Court Opinion

ID: 9323256
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-06 19:07:31.999564+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:46.496339
License: Public Domain

J-S37003-22

                             2022 PA Super 208

 IN THE INTEREST OF: K.L., A MINOR          :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                            :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                            :
 APPEAL OF: L.B. A/K/A T.B.                 :
                                            :
                                            :
                                            :
                                            :
                                            :   No. 1552 EDA 2022

                Appeal from the Order Entered May 20, 2022
  In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Juvenile Division at
                     No(s): CP-51-DP-0000839-2015

BEFORE: BOWES, J., LAZARUS, J., and OLSON, J.

OPINION BY BOWES, J.:                             FILED DECECMBER 6, 2022

       L.B. a/k/a T.B. (“Appellant”) appeals from the May 20, 2022 order

directing him to stay away from K.L., born March 2010. The order was entered

on K.L.’s dependency docket.        We vacate the order and remand for

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

       The instant matter arises in the context of K.L.’s dependency and

adoption proceedings, which both this Court and our Supreme Court have

detailed extensively.   See Int. of K.N.L., 264 A.3d 401 (Pa.Super. 2021)

(non-precedential decision) (“K.N.L. I”), rev’d in part, No. 1 EAP 2022, 2022

WL 10719028 (Pa. Oct. 19, 2022) (“K.N.L. II”).          Briefly, K.L.’s parents

relinquished her as a newborn to the care of R.B.P., who is Appellant’s mother.

During the next five years, Appellant and R.B.P. lived together and cared for

K.L.   In 2015, the Philadelphia Department of Human Services (“DHS”)
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received a child protective services report raising abuse allegations against

R.B.P. and, later, Appellant. In the course of the investigation, DHS removed

K.L. from R.B.P.’s home.1 K.L. was adjudicated dependent, committed to the

care of DHS, and placed in a foster home.

       Following the involuntary termination of the parental rights of K.L.’s

biological parents, K.L.’s foster parent filed a report of intention to adopt her.

The report was withdrawn, however, once K.L.’s maternal aunt filed a motion

to intervene and a petition to adopt.          Thereafter, Appellant also sought to

intervene on the adoption docket, claiming in loco parentis status. DHS and

the child advocate challenged Appellant’s standing. On January 26, 2021, the

adoption court held a hearing and entered an order denying Appellant’s

petition to intervene based on a lack of standing. After Appellant was excused

from the hearing, the child advocate alleged that Appellant had been

appearing at K.L.’s daycare and school and requested protection for the child.

Accordingly, the adoption court added to the order a provision directing

Appellant to stay away from K.L.2
____________________________________________

1  The abuse allegations were deemed unfounded but the investigation
revealed “significant, aggressive and sexualized behavioral health issues
which, in the [adoption] court’s view, R.B.P. was not adequately addressing.”
K.N.L., No. 1 EAP 2022, 2022 WL 10719028, at *2 (Pa. Oct. 19, 2022)
(“K.N.L. II”). The adoption court “suspected Appellant . . . was responsible
for ‘whatever happened[.]’” Id.

2The adoption court simultaneously issued a separate stay-away order, also
on the adoption docket, entitled “Dependency Court Protective Order.” Int.
of K.N.L., 264 A.3d 401 (Pa.Super. 2021) (non-precedential decision at 4)
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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       The stay-away provision entered on the adoption docket is not currently

before us. However, we briefly summarize the history of Appellant’s appeal

from the January 26, 2021 order, which included review of the validity of that

stay-away provision, as it is relevant to our analysis of the case at bar. Upon

review of the adoption court’s January 26, 2021 order, this Court affirmed the

denial of Appellant’s motion to intervene in the adoption matter for lack of

standing but reversed the stay-away portion of that order. We provided the

following explanation and directive regarding the stay-away provision:

       Appellant was not afforded procedural due process, as he lacked
       notice and an opportunity to be heard. We find the federal cases
       cited in the [adoption] court opinion, regarding temporary
       restraining orders, inapposite to this adoption case.         The
       [adoption] court, however well-intentioned, did not provide
       Appellant any notice or an opportunity to be heard on the Child
       Advocate’s allegations that Appellant had engaged in actions upon
       which the [adoption] court decided to issue the stay away
       provision/order. Without hearing from Appellant and creating a
       record from which this Court may conduct meaningful appellate
       review, we must agree that the [adoption] court deprived
       Appellant of due process when it included the stay away provision
       in the January 26, 2021 Order Denying Petition/Motion. While we
       recognize that [K.L.’s] best interests are at issue, upon remand,
       if any party has a basis for seeking such an order in this matter,
       it will have to be pursued in a manner to adhere to the parties’
       guarantees to due process and with the creation of an appellate
       record from which this Court may conduct our review. Thus, we
       vacate and remand the stay away portion of the January 26, 2021
       Order Denying Petition/Motion.
____________________________________________

(“K.N.L. I”), rev’d on other grounds, K.N.L. II. This Court subsequently
determined that the standalone order was a nullity as it was duplicative of the
stay-away provision in the January 26, 2021 order. Id. (non-precedential
decision at 43 n.11). Notably, that standalone order had substantially similar
language to the dependency order entered in the present case by the juvenile
court and which is the subject of the instant appeal.

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K.N.L. I, supra (non-precedential decision at 42) (footnote omitted).

      Appellant petitioned our Supreme Court for review of this Court’s

decision to affirm the adoption court’s denial of his petition to intervene in the

adoption proceedings. Our Supreme Court granted allocatur solely as to that

issue. After concluding that the adoption court applied the wrong analysis, it

remanded for a hearing de novo on Appellant’s standing to intervene on the

adoption docket. See K.N.L., II, supra.

      In the meantime, following this Court’s decision but while the appeal

regarding standing in the adoption proceedings was still pending in our

Supreme Court, the juvenile court conducted a permanency review hearing

on K.L.’s dependency docket. The events that unfolded at this hearing form

the basis for the instant appeal.    Although not a party to the dependency

proceedings, Appellant was present at the invitation of the former DHS

worker.   At the beginning of the hearing, the child advocate indicated her

intent to pursue a stay-away order against Appellant. Prior to calling K.L. as

a witness in that regard, all individuals were sequestered, including Appellant.

Appellant objected, as follows:

      [Appellant]:       --but I have a right to cross-examine.

      The Court:         -- sir? Sir? I’m sorry. I am the Judge in this
                         courtroom. And I’m telling you, you have to
                         vacate the courtroom at this juncture.

      [Appellant]:       Wow.

      The Court:         If you cannot follow my directions then we will
                         do something else. So I’m going to tell you one

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                        more time. At this juncture it’s time to vacate
                        the courtroom.
                               No words. Vacate the courtroom. And not
                        in this lobby. You sit in the sitting room. . . .

N.T., 5/20/22, at 12.

      Following K.L.’s testimony in support of the stay-away order request,

the juvenile court issued a stay-away order against Appellant. Appellant was

not provided the opportunity to present evidence or speak on his own behalf.

Instead, the court called Appellant into the courtroom, advised him of the

order, and noted that if he violates the order, he “may be placed under arrest.”

Id. at 25. The order itself provided that a “violation of this order may result

in court action including a fine, imprisonment, or prosecution[.]” Dependency

Court Protective Order, 5/20/22. An exchange occurred between Appellant

and the juvenile court following notice of the stay-away order and the

punishment for a violation. Although the contents are not entirely clear given

that Appellant and the court were talking over each other, the stenographer

captured the exchange as follows:

      [Appellant]:      -- Your Honor?

      The Court:        Sir?

      [Appellant]:      Are you going to file – if you’re going to put this
                        under investigation –

      The Court:        Sir?

      [Appellant]:      -- before you do something like that.

      The Court:        Sir, there is a current stay away order now.

      [Appellant]:      I see it.

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       The Court:           You’re excused. You’re --
       [Appellant]:         You know the Court Officer did not –

       The Court:           -- you are –

       [Appellant]:         -- call me in here one day.

       The Court:           -- you are excused. You are excused.

N.T., 5/20/22, at 25.

       This timely appeal followed.3           Appellant and the juvenile court have

complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925. Appellant presents the following issues for our

consideration:

       1) Did the [juvenile] court violate the Appellant’s Federal and
          State Constitutional right to Procedural Due Process by issuing
          a Stay Away Order against the Appellant without permitting the
          Appellant to present any evidence or cross-examine any
          witnesses?

       2) Did the [juvenile] court exhibit substantial bias against the
          Appellant by a) committing identical reversible errors against
          the Appellant when issuing subsequent Stay Away Orders
          against him despite receiving correction from the Superior
          Court ([K.N.L. I, supra]), b) using derogatory language to
          identify the Appellant and the Appellant’s supporters and
          witnesses, and c) threatening the Appellant with a judicial
          conclusion of mendacity if Appellant did not use only the legal
          definitions of common, everyday words?

____________________________________________

3 The juvenile court issued a letter to this Court stating, without elaboration,
that it “ha[d] committed a reversible error” and “request[ed] that the case be
remanded so that [it] may correct the error and reconsider the order.”
Juvenile Court Letter, 7/15/22. In this letter, the court described its order as
interlocutory. This Court issued a rule to show cause order regarding the
juvenile court’s request for a remand. Appellant responded, arguing that the
order appealed from is not interlocutory and the juvenile court’s request
should be denied as untimely filed. See Appellant’s Response to Rule to Show
Cause, 7/27/22. We thereafter discharged the show cause order.

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       3) Did the trial court abuse its discretion by crediting testimony
          that was vague, uncorroborated, and not subject to any
          challenge or cross examination to support issuing the Stay
          Away Order?

Appellant’s brief at 5.

       We begin with Appellant’s first issue regarding whether the juvenile

court denied him due process in issuing the instant stay-away order.           In

determining whether procedural due process violations have occurred, our

standard of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary.            See

Commonwealth v. Tejada, 161 A.3d 313, 317 (Pa.Super. 2017).                  Due

process of law is guaranteed by Article I, § 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution

and the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and it

protects “life, liberty, and property.”4 Commonwealth v. Beish, 207 A.3d

964, 968 (Pa.Super. 2019). “In assessing whether one has been unlawfully

deprived of a protected right, a two-part inquiry must be undertaken.”        In

Int. of A.P., 692 A.2d 240, 242 (Pa.Super. 1997). “The threshold inquiry in

any due process analysis is whether there exists any identifiable property

or liberty interest at issue.” Commonwealth v. Mountain, 711 A.2d 473,

476 (Pa.Super. 1998) (cleaned up).             “Once this has been established, a

determination must be made regarding the adequacy of the procedures

employed by the state to deprive a person of that right.” In Int. of A.P.,

supra at 242.
____________________________________________

4 As “the due process provision of the Pennsylvania Constitution does not
provide greater protections than its federal counterpart,” we address them
concomitantly. Commonwealth v. Louden, 803 A.2d 1181, 1184 (Pa.
2002).

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      The juvenile court found that Appellant lacked standing in the

dependency proceedings because he was “not the parent, guardian, or

caregiver of [K.L.]” Juvenile Court Opinion, 7/27/22, at 5. Based on his lack

of standing to participate in the underlying dependency proceedings, the

juvenile court explained that it did not believe Appellant had “any protected

liberty interest at stake and therefore no process was due prior to the issuance

of the stay[-]away order.” Id.

      Likewise, K.L. maintains that Appellant’s due process rights were not

violated because Appellant lacked standing to participate in the underlying

dependency proceedings. See K.L.’s brief at 13, 18-20. K.L. relies on this

Court’s non-precedential decision in Int. of Z.M., 225 A.3d 1183, (Pa.Super.

2019) (non-precedential decision).     In that case, a former guardian was

present at a dependency hearing when the agency indicated its intent to seek

a stay-away order.    Due to the former guardian’s lack of standing in the

dependency proceedings, she was excused from the courtroom before

testimony was taken on the underlying dependency matter, as well as on the

stay-away order. Since the former guardian did not object to the direction to

leave the courtroom for lack of standing, this Court concluded that she had

“waived her allegation that the juvenile court violated her due process rights

by excusing her from the dependency hearing.”           Id. (non-precedential

decision at 6) (citation omitted).

      We find the persuasive value of Int. of Z.M. lacking. Unlike the former

guardian in Int. of Z.M., in the case sub judice, Appellant unequivocally

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objected to being excluded from the courtroom during K.L.’s testimony

regarding the stay-away order.           It is also clear from the record that the

juvenile court did not provide Appellant the opportunity to argue on his own

behalf or present evidence regarding the stay-away order, nor did it give him

a meaningful opportunity to object to these threshold rulings that, as

discussed infra, clearly implicated Appellant’s due process rights. Accordingly,

we do not find that Appellant has waived his claim.

       Moreover, Appellant’s standing in the underlying dependency matter is

irrelevant to the issuance of the stay-away order. Accord K.N.L. I, supra

(affirming the adoption court’s finding that Appellant lacked standing in the

adoption proceedings but concluding that the court nonetheless deprived

Appellant of due process in entering the stay-away order). Therefore, any

purported waiver of a claim to standing in the dependency proceedings is

inconsequential to our review of the instant appeal.          This Court explicitly

directed that if “any party has a basis for seeking [a stay-away] order in this

matter, it will have to be pursued in a manner to adhere to the parties’

guarantees to due process[.]” K.N.L. I, supra at 42. That directive was not

limited to a stay-away order on the adoption docket.

       Stated simply, the juvenile court and K.L. have missed the forest for the

trees.5   It is irrelevant whether the stay-away order was entered on the
____________________________________________

5 We observe that the juvenile court has since concluded that it erred by not
allowing Appellant the opportunity to be heard. See Juvenile Court Opinion,
7/27/22, at 6; see also DHS letter in lieu of brief, 10/4/22 (joining the court’s
request for a remand to provide Appellant the opportunity to be heard).

                                           -9-
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dependency docket or the adoption docket, or whether Appellant had standing

to participate in either of those underlying proceedings. The discrete issue

before this Court is whether the juvenile court violated Appellant’s due process

rights in entering the stay-away order.

      The instant stay-away order limits Appellant’s movement and provides

that a violation may result in Appellant’s imprisonment. Unquestionably, the

order encroached upon Appellant’s recognized liberty interests. See Beish,

supra at 968 (“Freedom from bodily restraint lies at the core of

the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause.” (cleaned up)). Accordingly,

as he was in K.N.L. I, supra, on the adoption docket, Appellant was entitled

to due process, namely, notice and an opportunity to be heard, prior to

issuance of the stay-away order on the dependency docket. See also S.T. v.

R.W., 192 A.3d 1155, 1161 (Pa.Super. 2018) (“[P]rocedural due process

requires, at its core, adequate notice, opportunity to be heard, and the chance

to defend oneself before a fair and impartial tribunal having jurisdiction over

the case. Due process is flexible and calls for such procedural protections as

the situation demands.” (cleaned up)).

      In the case sub judice, the juvenile court provided Appellant notice of

the stay-away order.    However, it denied Appellant the opportunity to be

heard. As such, we are compelled to vacate the order and remand to the

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juvenile court.6 Upon remand, we once again advise that if “any party has a

basis for seeking [a stay-away] order in this matter, it will have to be pursued

in a manner to adhere to the parties’ guarantees to due process[, i.e., by

providing Appellant notice and the opportunity to be heard, along] with the

creation of an appellate record from which this Court may conduct our review.”

K.N.L. I, supra (non-precedential decision at 42).

       Order vacated.         Case remanded with instructions.      Jurisdiction

relinquished.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/6/2022

____________________________________________

6 In light of this disposition, we do not reach Appellant’s remaining issues.
Nonetheless, we note with displeasure that Appellant’s second issue includes
a thinly veiled attempt to relitigate bias claims that had been rejected by this
Court in K.N.L. I, supra, in relation to the adoption proceedings. Even if we
were to reach Appellant’s new bias claims in relation to the dependency
proceedings, we discern no evidence of bias against Appellant by the juvenile
court.

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