HomeMy WebLinkAbout94-7082 CivilBETH ANN KRUSEN,
Plaintiff
Ve
KURT R. KRUSEN,
Defendant
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION - LAW
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
IN RE: PLAINTIFF'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS TO
DEFENDANT'S PETITION FOR MODIFICATION
BEFORE SHEELY, P.J., HOFFER and OLER, JJ.
ORDER OF COURT
A~D NOW, this ~l ~ay of June, 1996, upon consideration of
Plaintiff's preliminary objections to Defendant's petition for
modification, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying
opinion, the preliminary objections are DENIED.
John J. Connelly, Jr., Esq.
108-112 Walnut Street
P.O. Box 963
Harrisburg, PA 17108
Attorney for Plaintiff
BY THE COURT,
Wesley Oler~__~i, J.~' ~
Barbara Sumple-Sullivan, Esq.
549 Bridge Street
New Cumberland, PA 17070-1931
Attorney for Defendant
: rc
BETH ANN KRUSEN,
Plaintiff
Ve
KURT R. KRUSEN,
Defendant
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION - LAW
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
IN RE: PLAINTIFF'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS TO
DEFENDANT'S PETITION FOR MODIFICATION
BEFORE SHEELY, P.J., HOFFER and OLER, JJ.
OPINION and ORDER OF COURT
Oler, J.
This is a child custody case in which a petition has been
filed to modify an existing custody order entered by this court.
Presently before the court are preliminary objections to the
petition to modify, challenging the exercise of jurisdiction by
this court on "home state" and forum non conveniens grounds.
The issue presented by the case is whether this court may or
should exercise jurisdiction on a petition to modify an April,
1995, custody order entered by it, where the order granted primary
physical custody of the parties' preschool-age child to the
Plaintiff mother, authorized the mother's relocation to North
Dakota, granted temporary or partial physical custody of the child
to the Defendant father for periods of 20 days every two months and
an additional period every summer, and authorized the parties to
seek an amended order at such time as the child was to begin
school, and where the father, who continues to reside in Cumberland
County, Pennsylvania, now seeks an amended order as the child
prepares to begin school. For the reasons stated in this opinion,
Plaintiff's preliminary objections challenging the court's exercise
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
of jurisdiction will be denied.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY; STATEMENT OF FACTS
The subject of this custody action is Matthew Thomas Antonio
Krusen, born March 12, 1991. Plaintiff and mother of the child is
Beth Ann Hamerlik (formerly Krusen), residing at 1549 Eighth Street
South, Fargo, North Dakota. Defendant and father of the child is
Kurt R. Krusen, residing at 15 Beaver Road, Camp Hill, Cumberland
County, Pennsylvania.
Following a custody hearing in April of 1995, this court
entered the following order:
AND NOW, this 10th day of April, 1995,
upon consideration of the custody complaint in
the above-captioned matter with respect to the
parties' child, Matthew Thomas Antonio Krusen,
born March 12, 1991, and following a hearing,
the Court finds inter alia that Plaintiff's
proposed relocation to Fargo, North Dakota, is
likely to significantly improve the quality of
life for Plaintiff and the child, that the
relocation is not motivated by a desire to
frustrate the visitation rights of Defendant
or to impede the development of a healthy
relationship between the child and Defendant,
and that feasible arrangements can be made to
ensure a continuing, meaningful relationship
between the child and Defendant
notwithstanding the relocation, and it is
ORDERED and DIRECTED as follows:
1. Legal custody of the child
shall be shared by the parties.
2. Primary physical custody
shall be in Plaintiff, the mother.
Temporary or partial physical
custody shall be in Defendant, the
father, for periods of 20 days every
two months; provided, that during
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
the summer one such period shall be
expanded to five weeks. Plaintiff
shall be responsible for the
expenses and any necessary
accompaniment of the child with
respect to custodial exchanges
between Fargo, North Dakota, and BWI
Airport.
Nothing herein is intended to preclude
the parties from varying the terms of this
Order by mutual agreement. At such time as
the child is ready to begin school, if the
parties are unable to agree upon a revised
schedule, counsel are requested to petition
the Court for an additional hearing to obtain
an amended order to accommodate the child's
school schedule.~
The factual background of this case was recounted in an
opinion entered in support of the order.2 Consequently, those
facts will not be repeated here.
A petition to modify the order was filed by Defendant father
~ Subsequent to issuance of this order of April 10, 1995, the
court was requested by counsel to state with more precision the
times of the father's temporary or partial custody. Pursuant to
Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1701(b), the following
order was entered:
In the absence of an agreement by the
parties to the contrary, Defendant's 20-day
periods of temporary or partial custody shall
begin with his receipt of the child at BWI
Airport on the first day of every other month
and end with his delivery of the child to the
Airport, on the 21st day of that month.
Defendant's five-week period of temporary or
partial custody during the summers of 1995 and
1996 shall begin on July 1 and end on August
5.
2 Krusen v. Krusen, 44 Cumberland L.J. 314 (1995). An appeal
from the order to the Superior Court by the father was withdrawn.
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
on April 10, 1996. The petition noted that the child would be
entering public school in the fall of 1996, and that the existing
custody schedule would no longer be feasible.
On May 1, 1996, Plaintiff mother filed preliminary objections
to Defendant's petition to modify. The preliminary objections
challenged this court's exercise of jurisdiction with respect to
the petition to modify, based upon a change in the child's "home
state" from Pennsylvania to North Dakota3 and the doctrine of forum
non conveniens;4 the objections also averred that Plaintiff was "in
the process of filing a Petition with the North Dakota Court to
modify the existing Pennsylvania Order .... ..5 Defendant father
filed an answer to the preliminary objections on May 24, 1996,
supporting this court's exercise of jurisdiction.
The matter was listed for the May 29, 1996, argument court.
By agreement of counsel, the issue has been submitted on briefs.
DISCUSSION
In Barndt v. Barndt, 397 Pa. Super. 321, 580 A.2d 320 (1990),
an interstate custody case involving, coincidentally, the states of
North Dakota and Pennsylvania, the Pennsylvania Superior Court held
that in certain circumstances, by virtue of the federal Parental
3 See Act of December 19, 1990, P.L. 1240, §2, 23 Pa. C.S.
§§5343, 5344(a)(1).
~ See id. ~5348(a), (c).
5 Plaintiff's preliminary objections, paragraph 13.
4
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
Kidnapping Prevention Act,6 jurisdiction to modify an existing
custody order lies exclusively with the court of the state which
initially issued the order. In Barndt, Judge Kelly, supported in
a concurring opinion by Judge Cercone, discussed one of the
purposes of the federal legislation:
In 1980, the United States Congress
enacted the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act
(PKPA). The title of the act is misleading
and unfortunate, as it was by no means limited
to criminal matters relating to kidnapping.
Rather, one of the [principal] purposes of the
PKPA was to protect the right of a decree
issuing state to exercise exclusive continuing
jurisdiction over its child custody orders in
certain cases, and to channel custody
litigation into the court having continuing
jurisdiction by requiring states to give full
faith and credit to the custody decrees of
states retaining jurisdiction and preventing
the issuance of competing decrees. To this
end, the PKPA established national standards
to determine jurisdiction in interstate
custody disputes.
Id. at 331, 580 A.2d at 325 (citations omitted).
In accordance with this purpose, the federal law provides,
inter alia, as follows:
The jurisdiction of a court of a State
which has made a child custody determination
... continues as long as [such court has
jurisdiction under the law of such state] and
such state remains the residence of the child
or of any contestant.
A court of a state may modify a
28 U.S.C. §1738.
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NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
determination of the custody of the same child
made by a court of another state, if -
(1) it has jurisdiction to
make such a child custody
determination; and
(2) the court of the other
state no longer has jurisdiction, or
it has declined to exercise such
jurisdiction to modify such
determination.
28 U.S.C. §1738A(d), (f) (emphasis added).
Applying the federal law, the Superior Court in Barndt vacated
a Pennsylvania court's modification of an existing North Dakota
custody order on jurisdictional grounds where (a) the North Dakota
court had initially exercised proper jurisdiction, (b) a proper
basis continued to exist for the exercise of jurisdiction by North
Dakota, (c) the North Dakota court had not effectively declined to
exercise jurisdiction, and (d) one of the parties continued to
reside in North Dakota.7 The import of the decision in Barndt, for
present purposes, is that unless this court has no basis for
continuing to exercise jurisdiction, or declines to do so,
Plaintiff's position that a court in North Dakota should determine
the issue of modification of the existing Pennsylvania order can
not be sustained.8
7 Barndt v. Barndt, 397 Pa. Super. 321, 580 A.2d 320 (1990).
8 This is so, because it does not appear to be disputed that
this court initially exercised proper jurisdiction in issuing the
custody order in question, or that one of the parties continues to
be a resident of this state.
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NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
Under the Uniform Child Custody
Jurisdiction Act,9 a
Pennsylvania court "has jurisdiction to make a child custody
determination by initial or modification decree if[,]" inter alia:
(1) this Commonwealth ... is the home state of
the child at the time of commencement of the
proceeding; or ...
(2) it is in the best interest of the child
that a court of this Commonwealth assume
jurisdiction because . the child and his
parents, or the chi~ and at least one
contestant, have a significant connection with
this Commonwealth ... and there is available
in this Commonwealth substantial evidence
concerning the present or future care,
protection, training and personal
relationships of the child .... ~0
"Home state," under the act, is defined as
[t]he state in which the child immediately
preceding the time involved lived with his
parents, a parent or a person acting as
parent, or in an institution, for at least six
consecutive months, and, in the case of a
child less than six months old, the state in
which the child lived from birth with any of
the persons mentioned. Periods of temporary
absence of any of the named persons are
counted as part of the six-month or other
period.~
In addition, under the act, a Pennsylvania court which has
jurisdiction to issue an initial decree or a modification decree
may decline to exercise such jurisdiction if it finds that it is an
seq.
Act of December 19, 1990, P.L. 1240, 23 Pa. C.S. §§5341 et.
~o Id., §5344(a)(1), (2).
~ Id. ~5343.
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
inconvenient forum and that a court of another state is a more
convenient forum.~2 Factors to be considered in a determination as
to forum non conveniens include:
(1) If another state is or recently was
the home state of the child.
(2) If another state has a closer
connection with the child and his family or
with the child and one or more of the
contestants.
(3) If substantial evidence concerning
the present or future care, protection,
training and personal relationships of the
child is more readily available in another
state.
(4) If the parties have agreed on
another forum which is no less appropriate.
(5) If the exercise of jurisdiction by a
court of this Commonwealth would contravene
any of the purposes stated in [the act].~3
In summary, this court's jurisdiction under the Uniform Child
Custody Jurisdiction Act may be in the form of "(1) 'home state'
jurisdiction [or] (2) jurisdiction founded upon 'significant
contacts' among the parties to the custody action and the locale in
which the action has been brought," inter alia.~4 In addition, the
court may, if it chooses, decline to exercise jurisdiction on
Id. §5348(a).
Id. §5348(c).
Guadagnino v. Montie, 435 Pa. Super.
1257, 1262 (1994).
603, 614,
646 A.2d
NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
grounds of forum non conveniens.~5
Under the circumstances of the present case, which include the
family's residence in Pennsylvania prior to the court's initial
order in April of 1995, the father's continued residence in
Pennsylvania, the continued presence of the child in Pennsylvania
for substantial periods of time on a regular basis, the parties'
acquiescence in an order which provided for review by this court of
the custodial schedule when the child was to begin school, and this
court's familiarity with the case based upon a relatively recent
adjudication following a hearing, we believe that sufficient
significant contacts among the parties and this locale exist to
warrant the continued exercise of jurisdiction by this court under
the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act,~6 and we are not
persuaded that this forum is so inconvenient for the parties that
the matter should be transferred to North Dakota. For this reason,
Plaintiff can not prevail in her position that Defendant's petition
for modification either must or should be adjudicated in North
Dakota, and the following order will be entered:
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this 24th day of June, 1996, upon consideration of
Plaintiff's preliminary objections to Defendant's petition for
~5 See generally Hamm v. Hamm, 431 Pa. Super. 283, 636 A.2d
652 (1994).
~6 Cf. Guadagnino v. Montie, 435 Pa. Super. 603, 646 A.2d
1257 (1994).
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NO. 94-7082 CIVIL TERM
modification, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying
opinion, the preliminary objections are DENIED.
BY THE COURT,
John J. Connelly, Jr., Esq.
108-112 Walnut Street
P.O. Box 963
Harrisburg, PA 17108
Attorney for Plaintiff
Barbara Sumple-Sullivan, Esq.
549 Bridge Street
New Cumberland, PA 17070-1931
Attorney for Defendant
: rc
s/ J. Wesley Oler, Jr.
J. Wesley Oler, Jr., J.
10