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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
IN RE: A.N.L. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
APPEAL OF: A.B.
No. 1949 MDA 2016
Appeal from the Order Entered November 4, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia County
Orphans' Court at No(s): 236 OC 2015
BEFORE: BOWES, DUBOW, AND FITZGERALD,* JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED JUNE 12, 2017
A.B. (“Mother”) appeals from the order entered on November 4, 2016,
wherein the trial court terminated her parental rights to her daughter, A.N.L.
We affirm.
Mother is a Russian citizen who came to the United States during 2004
on a visa which has since expired. A.N.L. was born during March 2012 of
Mother’s relationship with T.L. (“Father”) who is not involved in the child’s
life.1 On November 5, 2013, approximately one-and-one-half years after the
child’s birth, Columbia County Children and Youth Services (“CYS”) obtained
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1
The orphans’ court also terminated the parental rights of T.L., who
neglected to appear at the evidentiary hearing. He did not appeal the order
terminating his parental rights.
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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custody of A.N.L. due to Mother's substance abuse and inability to satisfy the
child’s basic needs. The agency was concerned about Mother’s substance
abuse, criminal activity, and her decision to leave A.N.L. with friends while
she travelled to New York for several days at a time. Once CYS obtained
custody of A.N.L. during November 2013, the child never returned to
Mother’s care and control. Since August 2014, A.N.L. remained with her
current foster family, which is an adoptive resource.
CYS crafted a family service plan (“FSP”) to facilitate Mother’s
reunification with A.N.L. Under the plan, Mother was required to, inter alia,
provide for A.N.L.’s basic needs, obtain suitable housing, cooperate with
CYS, abstain from substance abuse, refrain from engaging in criminal
activity, and attend visitation regularly. Pursuant to a later iteration of the
plan, Mother was expected to complete the substance abuse assessment and
treatment by July 29, 2015. Mother made a measure of progress during the
twenty-six month period between CYS’s involvement with the family and the
hearing on the petition to terminate her parental rights. However, her
compliance with the FSP prior to 2015 was abysmal: she had eight positive
urine screens for cocaine or its metabolites, one positive test for ethanol,
and two diluted samples that were unreadable. Mother did not submit to a
drug and alcohol investigation until December of 2014, and she did not start
to participate in the recommended program until January 2015, fourteen
months after she lost custody of her daughter. Mother failed to complete
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that program and, although she attended an evaluation for a second
program administered by a different service provider, she failed to complete
that program as well.
On December 21, 2015, CYS filed a petition to involuntarily terminate
Mother’s parental rights pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 2511(a)(1), (5), and (8)
and (b). During the ensuing hearing, CYS presented the testimony of
Natalie Patterson and Kerri Shaylor, two CYS caseworkers who had been
assigned to the family, and Judith Marita Blankenship, Mother’s substance
abuse counselor at A Better Today. As it relates to one of the issues that
Mother asserts on appeal, Ms. Patterson testified, over Mother’s hearsay
objection, about Mother’s failure to complete a second drug and alcohol
program administered by Stepping Stones to Recovery (“Stepping Stones”).
Mother complained that the witnesses’ reliance upon statements included in
a letter from Stepping Stones to CYS constituted double hearsay that was
barred by Pa.R.E. 802. She argued that, while Ms. Patterson’s testimony
regarding CYS’s records fell within the business records exception to the rule
against hearsay, the information in the letter that was provided by Stepping
Stones was tantamount to a second level of hearsay that did not fall within
any argued exception. Essentially, she contended that CYS was required to
produce a representative from Stepping Stones who would be subject to
cross-examination about the veracity of the statements in the letter. The
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orphans’ court overruled Mother’s objection and permitted Ms. Patterson to
testify about Mother’s failure to complete the Stepping Stones program.
At the close of the evidentiary hearing, the orphans’ court granted
CYS’s petition and terminated Mother’s parental rights pursuant to § 2511(a)
(1), (5), (8) and (b). Mother filed a timely notice of appeal and a statement
of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).
She presents two issues for our review.
I. Whether the Lower Court committed an abuse of
discretion when it found that the Columbia County Children
& Youth Services Agency established, by clear and
convincing evidence, the existence of grounds for
terminating the parental rights of Mother where Mother had
taken substantial steps toward completion of the goals set
forth and required by the Columbia County Children & Youth
Services Agency.
II. Whether the Lower Court erred in overruling
Mother's hearsay objections when the Lower Court
permitted Columbia County Children & Youth Services
Agency caseworkers to testify to information contained in
reports of third parties?
Mother’s brief at 2.
Our standard of review is well settled.
The standard of review in termination of parental rights cases
requires appellate courts to accept the findings of fact and
credibility determinations of the trial court if they are supported
by the record. If the factual findings are supported, appellate
courts review to determine if the trial court made an error of law
or abused its discretion. A decision may be reversed for an
abuse of discretion only upon demonstration of manifest
unreasonableness, partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will. The trial
court’s decision, however, should not be reversed merely
because the record would support a different result. We have
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previously emphasized our deference to trial courts that often
have first-hand observations of the parties spanning multiple
hearings.
In re T.S.M., 71 A.3d 251, 267 (Pa. 2013) (citations and quotation marks
omitted).
Involuntary termination of parental rights is governed by § 2511 of the
Adoption Act, 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 2101-2938. As the party petitioning for
termination of parental rights, CYS “must prove the statutory criteria for that
termination by at least clear and convincing evidence.” In re T.R., 465 A.2d
642, 644 (Pa. 1983). Clear and convincing evidence is defined as
“testimony that is so clear, direct, weighty, and convincing as to enable the
trier of fact to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of
the precise facts in issue.” Matter of Sylvester, 555 A.2d 1202, 1203–04
(Pa. 1989).
As noted, the orphans’ court terminated Mother’s parental rights
pursuant to § 2511(a)(1), (5), (8) and (b). As “we need only agree with
[the court’s] decision as to any one subsection in order to affirm the
termination of parental rights[,]” we review the trial court analysis under
§2511(a)(1) and (b). See In re B.L.W., 843 A.2d 380, 384 (Pa.Super.
2004) (en banc). The relevant sections provide as follows:
(a) General Rule.—The rights of a parent in regard to a child
may be terminated after a petition filed on any of the following
grounds:
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(1) The parent by conduct continuing for a period of at
least six months immediately preceding the filing of the
petition either has evidenced a settled purpose of
relinquishing parental claim to a child or has refused or
failed to perform parental duties.
....
(b) Other considerations.--The court in terminating the rights
of a parent shall give primary consideration to the
developmental, physical and emotional needs and welfare of the
child. The rights of a parent shall not be terminated solely on
the basis of environmental factors such as inadequate housing,
furnishings, income, clothing and medical care if found to be
beyond the control of the parent. With respect to any petition
filed pursuant to subsection (a)(1), (6) or (8), the court shall not
consider any efforts by the parent to remedy the conditions
described therein which are first initiated subsequent to the
giving of notice of the filing of the petition.
23 Pa.C.S. § 2511(a)(1) and (b).
With respect to § 2511(a)(1), this Court has explained,
A court may terminate parental rights under Section
2511(a)(1) where the parent demonstrates a settled purpose to
relinquish parental claim to a child or fails to perform parental
duties for at least the six months prior to the filing of the
termination petition. The court should consider the entire
background of the case[.]
In re A.S., 11 A.3d 473, 482 (Pa. Super. 2010) (citations omitted).
Regarding the definition of “parental duties,” we have stated,
There is no simple or easy definition of parental duties. Parental
duty is best understood in relation to the needs of a child. A
child needs love, protection, guidance, and support. These
needs, physical and emotional, cannot be met by a merely
passive interest in the development of the child. Thus, this court
has held that the parental obligation is a positive duty which
requires affirmative performance.
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....
Parental duty requires that the parent act affirmatively with good
faith interest and effort, and not yield to every problem, in order
to maintain the parent-child relationship to the best of his or her
ability, even in difficult circumstances. A parent must utilize all
available resources to preserve the parental relationship, and
must exercise reasonable firmness in resisting obstacles placed
in the path of maintaining the parent-child relationship. Parental
rights are not preserved by waiting for a more suitable or
convenient time to perform one’s parental responsibilities while
others provide the child with . . . her physical and emotional
needs.
In re B.,N.M., 856 A.2d 847, 855 (Pa.Super. 2004) (citations omitted)
(quoting In re C.M.S., 832 A.2d 457, 462 (Pa.Super. 2003)).
Once the evidence establishes a failure to perform parental duties or a
settled purpose of relinquishing parental rights, the orphans’ court must then
engage in three additional lines of inquiry: (1) the parent's explanation for
his or her conduct; (2) the post-abandonment contact between parent and
child; and (3) consideration of the effect of termination of parental rights on
the child pursuant to Section 2511(b). In re Z.S.W., 946 A.2d 726, 730
(Pa.Super. 2008).
Instantly, the record supports the orphans’ court’s conclusion that
Mother failed to perform her parental duties. A.N.L. has been in placement
since 2013. She was removed from Mother's custody due to Mother’s
substance abuse, unstable housing, and drug-related criminal activity.
Mother demonstrated minimal progress toward reunification in three years.
In addition to her continued struggles with drugs and alcohol that we
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referenced supra, Mother neglected to comply with the other aspects of the
FSP that were designed to facilitate reunification. For example, since the
commencement of the agency's involvement during November 2013, Mother
has been arrested three times for DUI and once for driving with a suspended
license. At the time of the termination hearing, Mother was confined in
Luzerne County prison, having been incarcerated since January 5, 2016, and
while she expected to be eligible for release from confinement during
December 2016, she must still serve an additional twelve months of
electronic monitoring. Moreover, her release from confinement at the end of
the referenced term is uncertain because, as an illegal resident, she is
subject to an active immigration detainer.
Likewise, as it relates to the housing component, Mother has had five
different residences since the family became involved with CYS. Soon after
A.N.L.’s placement in CYS’s care and control, Mother moved to Florida for
five months. When she returned to Pennsylvania during July 2014, Mother
lived with several other people in a home on Diamond Avenue in Hazleton,
Pennsylvania. Although she lived in that home for one year, CYS never
approved the residence because Mother refused to divulge the identity of her
housemates so that the agency could complete their background checks. As
CYS highlights in its brief, Mother testified that the agency’s inquiries about
her roommates were “harassment [against] them and something.” N.T.,
11/4/16, at 176. Next, for approximately two months, Mother rented a
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room in a home with shared common areas. Again, however, she failed to
provide sufficient information for the agency to complete its required
investigation of the other residents. During September 2015, Mother moved
in with her paramour in a home with a separate bedroom for A.N.L.
Unfortunately for Mother, the residence was not approved because the CYS
investigation revealed that the paramour had drug-related criminal charges
that disqualified him from living in the home with A.N.L. Mother’s most
recent residence prior to her incarceration was also with her paramour.
During the evidentiary hearing, Mother presented a portion of a residential
lease agreement for that residence. Curiously, the lease was dated three
days after she began serving her incarceration in the Luzerne County Jail.
Thus, the certified record confirms that Mother failed to correct her
housing issues. Despite three years of CYS services, Mother still does not
have a stable home that is appropriate for her daughter. To the contrary,
Mother is incarcerated in the Luzerne County Prison and facing possible
deportation.
In relation to the requirement to attend visitation with A.N.L.
consistently, the record reveals that Mother attended approximately one-half
of the scheduled biweekly two-hour supervised visitations that were offered
to her. Tellingly, Mother elected to relocate to Florida at the outset of the
dependency proceedings rather than remain in Pennsylvania and develop a
parent-child bond with A.N.L. During that five-month period, Mother
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attended one visitation with her daughter. While Mother’s attendance
improved following her return to the area and was consistent during the
three month period between October 2015 and January 2016, she has not
seen A.N.L. since her incarceration, approximately ten months before the
termination hearing. Mother testified that she contacted CYS to demand in-
prison visitation with A.N.L., but there is no evidence that she wrote to
A.N.L. or attempted to contact her daughter while incarcerated.
The foregoing evidence establishes that CYS satisfied its burden of
proving by clear and convincing evidence the grounds for involuntarily
terminating Mother’s parental rights pursuant to §2511(a)(1), i.e., that
Mother has failed to perform any parental duties for A.N.L. for a period in
excess of six months.
Having established Mother’s failure to perform her parental duties for
approximately three years, we next review the additional lines of inquiry
required under In re Z.S.W., supra. As it relates to Mother’s explanation
for her past conduct, Mother argues that her prior parental deficiencies were
the consequence of her depression, substance abuse, and lack of family
support. She contends that after she “hit rock bottom in late 2014 and very
early 2015” she made substantial progress toward the FSP goals. Mother’s
brief at 22. Mother’s argument relies, in part, upon the fact that CYS
sought to terminate her parental rights’ prior to the July 29, 2015 date that
it provided for her to complete drug treatment. Thus, highlighting the
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progress that she made since February 2015, Mother argues that the
termination of parental rights was premature because she “made substantial
progress toward completing [her] goals . . . well before the July 29, 2015
deadline.” Id. at 24. She continues that, had CYS “abided by its deadline,”
she would have completed her goals. Id. at 23. Ultimately, she asserts that
the certified record does not sustain the orphans’ court’s decision to
terminate her parental rights.
Mother’s contention fails for at least two reasons. First, the July 2015
deadline related to the anticipated date for her to complete the drug and
alcohol component of the FSP. That date was not an all-encompassing
period of immunity that she was promised. Recall that A.N.L. had been in
CYS placement for more than two years when the agency eventually filed its
petition to terminate Mother’s parental rights and Mother demonstrated
modest commitment toward reunification for most of that period.
Second, and more importantly, Mother’s belated efforts toward
reunification were considerably less than what she now proclaims. Mother
highlights that she completed a 21-day inpatient program during May 2015,
and enrolled in another outpatient program during June 2015. As we
previously noted, however, Mother consistently failed to complete the
various treatment programs that she initiated. Moreover, while Mother
asserts that she had an illuminating moment of discovery during the
beginning of 2015, that epiphany did not manifest in her behavior. Indeed,
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since February 2015, Mother submitted three positives drug screens: one
each for marijuana, cocaine metabolites, and ethanol, and two diluted
samples. Furthermore, she tested positive for marijuana as recent as two
weeks prior to the hearing on the termination of parental rights. Currently,
she is incarcerated.
Similarly, in relation to the housing component, Mother argues
unconvincingly that CYS’s insistence upon finding a safe home for A.N.L.
“placed [her] in an untenable position” when trying to attain stability.
Mother’s brief at 21. Again, we disagree. It is beyond peradventure that
A.N.L.’s safety is paramount, and if Mother was unable or unwilling to secure
a safe residence for her daughter, then the responsibility lies with Mother.
Although Mother is accurate in stating that she moved to several homes, she
ignores the fact that she persistently failed to address CYS’s safety concerns.
As we outlined supra, Mother either refused to provide the necessary
information about her housemates to allow CYS to perform the required
investigation or she insisted upon living with a paramour whose criminal
record presented a safety risk. Thus, while Mother opines that “she changed
her living situation on several occasions in an effort to eliminate the
[a]gency’s concerns,” her argument disregards that she neglected to ensure
A.N.L.’s safety in any of those residences. Id. at 22. Hence, it was Mother’s
half-hearted efforts, rather than CYS’s safety concerns, that placed her in an
untenable position. Id. at 22.
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Mother also assails the finding that she neglected to maintain a
relationship with A.N.L. She contends that her transportation was unreliable
for the majority of this case and stresses that once CYS agreed to assist her
with transportation to visitations with A.N.L. after 2015, her attendance
improved. Once more, Mother’s post hoc examination of her struggles
utterly ignores the fact that, even considering her belated efforts to attend
visitations consistently during the end of 2015, she still attended less than
fifty percent of the scheduled visitations with her daughter throughout the
child’s placement.
The final aspect of our review of the statutory grounds to terminate
Mother’s parental rights concerns the needs and welfare analysis under
2511(b). While Mother does not level any specific objection to this aspect of
the orphans’ court’s determination, we address it in an abundance of caution
and find that the orphans’ court did not abuse its discretion in concluding
that terminating Mother’s parental rights would best serve A.N.L.’s
developmental, physical, and emotional needs. Stated succinctly, the record
bears out that, while Mother and A.N.L. have not had any contact since
February 2015, A.N.L. continues to thrive in the anticipated pre-adoptive
foster home where she has resided since August 2014.
Finally, we address Mother’s contention that the trial court erred in
overruling her hearsay objection to Ms. Patterson’s testimony about Mother’s
discharge from Stepping Stone during the spring of 2015. Recall that
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Mother asserts that the testimony was a classic example of double hearsay.
She continues that, while the CYS record that formed the basis of Ms.
Patterson’s testimony was subject to the business record exception under
Pa.R.A.P. 803(6), the information in the letter from Stepping Stones to CYS
constituted an additional level of hearsay that requires an independent
exception to the hearsay doctrine.2 She entreats this Court to remand the
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2
As it relates to business records, the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence
provide the following exception to the rule against hearsay:
Records of a Regularly Conducted Activity. A record (which
includes a memorandum, report, or data compilation in any
form) of an act, event or condition if,
(A) the record was made at or near the time by—or from
information transmitted by—someone with knowledge;
(B) the record was kept in the course of a regularly
conducted activity of a “business”, which term includes
business, institution, association, profession, occupation,
and calling of every kind, whether or not conducted for
profit;
(C) making the record was a regular practice of that
activity;
(D) all these conditions are shown by the testimony of the
custodian or another qualified witness, or by a certification
that complies with Rule 902(11) or (12) or with a statute
permitting certification; and
(E) neither the source of information nor other
circumstances indicate a lack of trustworthiness.
Pa.R.E. 803(6).
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matter for additional proceedings where CYS would be required “to call
witnesses with first-hand knowledge concerning Mother's treatment” and
subject those witnesses to cross-examination. Mother’s brief at 29. No
relief is due.
Our standard of review as to a trial court's evidentiary ruling well
settled. “A trial judge has considerable latitude in determining the scope of
cross-examination and his determination will not be reversed in the absence
of an abuse of discretion unless a party suffers an obvious disadvantage.”
Majczyk v. Oesch, 789 A.2d 717, 726 (Pa.Super. 2001) (en banc). We will
not award a new trial “merely because some irregularity occurred during the
trial or another trial judge would have ruled differently; the moving party
must demonstrate to the trial court that he or she has suffered prejudice
from the mistake.” Knowles v. Levan, 15 A.3d 504, 507 (Pa.Super. 2011).
This Court has consistently held that Rule 803(6) does not subsume
information in a business record that was provided by a third-party. We
recently confronted this issues in Commonwealth v. Savage, 2017 PA
Super 57 (Pa.Super. 2017), and held that a child-victim’s statement to his
CYS caseworker that his mother, rather than the defendant, had slapped him
were not admissible under Rule 803(6) even though the child’s statement
was memorialized in a CYS report. In reaching this conclusion, we first
explained, “Where a business record that would otherwise be admitted as an
exception to the hearsay rule itself contains hearsay, it is double hearsay[,
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and] [t]he underlying hearsay must also qualify as a hearsay exception in
order for the trial court to properly admit into evidence the business record.”
Id. at *4 (citations omitted).
Applying that well-ensconced principle to the facts of the criminal case
before it, the Savage Court reasoned that the exculpatory out of court
statements that the defendant sought to introduce through the CYS report
“originated from a source outside of CYS and, thus, are not covered by the
business records exception to the hearsay rule just because the statements
were contained in a report that CYS prepared.” Id. at *4. As the defendant
failed to assert an independent exception specific to the child’s statements to
his caseworker, we held that the trial court did not err in finding the
statement inadmissible even though the CYS report fell within the business
record exception outlined in Rule 803(6).
While the principle we applied in Savage would appear to apply
equally in the case at bar, we need not address the merits of Mother’s
argument because any error in admitting evidence of Mother’s inability to
complete the Stepping Stone treatment program is harmless in light of the
force of the properly admitted evidence about her failure to address her
substance abuse issues. Indeed, in addition to the challenged reference to
the Stepping Stones program, Mother stipulated to the fact that she was
unsuccessfully discharged from at least one program during the two years
that her daughter has been in CYS placement and the testimony reveals that
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she failed to complete treatment in two others. See e.g., N.T., 11/4/16, at
19, 60 (stipulation regarding failure to complete Pathway to Recovery); id.
at 64 (testimony regarding failure to complete A Better Today during
summer 2015); id. at 82, 128 (neglected follow-up counseling following
discharge from 21-day inpatient at Marworth during June 2015). Thus,
insofar as any putative error in admitting Ms. Patterson’s testimony about
Mother’s failure to complete the Stepping Stones program did not affect the
outcome of this case, it is harmless. Knowles, supra at 508 n.4.
(harmless error does not warrant new trial, and error is harmless if it did not
affect verdict).
Accordingly, for all of the foregoing reasons, we find that the trial court
appropriately terminated Mother's parental rights under 23 Pa.C.S. §§
2511(a)(1) and (b).
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 6/12/2017
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