Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Aрpellant Vaughn S. McMillen (father) appeals from an order of the Superior Court,
The record shows that the parties were married on May 2, 1975 and that their son Emmett was bоm on September 30, 1977. The parties were subsequently divorced in the state of Wyoming on September 25, 1981. At the time of the divorce, the Wyoming court awarded primary custody of Emmett tо the mother, subject only to the reasonable visitation of the father.
In March of 1982, the father instituted an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Indiana County, Pennsylvania, seeking partial custody of Emmett. On April 27, 1982, the court awarded general custody of Emmett to the mother with the right of visitation in the father. The court limited the father’s visitation to alternating weekends and holidays, one day every other week and two weeks during the summer.
Over the next six years, the father sought modification of the custody order four times and the mother one time. Each time, the Court of Common Pleas significantly expanded the father’s visitation rights. From 1986 on, Emmett repeatedly and steadfastly expressed his preference to live with his father. Finally, on July 22, 1988, the Court of Common Pleas awarded general custody of Emmett to the father. The court opined that:
... Emmett’s best interests will be served most appropriately by placing him in the custody of his father because of Emmett’s desire to live with his father as well as the fact that each home is a suitable environment for Emmett.
(Trial Court Opinion, Earley, P.J., p. 3).
On appeal, the Superior Court vacated the July 22, 1988 custody order and reinstated the previous order of July 31, 1987. In doing so, the Superior Court determined that: 1) the record failed to present any circumstanсes warranting a change in custody; and 2) the child’s best interests would
Our paramount concern in child custody casеs is the best interest of the child. Commonwealth ex rel. Pierce v. Pierce,
The father argues that the Superior Court, in determining Emmett’s best interests, usurped the function of the trial court by ignoring the trial court’s factual findings and also failed to give proper weight to Emmett’s steadfast desire to live with his father. The scope of review of an appellate court reviewing a child custody order is of the broadest type; the appellate court is not bound by the deductions or inferеnces made by the trial court from its findings of fact, nor must the reviewing court accept a finding that has no competent evidence to support it. Commonwealth ex rel Robinson v. Robinson,
Although the express wishes of a child are not controlling in custody decisions, such wishes do constitute an important factor that must be carefully considered in determining the child’s best interest. Commonwealth ex rel. Pierce v. Pierce,
Our review of the record shows that Emmett’s preference to live with his father is supported by mоre than sufficient good reasons. Emmett testified that his stepfather frightens, upsets and threatens him, and his mother does nothing to prevent this mistreatment (H.T., July 22, 1988, pp. 3-4). He testified that he does nоt get along with either his mother or his stepfather, (H.T. at p. 4) and that he gets along well with his stepmother (H.T. at p. 5). His testimony also revealed that his mother and stepfather leave him аlone after school and that, even though his father and stepmother work, he is never left alone when he is at his father’s home for the summer (H.T. at p. 11). Emmett also stated that his mother interferes with his sporting and farming activities and refuses even to watch
Nor do we find an abuse of discretion in the trial court’s conclusion that Emmett’s best interests would be served more apprоpriately by placing him in his father’s custody. The record supports the trial court’s finding that both households were equally suitable. This being so, Emmett’s expressed preference to livе with his fathér could not but tip the evidentiary scale in favor of his father. Thus, the trial court’s conclusion that it would be in Emmett’s best interest to modify the prior custody order by transferring primary custоdy from the mother to the father is supported by the record, and we find no gross abuse of discretion by the trial court in awarding primary custody to the father.
Accordingly, we reversе the order of the Superior Court and reinstate the order of July 22, 1988.
Notes
. The trial court deemed this interference sufficiently detrimental to the child’s social growth and development to warrant an explicit directive in the custody order that the mother make Emmett available for these activities whenever she has physical custody of him.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The facts of this case, had we heard them fifteen years ago, would have lent themselves to only one conclusion. In 1967, this Court wrote that “[ejvery prеcept of the law, as well as every instinct and rule of reason, dictate that a child of tender age should not be taken from its mother unless brute circumstances dictate that the child would fare badly with its mother. Nothing less than gross, inexcusable neglect, coupled with evidence of unconcern and irresponsibility toward meeting the duties devolving upоn a mother in raising her child can take her offspring away from her.” In re Adoption of Austin,
In Commonwealth, ex rel. Spriggs v. Carson,
In this case, the incontrovertible factual findings of the trial court were that while both homes were equally suitable for thе child, the child expressed a clear preference to live with the father which was supported by good reasons. It was not a “bare preference,” as the Suрerior Court indicated, but a desire to leave behind certain circumstances of mistreatment which the trial court obviously accepted as true.
The court’s factuаl findings demonstrate that its decision to award custody to the father was not unreasonable and, therefore, does not represent an abuse of discretion. The Superior Court’s reversal can only have represented an archaic presumption that a child is best left with its mother.
I therefore agree with the result reached by the majority.
