Court Opinion

ID: 4671918
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-26 18:12:49.467029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:50.500619
License: Public Domain

J-S03032-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    M.K.,                                      :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellee                :
                                               :
                  v.                           :
                                               :
    J.M.                                       :
                                               :
                        Appellant              :   No. 716 WDA 2020

                    Appeal from the Order Entered June 18, 2020
                  in the Court of Common Pleas of Venango County
                          Civil Division at No(s): 475-2020

BEFORE:        DUBOW, J., MURRAY, J. and STRASSBURGER, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY DUBOW, J.:                             FILED: March 26, 2021

           J.M. (Mother) appeals from the order entered June 18, 2020, pursuant

to the Protection From Abuse (PFA) Act, 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6101-6122, granting

the petition M.K. (Father) filed on behalf of the parties’ son, Z.K. We reverse.

           Mother and Father are former spouses who have two children, Z.K., who

was eleven years old at the time of these proceedings, and A.K., who was

thirteen years old (collectively, the Children).1 On May 17, 2020, Mother and

Father exchanged custody of the Children, with Mother bringing the Children

back to her residence. N.T., 6/10/2020, at 7, 31, 58. After they arrived, an

argument ensued between Mother and Z.K., which concluded with Mother

going upstairs to her room. Id. at 16-18, 35-36, 59. A.K. fell and began to

cry shortly thereafter, and Mother came back downstairs. Id. at 7, 18-19, 31,
____________________________________________

*   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1   The Children’s birthdays do not appear in the record.
J-S03032-21

36, 59-60. According to Mother, Z.K. informed her smugly that he struck A.K.

Id. at 60, 71. According to the Children, A.K. slipped and fell, and Mother

assumed that Z.K. struck A.K. without asking. Id. at 7, 13-14, 20, 31-32,

36-39. In either event, the situation escalated. The testimony indicates that

Mother spanked Z.K. twice on the buttocks, covered his mouth because he

was screaming, “smacked” him once or twice on the face or head, and pushed

his head into a pillow. Id. at 8, 13, 22-25, 28-29, 32-34, 39-44, 55-56, 61-

69. This resulted in Z.K.’s ear being red and hurting to the touch for one to

two hours. Id. at 33-34, 40, 44.

      Father filed a PFA petition, which does not appear in the certified record,

and the trial court entered a temporary PFA order on May 19, 2020, awarding

him sole custody of the Children. The matter proceeded to a hearing on June

10, 2020, at which the Children, Father, Mother, and child protective services

caseworker Dalton Shuler testified. Significantly, A.K. recorded a video of the

May 17, 2020 incident using his cellphone. Id. at 9, 25-28. A.K. brought his

cellphone with him to the hearing, and the court, the witnesses, and the

parties’ counsel viewed the video using the cellphone several times. Id. at 9-

12, 28, 42, 69. However, no one marked the video as an exhibit or asked

that the trial court admit it into evidence. There is also no indication in the

record that the trial court admitted the video into evidence.

      Following the hearing, on June 18, 2020, the trial court issued findings

of fact and entered a final PFA order with an effective date of June 16, 2020,

and an expiration date of December 16, 2020. The order included a temporary

                                      -2-
J-S03032-21

custody provision granting Father sole custody of Z.K. and primary physical

custody of A.K., and granting Mother partial physical custody of A.K. as agreed

upon.2, 3

        Mother timely filed a notice of appeal. The trial court ordered Mother to

file a concise statement of errors pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b). Mother filed

a concise statement, which she amended the next day.4

        Subsequently, Mother filed an application to withdraw her appeal in this

Court. She averred that her counsel did not receive, and was not aware of,

the trial court’s June 18, 2020 findings of fact, rendering her counsel unable

to include appropriate claims in her concise statement. She requested that

this Court permit her to withdraw her appeal so that she could request an

appeal nunc pro tunc in the trial court and raise appropriate claims. This Court

denied Mother’s application, but permitted her to file a supplemental concise

statement. Mother filed her supplemental concise statement on October 29,

2020.

        Mother now raises the following claims for our review.
____________________________________________

2 The order specified that any subsequent custody order would supersede its
temporary custody provision.

3The order also states that the trial court entered it “by agreement without
an admission.” Order, 6/18/2020, at 2. We note that our review of the record
does not reveal any indication that Mother agreed to the entry of the order.

4 Because the final PFA order included a child custody provision, this Court
subsequently entered an order designating this as a Children’s Fast Track
appeal.

                                           -3-
J-S03032-21

       I. Whether the trial court erred in finding there was sufficient
       evidence to grant a PFA pursuant to [subsection 6102(a)(5)] of
       the [PFA] Act?

       II. Whether the trial court erred in ruling that the parental
       privilege to use corporal punishment codified in section 509 of the
       Crimes Code does not prevent the issuance of a [PFA] Order when
       the parent does not violate the privilege?

Mother’s Brief at 4.5

       This Court reviews appeals from PFA orders for an abuse of discretion

or error of law. Diaz v. Nabiyev, 235 A.3d 1270, 1273 (Pa. Super. 2020).

Mother’s appeal involves a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting the trial court’s order.            This Court has explained its review of

sufficiency challenges under the PFA Act as follows.

       When a claim is presented on appeal that the evidence was not
       sufficient to support an order of protection from abuse, we review
       the evidence in the light most favorable to the petitioner and
       granting her the benefit of all reasonable inference, determine
       whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain the trial court’s
       conclusion by a preponderance of the evidence. This Court defers
       to the credibility determinations of the trial court as to witnesses
       who appeared before it.

K.B. v. Tinsley, 208 A.3d 123, 128 (Pa. Super. 2019) (quoting Fonner v.

Fonner, 731 A.2d 160, 161 (Pa. Super. 1999)).

____________________________________________

5 Although the final PFA order expired in December 2020, we do not dismiss
Mother’s appeal as moot. This appeal presents an exception to the mootness
doctrine, as it involves a question “capable of repetition and apt to elude
appellate review[.]” In re D.A., 801 A.2d 614, 616 (Pa. Super. 2002); see
Snyder v. Snyder, 629 A.2d 977, 980 n.1 (Pa. Super. 1993) (reviewing an
expired six-month PFA order on the basis that it fell “into the well-recognized
exception to the mootness doctrine of a case which has important public policy
considerations and yet may escape review.”).

                                           -4-
J-S03032-21

      Here, the trial court entered its order pursuant to subsection 6102(a)(5)

of the PFA Act, which provides the following definition of “Abuse.”

      “Abuse.” The occurrence of one or more of the following acts
      between family or household members, sexual or intimate
      partners or persons who share biological parenthood:

                                     ***

            (5) Knowingly engaging in a course of conduct or
            repeatedly committing acts toward another person,
            including following the person, without proper
            authority, under circumstances which place the
            person in reasonable fear of bodily injury.       The
            definition of this paragraph applies only to
            proceedings commenced under this title and is
            inapplicable to any criminal prosecutions commenced
            under Title 18 (relating to crimes and offenses).

23 Pa.C.S. § 6102(a)(5).

      Mother contends in her first claim that the evidence was insufficient to

support the trial court’s finding that she engaged in a “course of conduct or

repeatedly committing acts” as subsection 6102(a)(5) requires. Mother’s Brief

at 7-9. She maintains that she “smacked” Z.K. in the head once, which was

a single act and not a course of conducted or repeated acts. Id. Mother also

argues that she did not place Z.K. in reasonable fear of bodily injury. Id. at

7, 9-10. She insists that she “smacked” Z.K. with an open hand, and that she

did not threaten him or use a weapon. Id. As part of this claim, Mother takes

issue with the court’s findings that she pinned Z.K. to the couch and that he

suffered substantial pain, asserting that those findings lack record support or

misrepresent the evidence. Id. at 8-9.

                                     -5-
J-S03032-21

      At the time the trial court entered its order on June 18, 2020, it issued

findings of fact indicating merely that it found Mother abused Z.K. pursuant

to subsection 6102(a)(5). The court went on to issue two opinions. In the

court’s first opinion, issued in response to Mother’s initial concise statement

and second, amended concise statement, it did not elaborate on the basis for

its decision, other than to state that it considered the evidence and testimony

and viewed the cellphone video of the incident that A.K. recorded. See Trial

Court Opinion, 9/9/2020, at 2 (unnumbered pages). In the court’s second

opinion, issued in response to Mother’s third, supplemental concise statement,

it explained its decision as follows.

             Th[e trial c]ourt viewed a cell phone video that showed
      [Mother] cornering the child and pinning him on the couch.
      [Mother] was screaming at the child in close proximity to his face.
      When [Mother] attempted to “smack” the child in the mouth, the
      child attempted to block her from doing so. [Mother] admitted
      that when she went to smack him in the mouth, the child “ducked
      it” and then she smacked him in the head. The child was
      screaming loudly as she attacked him. [Mother] pushed the
      child’s head into a pillow. [Mother] struck the child on the side of
      his head with her entire hand with her wrist striking the child’s ear
      causing the entire side of the child’s head to be “all red” and
      causing substantial pain for approximately 1-2 hours.

            This was not one single strike or act. There was no rational
      and thought-out act of punishment. [Mother’s] acts could not
      possibly be construed as any form of discipline. Viewing the video,
      [Mother’s] repeated acts were quite obviously violent and abusive.
      Thus, th[e trial c]ourt writes to clarify that it viewed [Mother’s]
      cornering of the child, pushing his head into a pillow, pinning him
      on the couch, attempting to strike him in the mouth, yelling at
      him in close proximity, and striking his head and ear as repeatedly
      committing violent acts within the definitions set forth in 23
      Pa.C.S.[ §] 6102 (a)(5). These acts or course of conduct caused
      or put the child in reasonable fear of bodily injury.

                                        -6-
J-S03032-21

Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/2020, at 1-2 (unnumbered pages).

      It is apparent from the trial court’s opinion that it found A.K.’s cellphone

video critically important and persuasive when reaching its decision to enter

the final PFA order. However, as explained above, no one marked the video

as an exhibit or asked that the court admit it into evidence. There is also no

indication in the record that the court admitted it into evidence.        It was

improper for the court to base its decision on material outside the record, and

we cannot affirm the court’s order based on that material. See M.P. v. M.P.,

54 A.3d 950, 955 (Pa. Super. 2012) (quoting Ney v. Ney, 917 A.2d 863, 866

(Pa. Super. 2007)) (“A trial court may not consider evidence outside of the

record in making its determination. Nor may this court uphold a trial court’s

order on the basis of off-the-record facts.”) (citations and quotation marks

omitted).

      While the trial court also heard testimony regarding the subject incident,

that testimony does not support a number of the court’s factual findings.

There was no testimony that Mother cornered Z.K. and “pinn[ed]” him to the

couch. Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/2020, at 1-2 (unnumbered pages). Also,

there was no testimony that Mother was screaming at Z.K. “in close proximity

to his face.” Id. at 1 (unnumbered pages). Perhaps the video may have

supported these findings, but without it, these findings stand unsupported in

the record.

                                      -7-
J-S03032-21

      Additionally, the court’s finding that “the entire side” of Z.K.’s head was

red, and that he suffered “substantial pain” for one to two hours, overstates

the evidence. Id. at 1-2 (unnumbered pages). Z.K. testified initially that “the

entire side of my head that she hit was all red and everything.”            N.T.,

6/10/2020, at 33. Nonetheless, when asked soon thereafter where “the red

mark” on his head was, Z.K. apparently clarified his testimony and explained

that the mark was “[o]n my ear, like on the actual ear.” Id. at 34. He did

not testify that the mark was particularly painful but indicated simply that “[i]t

hurt whenever I touched it for a while…. Like an hour and to [sic] two []

hoursish[.]” Id. at 44.

      Given that the trial court entered the final PFA order based on material

not in evidence, and the remaining evidence does not support a number of

the court’s findings, we are constrained to conclude that the court abused its

discretion. To affirm the order, this Court would need to take on the role of a

factfinder, assess the weight and credibility of the testimony on the trial

court’s behalf, and craft our own justifications for its decision. This is clearly

beyond our purview as an appellate court. See In re A.J.R.-H., 188 A.3d

1157, 1178 (Pa. 2018) (concluding that the harmless error and right for any

reason doctrines did not apply, where the orphans’ court admitted exhibits

erroneously, and where, “in order to affirm its decision on another basis … we

would have to engage in fact finding, weigh the competent … testimony

presented, and make our own credibility determinations[,]” which would be

                                      -8-
J-S03032-21

“far afield of our appellate court function[.]”).6 We must therefore reverse the

June 18, 2020 order.

       Order reversed.

       Judge Murray joins the memorandum.

       Judge Strassburger did not participate in the consideration or decision

of this case.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 3/26/2021

____________________________________________

6In light of our conclusion that Mother’s first claim entitles her to relief, we
do not address her second claim.

                                           -9-