237 Pa. Code Rule 302
(a) Intercounty Transfer.
(4) Acceptance of Jurisdiction. If the court in the transferring county finds that the proposed transfer would be consistent with the protection of the public interest and best suited to the juvenile’s treatment, supervision, rehabilitation, and welfare:
(5) Order.
(7) Receiving Court. On or before the effective date of the order established in subdivision (a)(5)(i), the receiving court shall enter an order:
(9) Transmission of Official Court Record.
(b) Courtesy Supervision.
(1) Timing. The court may transfer supervision of a juvenile to the juvenile’s county of residence after:
(4) Withdrawal of Supervision. The county providing courtesy supervision may, with cause, withdraw supervision at any time and return the matter for further action to the county which entered the dispositional order.
Comment:
Pursuant to subdivision (a), a juvenile’s case may be transferred to the juvenile’s county of residence after a ruling on offenses or after an adjudication of delinquency. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 6321(c)(1). However, a transfer is not required.
The court entering the dispositional order is responsible for implementing the disposition, including the costs of placement or treatment, and the collection of any financial obligations from the juvenile.
Judicial communications and service of orders on judges is unnecessary if the intercounty transfer occurs within the same judicial district.
Nothing in the rule is intended to prevent the juvenile probation office’s participation as a witness for the district attorney or a witness called by the court. See Pa.R.E. 614 (Court’s Calling or Examining a Witness). A transfer is not best suited to the juvenile’s treatment, supervision, rehabilitation, and welfare if the receiving judicial district does not accept jurisdiction.
The period between the order approving the transfer and the effective date of the transfer is intended to prepare for the case transfer. The juvenile probation offices are expected to communicate prior to the actual transfer of a case to another county so that efforts can be coordinated and services, if any, transitioned without interruption. Coordination includes the transfer of records maintained by the juvenile probation office that are not otherwise included in the official court record. This period also allows the clerk to prepare the official court record for transmission to the receiving county on the effective date of the transfer.
Nothing in this rule prohibits the use of electronic means when transferring and receiving records. However, if there is an electronic transfer, the receiving county is to send an electronic confirmation of receipt of the records as the return receipt. The transferring county’s clerk of courts is to docket the confirmation of receipt of records by the receiving county and may close the case once the confirmation has been received.
Upon receiving the order accepting the case, the transferring court may order the termination of court supervision pursuant to Rule 630(b).
Pursuant to subdivision (b)(2), if only supervision is being transferred, the juvenile’s official court record is not required to be transferred to the clerk of courts of the receiving county.
The provisions of this Rule 302 amended December 24, 2009, effective immediately, 40 Pa.B. 222; amended May 21, 2012, effective August 1, 2012, 42 Pa.B. 3203; amended February 18, 2026, effective July 1, 2026, 56 Pa.B. 1108. Immediately preceding text appears at serial pages (361565) to (361566).