody. See
    Father’s Petition to Modify Custody, 8/31/20 (the ”2020 Petition”).     In the
    petition, Father again asserted that he lived in California and Mother lived in
    New Jersey. The August 2020 petition averred new and different facts from
    those in Father’s 2018 custody and 2019 expedited petitions (where Father
    alleged Mother’s and Child’s unstable housing) – Father alleged that Child
    reported that Mother had numerous boyfriends and left Child unattended with
    multiple men, and that Mother’s new boyfriend Randy yelled at Child and the
    other children and spanked one of the children.       See 2020 Petition at 2
    (unnumbered).      Mother filed an answer denying Father’s substantive
    allegations. See Mother’s Answer, 9/9/20.
    Eleven months later, Father, Mother and their counsel appeared before
    yet a different judge on Father’s 2020 Petition and Mother’s 2019 Jurisdiction
    Motion. The court issued a temporary order on August 10, 2020 modifying
    the terms of Father’s Summer custody.        See Order, 8/10/21.    The court
    deemed the matter complex and stated that it should be scheduled for a
    protracted hearing before a different hearing court. The court stated that “all
    outstanding petitions [are] to be consolidated.” The court specifically noted
    that the August 2020 petition and the 2019 Jurisdiction Motion remained
    outstanding. See Order, 8/10/21. Later that month, the trial court scheduled
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    a trial on all outstanding custody petitions and ordered the parties to file pre-
    trial memorandums. See Order, 8/27/21.
    In December 2021, Mother filed her pre-trial memorandum asserting
    yet again that Pennsylvania lacked exclusive, continuing jurisdiction over the
    2020 petition pursuant to section 5422(a) of the UCCJEA and had no authority
    to modify the existing custody arrangement under section 5422(b).             See
    Mother’s Pre-Trial Memorandum, 12/10/21. In January 2022, the court listed
    the case for a protracted hearing in June 2022.
    When the parties appeared for the protracted hearing, Mother’s counsel
    directed the court’s attention to her argument that the trial court no longer
    had jurisdiction over the case.     See N.T., 6/2/22, at 6.      The trial court
    expressed its surprise and disappointment that there were undisposed pre-
    trial pleadings and stated its concern that Father had driven all the way from
    California over the course of five days. See id. at 5-6, 9, 20. The court asked,
    “Why did we prepare for trial if we’re p[u]rsuing a motion that’s been
    outstanding since 2018 [sic] concerning venue?” Id. at 7. It further stated:
    I’m not one to spend people’s time like that. I just don’t do that.
    These parties are here. [Father] drove from California to get to
    Philadelphia, and I cannot go [to trial] with a pretrial matter still
    pending, and if you’re going to pursue that, then we’re going to
    be very abbreviated today. I don’t know that that’s fair to these
    parties.
    Id. at 9. Mother’s counsel said she had raised the jurisdictional issue before,
    but the previous court continued it. See id. at 8. The court declared, “I didn’t
    hold this case up since 2018.” Id. at 11-12. Mother’s counsel asserted that
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    the prior court had resolved the 2018 custody petition and the trial court did
    not have jurisdiction over the 2020 petition, the petition that was properly
    before the court, because neither parent had lived in Pennsylvania for more
    than two-and-one-half years and neither had contacts with Pennsylvania. See
    id. at 12-13. The trial court repeated its dismay over the status of the case,
    and reiterated its unwillingness to consider jurisdiction at length, and its
    concern for Father’s lengthy travel from California. See id. at 13-15.
    Mother’s counsel directed the court to her argument that because
    neither of the parties, nor Child, had lived in Pennsylvania since December
    2018, Pennsylvania lacked jurisdiction over the case under the UCCJEA. See
    id. at 22-26, 41-42. Father’s counsel asserted that there had never been a
    final, appealable order on the 2018 petition.     See id. at 26-27.      Father’s
    counsel stated that “after this hearing today or trial, then we would agree that
    it could be transferred over to . . . New Jersey,” but requested that the court
    retain jurisdiction for the trial. See id. at 26-28, 30, 35. Mother’s counsel
    responded that Father had not opted to seek a final order on the 2018 petition
    but chose to file the 2020 petition instead. See id. at 29-30, 35, 37.
    The trial court stated that it did not have transcripts of the prior
    proceedings in the case and was not willing to take the time to get them.
    Those concerns led the court to declare its willingness to grant Mother’s
    Jurisdiction Motion.   It declared, “I’m ready to grant [Mother’s Jurisdiction
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    Motion]. I am.” See id. at 32-33. However, shortly afterward the court raised
    a concern about Child’s presence in court and equity factors:
    I would prefer to go forward if [Child] is here. I would prefer that.
    I’m not willing to volunteer to do extra work when I see a docket
    like this. It’s not fair to me. I would not have been allowed to do
    that. I’m not sure how that happened. I’m really not. I’m
    disappointed to see a docket like that where a pretrial matter is
    still []pending on the day when we’re scheduled for a protracted
    trial on modification.
    Id. at 45. After further argument and without assessing whether Father’s
    2018 petition had been finally resolved, the court changed its mind based in
    part on the fact that Father had filed the 2018 petition to modify custody
    before Mother filed the Jurisdiction Motion in 2019:
    The Court: So [F]ather’s [2018] petition was here. Father’s
    petition was already pending, and the petition to change venue
    was filed August [1,] 2019?
    [Mother’s Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    The Court: I’ll take that approach to this.
    Id. at 49. The court also noted that New Jersey had previously declined to
    exercise jurisdiction over the case.    Without further discussion, the court
    proceeded to take Child’s testimony and begin the protracted hearing. See
    id. at 49-54.
    Over the course of three days of hearings from June to August 2022
    (two of them virtual), the court heard testimony concerning Child’s life in New
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    Jersey with Mother and in California with Father. Neither party presented any
    evidence concerning conduct in, or contact with, Pennsylvania.6
    The court did not announce findings of fact at the conclusion of the
    hearing. The same day, it summarily denied Mother’s jurisdiction claim and
    awarded Father primary physical custody and Mother physical custody during
    Winter, Spring, and Summer breaks. See Order, 8/18/22.7 Mother filed a
    timely notice of appeal and she and the court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    On appeal, Mother presents the following issues for our review:
    1.   Did the trial court correctly rule on Mother’s . . . [p]etition for
    change of venue to New Jersey?
    2.   Did the trial court commit an error of law or abuse of
    discretion by granting Father . . . primary physical custody of
    [Child]?
    3.   Did the trial court properly weigh the applicable custody
    factors in issuing its [o]rder . . . including, but not limited to,
    factors outlined in 23 Pa.C.S.A. §5328?
    4.   Did the trial court commit an error of law or abuse of
    discretion by not properly weighting [sic] the applicable
    custody factors in issuing its [o]rder . . . including, but not
    limited to, factors outlined in 23 Pa.C.S.A. §5328?
    5.   Did the trial court sufficiently state its rationale for making its
    custody determination; namely, granting Father . . . primary
    ____________________________________________
    6Because we determine the jurisdictional issue to be dispositive, we do not
    address the testimony at the protracted hearing.
    7 The next day, the court issued a pre-printed form that listed the sixteen
    factors governing custody, 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a), to which it appended
    comments, and a one-paragraph addendum that did not address subject
    matter jurisdiction other than to assert that “[p]ending since 2018, this matter
    is overdue for a final order and determination. [Child] has experienced some
    matters which may be aggravated by delay.” See Order, 8/19/22.
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    custody and allowing Father to move [Child] to             . . .
    California?
    6.   Whether the trial court adequately weighed the applicable
    evidence provided on the record in the evidentiary hearings
    culminating in the [o]rder . . .?
    Mother’s Brief at 4-5 (issues reordered).
    Because it is dispositive, we begin with a consideration of the trial court’s
    subject matter jurisdiction, which goes to the competence of the court to
    render a judgment and whose absence is fatal at any stage of proceedings.
    See Turner v. Estate of Baird, 
    270 A.3d 556
    , 560 (Pa. Super. 2022) (also
    stating that a judgment or decree rendered by a court which lacks jurisdiction
    of the subject matter is null and void). Subject matter jurisdiction raises a
    question of law for which our standard of review is de novo and our scope of
    review is plenary. See Turner, 270 A.3d at 560. The UCCJEA governs subject
    matter jurisdiction in custody cases. The statute:
    establishes subject matter jurisdiction before the court of common
    pleas in child custody matters under various subsections of Title
    23, including 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 5421 and 5422. As the provision
    quoted below makes clear, section 5421 identifies the
    circumstances under which a court of common pleas has
    jurisdiction to make an initial child custody determination.
    Pursuant to section 5421(b), section 5421(a) is the exclusive
    jurisdictional basis for make an initial child custody determination
    by a court of the Commonwealth.
    Section 5422(a) identifies the circumstances under which a court
    has made a child custody determination under section 5421 or
    section 5422 retains exclusive, continuing jurisdiction over that
    determination until the elements of section 5422(a)(1) or section
    5422(a)(2) have been satisfied. Section 5422(b) states that if the
    trial court has made a child custody determination, but no longer
    has exclusive, continuing jurisdiction under section 5422(a), it
    may modify that determination if it has jurisdiction to make an
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    initial custody determination under section 5421. From our review
    of the statutory language, it is evident that a section 5422
    determination does not involve a trial court’s decision regarding
    whether to exercise jurisdiction that has been established.
    Rather, a section 5422 determination implicates the subject
    matter jurisdiction of the trial court.
    S.K.C. v. J.L.C., 
    94 A.3d 402
    , 407-08 (Pa. Super. 2014).
    Thus, there are two possible bases for a trial court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction over a custody determination: either exclusive, continuing
    jurisdiction under section 5422(a) or jurisdiction over a petition to modify
    custody under section 5422(b). UCCJEA section 5422(a) provides that a court
    of the Commonwealth which has made an initial custody determination has
    exclusive, continuing jurisdiction over the determination until:
    (1) a court of the Commonwealth determines that neither the
    Child nor the Child and one parent . . . have a significant
    connection with this Commonwealth and that substantial evidence
    is no longer available in the Commonwealth concerning the child’s
    care, protection, training, and personal relationships; or
    (2)   a court of the Commonwealth or a court of another state
    determines that the child [and] . . . the child’s parents . . . do not
    presently reside in this Commonwealth.
    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(a)(1)-(2).
    Under section 5422(b), a court may modify a custody determination
    where it does not have exclusive, continuing jurisdiction but only if it has
    jurisdiction to make an initial custody determination under 23 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 5421. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(b). Section 5421 vests a court with initial
    jurisdiction where:
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    (1) the Commonwealth is the home state of the child on the date
    of the commencement of the proceeding or was the home state of
    the child within the six months before the commencement of the
    proceeding . . . and a parent continues to live in the
    Commonwealth;
    (2) a court of another state does not have jurisdiction under
    paragraph (1) or a court of the home state of the child has
    declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that this
    Commonwealth is the more appropriate forum under section 5427
    (relating to inconvenient forum) or section 5428 (relating to
    jurisdiction by declined by reasons of conduct) and:
    (i) the child and the child’s parents, or the child and
    at least one parent . . . have a significant connection
    with this Commonwealth other than mere physical
    presence; and
    (ii) substantial evidence is available in this
    Commonwealth        concerning   the     child’s care,
    protection, training and personal relationships;
    (3) all courts having jurisdiction under paragraphs (1) and (2)
    have declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that a court
    of this Commonwealth is the more appropriate forum to determine
    the custody of the child under section 5427 or 5428; or
    (4) no court of any other state would have jurisdiction under the
    criteria specified in paragraph (1), (2), or (3).
    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5421.
    The trial court ruled that it retained jurisdiction over the case because
    the 2018 petition predated the 2019 jurisdiction motion. See N.T., 6/2/22,
    at 49. The court also later noted that the New Jersey court had declined to
    exercise jurisdiction over the case in 2019. See id. at 49-54. The court did
    not address jurisdiction in its final order or its opinion other than to cite a New
    Jersey court order and state that,
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    the previously filed custody petition pre-dating [M]other’s change
    of residence from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania remained pending.
    Thereby the New Jersey court’s July 2, 2019 determination
    remained unchanged (see [M]other’s Pre-Trial Memorandum at
    Exhibit “A”).2
    2“Mom   present. Dad served but did not appear. Court
    notes he resides in California. Currently there is a
    pending case in PA between these parties and PA has
    jurisdiction in this matter.   Mom’s application to
    modify custody and child support is dismissed without
    prejudice, John Tosasello, J.S.C., Superior Court of
    New Jersey, Chancery-Division-Family Part”[.]
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/13/22, at 7.
    Applying our de novo standard of review and plenary scope of review,
    we conclude that the 2019 jurisdictional petition and the 2020 custody petition
    were the two outstanding petitions at the time of the protracted hearing and
    the 2018 custody petition, the trial court’s stated basis for its jurisdiction, had
    been previously resolved by the equivalent of a final order as explained below.
    The trial court erred because both of the outstanding petitions actually before
    it on June 2, 2022 established that neither party nor the Child had resided in
    Pennsylvania since no later than April 2019, defeating the trial court’s
    assertion of jurisdiction and rendering its August 18, 2022 custody
    determination null and void.
    The trial court’s assertion that the 2018 custody petition remained
    unresolved at the time of the June 2022 protracted custody hearing
    contradicts the record, Father’s own actions, and the courts’ subsequent
    orders. Father filed the 2018 petition and then an expedited custody petition
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    five months later in 2019. In his 2019 expedited petition, Father expressly
    acknowledged that Mother now lived in New Jersey.         The parties resolved
    Father’s expedited petition with an interim order.       See Order, 5/31/19.
    Although the court’s order resolving the expedited petition explicitly left in
    place a scheduled September 2019 custody hearing, see id., the court then
    conducted that hearing in September 2019. The September 2019 hearing
    included an in camera interview of Child and a consideration of the custody
    factors and resulted in an order granting Father custody of Child during Winter,
    Spring, and Summer school breaks. See Order, 9/18/19. Nine months later,
    the court amended that order to correct a typographical error concerning
    Father’s Summer 2020 custody. In the corrected order, the court stated that
    “[t]he hearing scheduled for Monday June 15, 2020 is continued and shall be
    relisted for status at a future date if another hearing is necessary.” Order,
    6/9/20 (emphasis added).     Although the June 2020 order purported to be
    “temporary,” it is properly regarded as a final order.        See Wagner v.
    Wagner, 
    887 A.2d 282
    , 285 (Pa. Super. 2005) (holding that a trial court’s
    “temporary” custody order allowing for the possibility of a further hearing is a
    final order: “a custody order that anticipates future hearings that could take
    place on application of one of the parties is a final, appealable order.”).
    Father’s 2018 petition, therefore, was the subject of a final order and did not
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    vest the trial court with jurisdiction at the time of the 2022 protracted
    hearing.8
    Father’s own actions and the court’s subsequent orders further
    demonstrate that neither the parties nor the prior court regarded the 2018
    petition as unresolved, and that the 2020 petition was his unresolved petition
    at the time of the protracted hearing. Rather than file an appeal pursuant to
    Wagner or request a future status date on the 2018 petition as the court’s
    June 9, 2020 order clearly contemplated, Father instead filed a new petition
    to modify custody in 2020. That petition acknowledged Father’s California
    residence and Mother’s New Jersey residence, and did not assert that Mother,
    ____________________________________________
    8 Our decision in S.K.C. v. J.L.C., 
    94 A.3d 402
    , 411-12 (Pa. Super. 2014),
    that jurisdictional facts are to be determined at the time a modification petition
    is filed does not alter this result. Under Wagner, the court’s June 9, 2020
    temporary order is properly viewed as a final, appealable order. Thus, the
    2020 petition, not Father’s resolved 2018 petition, triggered the date of the
    jurisdictional determination. The 2020 petition acknowledged Mother and
    Child’s New Jersey residence and was filed after Mother’s Jurisdiction Motion
    was filed in 2019.
    S.K.C. expressed a concern that using the date of the hearing, rather than
    the date of the filing of the custody modification, to assess jurisdiction would
    provide an incentive for a parent not residing in the Commonwealth to delay
    proceedings to reduce a child’s connection to the Commonwealth and would
    encourage the trial court to make factual findings concerning changed
    circumstances since the modification hearing occurred. See S.K.C., 
    94 A.3d at 411-12
    . We use the date of the 2020 petition to assess the jurisdictional
    facts. In any event, the manipulation concerns S.K.C. recognizes are not
    present in this case. There is no suggestion that Mother moved to New Jersey
    to reduce Child’s connection to Pennsylvania, and at the time of the 2020
    petition, Mother and Child had lived in New Jersey for one-and-one-half years
    as Father’s petition acknowledged.
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    Father, or Child resided in Pennsylvania, the presence of any evidence in
    Pennsylvania relevant to the 2020 petition, or any connection between the
    2020 petition and the 2018 petition.     Instead, the 2020 petition alleged a
    never-before-raised series of assertions, including Mother’s relationships with
    men whom she left Child unattended and one of whom allegedly yelled at
    Child. See 2020 Petition at 2 (unnumbered). The 2020 petition cannot be
    regarded as a continuation of the resolved 2018 petition; it was a new petition.
    Court orders subsequent to the June 9, 2020 order also demonstrate
    that the parties and the court understood that only Mother’s jurisdiction
    motion and the 2020 custody petition remained outstanding at the time of the
    protracted hearing. In July 2021, at Father’s request, the trial court, which
    handled that listing of the case, entered an order continuing the 2020
    custody petition at his request.      See Order, 7/14/21. The next month,
    Father and Mother were present in court on what the subsequent order stated
    were “all outstanding petitions,” but specifically named as “Father’s petition
    for modification filed August 31, 2020 [the 2020 petition] and Mother’s
    petition for change of venue filed August 1, 2019.” See Order, 8/10/21. The
    order modified the June 9, 2020 custody order, and stated that the matter
    was complex and required a protracted hearing and that all outstanding
    petitions were to be consolidated.    See 
    id.
       The trial court then assumed
    responsibility for the case and ordered the parties to file pre-trial
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    memorandums. See Order, 8/27/21. In his pre-trial memorandum,9 Father
    advanced new arguments he had either never raised before, see Father’s Pre-
    Trial Memorandum at ¶¶ 1, 2 (asserting concerns about Mother’s selection of
    a pediatrician and Child’s bed-wetting), or issues he first raised in the 2020
    custody petition, see ¶¶ 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (addressing Mother’s romantic partners,
    leaving Child unattended with various boyfriends, Randy’s alleged abuse of
    Child, Mother’s “immoral” conduct, and Father’s concerns about Child’s
    emotional well-being). Clearly, Father regarded the 2020 custody petition as
    distinct from his prior, resolved petitions. Thus, the record also defeats the
    suggestion that any party regarded the 2018 petition as unresolved when
    Father filed the 2020 petition, or nearly two years later when the trial court
    convened the protracted hearing that consisted of three days of testimony
    about conduct involving the parties and Child in New Jersey and California.
    Since the 2018 petition was not before the trial court, we consider
    whether there is an alternate basis to find that the trial court retained subject
    matter jurisdiction over the custody proceeding. Under section 5422, a court
    has exclusive jurisdiction until a court of this Commonwealth determines that
    neither the child nor the child and one parent have a significant connection
    with the Commonwealth and that substantial evidence is no longer available
    ____________________________________________
    9 Father’s Pre-Trial Memorandum is undated and undocketed but is included
    in the certified record on appeal, and the trial court received it prior to trial.
    See N.T., 6/2/22, at 15. We consider it for its relevance to the jurisdictional
    determination.
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    in the Commonwealth concerning the child’s care, protection, training, and
    personal relationships, or a court of the Commonwealth or another state
    determines that the child and child’s parents do not presently reside in this
    Commonwealth.          See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(a)(1), (2).         A proceeding
    commences at the time a petition for modification is filed.        See S.K.C. v.
    J.L.C., 
    94 A.3d 402
    , 411 (Pa. Super. 2014).          When Father filed the 2020
    petition to modify custody, neither parent nor Child had a significant
    connection with Pennsylvania.          Father had not lived in Pennsylvania since
    2015, and Mother and Child had not lived in Pennsylvania for more than one-
    and-one-half years and there is no indication that substantial evidence
    concerning Child was present in Pennsylvania – Father presented none at the
    three-day protracted hearing.         See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(a)(1).    Similarly,
    there is no doubt that neither parent nor Child resided in the Commonwealth
    when Father filed the 2020 petition; both Father and Mother acknowledged
    that Mother and Child lived in New Jersey since at least April 2019. See 23
    Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(a)(2). Accordingly, the trial court did not have exclusive
    and continuing jurisdiction over the 2020 petition.10
    The court also lacked jurisdiction under 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5422(b), which
    permits a court to modify a custody determination only if it has jurisdiction to
    ____________________________________________
    10That the court failed to perform the jurisdictional inquiry is irrelevant.
    Where subject matter jurisdiction does not exist, any resulting judgment or
    decree is null and void. See Turner, 270 A.3d at 560.
    - 18 -
    J-A03019-23
    make an initial custody determination under 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5421(a).               The
    facts on the record fail to establish any of the four jurisdictional bases stated
    in section 5421, concerning            jurisdiction   to   make   an initial   custody
    determination: subsection (1) is inapposite because the Commonwealth was
    not Child’s home state at the time of the proceeding or six months before;
    subsection (2) is inapposite because a court of another state11 had jurisdiction
    at the time of the filing of the 2020 petition; subsection (3) is inapposite
    because New Jersey (and/or California) have not declined to exercise
    jurisdiction on the grounds that the Commonwealth is the most appropriate
    forum to determine custody under sections 5427 or 5428;12 and (4) at least
    one other state would have jurisdiction under paragraphs (1), (2) or (3). The
    trial court therefore lacked jurisdiction to modify custody under section 5421.
    Because the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, its August 19, 2022
    custody order is null and void.
    ____________________________________________
    11Under the custody agreement in effect at the time, New Jersey qualified as
    Child’s home state under section (1).
    12 New Jersey declined to exercise jurisdiction in 2019 because there was a
    pending custody hearing on Father’s prior petitions that were subsequently
    resolved no later than the court’s June 9, 2020 order. New Jersey did not
    decline to exercise jurisdiction under section 5427 or 5428 and has not been
    asked to exercise jurisdiction over the 2020 custody petition or over the 2019
    jurisdiction motion now that Pennsylvania no longer has exclusive, continuing
    jurisdiction.
    - 19 -
    J-A03019-23
    It is regrettable that the trial court’s failure to make a proper
    assessment of its subject matter jurisdiction has resulted in wasted time,
    expense, and emotional upheaval in the lives of Child, Mother, and Father. 13
    Courts cannot assume jurisdiction they do not possess, nor can parties confer
    jurisdiction on the court; jurisdiction is conferred solely by the Constitution
    and laws of the Commonwealth. See Page Publishing, Inc. v. Hemmerich,
    
    287 A.3d 948
    , 955 (Pa. Super. 2022) (stating that jurisdiction may be raised
    at any time in the course of proceedings, including a reviewing court sua
    sponte). The trial court clearly did not have jurisdiction over the 2020 custody
    petition. We are thus compelled to vacate the trial court’s order and remand
    to the lower court to reimpose the last valid custody agreement. Absent a
    change in circumstance of residence, any further custody matters should be
    resolved by a state that satisfies the UCCJEA’s subject matter jurisdiction
    requirements.
    Order vacated; case remanded for proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    ____________________________________________
    13 Plainly the court misunderstood what petitions were properly before it; for
    example, it issued an order on the second day of the protracted hearing
    incorrectly stating that Mother’s 2015 counter complaint, which had been
    resolved by the final order on 7/19/17, was before it. See Order, 7/27/22.
    - 20 -
    J-A03019-23
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/08/2023
    - 21 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2347 EDA 2022

Judges: Sullivan, J.

Filed Date: 3/8/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/8/2023