Court Opinion

ID: 5236033
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 17:09:16.78228+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:50.938677
License: Public Domain

J-S34034-21

                              2022 PA Super 7

 IN RE: M.N.K., A MINOR                  :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                         :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                         :
 APPEAL OF: R.J.K., FATHER               :
                                         :
                                         :
                                         :
                                         :
                                         :   No. 929 MDA 2021

               Appeal from the Decree Entered June 16, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Orphans' Court at
                             No(s): 818-2021

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

OPINION BY McCAFFERY, J.:                        FILED JANUARY 06, 2022

      R.J.K. (Father) appeals from the decree entered on June 16, 2021, in

the Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas, Orphans’ Court Division,

involuntarily terminating his parental rights to his daughter, M.N.K. (Child),

born in December of 2006. Father now argues the orphans’ court erred by

finding that the respective county’s Children and Youth Social Service Agency

(CYS) provided Father with proper legal notice of the underlying termination

of parental rights (TPR) proceeding pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 2513 and

Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court Rule 15.6. After careful review, we affirm.

      Based on the nature of Father’s claim, the underlying facts that led to

Child’s removal from Father’s care are not pertinent to this appeal and we

need not recite them in detail herein. CYS has been involved with the family

since 2009. For much of Child’s life, Father has resided in Ohio. In November
J-S34034-21

2018, the court adjudicated Child, who was 12 years old at the time,

dependent pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 6302(1), and later approved a

permanency plan setting forth the reasons for placement and the objectives

the parents had to achieve for Child to be returned to parents’ care.

Subsequently, on March 29, 2021, CYS filed a petition for involuntary

termination of Father’s parental rights in accordance with 23 Pa.C.S. §

2511(a)(1), (2) and (b).1         CYS alleged that Father failed to complete the

permanency plan, and termination would best serve the needs and welfare of

Child. See Petition to Terminate Parental Rights of Parents, 3/29/2021, at 2-

3.

       Based on the petition, the orphans’ court scheduled a TPR hearing for

June 2021. In the meantime, a permanency review hearing was held on April

26, 2021, during which Father was present by video conference. The date of

the TPR hearing was stated twice during the permanency review video

conference. The court subsequently held the TPR hearing on June 14, 2021.

Father was not present, but his counsel at the time did appear at the

proceeding.     See N.T., 6/14/21, at 3.         Father’s absence was discussed at

____________________________________________

1 CYS also filed a petition to involuntarily terminate the parental rights of
Child’s mother (Mother). Like Father, the court terminated Mother’s rights to
Child. Mother is not a party of this appeal. Moreover, Mother’s counsel sent
a letter to this Court, indicating that Mother agreed with the decision of the
orphans’ court and did not intend to file a brief in support of the appeal. See
Letter from Caprice Hicks Bunting, Esquire, to Superior Court of Pennsylvania,
10/15/2021.

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length, as well as what type of notice was provided to him. Id. at 4-6, 14-

16. Father’s counsel also tried to contact him during the proceeding. See id.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the court indicated it wanted to review the

transcript from the April 26, 2021, permanency review hearing to confirm

Father was given proper notice. See id. at 16, 36. Two days later, the court

entered a decree, terminating Father’s parental rights pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S.

§ 2511(a)(1), (2) and (b). This timely appeal followed.2

       Father raises the following issue on appeal.

       1. Whether the Orphans’ Court erred in its Decree dated June 16,
          2021 that [CYS] had met its burden in proving that [F]ather’s
          parental rights should be terminated when the Court erred as
          a matter of law when it concluded that [F]ather had been
          adequately served with the petition for involuntary termination
          under Pa.O.C.R. 15.6 and/or The Adoption Act under Section
          2513(a)-(b), thus violating his right to due process.

Appellant’s Brief at 11.3

       Initially we note that while the issue in his statement of question

involved concerns the matter of whether he had been adequately served with

the petition, his argument addresses whether he was properly served notice

of the TPR hearing. As such, we confine our analysis to the issue addressing

____________________________________________

2 Concomitant with his notice of appeal, Father filed a concise statement of
errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)(2)(i) (requiring
appellant to attach concise statement to notice of appeal in family fast track
appeals).

3 Notably, Father did not raise a claim regarding the court’s termination of
Father’s parental rights pursuant to Sections 2511(a)(1), (2) and (b).

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the TPR hearing notice. Any argument concerning the petition will be deemed

abandoned, and consequently waived, for purposes of appellate review. See

Interest of D.N.G., 230 A.3d 361, 363 n.2 (Pa. Super. 2020).

      Father’s claim “presents a question of law requiring us to interpret the

notice requirements of the Adoption Act and our Rules of Orphan Court

Procedure. Thus, our standard of review is de novo and our scope of review

is plenary.” In re Adoption of K.M.D., __ A.3d __, 2021 WL 3671701, *3

(Pa. Super. Aug. 19, 2021) (citation omitted).

      The “termination of parental rights implicates a parent’s Fourteenth

Amendment right to due process.” In Interest of A.N.P., 155 A.3d 55, 66

(Pa. Super. 2017) (citations omitted). “Due process requires . . . adequate

notice, an opportunity to be heard, and the chance to defend oneself in an

impartial tribunal having jurisdiction over the matter.” Id. (citation and some

punctuation omitted). Although “[d]ue process is flexible and calls for such

procedural protections as the situation demands[,]” this Court is “unwilling to

allow the termination of parental rights . . . without strict compliance with the

procedures set forth by the Legislature[.]” Id., at 66, 68 (citations and some

punctuation omitted). “As in all civil cases, the petitioner . . . bears the burden

to prove proper service by its affirmative acts.” In re K.B., 763 A.2d 436,

439 (Pa. Super. 2000) (citation omitted).

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        Section 2513 of the Adoption Act addresses the hearing notice

requirement in matters concerning the involuntary termination of parental

rights:

        (a) Time.--The court shall fix a time for hearing on a petition filed
        under section 2512 (relating to petition for involuntary
        termination) which shall be not less than ten days after filing of
        the petition.

        (b) Notice.--At least ten days’ notice shall be given to the parent
        or parents . . . whose rights are to be terminated, by personal
        service or by registered mail to his or their last known address or
        by such other means as the court may require.

23 Pa.C.S. § 2513(a)-(b).

        Moreover, Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court Rule 15.6 provides, in pertinent

part:

        (a) Notice to every person to be notified shall be by personal
        service, service at his or her residence on an adult member of the
        household, or by registered or certified mail to his or her last
        known address.

Pa.O.C. Rule 15.6(a).

        Here, the trial court described the background relevant to the notice of

the TPR hearing as follows:

              Notice of hearings in the Juvenile Court dependency action
        for the Child have been sent to Father at 7519 Dorr Street,[4] in
____________________________________________

4 Both the court and CYS reference Father’s address as 7519 Dorr Street. In
Father’s brief, he points to a statement at the TPR hearing where a witness
testified that his address was at 7519 George Street. See Father’s Brief at
17; see N.T., 6/14/2021, at 19, 23. We find the “George Street” reference at
the hearing is either a misunderstanding or a scrivener’s error as the record
demonstrates Father’s address was at Dorr Street. See i.e., Petition to
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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       Toledo, Ohio, for all hearings in the dependency action since
       December 2019, when notice was mailed for a permanency review
       hearing to be held in January 2020. Father was present in person
       for the January 3, 2020, permanency review hearing, and by
       telephone or video call for the four hearings held since then (three
       permanency reviews and one placement modification hearing).
       The [CYS] caseworker testified at the April 26, 2021, permanency
       review hearing that she had spoken with Father in March 2021,
       but he had refused to provide updates. In the permanency review
       order issued on April 26, 2021, the court found that Father
       “refuses to provide updates to the caseworker.” During the April
       26, 2021, permanency review hearing, Father stated that he had
       a residence in which he had been living for approximately two
       years. Father did not indicate any change of address.

             During the permanency review hearing on April 26, 2021,
       the [CYS] caseworker stated during her testimony that the TPR
       hearing was scheduled for June 14, 2021. Father was present
       virtually at the permanency review hearing through the video
       conferencing application Lifesize.    Additionally, the [c]ourt
       instructed Father during the permanency review hearing that he
       needed to be physically present at the TRP hearing on June 14,
       2021, at 9:00 a.m.

             [CYS] sent notice of the June 14, 2021, TPR hearing to
       Father at the address at which he had been receiving his mail, and
       [CYS] received a receipt showing that the mail was delivered to
       Father’s address of record. Notice was sent by certified mail, the
       receipt for which indicated that it had been delivered on May 14,
       2021, and left with an individual at Father’s home address. The
       court heard on June 14, 2021, that Father had not been in contact
       with [CYS] or with his court-appointed counsel since April 2021.
       Father did not notify [CYS] or his attorney of any change in his
       address.

Orphans’ Ct. Op., 8/10/21, at 2-3.

____________________________________________

Terminate Parental Rights of Parents, 3/29/2021, at 2; TPR Exhibit 3, Letter
from Sue Hickey to Lancaster County Children and Youth Social Services
Agency, 11/16/2020.

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      As noted above, Father complains that he did not receive adequate

notice of the TPR hearing. See Father’s Brief at 15. First, he states that even

though the date of the TPR hearing was mentioned twice at the April 26th

permanency review hearing, “this did not meet the required notice standard

nor the contents and instructions of the notice required for the seriousness of

a TPR hearing.” Id. Father maintains that although the date and time were

mentioned at the permanency review hearing and “could possibly be

construed as actual notice,” it is irrelevant because a parent’s “actual

knowledge of the hearing does not remedy defective service noticing the

hearing and making a parent aware of the hearing is not the same as affording

the parent the necessary information mandated by the law – to defend in such

a hearing.” Id. at 18-19.

      Second, he contends that the circumstances surrounding the delivery of

the notification that was sent by certified mail were lacking since “it was not

signed by a receiving individual, [but] merely a handwritten assertion by the

[United States Postal Service] worker that it was delivered.” Father’s Brief at

16. He states that “without a signature, the letter could have been tracked to

the address, or placed at the address, almost like a first class letter, without

actual delivery of the certified letter to an adult individual residing at the

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address.” Id. Moreover, he alleges an assumption “that someone at that

address did receive the certified letter” should not be deemed sufficient. 5 Id.

       Father concludes that the “first method of service contemplated by the

rule and statute is personal service[,]” and here, there was no evidence that

CYS “attempted to engage the services of anyone to personally serve the

notice to [F]ather in Ohio.” Father’s Brief at 19. Father then states the next

method of service is “service at his residence on an adult member of the

household[,]” and here, “there is no signature identifying who, if anyone,

received the certified mail, let alone actual service to anyone in the

household.” Id. (emphasis omitted).

       The orphans’ court maintains notice of the TPR hearing was properly

served on Father in accordance with Section 2513(b) and Orphans’ Court Rule

15.6 based on the following:

              Notice of the June 14, 2021, TPR hearing was sent by
       certified mail to the Dorr Street address, which was where notices
       for the previous six hearings in the dependency action had been
       sent. The Agency received a return receipt card indicating that
       the notice had been delivered to that address. Father had the
       contact information to reach out to the Agency caseworker or to
       his attorney to let them know if he changed addresses, but he
       failed to do so. Because the Dorr Street address was Father’s last
       known address, notice was properly sent in accordance with the
       requirements of [Section] 2513. In addition, Father was informed
       of the TPR hearing date when he was present through video
____________________________________________

5 Father also states: “It is not contested that the caseworker never received
anything by mail from [him], nor anything confirming his present address,
landlord or lease. [Father] also did not provide any updates concerning any
addresses he might have to his caseworker[.]” Id. at 17 (citations omitted).

                                           -8-
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        conference at the permanency review hearing on April 26, 2021,
        when [the orphans’ court] instructed Father specifically that he
        would need to be present in person for the TPR hearing on June
        14, 2021, at 9:00 a.m.

Orphans’ Ct. Op. at 4.

        We discern no error of law or abuse of discretion in the orphans’ court’s

analysis. First, the record supports the court’s determination. At the TPR

hearing, Counsel for CYS established that notice had been sent by certified

mail:

               We have a green card returned, Your Honor, that indicates
        that it was delivered, which was handwritten by the postal service
        worker. But we have a tracking history also indicating that it was
        delivered and left with an individual on May 14th. Obviously, a
        month ago at this point and the time it had been delivered.

                                    *    *    *

               We attempted to serve him at this address. I have no idea
        with [the COVID-19 pandemic] why it didn’t even get -- whether
        somebody refused to sign it or how it was delivered, but I am
        satisfied with the tracking history indicating that it was left with
        an individual. Somebody who was an adult would have received
        it.

              And since [Father] has not provided [CYS] with a new
        address and has failed to communicate, I am assuming he is, at
        this point, no longer interested in participating in this proceeding.

N.T., 6/14/21, at 4-5. Moreover, it merits mention that counsel for Father

was present at the hearing. He could not explain his client’s absence, nor

could he get in contact with his client. Nevertheless, counsel did not ask for

a continuance based on a lack of notice or Father’s failure to appear.

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      Second, we observe Father does not argue that he never received notice

of the TPR hearing via certified mail; rather, he asserts that the circumstances

surrounding the delivery were insufficient to demonstrate he actually received

service because the USPS employee handwrote on the green verification card

that the document was delivered and not an adult individual residing at the

home. Without more, we conclude the court was permitted to find that notice

of the TPR hearing was properly sent in accordance with the requirements of

Section 2513 and Orphans’ Court Rule 15.6. Furthermore, the fact that Father

was informed of the TPR hearing date twice at the April 26, 2021,

permanency review hearing supports the court’s conclusion that he was on

notice about the hearing. Therefore, Father has not established that his due

process rights were violated.

      Lastly, we note Father cites to Adoption of K.M.D., supra, in his brief.

See Father’s Brief at 19. We note that case is distinguishable from the present

matter. In K.M.D., the court held a termination hearing via videoconference

and the parents were not in attendance.       Adoption of K.M.D., 2021 WL

3671701, *2. The parents’ address was known by the agency, and the agency

admitted that neither personal service or service by certified mail were

accomplished or even attempted. See id. at 4. Instead, the agency had sent

notification of the TPR hearing via email based on its interpretation of the

Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s and local common pleas court’s emergency

orders issued during the COVID-19 pandemic, which authorized the use of

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“advanced communication technologies.” Id. at *6. There was also evidence

that the parents had actual knowledge of the TPR hearing because the mother-

appellant texted her caseworker immediately prior to the hearing to say that

she and father-appellant would not be attending due to internet issues and

because of dissatisfaction with their attorneys. See id. at *4. Therefore, the

question on appeal was “whether the [a]gency effectuated proper service via

email, or in the alternative, whether the Parents’ actual knowledge of the

proceedings excuses the otherwise defective service.” Id.

      A panel of this Court concluded the statewide and local emergency

orders “primarily referenced ‘advanced communication technologies’ as

means to hold remote hearings, conferences, and the like.”      Adoption of

K.M.D., 2021 WL 3671701, *6. The panel opined that “insofar as the judicial

emergency orders even pertained to [a]gency business, the [a]gency’s use of

email was still subject to constitutional constraints,” and the agency was

required to make a good faith effort to properly serve notice to the parents.

Id. The panel further determined:

      [T]he [a]gency’s email to the Parents constituted defective
      service, where the [a]gency did not attempt service under Pa.O.C.
      Rule 15.6(a) and Section 2513(b) of the Adoption Act. Neither
      the judicial emergency orders, nor [p]arents’ actual knowledge of
      the hearing, negates the [a]gency’s circumvention of these
      procedures. Consequently, without proper service, the [p]arents’
      rights to due process were violated.

Id. at *7.

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      Here, contrary to Adoption of K.M.D., CYS did attempt — and

successfully effectuated — service on Father via certified mail. Accordingly,

we affirm the court’s decree involuntarily terminating Father’s parental rights

to Child.

      Decree affirmed.

      Judge Dubow joins the Opinion.

      Judge McLaughlin Concurs in the Result.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 01/06/2022

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