Court Opinion

ID: 6348765
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-10 15:29:39.942903+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:42:12.149384
License: Public Domain

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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 CHAD BATTERMAN                            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                           :        PENNSYLVANIA
                    Appellant              :
                                           :
                                           :
              v.                           :
                                           :
                                           :
 SILVIA SANTO                              :   No. 1532 EDA 2021

                Appeal from the Order Entered June 16, 2021
            In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County
                      Civil Division at No: 2019-06877

 CHAD BATTERMAN                            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                           :        PENNSYLVANIA
                    Appellant              :
                                           :
                                           :
              v.                           :
                                           :
                                           :
 SILVIA SANTO                              :   No. 1703 EDA 2021

                 Appeal from the Order Entered July 16, 2021
            In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County
                      Civil Division at No: 2019-06877

BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., and McCAFFERY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                              FILED JUNE 10, 2022

      Chad Batterman (“Father”) appeals pro se from the child custody orders

entered on June 16, 2021, and July 16, 2021. In the June 16, 2021 order,

the trial court ruled on a dispute involving a dance recital Father scheduled for

one of the parties’ children and a vacation Silvia Santo (“Mother”) scheduled

for the same time. The court further denied Father’s request to find Mother

in contempt. In the July 16, 2021 order, the court made a final custody award,
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maintaining sole legal and primary physical custody of the parties’ children

with Mother and adjusting Father’s partial physical custody schedule.     The

court again denied Father’s request to find Mother in contempt. In reviewing

these matters, we also consider Father’s pro se “Motion for Reconsideration”

of our order consolidating his appeals. We affirm the June 16, 2021, and July

16, 2021 orders and deny Father’s motion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

     This case has a lengthy and tortuous history. For the sake of brevity,

we note only that Father and Mother married in November 2014 and separated

in November 2017. The parties had two children together, C.B., a female born

in October 2015, and D.B., a male born in October 2017 (collectively, “the

Children”). Mother commenced divorce proceedings, but our review of the

record does not disclose whether those proceedings remain ongoing.

     The parties’ custody litigation began in Philadelphia County. Pursuant

to a custody order entered by the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas,

dated March 6, 2019, Mother received sole legal and primary physical custody

of the Children. Father received partial physical custody on the first, third,

and (if available) fifth weekend of each month, from Thursday at 4:00 p.m.

until Monday at 9:00 a.m. During weeks that Father would not have weekend

custody, he received partial physical custody on Thursday from 4:00 p.m. until

8:00 p.m. The Philadelphia trial court entered an amended custody order,

dated May 3, 2019, which made no substantive changes to this schedule.

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      Meanwhile, venue over the dispute transferred to Montgomery County,

because Mother lived there, and neither party continued to live in Philadelphia

County. Extensive litigation ensued over the next two years, due in large part

to Father’s myriad court filings and discovery disputes he initiated with two

police departments and a pediatrician’s office.

      Relevant for purposes of this appeal, the trial court entered an order on

October 15, 2020, pursuant to which the parties agreed to resolve all custody

issues between them by withdrawing their outstanding pleadings and leaving

the existing May 3, 2019 order in place. This resolution of the parties’ dispute

lasted only fleetingly, as Father filed pro se petitions for contempt on October

23, 2020, October 26, 2020, and October 30, 2020, followed by two pro se

amended petitions for contempt on December 9, 2020. Father filed a pro se

petition to modify custody on November 25, 2020, in which he requested sole

legal and primary physical custody of the Children. He then filed yet another

pro se petition for contempt on February 26, 2021.

      The trial court conducted a consolidated hearing on Father’s pleadings

over five days, on January 25, 2021, January 26, 2021, February 19, 2021,

March 15, 2021, and March 16, 2021. Following the hearing, on March 17,

2021, the court entered an order indicating that it was taking the matter under

advisement.

      While the trial court’s resolution remained pending, yet another dispute

arose between the parties. On May 12, 2021, Father filed a pro se “Emergency

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Motion Regarding Dance Recital,” averring that a conflict had arisen between

a dance recital he arranged for C.B. and a vacation Mother planned for June

2021. Father later filed a pro se amended version of this pleading on June 2,

2021, and a pro se “Emergency Motion for Special Relief for the Denial of

Mother’s Vacation and Contempt” on June 4, 2021. He filed a pro se amended

pleading requesting special relief and contempt on June 15, 2021. Generally,

Father requested that the court prohibit or limit Mother’s planned vacation or,

in the alternative, find her in contempt of the May 3, 2019 order for failing to

provide him with start and end dates of her vacation thirty days in advance.

       The trial court conducted a hearing on June 16, 2021, and entered an

order that same day, which denied as moot Father’s request to ensure C.B.

participated in her dance recital by precluding Mother’s vacation. The court

granted Father’s request to limit Mother’s vacation in part, in that it directed

Mother to return Child to Father by 6:00 p.m. on June 19, 2021. Further, the

court granted Father three days of makeup custody time during the summer

of 2021. The court denied Father’s request to find Mother in contempt.

       On July 12, 2021, Father filed a pro se motion for reconsideration of the

June 16, 2021 order. The trial court denied reconsideration on the same day.1

Father timely filed a pro se notice of appeal on July 13, 2020, along with a

____________________________________________

1 Curiously, the motion for reconsideration continued to appear as a pending
pleading on scheduling orders for months afterward. See, e.g., Amended
Order – Scheduling, 9/16/21.

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concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.2 This Court assigned

Father’s appeal docket number 1532 EDA 2021.

       While the parties litigated their dispute regarding the dance recital and

Mother’s vacation, the trial court had not yet entered an order resolving the

five-day custody hearing from January to March 2021. In addition, the parties

continued to file new pleadings. Mother filed an emergency custody petition

on June 25, 2021, averring Father was refusing to return the Children to her

care pursuant to the May 3, 2019 order. She filed a praecipe to withdraw the

emergency petition on June 29, 2021. Father filed a pro se petition for special

relief on July 13, 2021, requesting sole legal custody and that the Children be

enrolled in a camp program his family operates.3

       At last, the trial court entered its final custody order on July 16, 2021.

The order maintained sole legal and primary physical custody of the Children

with Mother and adjusted Father’s partial physical custody award. The order
____________________________________________

2 The June 16, 2021 order is appealable, as it denied Father’s request for a
finding of contempt with respect to the May 3, 2019 final order. See Schultz
v. Schultz, 70 A.3d 826, 828-29 (Pa. Super. 2013) (“[A]n order refusing to
find an individual in contempt is appealable only where the respondent failed
to comply with a prior final order.”). To the extent portions of the June 16,
2021 order not dealing with contempt were interlocutory and unappealable at
the time Father filed his notice of appeal, the subsequent entry and appeal of
the final custody order, described below, rendered those portions reviewable.
In re Bridgeport Fire Litigation, 51 A.3d 224, 229 (Pa. Super. 2012) (citing
Quinn v. Bupp, 955 A.2d 1014, 1020 (Pa. Super. 2008), reargument denied
(Sept. 19, 2008), appeal denied, 989 A.2d 918 (Pa. 2009)).

3The parties also filed a slew of contempt petitions against each other between
June 25, 2021, and August 14, 2021. These petitions remained pending at
the time this Court received the certified record.

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awarded Father partial physical custody every Tuesday from 8:00 a.m. until

Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. and every other weekend from Friday at 5:00 p.m.

until Monday at 8:00 a.m. Moreover, the order explained, although “certain

actions of each of the parties ha[ve] risen to the level of contempt,” the court

was “choos[ing] to look forward and not back” and denied the outstanding

contempt petitions, with the aspiration that the parties would resolve their

differences more amicably going forward. Order, 7/16/21, at 8-9. The court

issued separate findings of fact, which further explained its decision.

       In essence, the trial court’s findings focused on the parties’ inability to

coparent and hostility toward each other. While the court found Mother was

not without fault for this situation, it concluded Father bore the greater share

of the blame, due primarily to his excessive litigiousness. Findings of Fact,

7/16/21, at 2-5, 9. The court expressed hope that the parties would improve

their coparenting in the future but reasoned that their present combativeness

precluded a more equal custody award. Id. at 4, 11-12.

       Mother filed a motion for reconsideration of the July 16, 2021 order on

August 13, 2021. Father then filed timely pro se notice of appeal on August

16, 2021,4 along with a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.

He filed a pro se amended concise statement on August 17, 2021, which made
____________________________________________

4 Thirty days after the trial court entered its order was Sunday, August 15,
2021. Therefore, Father timely filed his notice of appeal on Monday, August
16, 2021. See Pa.R.A.P. 903, Note (observing our Rules of Appellate
Procedure incorporate 1 Pa.C.S. § 1908 “relating to . . . the omission of the
last day of a time period which falls on Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday.”).

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only superficial wording changes to the claims he was presenting. It does not

appear that the trial court ruled specifically on the motion for reconsideration.

This Court assigned Father’s second appeal docket number 1703 EDA 2021.5

FATHER’S APPEAL AT 1532 EDA 2021

       We begin by considering Father’s appeal at 1532 EDA 2021. He presents

the following claims for our review:

       Did the trial court err[] as a matter of law by the following:

       1. by failing to find [Mother] in contempt of the May 3, 2019
       custody order,

       2. by modifying the May 3, 2019 custody order without prior
       notice,

       3. by modifying the May 3, 2019 custody order at a contempt
       hearing when there was no pending petition to modify custody
       heard at the hearing, and

       4. by allowing [Mother] to submit their exhibits late, not in
       compliance with the June 7, 2021 scheduling order[?]

Father’s Brief (1532 EDA 2021) at 6 (emphasis and unnecessary capitalization

omitted) (unnumbered pages).6

____________________________________________

5We entered an order consolidating Father’s two appeals on January 11, 2022.
Father filed a pro se “Motion for Reconsideration” of our consolidation order
on January 25, 2022. Because consolidation eases our review and disposition
of Father’s appeals and causes him no prejudice, we deny his motion.
6 We note with disapproval that Father does not divide the argument section
of brief into subsections corresponding to his statement of questions involved.
See Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a) (“The argument shall be divided into as many parts as
there are questions to be argued; and shall have at the head of each part--in
distinctive type or in type distinctively displayed--the particular point treated
therein[.]”).

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       In Father’s first claim, he challenges the trial court’s finding that Mother

was not in contempt of the May 3, 2019 order by going on vacation with the

Children rather than facilitating C.B.’s participation in the dance recital that

he arranged. We review the court’s finding pursuant to an abuse of discretion

standard of review. Garr v. Peters, 773 A.2d 183, 189 (Pa. Super. 2001).

To support a finding of civil contempt,7 a court must determine “(1) that the

contemnor had notice of the specific order or decree which she is alleged to

have disobeyed; (2) that the act constituting the contemnor’s violation was

volitional; and (3) that the contemnor acted with wrongful intent.” Harcar v.

Harcar, 982 A.2d 1230, 1235 (Pa. Super. 2009).

       Father argues Mother was in contempt of the May 3, 2019 order because

she did not provide him with notice of her vacation thirty days in advance with

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7 A trial court may order civil or criminal contempt. In the Interest of E.O.,
195 A.3d 583, 586 (Pa. Super. 2018) (quoting In the Interest of C.W., 960
A.2d 458, 466 (Pa. Super. 2008)). If the court’s dominant purpose in finding
contempt is to coerce compliance by the contemnor, the adjudication is civil
in nature. Id. If the court’s dominant purpose is to punish disobedience by
the contemnor, the adjudication is criminal in nature. Id.

       We apply the standards applicable to a finding of civil contempt here, as
this case involves a private party requesting contempt in an ongoing action to
obtain relief for his own benefit. See Warmkessel v. Heffner, 17 A.3d 408,
414 (Pa. Super. 2011), appeal denied, 34 A.3d 833 (Pa. 2011) (quoting Stahl
v. Redcay, 897 A.2d 478, 486 (Pa. Super. 2006), reargument denied (May
18, 2006), appeal denied, 918 A.2d 747 (Pa. 2007)) (discussing factors
“generally said to point to a civil contempt”). In addition, Father sought civil
contempt in his petitions or included language in his petitions asking the trial
court to enter an order “compelling [Mother] to comply[.]” See, e.g., Petition
for Contempt and Enforcement, 10/23/20, at 2-3; Emergency Petition for Civil
Contempt, 10/26/20, at 1.

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the specific start and end dates. Father’s Brief (1532 EDA 2021) at 7-9. He

further maintains Mother was in contempt because her vacation caused an

extension of her custody time and reduction of his custody time. Id. at 8-11.

Father’s claim relies on the vacation provision of the May 3, 2019 order, which

provides, in relevant part, that the parents would each “be entitled to two []

non-consecutive weeks of vacation with the Children upon thirty [] days

written notice to the other parent. A week is defined as seven [] days, which

shall not be used to extend their regular custodial time.” Order, 5/3/19, at 4

(unnecessary capitalization omitted).

      The trial court explained in its opinion that it declined to find Mother in

contempt because it did not believe that she acted with wrongful intent. Trial

Court Opinion (1532 EDA 2021), 9/13/21, at 7-9. The court cited Mother’s

testimony regarding her numerous attempts to compromise with Father after

the parties discovered the conflict between the vacation and the dance recital.

Id. In addition, the court reasoned that the vacation provision of the May 3,

2019 order was ambiguous. Id. While the order provided that Mother could

exercise two nonconsecutive weeks of vacation with Child each year, it further

provided Mother’s vacation could not “extend [her] regular custodial time.”

Id. at 6 (quoting Order, 5/3/19, at 4) (capitalization omitted). This made it

impossible for Mother to exercise a full week of vacation with Child without

violating the order, the court observed, since Father was entitled to regular

custody of Child under the order at least once per week. Id. at 6-7.

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       We discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s analysis. The record

indicates that Mother first notified Father she would be taking a vacation on

the same weekend as the June 2021 dance recital on April 23, 2021, more

than thirty days in advance. N.T., 6/16/21, at 57, 85; Supplemental Record,

12/6/21.8 Further, Mother testified she attempted repeatedly to compromise

with Father to resolve the parties’ disagreement. N.T., 6/16/21, at 86-90.

These attempts at compromise included a proposal Mother sent Father on May

4, 2021, which included specific start and end dates for her vacation. See

Supplemental Record, 12/6/21 (“I would start our vacation . . . Sunday, June

13th to Sunday, June 20th, [C.B.] would be here to do the recital[, and] the

kids still get a great vacation, seems like a win win. Are you ok with this?”).

This again was more than thirty days in advance. While Mother did ultimately

act contrary to the May 3, 2019 order by taking a vacation that extended her

regular custodial time, this evidence supports the court’s finding that she did

not act with wrongful intent.

       It was also reasonable for the trial court to weigh the ambiguity of the

May 3, 2019 order against a finding of contempt. As the court observed, the

order provided that the parties would have seven-day periods of vacation but

also that vacation could not extend a party’s regular custody time. This caveat

made it impossible for Mother to have a seven-day vacation, since Father

____________________________________________

8 This Court received a supplemental record on December 6, 2021, containing
exhibits from the June 16, 2021 hearing, but the exhibits are not individually
labeled.

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would always have custody of the Children at least once per week. See Sutch

v. Roxborough Memorial Hosp., 142 A.3d 38, 67 (Pa. Super. 2016), appeal

denied, 163 A.3d 399 (Pa. 2016) (quoting Stahl, 897 A.2d at 489) (“Because

the order forming the basis for civil contempt must be strictly construed, any

ambiguities or omissions in the order must be construed in favor of the

defendant. In such cases, a contradictory order . . . will not serve as the basis

for a finding of contempt.”).

       Next, Father argues in his interrelated second and third claims that the

trial court impermissibly modified the May 3, 2019 custody order following the

contempt hearing without prior notice and when there was no pending custody

modification petition.9 He contends the court had no power to deviate from

the terms of the May 3, 2019 order and simply should have enforced it as it

was written, which would have meant limiting Mother to less than a full seven

days of vacation and ordering her to return the Children to him for his regular

custody time beginning on Thursday, June 17, 2017. Father’s Brief (1532 EDA

2021) at 11-13. Father maintains that the court instead modified the order

by directing Mother to return the Children on the evening of Saturday, June

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9 We note that different trial judges entered the two orders on appeal in this
matter. The Honorable Richard S. Haaz entered the order on appeal at 1532
EDA 2021, relating to the dance recital and Mother’s vacation, while the
Honorable Melissa S. Sterling entered the order on appeal at 1703 EDA 2021,
resulting from the five-day modification hearing. Thus, while there actually
was a modification proceeding pending at the time Judge Haaz entered the
June 16, 2021 order, Judge Haaz had not been involved.

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19, 2019, resulting in Father exercising only part of his regular custody time.

Id.

       Our case law is clear a trial court may not modify custody at a contempt

hearing without explicit notice to the parties that custody rights are at stake.

J.M. v. K.W., 164 A.3d 1260, 1267-70 (Pa. Super. 2017) (en banc). In this

case, by contrast, the record demonstrates contempt was not the only matter

at issue when the court entered its June 16, 2021 order. The court addressed

two of Father’s outstanding pleadings when entering its order, which included

his “Amended Emergency Motion for Special Relief Regarding Dance Recital”

and “Amended Emergency Motion for Special Relief for the Denial of Mother’s

Vacation and Contempt.” In the pleadings, Father asked that the court ensure

C.B.’s participation in her dance recital and prevent Mother from continuing

her vacation into his custody time. At the time of the hearing, Father did not

dispute that his request to ensure C.B.’s participation in her dance recital was

moot, since the recital had already occurred. N.T., 6/16/21, at 6. He asked,

nonetheless, that the court order Mother to return from her vacation early, so

that it would not continue into his custody time. Id. at 7. Therefore, because

Father himself placed custody at issue by requesting that the court enter an

order resolving the parties’ vacation dispute, no relief is due.10
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10It was permissible for the trial court to enter the custody portion of its order
pursuant to our Rules of Civil Procedure, which provide, “[a]t any time after
commencement of the action, the court may on application or its own motion
grant appropriate interim or special relief. The relief may include, but is not
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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       Father’s fourth and final claim at 1532 EDA 2021 is that the trial court

erred by permitting Mother to submit exhibits late and not in compliance with

its June 7, 2021 scheduling order. Father argues the court’s scheduling order

required the parties to submit exhibits three business days prior to the hearing

scheduled for Wednesday, June 16, 2021, at 9:30 a.m. Father’s Brief (1532

EDA 2021) at 14. Father insists Mother violated the order by submitting her

exhibits on Sunday, June 13, 2021, at 5:35 p.m. Id.

       We agree with the trial court that Father waived this claim by failing to

make a timely and specific objection at the hearing, as the following excerpt

from the record reveals:

              THE COURT: All right, [Father]. You have the floor.

             [Father:] Just some housekeeping, just a normal record. I
       am not sure if you are aware, pursuant to your June 17 [sic]
       scheduling order, we had to submit exhibits by three business
       days, which is Friday. [Mother’s counsel] sent it on Friday 5:30
       p.m., which would only by two business days before. I would like
       to note that on the record. I object to them being --

             THE COURT: Okay. If he moves them in, you make an
       objection and I will make a ruling at that time.

              [Father:] Okay. . . .

                                               ***

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limited to, the award of temporary legal or physical custody[.]” Pa.R.C.P.
1915.13; see also J.M., 164 A.3d at 1269 (explaining, “that absent an award
of special relief under Rule 1915.13 . . . it is an abuse of discretion for the trial
court to transfer custody from one party to the other as a contempt sanction”).

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             THE COURT: . . . . [Mother’s counsel], do you have anymore
       evidence to present?

             [Mother’s counsel:] No. Just move the admission of Exhibit
       M-1 through M-4?

             THE COURT: Any objection to M-1 through M-4?

             [Father:] No. No objection.

             THE COURT: They are admitted into the record.

N.T., 6/16/21, at 9, 125.

       As we have explained, failure to make a timely and specific objection in

the trial court will result in waiver on appeal. In the Interest of L.V., 209

A.3d 399, 418 (Pa. Super. 2019) (quoting In re S.C.B., 990 A.2d 762, 767

(Pa. Super. 2010)). “[O]ne must object to errors . . . at the earliest possible

stage of the adjudicatory process to afford the jurist hearing the case the first

occasion to remedy the wrong and possibly avoid an unnecessary appeal to

complain of the matter.” Id. Because Father stated expressly on the record

that he did not object to the admission of Mother’s exhibits, he is not entitled

to relief.

       Based on the foregoing analysis, we conclude Father’s appeal at 1532

EDA 2021 is meritless, and we affirm the June 16, 2021 order.

FATHER’S APPEAL AT 1703 EDA 2021

       We next direct our attention to Father’s appeal at 1703 EDA 2021. His

brief presents the following claims:

       The [trial] court erred in its Order of July 16, 2021, for the
       following reasons:

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     1. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by awarding Mother
     primary physical custody of the parties’ children.

     2. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by awarding Mother
     sole legal custody of the parties’ children.

     3. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by failing to rule on
     contempt petitions before the court, failing to find [Mother] in
     contempt and failing to award make-up time and filing fees to
     [Father].

     4. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by failing to enter an
     order regarding the [C]hildren’s school and summer camp
     consistent with the [C]hildren’s best interest and best options
     available to them.

     5. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by failing to equitably
     distribute the financial obligations and holiday time between the
     parties’. [sic]

     6. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by denying [Father’s]
     motion to allow more time for contempt’s [sic] to be fully heard
     and stay all pending matters.

     7. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by substantially
     limiting the custody hearing, evidence, subpoenas and witnesses,
     including experts, presented by [Father].

     8. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by refusing to recuse
     herself from the parties’ case despite [Father’s] petition for
     recusal.

     9. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by denying Father’s
     motion in limine to exclude reference or evidence of [Father’s]
     driver’s license.

     10. The [trial court] erred as a matter of law by denying Father’s
     motion in limine to exclude reference or evidence of support.

Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 11-12 (unnecessary capitalization omitted)

(unnumbered pages).

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       Preliminarily, we address Father’s noncompliance with our law regarding

appellate briefs. Pa.R.A.P. 2135(a)(1) provides that a principal brief generally

should not exceed fourteen thousand words, and that a typed principal brief

over thirty pages in length must contain a certificate of compliance. Father’s

principal brief at 1703 EDA 2021, excluding supplementary matter, is ninety-

seven pages long and does not include a certificate of compliance. According

to a word processor, the brief includes nearly forty thousand words, excluding

the same supplementary matter.11 Father again fails to comply with Pa.R.A.P.

2119(a), in that he organizes the argument section of his brief in a manner

inconsistent with his statement of questions involved. Cf. Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a)

Further, Father fails to develop several claims with citation to legal authority.

See In re M.Z.T.M.W., 163 A.3d 462, 465 (Pa. Super. 2017) (explaining that

this Court will not review a claim unless it is developed in the argument section

of an appellant's brief and supported by citation to relevant legal authority).

       While Father is proceeding pro se, we must emphasize this status does

not relieve him of the obligation to comply with our appellate rules. Jiricko

v. Geico Ins. Co., 947 A.2d 206, 213 n.11 (Pa. Super. 2008), appeal denied,

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11As a further example of Father’s extreme prolixity, we note that Mother filed
only a short appellee’s brief in this Court indicating she was relying on the trial
court’s explanation of its decision. In response, Father filed a seventy-page
reply brief. Cf. Pa.R.A.P. 2135(a)(1) (directing that, generally, “a reply brief
shall not exceed 7,000 words . . . . A party shall file a certificate of compliance
with the word count limit if the . . . reply brief is longer than 15 pages when
prepared on a word processor or typewriter.”).

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958 A.2d 1048 (Pa. 2008). Although this Court is willing to construe Father’s

pro se materials liberally, “pro se status confers no special benefit upon [an]

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.” In re Ullman, 995 A.2d 1207, 1211-

12 (Pa. Super. 2010), reargument denied (July 13, 2010), appeal denied, 20

A.3d 489 (Pa. 2011) (citations omitted).

      Given Father’s noncompliant principal brief, we could dismiss his appeal

in its entirety. See Pa.R.A.P. 2101 (“[I]f the defects are in the brief . . . of

the appellant and are substantial, 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.”). Nevertheless, in the interest of justice, and mindful that this is

a Children’s Fast Track appeal, we will endeavor to address Father’s claims to

the extent we are able to discern them.

      We review the custody order pursuant to an abuse of discretion standard

of review. V.B. v. J.E.B., 55 A.3d 1193, 1197 (Pa. Super. 2012) (quoting

C.R.F. v. S.E.F., 45 A.3d 441, 443 (Pa. Super. 2012)). This Court must defer

to the trial court’s credibility and weight of the evidence determinations, as

the court was able to view and assess the witnesses’ testimony firsthand. Id.

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We must accept the court’s factual findings if the record supports them, but

we need not accept the court’s deductions or inferences from its findings. Id.

      When entering a custody order, the trial court must base its decision on

the child’s best interests. S.W.D. v. S.A.R., 96 A.3d 396, 400 (Pa. Super.

2014) (citation omitted). The factors that courts must consider when ordering

custody are set forth at 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a), as follows:

      (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)
            (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.

            (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

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            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).

      In his interrelated first, second, and fourth claims, Father challenges the

trial court’s credibility determinations and findings of fact, arguing the court

should have viewed the evidence differently and awarded him primary physical

and sole legal custody of the Children. Father contends, in essence, that he

has supported the Children’s relationship with Mother, while Mother has tried

to limit the Children’s relationship with him. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021)

at 12-23. He also maintains the Children want to spend more time with him.

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Father criticizes Mother’s parenting in various ways, alleging she mistreats the

Children. Id. at 16-19. He complains that Mother has made poor decisions

with respect to the Children’s education, and that the Children should attend

the preschool and camp program that his family operates as well as a school

district where he resides.12 Id. at 14, 17-21, 83-87. Regarding the award of

sole legal custody in particular, Father contends that Mother does not consult

him or keep him informed but acts out of animosity and has used the award

to exclude Father from the Children’s major life decisions. Id. at 24-27.

       As we summarized above, the trial court considered the Section 5328(a)

factors in its findings of fact, focusing on the parties’ inability to coparent and

hostility toward each other. While the court found Mother bore some blame,

it concluded that Father was the party most responsible for the situation, due

primarily to his excessive litigiousness. Findings of Fact, 7/16/21, at 2-5, 9.

While the court expressed hope the parties coparenting would improve in the

future, it reasoned that their present combativeness precluded a more equal

award of custody. Id. at 4, 11-12. The following is illustrative of the court’s

findings:

             While ordinarily this might be a case for a 50/50 sharing of
       custody, and we hope that may someday be the case, Father’s
       behavior is and has been his own worst enemy. He files pleading
       after pleading, not only against Mother, but against her parents,
       against the local police departments where custody exchanges
       take place, and against the doctors who provide medical care for
____________________________________________

12Father indicates in his brief that he “does have residency” in three different
school districts. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 84.

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     his [c]hildren. We find particularly sad the fact that Father has
     badgered (with over 30 emails) the very professionals who
     provide care for his [c]hildren until, although they would like to
     continue to provide that care, they cannot do so due to Father’s
     repeated impositions on their staff in his search for the most
     minute and irrelevant details on the relationship between Mother
     and the pediatric practice which have nothing to do with his
     [c]hildren’s care.

                                 ***

     . . . [W]e must be guided by what is in the best interest of the
     Children. Constant court battles over custody, support, discovery,
     vacations, religion and a plethora of other issues are destructive
     to these [c]hildren who are regularly exposed to the stress . . .
     and cannot be unaffected by this. While Mother is not without
     blame and Father has presented many legitimate issues to the
     [c]ourt, we find that Father’s unending litigious nature and need
     to win precludes us from finding the parties equal . . . . Fighting
     over every perceived slight is not a way to show a parent’s love
     for their [c]hildren or to create a healthy environment in which
     they can grow.

                                 ***

            We do not make our decision today lightly, particularly given
     the four-year, non-stop battle over these small children and the
     continued abuse of court time and resources. It appears to us
     that their spiteful litigation has almost become a full-time job for
     these parents. We know Father seeks an equal parenting role,
     but we do not believe that would be the correct decision at this
     time. These parents must learn to co-parent as peacefully as they
     possibly can. Once they reach that state of mind – that their
     children are more important than their battles – we are hopeful
     that they will be able to jointly make the right decisions for the
     Children. But for now, one parent must have the ability to make
     final decisions on critical issues such as health and education and,
     having heard 5 days of testimony, reviewed both parties’ exhibits
     and considered all the evidence before us, we believe the Order
     we have issued today is the fairest we can provide.

Id. at 4-12.

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      Our review of the record supports the trial court’s decision. Tellingly,

the hearing began on January 25, 2021, with argument addressing Father’s

ongoing discovery disputes with third parties, which included his attempt to

subpoena records from the pediatrician’s office that the Children attend. The

office’s counsel appeared at the hearing and maintained she and the office’s

staff had spent “untold hours communicating” with Father. N.T., 1/25/21, at

21. Counsel indicated that Father received the Children’s medical records, as

well as records of her personal communications with Mother. Id. at 22-23.

Father still was not satisfied, counsel explained, and sent her “what looked

like interrogatories with . . . 30, 40 questions that he was demanding that I

answer, and I didn’t respond, and now he subpoenaed me to be here today.”

Id. at 23. She cautioned the office “can’t afford to stay in these battles. And

so if [Father] is permitted to keep serving subpoenas and to keep harassing

[the office] and to keep harassing me, they’re going to have to say they can’t

care for these children anymore.” Id.

      The record indicates Father’s litigious tendencies manifest even outside

of court in personal communications with Mother. The parties send messages

to one another using the “Our Family Wizard” electronic system. During her

testimony, Mother reported Father had sent her approximately two thousand

one hundred messages since the parties began using Our Family Wizard in

February 2018, which amounted to an average of fifty-eight messages per

month. N.T., 2/19/21, at 141-42. The messages were often lengthy. Father

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acknowledged that his messages sometimes contain twenty or more questions

for Mother to answer. Id. at 220; 1/26/21, at 191-92; N.T., 3/15/21, at 261.

The parties’ custody evaluation, which the trial court admitted into evidence,

and some of which Mother read while testifying, described Father’s messages

as “very inappropriate and not conducive to reciprocal communication. His

questions are often demanding, numerous, numbered, have an accusatory

tone, and contain deadlines by which [Mother] is to provide the information.

His communication style can be described as nothing short of adversarial.”

N.T., 3/16/21, at 236-37.     While Father sometimes invites Mother to joint

activities, the evaluation added, the invitations to these activities frequently

appear “in lengthy messages that are replete with accusations, insults, and

demeaning language.” Id. at 239.

      Perhaps the most troubling aspect of Father’s litigiousness is the way in

which he has attempted to use the courts to impair Mother’s relationship with

the Children. The record reveals that Father filed a series of unfounded child

abuse reports against Mother, apparently prior to the entry of the final May 3,

2019 order in Philadelphia. N.T., 3/16/21, at 147-49, 221-225, 239-40. The

May 3, 2019 order is replete with findings regarding these reports. See, e.g.,

Order, 5/3/19, at 6 (“Father has repeatedly abused child protective services

. . . in attempts to secure tactical advantages in this custody litigation and to

attempt to circumvent interim custody orders. All child protective services

. . . have found allegations of abuse unfounded.”) (unnecessary capitalization

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omitted).    Father persisted, nevertheless, in defending this behavior and

characterizing Mother as an abuser during the hearings in the matter at bar.

See N.T., 3/15/21, at 18-21; N.T., 3/16/21, at 76, 270. Even before this

Court, Father asserts in his brief and reply brief that Mother engaged in abuse.

See Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 7, 16, 37, 78; Father’s Reply Brief

(1703 EDA 2021) at 11-12, 36-38, 51, 58 (unnumbered pages).

       Ultimately, Section 5328(a)(13) directs that trial courts consider “[t]he

level of conflict between the parties and the willingness and ability of the

parties to cooperate with one another” when rendering a custody award. 23

Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(a)(13). Our review of the record amply supports the court’s

conclusion that this is a high-conflict case with poor cooperation between the

parties, due primarily to Father’s litigiousness. Thus, it was within the court’s

discretion to award sole legal and primary physical custody of the Children to

Mother. See P.J.P. v. M.M., 185 A.3d 413, 420 (Pa. Super. 2018) (affirming

the trial court’s award of primary physical custody to the appellee where the

record supported the court’s finding that “the high level of conflict between

[the parties’] would make a shared custody arrangement untenable. . . . The

record confirms that they struggle to communicate with each other, and have

been unable to resolve their interpersonal disputes.”).13

____________________________________________

13In the July 16, 2021 order, the trial court granted Father’s request that the
Children attend his family’s preschool and camp program in part, in that it
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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       In Father’s third claim, he contends that the trial court erred by failing

to rule “meaningfully” on his contempt petitions, by failing to find Mother in

contempt, and by failing to award him “make-up time and filing fees.” Father’s

Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 11, 28. The first portion of Father’s claim fails, as

the court expressly denied his contempt petitions. See Order, 7/16/21, at 8-

9 (“[W]e are denying all petitions for contempt . . . . This order resolves all

outstanding pleadings . . . filed by either of the parties . . . before the date of

this order[.]”) (unnecessary capitalization and emphasis omitted, italics in

original). We conclude Father waived the remainder of this claim by failing to

develop it a manner capable of appellate review.

       Here, Father filed four contempt petitions and two amended contempt

petitions, which were at issue when the trial court entered its order of July 16,

2021. He fails to specify in the argument section of his brief, however, which

of his several petitions his argument pertains to, what the relevant allegations

of contempt were, and how the evidence at the hearing was such that the

court abused its discretion by not finding contempt. Instead, Father indicates

____________________________________________

directed that the Children attend the camp program at least three weeks each
summer and be allowed to attend the preschool during Father’s custodial time.
Order, 7/16/21, at 3. Father appears to argue, in relevant part, that the court
should have ordered the Children to attend the camp for eight weeks each
summer and to attend the preschool full time. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021)
at 81-87. Given the court’s observations regarding the parties’ high-conflict
relationship, and its award of sole legal and primary physical custody to
Mother, we discern no abuse of discretion by the court in deciding to limit the
amount of time the Children would need to spend at the preschool and camp
program Father’s family operates.

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that he will provide “some highlights of Mother’s contemptuous behavior” and

then goes on for roughly fifty pages listing, often with repetition, seemingly

everything he can think of that Mother has done to upset him since the parties

separated. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 29-81. Father’s contempt claim

is incomprehensible, and this Court will not act as his counsel by scouring the

record, comparing his myriad contempt allegations against the five days of

testimony in this case, and developing a clear argument for him. See Krauss,

104 A.3d at 584; Schenk v. Schenk, 880 A.2d 633, 639 (Pa. Super. 2005)

(quoting Hayward v. Hayward, 868 A.2d 554, 558 (Pa. Super. 2005) (“‘[I]t

is not the duty of the Superior Court to scour the record and act as appellant’s

counsel, and we decline to do so.’”).

      Father argues in his fifth claim that the trial erred by failing to “equitably

distribute” the parties’ “financial obligations and holiday time” in its July 16,

2021 order. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 11. Father complains Mother

does not earn a significant income but works for free at a daycare in exchange

for the Children’s attendance as well as part-time for a caterer. Id. at 87-91.

Because of this, Father argues, he is burdened with child and spousal support

obligations, provides the Children’s health insurance, and pays other expenses

as well. Id. at 89-91. Father also requests changes to the order’s holiday

schedule, asserting primarily that he should receive additional holiday time

with the Children, and that Mother’s holiday time should be reduced. Id. at

91-94.

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       It is important to emphasize the only matter presently before this panel

is the parties’ child custody dispute. To the extent Father complains about his

child or spousal support obligations, the order on appeal does not govern those

matters, and we may not consider them. Further, to the extent he complains

about his financial burdens in this custody case, the only burden the July 16,

2021 order appears to impose on Father is that he provide the Children with

health insurance. See Order, 7/16/21, at 8. Father did not oppose providing

insurance for the Children at the custody hearing and complained that Mother

was using her own health insurance for the Children rather than his. See N.T.

2/19/21, at 136 (Father testifying, “her not using my private health insurance

is another way of restricted parenting and not giving access so I don’t get the

summaries of the appointments.”). Therefore, the health insurance provision

in the July 16, 2021 order essentially grants relief that Father requested during

these proceedings.14

       As for Father’s complaints regarding the holiday schedule, our review of

the trial court’s order reveals the court crafted a reasonably balanced division

of holiday time. The parties alternate all secular holidays. Regarding religious

____________________________________________

14 We also note that Father’s complaint regarding Mother’s failure to earn a
significant income is perplexing, given Father does not appear to earn any
income at all. Father testified he suffered injuries in 2019, which impair his
ability to work as a software developer. N.T., 3/16/21, at 54, 68. According
to Father, these include injuries to his elbow, wrist, and back, which prevent
him from sitting and typing for long periods. Id. at 65-68. Father conceded,
despite this, that he had not earned “any money from working” since 2014,
long before the injuries occurred. Id. at 21.

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holidays, Father is Jewish, while Mother is Catholic. Thus, the court awarded

Jewish holidays to Father and Catholic holidays to Mother. The court awarded

more time to Mother during each Catholic holiday than it did to Father during

each Jewish holiday and provided Catholic holidays would take precedence if

a Catholic holiday and Jewish holiday coincide.15 The apparent reason for this

disparity is that there are more Jewish holidays on the schedule than Catholic

holidays. Specifically, the court awarded Father Passover, Rosh Hashanah,

Yom Kippur, and Hanukkah, while awarding Mother Easter and Christmas. If

no holidays coincide, this results in Father having one hundred and forty-four

hours of religious holiday time during a given year, and Mother’s having one

hundred and fifty-one hours of religious holiday time. As the holiday schedule

is generally equitable, we discern abuse of discretion.

       Next, Father’s interrelated sixth and seventh claims are that the trial

court erred by denying his “Motion to Extend Time for Contempts,” and limiting

his presentation of evidence during the hearing.16 The substance of Father’s

claims is that the five-day custody hearing the court conducted in this matter

____________________________________________

15More precisely, if Christmas and Hanukkah coincide, Christmas would take
precedence, but Father would receive an extra day of custody during the
noncoinciding portion of Hanukkah. If Easter and Passover coincide, Easter
would take precedence, except that Passover would take precedence over
Mother’s custody on Easter Monday.

16Father filed his “Motion to Extend Time for Contempts” during the hearing
on February 19, 2021, and the trial court denied the motion on the record.
N.T., 2/19/21, at 137.

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was inadequate for him to present his case. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021)

at 94-96. Father waived these claims by failing to develop them in his brief

with citations to relevant legal authority. See M.Z.T.M.W., 163 A.3d at 465.

      Even if Father had not waived these claims, we would conclude they are

meritless. It is within the sound discretion of the trial court to admit or exclude

evidence. In re A.J.R.-H., 188 A.3d 1157, 1166-67 (Pa. 2018). Our Rules

of Evidence direct, moreover, that courts “should exercise reasonable control

over the mode and order of examining witnesses and presenting evidence so

as to[,]” in relevant part, “(1) make those procedures effective for determining

the truth; [and] (2) avoid wasting time[.]” Pa.R.E. 611(a)(1)-(2).

      Here, we see no basis to conclude the five-day hearing in this matter

was inadequate for the trial court to hear the relevant evidence and reach an

appropriate decision. What Father fails to acknowledge in his brief is that the

hearing was originally scheduled to last only two days. See Amended Order

– Triage Resolution, 12/23/20 (scheduling the parties’ dispute for “a two []

day protracted hearing”). At the hearing, the court cautioned Father it would

not grant excessive continuances. See N.T., 1/26/21, at 115 (“But I’m just

telling you now, I’m not scheduling this hearing out three or four more days.”).

The court later relented and extended the matter for an additional three

days to accommodate Father. Of the five-day hearing that resulted, Father

spent about four days presenting evidence, while Mother spent about one.

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Although Father may have preferred to have an even longer hearing, it was

well within the court’s discretion to limit the case to five days.

       In Father’s eighth issue, he argues that the trial court erred by declining

to recuse itself. Father does not develop this argument in his brief but merely

directs our attention to argument he presented in his petition for recusal.17

Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 96-97. Thus, Father has waived this claim.

See M.Z.T.M.W., 163 A.3d at 465; Commonwealth v. Briggs, 12 A.3d 291,

343 (Pa. 2011) (“[O]ur appellate rules do not allow incorporation by reference

of arguments contained in briefs filed with other tribunals, or briefs attached

as appendices, as a substitute for the proper presentation of arguments in the

body of the appellate brief.”) (footnote omitted).

       Had Father not waived this claim, it would be meritless. We review the

trial court’s decision not to recuse for an abuse of discretion. In the Interest

of D.R., 216 A.3d 286, 292 (Pa. Super. 2019), affirmed, 232 A.3d 547 (Pa.

2020) (quoting In re A.D., 93 A.3d 888, 892 (Pa. Super. 2014)). Our review

of the court’s decision is “exceptionally deferential.” Id. We recognize that

the court itself is the best judge of its own impartiality, and that a court should

recuse “only if a doubt exists as to [its] ability to preside impartially or if

impartiality can be reasonably questioned.” Id.

____________________________________________

17 Father also filed this petition during the hearing on February 19, 2019. The
trial court denied it on the record. N.T., 2/19/21, at 137-40.

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      We have thoroughly reviewed the record in this case and have no reason

to believe that the trial court harbored any partiality against Father. Father’s

argument in his petition for recusal consisted generally of complaints that the

court made rulings or was conducting the matter in a way he did not like. This

Court has stated, contrary to Father’s position, that “simply because a judge

rules against a [party] does not establish bias on the part of the judge against

that [party].” Lewis v. Lewis, 234 A.3d 706, 722 (Pa. Super. 2020) (quoting

Commonwealth v. McCauley, 199 A.3d 947, 951 (Pa. Super. 2018)). Our

review confirms the court treated Father respectfully, granted him latitude

throughout the hearing, and demonstrated exemplary patience. As discussed

above, the court even held a hearing that was more than twice its originally

scheduled length to accommodate Father’s presentation of his case.         This

resulted in Father’s taking roughly four days to present evidence and Mother’s

taking roughly one. Father’s suggestion that the court conducted the matter

in a way that was biased against him is baseless.

      Finally, Father maintains in his interrelated ninth and tenth issues that

the trial court erred by denying his motions in limine to exclude any evidence

regarding his suspended driver’s license and failure to pay spousal or child

support. See Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 97-100. Father waived these

claims by failing to develop them in his brief with citations to relevant legal

authority and relying in part on arguments he made in his motions in limine.

See M.Z.T.M.W., 163 A.3d at 465; Briggs, 12 A.3d at 343.

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      We would conclude once again, however, that Father’s claims lack merit

even if he had not waived them. “When reviewing a trial court’s determination

on motions in limine, we apply an abuse of discretion standard.” Davis v.

Borough of Montrose, 194 A.3d 597, 606 (Pa. Super 2018) (citing Turner

v. Valley Hous. Dev. Corp., 972 A.2d 531, 535 (Pa. Super. 2009),

reargument denied (June 23, 2009)).

      Father argued in his motions in limine that his suspended driver’s license

and failure to pay support had no relevance to the custody proceedings. See

Pa.R.E. 401 (“Evidence is relevant if: (a) it has any tendency to make a fact

more or less probable than it would be without the evidence; and (b) the fact

is of consequence in determining the action.”). Alternatively, he argued unfair

prejudice, confusion of the issues, and the potentially misleading nature of the

evidence warranted its exclusion. See Pa.R.E. 403 (“The court may exclude

relevant evidence if its probative value is outweighed by a danger of one or

more of the following: unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, [or] misleading

the jury[.]”). Father further proposes in his brief that his legal counsel in

other matters instructed him not to disclose his failure to pay support, and

that forcing him to do so violated his right to due process and attorney-client

privilege. Father’s Brief (1703 EDA 2021) at 98.

      Father’s argument is disingenuous. Father filed his motions in limine on

March 12, 2021. Strikingly, though, Father himself first introduced evidence

of his suspended license, and the fact that it resulted from a support issue,

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one-and-a-half months earlier on the first day of the hearing, January 25,

2021. Father raised his suspended license in his opening statement and then

presented extensive testimony addressing the issue. See N.T., 1/25/21, at

85, 89-158, 166-77. Father’s motions in limine advanced the argument, in

effect, that he should be allowed to present evidence as to his suspended

license and failure to pay support, but Mother should not.

      It is important to add that the admission of evidence regarding Father’s

suspended driver’s license worked in his favor. In its findings of fact, the trial

court observed that Mother had acted vindictively by notifying the police at a

custody exchange that Father’s license was suspended when she knew this

resulted from failure to pay support and not from a safety issue. See Findings

of Fact, 7/16/21, at 4-5. The court used this incident as an example of how

Father was “not alone” in his failure to coparent, and why Mother was also to

blame. Id.

      Based on the foregoing analysis, we conclude Father’s appeal at 1703

EDA 2021 is also meritless, and we affirm the July 16, 2021 order.

CONCLUSION

      After review of the lengthy record in this matter, we conclude the trial

court did not commit an error of law or abuse of discretion. We, therefore,

affirm the June 16, 2021, and July 16, 2021 orders. We also deny Father’s

“Motion for Reconsideration” of our order consolidating these appeals.

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       Orders affirmed. Motions for reconsideration denied.18

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 6/10/2022

____________________________________________

18We previously disposed of Appellant’s Applications for Relief and Amended
Application for Relief filed on December 9, 2021, and December 13, 2021.
See Order, 3/21/22.

On March 29, 2022, Appellant filed an Application for Emergency Relief, which
we addressed in our April 4, 2022 Order. In our 4/4/22 Order, we directed
Appellant to provide four flash drives containing copies of Appellant’s exhibits.
Appellant timely complied.

Based on our review of the record, it appears the “missing” exhibits are in fact
part of the official record forwarded to us by the trial court. See 2019-06877-
0253 Petition and accompanying exhibits, and 2019-06877-0266 Emergency
Family Petition and accompanying exhibits. Additionally, Appellant attached
the same missing exhibits to his reply brief. Thus, the record is complete. To
the extent some of the exhibits are missing, as Appellant claims, the
incompleteness of the record is attributable to Appellant’s inability to comply
with the trial court’s clear instructions regarding introduction of evidence, and
the confusion resulting from overwhelming the trial court with a plethora of
filings, all affected by excessive verbosity, and unnecessary redundancy.

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