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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
T.S.K. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
: OF PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
D.M.K. : No. 1983 MDA 2019
Appeal from the Order Entered November 5, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Fulton County
Civil Division at No: 301-2015-C
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., STABILE, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.
MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED JUNE 30, 2020
T.S.K. (“Father”) appeals pro se from the order entered November 5,
2019, in the Court of Common Pleas of Fulton County, which dismissed with
prejudice his “Petition to Correspond with Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail.”
After careful review, we dismiss Father’s appeal due to his substantial failure
to comply with our Rules of Appellate Procedure.
This appeal stems from a child custody case involving D.M.K. (“Mother”)
and the parties’ minor daughter, A.L.K. (“Child”), born in May 2011. Mother
and Father are former spouses who married in 2012 and separated in 2015.1
N.T., 12/21/18, at 111-12. Mother commenced a Protection From Abuse
(“PFA”) action against Father, resulting in a final PFA order entered September
15, 2015. Father filed a child custody complaint on the same day that the
trial court entered its PFA order. However, in 2016, Father was charged with
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1 The parties divorced at a time unspecified in the record.
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myriad criminal offenses related to his alleged sexual abuse of two girls. Id.
at 16, 30. Mother alleged that Father had also abused her, in that he began
a sexual relationship with her when he was an adult and she was only twelve
years old. Id. at 107-09. This resulted in additional charges against Father.
Id. at 30. Ultimately, a jury convicted Father of one set of charges, the second
set of charges was “thrown out,” and Father pled guilty to the third set of
charges involving Mother. Id. at 16, 30-35. Father received a sentence of
incarceration and will not be released until June 2039 at the earliest. Id. at
39.
Meanwhile, the trial court entered a series of child custody orders, which
concluded with the order entered April 5, 2018. Pursuant to these orders,
Mother received sole legal and physical custody of Child, and Father received
the ability to send Child correspondence while incarcerated. Father filed a pro
se petition for modification of custody on June 15, 2018, in which he requested
regular visits and telephone calls with Child. On December 21, 2018, while
the petition for modification remained pending, Father filed a pro se petition
for contempt. He alleged that Mother was in contempt of the September 15,
2015 PFA order. Specifically, he alleged that Mother violated the provision of
the PFA order prohibiting either party from relocating without complying with
the procedures set forth at 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5337. Mother filed an answer to
the petition for contempt on January 23, 2019.
On January 24, 2019, the trial court entered a final custody order, which
awarded Mother sole legal and physical custody of Child, and provided Father
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with “the right to send the child written correspondence, drawings, and gifts.”
Order, 1/24/19, at 1. The order also directed that Mother initiate a plan to
enroll Child in therapy, in order to prepare Child for future communication with
Father, among other things.2 The court entered a separate order on April 16,
2019, finding that Mother was not in contempt. Father appealed the contempt
order and a prior panel of this Court affirmed on September 23, 2019. T.S.K.
v. D.M.K., 221 A.3d 1278 (Pa. Super. 2019) (unpublished memorandum).
Father filed another pro se petition for contempt on April 17, 2019. This
time, Father alleged that Mother had failed to provide him with documents
demonstrating that she was compliant with the therapy provision contained in
the order of January 24, 2019. Mother filed preliminary objections on May 8,
2019. The trial court entered an order on May 21, 2019, finding that Mother
was not in contempt.3 Father attempted to appeal that order as well, but, due
to an unexplained error, no appeal took place.4
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2Father filed a pro se “Response to Courts [sic] Order” on February 28, 2019,
which the trial court treated as an improper motion for post-trial relief and
denied.
3Father filed a pro se response to Mother’s preliminary objections on May 28,
2019, after the trial court had already found Mother not in contempt.
4 Our review of the record reveals that Father timely filed a pro se notice of
appeal on May 31, 2019, stating explicitly that he intended to appeal the May
21, 2019 order. He also attached a concise statement of errors complained
of on appeal, challenging the May 21, 2019 finding of no contempt against
Mother. Curiously, however, the trial court issued an opinion on May 31, 2019,
stating that it was in receipt of Father concise statement filed “May 30, 2019,”
that Father’s concise statement related to his prior appeal from the April 16,
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The events culminating in Father’s current appeal began on October 23,
2019, when he filed a pro se pleading entitled, “Petition to Correspond with
Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail.” Father averred that he was experiencing
difficulty contacting Child because Mother moved out of her prior residence,
which belonged to Child’s maternal grandmother, and that the correspondence
he was sending to the prior residence was “occasionally being returned as un-
deliverable.” Petition to Correspond with Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail,
10/23/19, at 1 (unnumbered pages). He requested that the trial court direct
Mother to either provide him with a new address or open a post office box to
which he could send correspondence for Child.
The trial court entered a rule to show cause order on October 29, 2019,
directing Mother to file an answer within twenty days. Mother complied by
filing an answer on October 31, 2019. Mother asserted that her address is
confidential pursuant to Pennsylvania’s child custody law. See 23 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 5336(b)(1) (“The court shall not order the disclosure of . . . [t]he address
of a victim of abuse.”). However, she averred that Father had been sending
correspondence to her prior residence, where Child’s maternal grandmother
continued to reside.5 She suggested that some of Father’s correspondence
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2019 order, and that the May 21, 2019 order, was “not currently subject to
appellate review.” Trial Court Opinion, 5/31/19, at 1-3 (unnumbered pages).
5 Mother testified during the parties’ prior custody proceedings that she moved
out of the maternal grandmother’s residence in 2017 but that she continued
to receive Father’s letters and read them to Child. N.T., 12/21/18, at 154,
188-93.
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had been returned due to problems with the prison mail system, or because
he had transposed the numbers in the maternal grandmother’s address. The
court dismissed Father’s petition with prejudice on November 5, 2019. Father
timely filed a pro se notice of appeal on November 25, 2019, along with a
concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.
Before considering the merits of Father’s appeal, we must first address
his failure to comply with our Rules of Appellate Procedure. Father did not file
an appellant’s brief in this Court. Instead, he filed a two-page document
entitled, “Amendment to [Pa.R.A.P.] 1925(b) in Response to the Courts [sic]
1925(a)(1) Opinion,” accompanied by various exhibits, including an envelope
addressed to Child with a “Return to Sender” sticker. This document, which
Father apparently intended to serve as an amended concise statement, fails
to comply with our Rules regarding briefs. See Pa.R.A.P. 2111-2135 (listing
the requirements for an appellant’s brief). This Court has emphasized that an
appellant’s pro se status does not excuse him or her from compliance with our
Rules. See S.S. v. T.J., 212 A.3d 1026, 1032 (Pa. Super. 2019) (“[P]ro se
status confers no special benefit upon the appellant. To the contrary, any
person choosing to represent himself in a legal proceeding must, to a
reasonable extent, assume that his lack of expertise and legal training will be
his undoing.”) (quotation marks and citations omitted). Because Father’s
failure to comply is substantial, and impairs our ability to conduct meaningful
appellate review, we conclude that we must dismiss his appeal. See Pa.R.A.P.
2101 (“[I]f the defects are in the brief . . . of the appellant and are substantial,
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the appeal or other matter may be quashed or dismissed.”); Krauss v. Trane
U.S. Inc., 104 A.3d 556, 584 (Pa. Super. 2014) (“When deficiencies in a brief
hinder our ability to conduct meaningful appellate review, we may dismiss the
appeal entirely or find certain issues to be waived.”).
Even if we were to attempt to reach the merits of Father’s appeal, we
would conclude that he is not entitled to relief and affirm the November 5,
2019 order. Our standard of review is as follows:
In reviewing a custody order, our scope is of the broadest type
and our standard is abuse of discretion. We must accept findings
of the trial court that are supported by competent evidence of
record, as our role does not include making independent factual
determinations. In addition, with regard to issues of credibility
and weight of the evidence, we must defer to the presiding trial
judge who viewed and assessed the witnesses first-hand.
However, we are not bound by the trial court’s deductions or
inferences from its factual findings. Ultimately, the test is whether
the trial court’s conclusions are unreasonable as shown by the
evidence of record. We may reject the conclusions of the trial
court only if they involve an error of law, or are unreasonable in
light of the sustainable findings of the trial court.
V.B. v. J.E.B., 55 A.3d 1193, 1197 (Pa. Super. 2012) (citations omitted).
Father’s “Petition to Correspond with Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail”
was, in effect, a petition for modification of custody requesting modification of
a discrete and ancillary custody issue. See S.W.D. v. S.A.R., 96 A.3d 396,
403 (Pa. Super. 2014) (providing examples of discrete and ancillary custody
issues, including “a dispute over a custody-exchange location; which youth
sports the children should play; or whether a parent should be required to
have children’s toys, beds, or other things in his or her house.”) (footnote
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omitted). A trial court may grant a petition for modification of a discrete and
ancillary custody issue if doing so would be in the child’s best interest. Id. at
402-03.
In its opinion, the trial court explained its decision to dismiss Father’s
petition as follows, in relevant part:
. . . . The issue is whether or not this court was justified in denying
[Father’s] petition for a mailing address. The trial court notes that
[Father] did not attach any documents proving that the letters,
cards and any other mailing he is sending the child are being
returned to him as undeliverable. Surely if his mail was being
rejected, or not being delivered to the address where he has been
mailing documents, he would be in possession of the returned
mailings or he could provide specific dates of when documents
were returned to him. His petition is lacking in that regard.
[Mother] does not agree with [Father’s] assertion that she is not
receiving mail or sharing it with the child and stated that in her
answer.
Essentially this court is of the opinion that [Father] does not
like the terms of the court’s custody order which limits his contact
and that of his immediate and extended family with the child.
[Father’s] petition contains statements that reveal his dislike of
the custody order.
The court could see no reason to subject [Mother] and/or
the child to a hearing where [Father] fails to plead with specificity
the number of items that he has mailed and have been returned.
If he had identified a significant quantity of his mailings as being
returned by the United States Postal [Service], that would prompt
this court to schedule a hearing and afford him the opportunity to
provide evidence in support of his claims. Without any facts plead
to support his claims, the court is warranted in denying his request
for a hearing.
Trial Court Opinion, 12/10/19, at 3-4 (unnumbered pages) (citations omitted).
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion or commit
an error of law, although our reasoning differs from that in the court’s opinion.
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See R.M. v. J.S., 20 A.3d 496, 506 n.8 (Pa. Super. 2011) (“If we determine
that the trial court ruling is correct, we can affirm on any basis supported by
the record.”). As we explained above, Father’s “Petition to Correspond with
Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail” requested that the court direct Mother to
provide him with an address so that he could send correspondence to Child.
However, it is clear that Father already had an address for Child, to which he
was already sending correspondence. Father was sending correspondence to
Mother’s prior residence, where Child’s maternal grandmother continued to
reside. During the parties’ contempt proceedings, on April 2, 2019, Father
testified that he had sent twenty-six or twenty-seven letters for Child to the
residence during the previous six months, and that only two or three of those
letters were returned. N.T., 4/2/19, at 10. Father filed the subject petition
just over six months later, on October 23, 2019. Father’s petition indicated
that the circumstances remained unchanged since the contempt proceedings,
in that he was continuing to send correspondence for Child to the maternal
grandmother’s residence, and this correspondence was being returned only
“occasionally.” Petition to Correspond with Minor Child by Means of U.S. Mail,
10/23/19, at 1 (unnumbered pages). Therefore, Father’s petition was plainly
frivolous and it was within the trial court’s discretion to dismiss it.6
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6 In her appellee brief, Mother suggests that Father’s correspondence is being
returned because he occasionally transposes the numbers in the maternal
grandmother’s address. Mother’s Brief at 9-10. Mother directs this Court to
the envelope with the “Return to Sender” sticker that Father attached to his
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Based on the foregoing analysis, we conclude that Father’s substantial
failure to comply with our Rules of Appellate Procedure impairs meaningful
appellate review and requires that we dismiss his appeal. Even if we were to
attempt to reach the merits of Father’s appeal, we would affirm the November
5, 2019 order.
Appeal dismissed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 06/30/2020
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“Amendment to [Pa.R.A.P.] 1925(b) in Response to the Courts [sic]
1925(a)(1) Opinion.” She contends that the maternal grandmother’s house
number is “26522” but that Father wrote the house number incorrectly as
“25622,” resulting in the correspondence being returned. Mother’s Brief at 9.
Contrary to Mother’s suggestion, the maternal grandmother’s house number
appears as “25622” throughout the certified record. In fact, Mother herself
provided the number as “25622” during a prior custody hearing on December
21, 2018. See N.T., 12/21/18, at 154. While Father wrote the maternal
grandmother’s house number correctly, we observe that the address on the
envelope is still incorrect, because it contains the wrong city. It is not clear
why Father would have made that mistake, as he recited the address with the
correct city during his testimony on April 2, 2019. See N.T., 4/2/19, at 4.
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