Campbell, T. v. Campbell, J. ( 2023 )


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  • J-S38002-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    TIMOTHY CAMPBELL                           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    JENNIFER CAMPBELL                          :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1548 EDA 2022
    Appeal from the Order Entered May 20, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Civil Division at No(s):
    2015-03232-CU
    BEFORE: KUNSELMAN, J., MURRAY, J., and SULLIVAN, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.:                          FILED FEBRUARY 6, 2023
    Jennifer Campbell (“Mother”), files this appeal from the order awarding
    Timothy Campbell (“Father”) primary physical custody of the parties’ minor
    children, L.C., T.C., and V.C. (collectively, “Children”). We affirm.
    In 2015, Father filed a custody complaint requesting partial physical
    custody of Children.1 The court2 awarded the parties shared legal custody of
    their then four minor children.3 The court granted Mother primary physical
    custody, and Father partial physical custody. See Order, 6/5/15 (“the 2015
    ____________________________________________
    1 L.C. was born in December 2005, T.C. was born in September 2008, and
    V.C. was born in November 2011.
    2 Earlier proceedings in this case were conducted before other trial courts.
    The court from whose order Mother appeals did not become involved in this
    case until 2022. See Trial Court Opinion, 7/20/22, at 2.
    3   E.C., the parties’ eldest child, is now emancipated.
    J-S38002-22
    order”). At the time of the court’s order, Mother and Father both lived in West
    Chester where Father works and still lives. See N.T., 3/29/22, at 16, 70.
    Mother bought a home in West Grove, Chester County to which she
    moved in 2020, retaining primary physical custody of Children. See N.T.,
    3/30/22, at 168.     Father filed a petition for primary physical custody of
    Children and a petition for special relief to prevent Mother from removing
    Children from the West Chester Area School District. See Trial Court Opinion,
    7/20/22, at 1-2.
    Following a conciliation conference in December 2020, the court entered
    a temporary order awarding the parties shared legal and physical custody of
    Children. See id. at 2. Mother challenged the ruling, resulting in hearings
    after which the court awarded Mother primary physical custody and Father
    partial physical custody during the school year and shared physical custody
    during the summer, and permitted Children to begin school in the Avon Grove
    School District. See Order, 12/24/20 (“the December 2020 order”).
    In February 2021, L.C., then sixteen years old, ran away from Mother’s
    home in the middle of the night and called paternal grandmother, who took
    him to Father’s house. See N.T., 3/29/22, at 89-92, 189-192; N.T., 3/30/22,
    at 176-179. After school the next day, Father returned L.C. to Mother’s home.
    See N.T., 3/29/22, at 92; N.T., 3/30/22, at 179.
    Mother filed a temporary protection from abuse petition (“PFA”) that
    day, alleging that Father had threated to kill her if she retrieved L.C. from his
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    home.      See PFA Petition, 2/16/21.          Mother also alleged that Father had
    previously abused her by attempting to intimidate her, backing her against a
    wall, screaming in her face, and pushing her. See id. The court granted a
    temporary PFA order against Father. See Order, 2/16/21.4
    In March 2021, Mother filed a petition for contempt of the trial court’s
    December 2020 order alleging that Father had threatened to kill her. See
    Petition, 3/3/21. Mother’s petition attached text messages between L.C. and
    Father, which, she averred, showed that Father induced L.C. to run away and
    spoke negatively about her and her mother.              See id.    The following day,
    Mother filed a petition to modify custody and suspend Father’s physical
    custody, citing text messages in which Father texted L.C. to “just run away to
    me they will yell at me not you,” “nobody helps us white men anymore,” and
    “women are the root of all evil.” See Petition, 3/4/21, at 3-4 (unnumbered).
    Following an April 2021 custody conciliation conference, the court issued
    an order suspending Father’s physical custody and preventing him from
    having unsupervised communications or contact with Children until further
    order of court.        The court’s order further barred Father from texting,
    telephoning, FaceTiming or otherwise contacting L.C. “until such time as
    Father’s treating therapist recommends that Father understands the impact of
    his    manipulative,     racist,   sexist,     and   destructive   behavior   on   the
    ____________________________________________
    4   Mother filed a praecipe to withdraw her PFA petition on April 16, 2021.
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    impressionable young minds of his children.” Order 4/16/21 (“the April 2021
    order”).
    Four months later, Father filed a petition to modify custody, asserting
    that Mother had stopped taking L.C. to the therapist they had found for him,
    and that Father had: undertaken therapy, been found not to present a current
    risk of harm to himself or others, continued to receive treatment, and had not
    any contact with Children for four months. See Father’s Petition, 8/25/21, at
    2-4. Father sought an order similar to the 2015 order that would permit him
    to coordinate his partial custody time with his work schedule. See Father’s
    Petition, 8/25/21, at 4.
    In November 2021, after a conciliation hearing, the court granted Father
    “therapeutic supervised visitation”5 one day every other weekend for three
    hours and directed that L.C. begin therapy. The order stated that “Father
    shall have no unsupervised communications or contact with [Children] until
    either the agreement of the parties or further order of court.” See Order,
    11/19/21 (“the November 2021 order”). Father challenged the rulings, and
    the court scheduled a custody trial.
    ____________________________________________
    5 The Child Custody Act (“the Act”), 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 5321-5340, does not
    provide for an award of therapeutic supervised visitation. See 23 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 5323(a). Rather, the Act provides for “supervised physical custody,” 23
    Pa.C.S.A. § 5323(a)(5), which is defined as “[c]ustodial time during which an
    agency or an adult designated by the court or agreed upon by the parties
    monitors the interaction between the child and the individual with those
    rights.” 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5322(a). We deem the court’s order as a grant of
    supervised physical custody and refer to it as such.
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    The trial court conducted a custody trial over multiple days in March and
    April 2022, at which it heard the testimony of the parties and multiple other
    witnesses,6 and also interviewed each child separately in camera.                 The
    evidence showed that at times Father used inappropriate language towards
    Mother and spoke inappropriately with and/or around Children about her. See
    N.T., 3/29/22, at 27-30, 81-83, 185-186; N.T., 4/13/22, at 11, 31, 40. The
    evidence also showed that, Mother spoke negatively about Father in front of
    at least one child. See N.T., 4/13/22 Court Child Interviews (“CCI”), at 11.7
    Father, his treating therapist, Joseph Peter Francisco (“Francisco”), and Dr.
    Thomas Haworth, Ph.D. (“Dr. Haworth”), who performed a clinical forensic
    examination      of   Father,   testified      that   Father   acknowledged   behaving
    inappropriately at times during the course of the custody litigation, including
    making some comments to L.C. inappropriate to his age or mental status.
    See N.T., 3/29/22, at 22-24, 82-83, 123-26, 185-86.                 Francisco and Dr.
    Haworth testified that Father had made significant progress in understanding
    how his previous behavior negatively affected Children, showed openness to
    learning, and learned appropriate methods to deal with triggering events. See
    N.T., 3/29/22, at 22-24, 82-83, 123-126, 135. Father testified that Mother
    ____________________________________________
    6 The witnesses included Father’s treating therapist and doctor, two of his
    work colleagues, his best friend, and paternal grandmother, as well as the
    couple’s emancipated son, E.C.
    7Other testimony presented on April 13, 2022 appears in a different transcript
    with the same date.
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    has ignored or declined his frequent requests to talk to Children, including on
    Father’s Day in 2021. See N.T., 3/29/22, at 107-108.
    During his in camera interview, L.C., then sixteen years old, stated that
    Mother sometimes drinks and drives. See N.T., 4/13/22 (CCI) at 8-9. L.C.
    said he initially believed this behavior to be normal but became concerned.
    See id. L.C. stated that Mother drinks “a few drinks, pretty much every day”
    and at least as much on weekends, and that “when she drinks a lot more, she
    usually gets more short-tempered.” See id. at 10. L.C. also testified that
    both parents speak ill of one another: when she is drunk, Mother tells L.C.
    that Father is a “deadbeat,” “manipulative,” and “aggressive,” and Father has
    said similar things regarding Mother. See id. at 11-12. L.C. said that he ran
    away in the middle of the night in sleet and rain in February 2021,8 and walked
    for three hours due to the extreme stress of living with Mother, who drank a
    lot and yelled at and confronted him frequently. See id. at 12-13. L.C. said
    that Father joked about him running away, but he did not take Father
    seriously. See id. at 13.
    L.C. told the court that he learned in approximately April 2021 that
    Father had been ordered not to see him, or, as L.C. understood it, text or call.
    See id. at 17-18. He stated that Mother had never told him after November
    2021 (when the court modified the April 2021 order) that he could have
    ____________________________________________
    8 L.C. described this as “[n]ot my smartest move.” See N.T., 4/13/22 (CCI)
    at 13.
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    supervised contact or communication with Father, and that she did not tell
    him until one and one-half months before the hearing that he could pick up
    the phone when Father called. See id. L.C. became aware that Father made
    daily calls to the house.    See id.   L.C. said that Mother never directly
    prevented Children from speaking with Father, but she never encouraged
    Children to do so. L.C. told the court that he “felt awkward because I didn’t
    want to ask if I could [speak with Father] and then [have her] say [‘]no[’].”
    See id. at 18. L.C. said that when Father would call, some days Mother would
    permit Children to answer, but the majority of times she would ignore the call,
    hang up on Father, not tell L.C. about the call, or not put him on the phone;
    as a result, he spoke to Father once per week or less.     See id. L.C. stated
    that he preferred to live with Father and return to the West Chester Area
    School District. See id. at 15, 18.
    Thirteen-year-old T.C. told the court that he gets along with Father and
    has good times with him, including on a recent visit, as did his sister, V.C.
    See id. at 35, 41-42. T.C. told the court that when prevented from seeing or
    speaking to Father in the first half of the past year, “I didn’t even know
    [Father] was calling” because Mother did not tell him. See id. at 32, 36. T.C.
    had only spoken to Father ten or twelve times in the preceding year although
    he wanted to speak to Father whenever he called. See id. at 36. T.C. also
    stated that he had heard Father say bad things about Mother a few times
    years ago, but that in T.C.’s experience, it got better over time. See id. at
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    39-40. When asked which parent he would choose to live with, T.C. indicated
    some uncertainty but declared “probably [Mother]” because “[he didn’t] really
    want to move schools again.” Id. at 42.
    Eleven-year-old V.C. stated that she heard Father say Mother is not a
    good person. See N.T., 4/13/22, at 22, 28. V.C. also testified that she had
    fun visiting Father on a day in the week prior to the interview with the court.
    See id. at 29. V.C. confirmed that she had seen Mother drink wine at night,
    and Mother’s boyfriend drank beer. See id. at 30. V.C. stated that she has
    spoken with Father when he said negative things about Mother, and he
    “reacted fine . . . and . . . did stop most of the time” and has now stopped
    entirely. See id. at 31.
    Mother asserted that Father encouraged L.C. to run away in February
    2021 and had a history of sending abusive messages to her. See, e.g., N.T.,
    3/29/22, at 9; N.T., 3/30/22, at 84-85. Mother alleged that Father told her
    he would kill her if she came to retrieve L.C. Father denied saying this, and
    paternal grandmother, who heard his end of the conversation, testified she
    did not hear him say that. See id. at 92, 192; N.T., 3/30/22, at 178-179.
    The trial court also heard testimony about Mother’s and her boyfriend’s
    drinking. In June 2021, the office of Child Protective Services (“CPS”) received
    a report, later determined to be unfounded, that Mother drank alcohol and
    then drove Children, a report Mother believed Father encouraged L.C. to
    make. See N.T., 3/29/22, at 180-184; N.T., 3/31/22, at 7-8; Father’s Exhibit
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    H. Mother testified that she drinks alcohol most nights, as does her boyfriend.
    See N.T., 4/13/22, at 59-60, 65-66.
    During the custody trial, the trial court awarded Father supervised
    physical custody of Children for two hours one night per week. At the end of
    the trial, the trial court ordered that Father have supervised physical custody
    of Children and supervised telephone calls with Children for one-half hour on
    Tuesday nights, and directed the parties to file briefs regarding the sixteen
    custody factors set forth in 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a). See N.T., 4/21/22, at 47,
    66.9
    On May 20, 2022, the trial court entered an order and an accompanying
    memorandum awarding Father primary physical custody of Children.               See
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/20/22, at 3. Mother timely filed a notice of appeal and
    a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(a)(2)(i) and (b), and the trial court filed a Rule 1925(a) opinion.
    On appeal, Mother presents the following questions for our review:
    1.    Did the . . . [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion and commit
    reversible error in awarding primary custody to Father, who
    had not requested primary custody at any time prior to or
    during the trial[?]
    2.    Did the . . . [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion and commit
    an error of law in its findings and application of the custody
    factors which resulted in the custody order issued by the
    court[?]
    ____________________________________________
    9   Father filed a post-trial brief seeking primary custody of Children.
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    J-S38002-22
    3.      Did the . . . [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion and commit
    reversible error by including Father’s prior conduct in its
    findings, which were contrary to the findings of fact issued
    by the court who heard testimony concerning that
    conduct[?]
    Mother’s Brief at 9-10.
    We review Mother’s issues according to the following scope and standard
    of review:
    [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.
    R.M.G., Jr. v. F.M.G., 
    986 A.2d 1234
    , 1237 (Pa. Super. 2009) (internal
    citation omitted). On matters concerning the weighing of evidence and the
    credibility of witnesses, an appellate court accords deference to the trial court.
    See id; see also A.V. v. S.T., 
    87 A.3d 818
    , 820 (Pa. Super. 2014) (stating
    that this Court will affirm the decision of the trial court where the evidence of
    record supports the trial court’s conclusions).
    The primary concern in any custody case is the best interests of the
    child.        “The best-interests standard, decided on a case-by-case basis,
    considers all factors that legitimately have an effect upon a child’s physical,
    intellectual, moral, and spiritual wellbeing.” Saintz v. Rinker, 
    902 A.2d 509
    ,
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    512 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citation omitted). This Court will not interfere with
    the trial court’s consideration of a child’s best interests if the court conducts a
    careful and thorough assessment and properly exercises its discretion. See
    R.M.G., Jr., 
    986 A.2d at 1237
    .
    Child custody actions are governed by the Act. Trial courts are required
    to consider “[a]ll of the factors listed in section 5328(a) . . . when entering a
    custody order.”    J.R.M. v. J.E.A., 
    33 A.3d 647
    , 652 (Pa. Super. 2011)
    (emphasis in original). Section 5328(a) provides as follows:
    § 5328. Factors to consider when awarding custody.
    (a) Factors. – In ordering any form of custody, the court
    shall determine the best interest of the child by considering all
    relevant factors, giving weighted consideration to those factors
    which affect the safety of the child, including the following:
    (1) Which party is more likely to encourage and permit
    frequent and continuing contact between the child and
    another party.
    (2) The present and past abuse committed by a party or
    member of the party’s household, whether there is a
    continued risk of harm to the child or an abused party and
    which party can better provide adequate physical safeguards
    and supervision of the child.
    (2.1) The information set forth in section 5329.1(a)(1) and
    (2) (relating to consideration of child abuse and involvement
    with protective services).
    (3) The parental duties performed by each party on behalf of
    the child.
    (4) The need for stability and continuity in the child’s
    education, family life and community life.
    (5) The availability of extended family.
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    (6) The child’s sibling relationships.
    (7) The well-reasoned preference of the child, based on the
    child’s maturity and judgment.
    (8) The attempts of a parent to turn the child against the
    other parent, except in cases of domestic violence where
    reasonable safety measures are necessary to protect the
    child from harm.
    (9) Which party is more likely to maintain a loving, stable,
    consistent and nurturing relationship with the child adequate
    for the child's emotional needs.
    (10) Which party is more likely to attend to the daily physical,
    emotional, developmental, educational and special needs of
    the child.
    (11) The proximity of the residences of the parties.
    (12) Each party’s availability to care for the child or ability to
    make appropriate child-care arrangements.
    (13) The level of conflict between the parties and the
    willingness and ability of the parties to cooperate with one
    another. A party’s effort to protect a child from abuse by
    another party is not evidence of unwillingness or inability to
    cooperate with that party.
    (14) The history of drug or alcohol abuse of a party or
    member of a party’s household.
    (15) The mental and physical condition of a party or member
    of a party’s household.
    (16) Any other relevant factor.
    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a). A child’s preference in a custody case, when based
    on good reasons, merits careful consideration.      See E.A.L. v. L.J.W., 
    662 A.2d 1109
    , 1117-18 (Pa. Super. 1995). See also Wheeler v. Mazur, 793
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    22 A.2d 929
    , 937 (Pa. Super. 2002) (stating that as a child grows older, more
    weight must be given to his custodial preference).
    Pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5323(d), a trial court shall delineate the
    reasons for its decision on the record in open court or in a written opinion or
    order. Additionally, section 5323(d) requires the trial court to set forth its
    mandatory assessment of the sixteen section 5328 custody factors prior to
    the deadline by which a litigant must file a notice of appeal. There is, however,
    no required amount of detail for the trial court’s explanation:
    all that is required is that the enumerated factors are considered
    and that the custody decision is based on those considerations. A
    court’s explanation of reasons for its decision, which adequately
    addresses the relevant factors, complies with [s]ection 5323(d).
    A.V., 
    87 A.3d at 823
     (internal citations and brackets omitted).               After
    considering the factors set forth in section 5328, the court may award any of
    the following types of custody if it is in the best interests of the child:
    (1)   Shared physical custody.
    (2)   Primary physical custody.
    (3)   Partial physical custody.
    (4)   Sole physical custody.
    (5)   Supervised physical custody.
    (6)   Shared legal custody.
    (7)   Sole legal custody.
    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5323(a).
    In her first issue, Mother asserts that the trial court erred in awarding
    Father primary physical custody when he did not seek that relief prior to, or
    during, the trial. See Mother’s Brief at 15-17. Mother contends that “Father’s
    failure to provide notice that a change of custody was at issue is a violation of
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    [her] due process rights.”    See id. at 17 and 18 (citing Langendorfer v.
    Spearman, 
    797 A.2d 303
     (Pa. Super. 2002)). Mother further argues that
    trial courts are only required to weigh the sixteen Section 5328(a) custody
    factors when assessing a petition that requests a change in the type of
    custody. See Mother’s Brief at 18 (citing M.O. v. J.T.R., 
    85 A.3d 1058
    , 1062
    (Pa. Super. 2014). Mother contends that because Father’s petition requested
    less time with Children than he had under the 2015 order, see Father’s
    Petition, 8/25/21, and did not request primary physical custody until his post-
    trial brief, she did not present evidence about the effect on such an order on
    Children. See Mother’s Brief at 25-26. Mother also asserts, as part of her
    claim of deficient notice, that Father failed to present evidence that his work
    schedule would allow him to assume primary custody, or that he has stability
    in his rented home, and, further, that Children have flourished in her sole care
    and that Father has misogynistic and racist views that the court should have
    acted to prevent him from imparting to Children. See id. at 21-25.
    Mother did not assert a violation of her due process rights at trial, in her
    concise statement of matters complained of on appeal or her statement of
    questions involved. The trial court did not address that issue. Mother thus
    waived review of that assertion.     See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (stating that issues
    not raised in the trial court are waived and cannot be raised for the first time
    on appeal); see also Pa.R.A.P. 2116 (stating that no questions will be
    considered “unless it is stated in the statement or questions involved or is
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    fairly suggested thereby”); In re M.Z.T.M.W., 
    163 A.3d 462
    , 466 (Pa. Super.
    2017) (holding that issues not included in an appellant’s statement of
    questions involved and concise statement of errors complained of on appeal
    are waived.)
    Langendorfer would not, in any event, support Mother’s due process
    claim. The Langendorfer Court found a due process violation when a lower
    court modified a custody order although the only issue before it was a
    contempt petition. See Langendorfer, 
    797 A.2d at 309
    . Here, by contrast,
    the parties knew that the five-day trial – which included in camera interviews
    of Children soliciting the custodial preference of the two eldest – centered on
    Father’s petition to modify custody. See, e.g., N.T., 3/29/22, at 53 (Mother’s
    attorney makes reference to “the [custody] factors”); N.T., 3/30/22, at 132
    (trial court states that “I understand there are 16 [custody] factors and the
    court will consider all of them”); N.T., 3/31/22, at 77 (Mother’s counsel asks
    Mother why she “think[s] it’s not in the best interest of the Children to have
    50/50 custody now”). When notice of a proceeding adequately advises a party
    that custody will be in issue, a court may entertain a request to modify a
    custody order after a hearing in that proceeding. See C.A.J. v. D.S.M., 
    136 A.3d 504
    , 507 (Pa. Super. 2016). Moreover, a court considering custody has
    all seven options at its disposal, including primary physical custody where that
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    is in the best interests of the child. 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5323(a). Accordingly,
    Mother’s due process claim, even if preserved, would not merit relief.10
    In her second issue, Mother asserts the trial court did not analyze or
    weigh the factors, but rather “recited [F]ather’s complaints, without any
    reference to [M]other’s explanations for her actions or the documentary
    evidence that supports [M]other’s testimony.” Mother’s Brief at 27. Mother
    further contends that the trial court’s findings regarding the custody factors
    lack evidentiary support and are unreasonable in light of the evidence
    presented. See id. Mother challenges, inter alia, the trial court’s weighing of
    section 5328(a)(1) because she more likely encourages contact between
    Children and the other party, see id. at 28-33; section 5328(a)(7) because
    Father manipulated L.C.’s custody preference, see id. at 33-40, 53-55;
    section 5328(a)(8) because Father attempted to alienate her from Children,
    ____________________________________________
    10 Mother asserts, citing M.O., that a trial court is only required to weigh the
    sixteen factors when the petition for modification requests a change in the
    type of custody, see Mother’s Brief at 18-19 (emphasis added). She asserts
    that there was no such request here, and therefore the court was only required
    to consider the best interests of the child. That the trial court awarded Father
    more custody than he had originally requested does not demonstrate error.
    The trial court made its ruling in the best interest of the Children. As Mother
    acknowledges, the best interest of the child is the determinative factor in
    considering custody. See Mother’s Brief at 19. See also Trial Court Opinion,
    7/20/22, at 7 (concluding that the best interests of the child is “[t]he polestar
    of any child custody dispute”).
    Mother’s additional assertions concerning Father’s allegedly bad character do
    not support her claim that she lacked proper notice and cannot serve as the
    basis for relief on her first issue.
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    see id. at 33-45, 53-55; section 5328(a)(13) because Father is alienated from
    her, see id. at 52-53; and section 5328(a)(14) because Father falsely accused
    her of drug and alcohol abuse, see id. at 46-47.11
    The trial court found that custody factors (1), (7), (8), (13), and (14)
    weighed in Father’s favor. See Trial Court Memorandum, 5/20/22, at 1-8.12
    Regarding section 5328(a)(1), the parent more likely to encourage contact
    between Children and the other party, the court found that Father had not
    discouraged or denied frequent contact between Children and Mother but that
    “the same may not be said for Mother.” Trial Court Memorandum, 5/20/22,
    at 1. The trial court faulted Mother for not telling Children that Father had
    attempted to call them in the nearly one year between the April 2021 order
    and the trial and found “[o]f particular note . . . Father’s Day of 2021, when
    Father requested an opportunity to speak with . . . [Children]. Mother never
    responded to that request and, in fact, did not respond[] in any way for nearly
    20 days.” See id. at 3. The trial court also credited Father’s “acknowledgment
    ____________________________________________
    11Mother also asserts that the court improperly blamed her for difficulties in
    setting up therapy for L.C., see Mother’s Brief at 57-58, and faulted her for
    not having Children vaccinated. See id. at 59-60.
    12 A fair review of the trial court’s Memorandum shows that it weighed all
    sixteen factors and determined that factors (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (9), (10),
    (11), (12), and (15) carried neutral weight, and that it had no additional
    information concerning factor (16). See A.V., 
    87 A.3d at 823
     (stating that
    the court need only articulate its consideration of all of the relevant custody
    factors without any particular level of detail).
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    of his transgressions, subsequent treatment, and his significant progress in
    addressing the issues[] which gave rise to . . . prior problems.” 
    Id.
    Regarding section 5328(a)(7), the well-reasoned preference of the child,
    the trial court found L.C. to be “bright, mature and well spoken. The [c]ourt
    also found L.C. to be credible. L.C. expressed a preference to live with Father
    to get away from the stress placed on him by . . . Mother. . ..” See id. at 5.
    Additionally, the court noted that T.C. stated his desire to continue living with
    Mother because he does not want to change schools again but found T.C.’s
    affect flat and apparently the product of “resignation rather than enthusiasm.”
    See id.
    Regarding section 5328(a)(8), the attempts of a parent to turn a child
    against the other parent, the trial court found on the one hand that both
    parents had spoken ill of each other in front of Children but emphasized that
    Father has “acknowledged his conduct in this regard and is taking active
    measures, by going through therapy and additional work, to resolve how he
    interacts and speaks about Mother.” See id. On the other hand, the trial
    court found that Mother:
    has made every effort to separate Father from . . . Children since
    April of 2021, failed to respond to Father’s request for telephone
    calls, including Father’s Day of 2021, and according to L.C. and
    T.C., failed to advise them that Father was attempting to call
    them.     In the [c]ourt’s view, Mother’s conduct created the
    impression among . . . Children that Father is a bad person from
    whom they must remain distant.
    See id. at 6. The trial court amplified this point in its opinion, where it stated:
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    J-S38002-22
    Mother acknowledged that at no time did Father pose a threat to
    the safety of . . . Children. This finding was based upon Mother’s
    testimony and her allowing . . . Children to continue to have
    unsupervised visits with Father from the time of the filing of a PFA
    by Mother, until issuance of the [April 2021 order]. The [c]ourt
    found that despite Mother’s conclusion that Father was not a
    threat to the safety of . . . Children, she nonetheless filed a petition
    and, apparently, presented a case calling for Father to lose all
    custody/visitation with . . . Children.
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/20/22, at 11.13
    Similarly, regarding section 5328(a)(13), the level of conflict between
    the parties and the parties’ attempts to cooperate, the trial court
    acknowledged the contentious nature of the parties’ relationship and lack of
    maturity when co-parenting, but again recognized Father for accepting
    responsibility and pursuing therapeutic assistance while Mother “does not
    acknowledge any responsibility for the inability to cooperate with Father.” See
    id. at 7.
    Finally, regarding section 5328(a)(14), the history of drug or alcohol
    abuse of a party or member of a party’s household,14 the trial court
    emphasized that Mother testified to drinking most days, and credited L.C.’s
    testimony that Mother consumed alcohol then drove with Children and that
    she gets “short-tempered the more she drinks.” See id.
    ____________________________________________
    13We note that the April 2021 order was not premised on Father’s presentation
    of a physical threat to Children. See April 2021 Order. However, the trial
    court focused on the harmful effect to Children of Mother not telling them that
    Father had asked to speak with them.
    14   Father offered no evidence that Mother or her boyfriend used illegal drugs.
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    J-S38002-22
    We conclude that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in
    awarding Father primary custody of Children. Concerning related factors (1)
    (8), and (13) which consider a party’s attempts to support Children’s
    relationship with the other party and their attempts to cooperate with each
    other, the record supports the trial court’s finding that Father did not impair
    the parent-child relationship, but Mother did. Both L.C. and T.C. testified that
    for a period of many months Mother did not tell them that Father had been
    trying to speak to them on the phone. The court twice noted that Mother did
    not grant Father’s request to speak to Children on Fathers’ Day 2021 and did
    not respond to that request at all for nearly twenty days. See Trial Court
    Memorandum, 5/20/22, at 2, 6.       Although the April 2021 order reflected a
    concern that unsupervised contact with Father threatened to expose Children
    to the abhorrent views he had expressed and, further, did not require Mother
    to allow Children to speak to Father, nothing in that order or the subsequent
    November 2021 order precluded Mother from permitting and supervising calls
    between Children and Father or, failing that, from telling Children that Father
    had been calling to speak to them. See N.T., 4/13/22 (CCI), at 17-18, 36.
    Mother had no obligation to allow Children to speak to Father on the phone or
    have unsupervised contact with him. However, she did not even tell them
    their Father was calling. Mother’s conduct prevented T.C. from knowing that
    Father had called and, after she belatedly gave them that information, only
    inconsistently allowed Father to speak to Children, which left L.C. feeling
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    J-S38002-22
    awkward when he wanted to speak to Father. Mother’s discouragement of
    Children’s contact with Father supports the trial court’s determination that
    “Mother’s conduct create[d] the impression among . . . Children that Father is
    a bad person from whom they must remain distant.”                     Trial Court
    Memorandum, 5/20/22, at 6.
    Additionally, Dr. Haworth and Father’s treating therapist testified that
    Father had acknowledged his prior misconduct that had hurt Children and was
    making significant progress in changing his behavior. See N.T., 3/29/22, 22-
    24, 82-83, 123-26. Father also acknowledged his prior mistakes of sharing
    his frustrations with Children. See id. at 82. By contrast, Mother blamed
    Father for L.C. running away, see N.T. 4/13/22, at 9, and also blamed him
    for falsely reporting in June 2021 that she drank and drove, see N.T., 3/29/22,
    at 180-84, even though Father had not spoken to Children for two months
    before the report. See N.T., 3/31/22, at 7-8.
    Regarding section 5328(a)(7), the well-reasoned preference of the child,
    the record supports the trial court’s characterization of L.C. as “bright, mature,
    and well-spoken,” and finding that L.C. expressed a preference to live with
    Father rather than Mother in part to avoid her short temper when she drank.
    Trial Court Memorandum, 5/20/22, at 5. The law supports the trial court’s
    decision to afford great weight to L.C.’s preference. See Wheeler, 793 A.2d
    at 937; E.A.L., 
    662 A.2d at 1117-18
    . Further, on a cold record there is no
    basis to find an abuse of discretion in the trial court’s determination that T.C.’s
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    J-S38002-22
    statement that he did not want to move schools again expressed resignation
    rather than enthusiasm about living with Mother15 and that V.C. would fare
    equally well in either home. See 
    id.
    Finally, with regard to section 5328(a)(14), which addresses alcohol and
    drug abuse by a party or a member of the party’s household,16 L.C.’s
    testimony, T.C.’s testimony, and Mother’s own testimony established that
    Mother drank almost every day as did her boyfriend, and that Mother became
    more irritable when she drank. No evidence suggested that Father had an
    alcohol problem. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in weighing this
    factor in Father’s favor. See Trial Court Memorandum, 5/20/22, at 7-8.
    Mother challenges the trial court’s weighing, inter alia, of which parent
    was more likely to encourage contact between Children and the other party,
    and her assertions that Father manipulated L.C., attempted to alienate Mother
    from Children and falsely accused Mother of drug and alcohol abuse. This
    Court will not disturb a trial court’s findings of fact and determinations
    regarding credibility and weight of the evidence absent an abuse of discretion.
    See R.M.G., Jr. 
    986 A.2d at 1237
    ; A.V., 
    87 A.3d at 820
    .             We are not
    permitted “to determine whether the trial court reached the ‘right’ decision;
    ____________________________________________
    15 See McMillen v. McMillen, 
    602 A.2d 845
    , 847 (Pa. 1992) (asserting that
    to merit consideration a child’s custody preference must be based upon good
    reasons).
    16   Father presented no evidence of Mother’s or her boyfriend’s drug use.
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    J-S38002-22
    rather, we . . . consider whether, ‘based on the evidence presented, given
    [sic] due deference to the trial court’s weight and credibility determinations,’
    the trial court erred or abused its discretion in awarding custody to the
    prevailing party.” King v. King, 
    889 A.2d 630
    , at 632 (Pa. Super. 2005)
    (internal citations omitted). In light of our standards of review, we cannot
    agree with Mother that the trial court abused its discretion in weighing the
    evidence.
    In her third and final issue on appeal, Mother asserts that the trial court
    must have disregarded section 5328(a)(10), the daily needs of the child,
    regarding V.C.’s former peanut allergy, see Mother’s Brief at 60, a factor
    Father admits a prior court weighed in Mother’s favor. See Father’s Brief at
    22. Regarding this factor, Mother asserts that the trial court “failed to give
    due weight to the factual findings of the trial court who issued her opinion less
    than two months before L.C. ran away.” Id. at 62.17 Mother emphasizes that
    “all themes addressed in the previous trial are repeated here.” Mother’s Brief
    at 63. Mother appears to be asking this Court to reweigh the evidence from
    this trial in light of the evidence at a prior trial. She may not have such review.
    See M.J.M. v. M.L.G., 
    63 A.3d 331
    , 339 (Pa. Super. 2013) (stating that it is
    within the trial court’s discretion to determine which factors are most salient).
    ____________________________________________
    17  The trial court precluded the admission of evidence relating to previously-
    litigated claims and conduct prior to its December 23, 2020 order. See Order,
    3/7/22.
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    J-S38002-22
    Upon review of the testimonial and documentary evidence, the trial
    court’s memorandum, and its Rule 1925(a) opinion, and mindful of our scope
    and standard of review, we conclude that the trial court carefully and
    thoroughly considered Children’s best interests, and its award of primary
    physical custody to Father constituted a proper exercise of discretion.
    Accordingly, we affirm the order.
    Order affirmed.
    Judge Murray joins this memorandum.
    Judge Kunselman Concurs in the Result.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 2/6/2023
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