R.P. v. K.F. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A30016-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    R.P.                                       :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :         PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                          :
    :
    :
    K.F.                                       :
    :
    Appellant       :    No. 955 MDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered May 14, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lycoming County Civil Division at
    No(s): FC-2013-0021695-CU
    BEFORE:         DUBOW, J., NICHOLS, J., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.:                      FILED: FEBRUARY 28, 2020
    K.F. (Mother) appeals the order granting the petition for modification of
    custody filed by R.P. (Father) and awarding Mother and Father shared legal
    and physical custody of their son, G.P. (Child), born in November 2013. We
    affirm.
    The trial court set forth the factual and procedural history of this matter
    as follows:
    [Mother] has appealed this [c]ourt’s Order dated May 13, 2019,
    and docketed on May 14, 2019, issued after a custody trial, with
    regard to the Petition for Modification of Custody filed by [Father]
    on September 6, 2018. At the time of the custody trial, Father
    was present and represented by Melody Protasio, Esquire, and
    Mother was present and represented by Brandon Schemery,
    Esquire.   Prior to the trial, Father and Mother reached an
    agreement on a custody schedule for [Child] wherein the parties
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A30016-19
    would share physical custody on a week-on/week-off basis with
    the custody exchanges taking place on Fridays at 4:30 p.m.
    Although the parties agreed to the physical custody schedule, they
    could not agree on which school district [Child] will attend when
    he enters Kindergarten in the fall of 2019. Additionally, Mother
    requested that the custody order contain a provision indicating
    that if a party would need care for [Child] for a period of three
    hours or longer, that party must offer the other parent the right
    of first refusal to care for [Child] during that time.[1] Father
    objected to the inclusion of this provision as his mother [(Paternal
    Grandmother)] has provided childcare for [Child’s] entire life, and
    he wishes to allow her to continue doing so during his periods of
    custody.
    Following a full day of testimony and, after careful consideration
    of the facts and exhibits, this [c]ourt determined that [Child]
    would attend [school in the South Williamsport School District
    (South Williamsport)] where Father resides. Additionally, the
    [c]ourt declined to include a right of first refusal/babysitting
    ____________________________________________
    1 The prior custody order of December 3, 2014 contained a “first option
    clause.” Mother’s Brief at 6. After Father filed the instant petition for
    modification of custody, but before trial, Mother and Father agreed to an
    interim custody stipulation, which included the following provisions:
    2. The parties acknowledge that paragraph 3(h) of their current
    custody order, filed December 3, 2014, permits the non-custodial
    parent to pick [Child] up from daycare if he/she is not
    working/attending school and the custodial parent is working. The
    parties wish to amend that provision of the Order on an interim
    basis.
    *       *   *
    4. . . . the parties specifically agree that on days where [Child]
    has preschool (Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays), the non-custodial
    parent may get custody if they are not working or in school (and
    the custodial parent is working or in school) from 11:30 a.m. until
    4:15 p.m. or earlier if the custodial parent is off from work/school
    earlier.
    Interim Custody Stipulation, 2/21/19, at ¶¶ 2, 4.
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    provision in the Order. Mother’s counsel filed a Petition for
    Reconsideration on May 23, 2019, which was summarily denied
    on May 29, 2019. Mother filed a timely Notice of Appeal on June
    12, 2019.[2]
    Trial Ct. Op., 7/2/19, at 1-2.
    On appeal, Mother raises two issues, which we have reordered as
    follows:
    1. Whether the trial court erred in ordering [Child] to attend
    [school in South Williamsport]?
    2. Whether the trial court erred in giving a non-party, third party
    individual, de facto visitation?
    Mother’s Brief at 5.
    Mother does not challenge the trial court’s award of shared physical and
    legal custody. Instead, she challenges two aspects of the order, namely: (1)
    the choice of school district and (2) the absence of a first refusal/babysitting
    provision, which, Mother asserts, is equivalent to an improper grant of custody
    to Paternal Grandmother.          See id. at 35-36, 45, 62.   We address these
    challenges in further detail below.
    Initially, we note that in custody cases under the Child Custody Act (the
    Act), 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 5321-5340, our standard of review is as follows:
    In reviewing a custody order, our scope is of the broadest type
    and our standard is abuse of discretion. We must accept findings
    of the trial court that are supported by competent evidence of
    record, as our role does not include making independent factual
    determinations. In addition, with regard to issues of credibility
    ____________________________________________
    2 As required by Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925(a)(2)(i) and
    (b), Mother filed a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal
    contemporaneously with her notice of appeal.
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    and weight of the evidence, we must defer to the presiding trial
    judge who viewed and assessed the witnesses first-hand.
    However, we are not bound by the trial court’s deductions or
    inferences from its factual findings. Ultimately, the test is whether
    the trial court’s conclusions are unreasonable as shown by the
    evidence of record. We may reject the conclusions of the trial
    court only if they involve an error of law, or are unreasonable in
    light of the sustainable findings of the trial court.
    With any child custody case, the paramount concern is the best
    interests of the child. This standard requires a case-by-case
    assessment of all the factors that may legitimately affect the
    physical, intellectual, moral and spiritual well-being of the child.
    M.J.M. v. M.L.G., 
    63 A.3d 331
    , 334 (Pa. Super. 2013) (citation omitted).
    Section 5323 of the Act provides for the following types of awards:
    (a) Types of       award.—After considering the factors set forth in
    section 5328        (relating to factors to consider when awarding
    custody), the       court may award any of the following types of
    custody if it is   in the best interest of the child:
    (1) Shared physical custody.
    (2) Primary physical custody.
    (3) Partial physical custody.
    (4) Sole physical custody.
    (5) Supervised physical custody.
    (6) Shared legal custody.
    (7) Sole legal custody.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 5323(a).
    Section 5328(a) sets forth the best-interest factors that the trial court
    must consider in making a custody award. See E.D. v. M.P., 
    33 A.3d 73
    , 79-
    80, n.2 (Pa. Super. 2011). However, if the order addresses a discrete and
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    distinct issue that is ancillary to the form of custody, full consideration of the
    Section 5328(a) factors is not necessary. See S.W.D. v. S.A.R., 
    96 A.3d 396
    ,
    403 (Pa. Super. 2014). In S.W.D., this Court observed that
    resolution of an otherwise ancillary matter may affect a form of
    custody and require consideration of the § 5328(a) factors. For
    instance, the choice of a child’s school may factor into a trial
    court’s decision to award a form of custody when the trial court is
    addressing a request to establish or change legal or physical
    custody in connection with the choice of school. One parent in a
    custody dispute may argue that he or she is entitled to primary
    physical custody because his or her residence has much better
    schools. On the other hand, many times—like here—these items
    may appear as independent, discrete issues advanced by motion
    or petition that does not require a change in the form of custody.
    Although any decision requires consideration of the child’s best
    interest, only the former situation requires consideration and
    application of the § 5328(a) factors.
    Id. at 403; see also M.O. v. J.T.R., 
    85 A.3d 1058
    , 1063 (Pa. Super. 2014)
    (noting that when the trial court does not make an award of custody, but
    modifies a discrete custody-related issue, it does not need to address the best-
    interest factors in Section 5328(a) when determining the child’s best interest).
    Mother first contends that the trial court erred in deciding that Child
    would attend school in South Williamsport rather than in the Williamsport Area
    School District (Williamsport). Mother’s Brief at 33-34, 46-62. Mother argues
    that although “the trial court was not required to make a full analysis of the
    factors, it was not excused from considering the relevant § 5328(a) factors.”
    Id. at 47.    In particular, Mother asserts that the trial court should have
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    considered Section 5328(a)(3), (4), (6), (9), (10), (11), and (12).3 Id. at 49.
    Relying on Fox v. Garzilli, 
    875 A.2d 1104
     (Pa. Super. 2005), Mother argues
    that the trial court did not properly consider the inconvenience of transporting
    Child to school in South Williamsport. Id. at 48.
    Mother   contends     that, if Child     attends school    in   Williamsport,
    transportation will be more convenient, and that the trial court did not truly
    consider Mother’s inconvenience. Id. at 50-52. Mother argues that the trial
    court did not consider that Mother performs more parental duties than Father,
    and that Father has not been involved in Child’s daily transportation. Id. at
    ____________________________________________
    3   The pertinent subsections of Section 5328(a) are:
    (3) The parental duties performed by each party on behalf of the
    child.
    (4) The need for stability and continuity in the child’s education,
    family life and community life.
    (6) The child’s sibling relationships.
    (9) Which party is more likely to maintain a loving, stable,
    consistent and nurturing relationship with the child adequate for
    the child’s emotional needs.
    (10) Which party is more likely to attend to the daily physical,
    emotional, developmental, educational and special needs of the
    child.
    (11) The proximity of the residences of the parties.
    (12) Each party’s availability to care for the child or ability to make
    appropriate child-care arrangements.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 5328(a).
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    54-56. Mother asserts the trial court failed to consider that Mother’s other
    child, Child’s half-sibling, will eventually attend school in Williamsport,
    providing additional convenience to Mother if both children attend school in
    Williamsport. Id. at 56-57. Mother further argues that the trial court should
    have credited testimony that, despite her frequent moves, she built a new
    home and intends to remain in the home. Id. at 58.
    Additionally, Mother contends that the trial court failed to consider that
    other children from Child’s current preschool will attend school in Williamsport.
    Id. at 59. Moreover, Mother claims that the court failed to assess Father’s
    childcare arrangements and failed to consider how Child’s attendance at
    school in South Williamsport would inconvenience Paternal Grandmother. Id.
    at 60-61.
    Mother summarizes her position as follows:
    While the trial court was not required to make a full analysis of
    the child custody factors, had it considered the relevant factors to
    this case and used Fox . . . as guideposts to making its decision,
    it would have been abundantly clear that the decision on May 13,
    2019 manifestly inconvenienced both parties to the detriment of
    the best interests of the child. Therefore, the trial court abused
    its discretion in deciding [Child] should attend South Williamsport
    School District, and its decision should be reversed.
    Id. at 61-62.
    When reviewing a trial court’s decision regarding a discrete issue of
    school choice, this Court has noted that
    the child’s best interest is still paramount. The § 5328(a) factors,
    however, are a means to that end, and represent a legislative
    framework for determining a form of custody that is in a child’s
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    best interest. Even where a trial court need not consider and
    address the § 5328(a) factors, it still must consider the child’s best
    interest in custody matters.
    S.W.D. 
    96 A.3d at 403
    .
    Here, the trial court addressed the school choice issue as follows:
    Mother . . . alleges that this [c]ourt abused its discretion pursuant
    to 23 Pa.C.S.[] § 5328(a) by failing to give appropriate weight to
    her “overwhelmingly favorable factors” related to the minor child
    attending [school in Williamsport], where she resides. Again, this
    [c]ourt notes that Mother’s reliance on 23 Pa.C.S.[] § 5328 is
    misplaced. This statute enumerates the factors the [c]ourt must
    consider in determining the best interest of the child when
    ordering any form of custody. In the present case, the parties
    arrived on the day scheduled for the custody trial with an
    agreement regarding a shared physical custody schedule.
    Therefore, counsel for the parties agreed that a comprehensive
    evaluation of the factors enumerated in 23 Pa.C.S.[] § 5328(a)
    was not required. While the parties agreed on a shared physical
    custody schedule, they left it for the [c]ourt to decide which school
    district [Child] would attend and whether or not Mother’s request
    for a babysitting provision should be granted. Essentially, with
    the physical and legal custody provisions agreed upon, the
    testimony on the remaining issues was akin to a hearing on a
    petition for special relief.
    When determining that [Child] should attend [school in South
    Williamsport], the [c]ourt carefully considered both parties’
    positions. Mother, who recently had another child with her new
    husband, will be a stay-at-home mother. Father works Monday
    through Friday. His hours are currently 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.;
    however, he testified that if his request to have [Child] attend
    [school in South Williamsport] was granted, he had the flexibility
    to change his hours to 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Students in [South
    Williamsport] can arrive for school at 8:15 a.m. and classes begin
    at 8:35 a.m. This would enable Father to take [Child] to school
    every day on his custody weeks. In [Williamsport], the doors do
    not open until 8:50 a.m. This would prevent Father from ever
    being able to take the Child to school during his weeks of custody,
    even if he changed the start of his work day to 9:00 a.m., and
    require him to arrange for childcare prior to the start of the school
    day, including a third party having to transport [Child] to [school
    in Williamsport].
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    Father has lived in [South Williamsport] for [nine] years and lives
    within walking distance of the elementary school that Child will
    attend. Father had two witnesses testify that they live in his
    neighborhood and have children who also attend the school, and
    therefore [Child], who was described as shy, will have peers that
    he is familiar with when he starts school in South Williamsport.
    Mother, who has lived in her current home for only one year, lives
    approximately [ten] highway miles from the elementary school in
    Williamsport that [Child] would attend had this [c]ourt found in
    her favor. Mother argued that she has another child who will
    eventually attend [Williamsport], and that it would be an
    inconvenience to have her children in different school districts.
    Although the [c]ourt understands Mother’s desire to have her
    children attend the same school district, because there is a five-
    year age difference between [Child and Child’s half-sibling] they
    will never attend the same school together. Therefore, the [c]ourt
    did not find this to be a sufficient reason to tip the scales in favor
    of [Williamsport].
    The [c]ourt did consider the inconvenience that Mother may
    encounter if she has to make two trips to South Williamsport to
    take the Child to and from school on her weeks of custody.
    However, as with any decision in a custody matter, the [c]ourt
    must determine what is in the best interest of the Child. This
    [c]ourt reasoned that by attending [school in South Williamsport],
    on Mother’s weeks of custody he will be dropped off and picked
    up by her. On Father’s weeks of custody, he will be dropped off
    or walked to school by Father and picked up by paternal
    grandmother and taken back to Father’s house. This significantly
    reduces the amount of back-and-forth that [Child] could
    encounter on Father’s weeks of custody if [Child] were to attend
    [Williamsport]. This arrangement, coupled with the fact that
    [P]aternal [G]randmother will continue to babysit [Child] on
    Father’s weeks of custody, provides the most consistent and
    stable schedule for [Child] as he transitions into kindergarten.
    Trial Ct. Op. at 3-5 (record citations omitted).
    The record supports the trial court’s conclusion. Kirk Felix, the principal
    of Jackson Primary School in Williamsport, and Michele Loomis, the
    elementary school principal in South Williamsport, testified that the class sizes
    at each school were approximately the same. N.T., 5/13/19, at 61-63, 128.
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    Both acknowledged that bus transportation would not be available to the
    parent who resided outside the district. Id. at 66-67, 135. Mr. Felix testified
    that students can arrive in Williamsport at 8:50 a.m. and are released at 3:35
    p.m. Id. at 134. In South Williamsport, students can arrive at 8:15 a.m. and
    classes begin at 8:35 a.m., with dismissal at 3:05 p.m. Id. at 63-64.
    Mother testified that she primarily objected because if Child attended
    South Williamsport, the driving distances would make it inconvenient for
    everyone, but if Child goes to Williamsport, only Father would bear an
    inconvenience.4 Id. at 173-74. Mother asserted that Father could currently
    drop Child off at preschool in Williamsport on his way to work, but that he
    makes Paternal Grandmother do it instead. Id. at 175. Mother noted that
    most of Father’s drop-offs and pick-ups of Child currently occur at his sister’s
    home, which is close to Mother’s residence. Id.
    Mother acknowledged the trip to South Williamsport is approximately
    the same distance as her current trip to Child’s preschool, but expressed
    concerns about having to make the trip more frequently.            Id. at 204-05.
    Mother explained that it would be inconvenient for her to make the trip twice
    per day, particularly once Child’s half-sibling attends school. Id. at 177-79,
    205.
    ____________________________________________
    4 M.R., Child’s stepfather, testified that it would be more convenient for Child
    to attend school in Williamsport because M.R. and Mother would not have to
    travel to two different school districts to watch Child’s and Child’s half-sibling’s
    activities. N.T., 5/13/19, at 146-48.
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    However, Mother agreed that Child and Child’s half-sibling would never
    attend the same school because of their age difference.           Id. at 210.
    Additionally, Mother testified that she wanted Child to ride the bus to school
    to gain independence. Id. at 176. Mother believed that the bus trip would
    take ten to fifteen minutes, but Mother acknowledged she did not know. Id.
    at 203.
    Father testified that he lives two blocks from the elementary school in
    South Williamsport and has resided in his home for ten years.        Id. at 71.
    Currently, Father works from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., but has flexibility to
    work from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., which he would do if Child attended school
    in South Williamsport. Id. at 72-73. This would enable Father to take Child
    to school during his custodial time. Id. at 73. However, if Child attended
    school in Williamsport, the later start time and the greater distance to his job
    would prevent Father from taking Child to school in the morning. Id. Father
    asserted that Child’s middle and high schools in Williamsport would be farther
    from Mother’s house than the schools in South Williamsport. Id. at 95-96.
    Father testified that if Child went to school in South Williamsport,
    Paternal Grandmother would retrieve Child’s cousin, N., at his bus stop after
    school, and then travel to South Williamsport to pick up Child. Grandmother
    would then before bring the children a short distance back to Father’s house.
    Id. at 100. Father testified Grandmother would stay at his house for less than
    two hours before he returned home from work.              Id. at 92.     Father
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    acknowledged that he is the only member of his family who lives in South
    Williamsport and that Paternal Mother and the rest of his family live
    geographically closer to each other in the Jersey Shore/Linden area. Id. at
    104. However, he asserted that the travel times for Paternal Grandmother
    would not be significantly different if Child went to school in South
    Williamsport. Id.
    Father noted that Child is very familiar with the South Williamsport
    elementary school because they go to the playground there often. Id. at 75-
    76. Father believed that Child, who he described as shy, would attend school
    in South Williamsport with a friend from Father’s neighborhood and would
    know one of the teachers.5 Id. at 88, 90-91.
    Paternal Grandmother testified that if Child attends school in South
    Williamsport, Father would not need help getting Child to school in the
    morning. Id. at 37, 42. Paternal Grandmother further testified that she could
    pick her other grandchildren up from the bus at 2:20 p.m. before getting Child
    when his school day ended at approximately 3:00 p.m. Id. at 56-59. Paternal
    Grandmother acknowledged that she lives closer to Mother than to Father and
    ____________________________________________
    5 R.M., a friend of Father’s who has known Father since grade school, testified
    that his daughter and Child are friends and frequently play together. N.T.,
    5/13/19, at 6-7. R.M. testified his daughter would attend kindergarten at the
    South Williamsport elementary school, and he believed there was a good
    chance his daughter and Child would be in the same class. Id. at 8. Further,
    R.M.’s wife is a teacher at the school and Child knows her. Id.
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    that the school in Williamsport is geographically closer to her. Id. at 47-48,
    51. However, Paternal Grandmother stated that the difference in the travel
    times of going to the schools in Williamsport versus South Williamsport “might
    be one minute or something like that.” Id. at 51.
    Based upon our review of the record, we conclude that the trial court
    did not commit an error of law or abuse of discretion in its determination that
    Child would attend school in South Williamsport.         Contrary to Mother’s
    argument, the trial court was not required to assess the custody best interest
    factors when deciding the discrete issue of Child’s school district. See S.W.D.,
    
    96 A.3d at
    403–04.
    Further, while Mother argues that Fox should control, we disagree. In
    Fox, the mother and father disputed which school district their children would
    attend. At the time, the mother exercised physical custody of the children
    from Sunday through Thursday, while the father exercised physical custody
    from Thursday night through Sunday three weeks per month, and from
    Thursday night to Friday one week per month. Fox, 
    875 A.2d at 1106
    . The
    children were both in elementary school and the parents’ homes were one and
    a half miles apart. 
    Id.
     The children’s elementary school, which was located
    in the father’s school district and two miles from the mother’s home, was
    somewhat closer to the father’s home. 
    Id. at 1109
    . The mother was required
    to drive the children to school because busing was not available since her
    house was not in the same school district. 
    Id.
     If the children remained in the
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    father’s school district, the mother’s drive to the middle and high schools in
    the father’s district would exceed twenty minutes, while the middle school in
    her district would be less than two miles away. 
    Id.
    Ultimately, the trial court in Fox determined that the children would
    continue to attend school in the father’s school district, focusing primarily on
    the fact that the children were doing well in the school district. 
    Id. at 1108
    .
    This Court reversed, holding that the evidence did not support the trial court’s
    conclusion that “the choice of school does not present a burdensome commute
    for either party, nor does it present a situation that is contrary to the best
    interests of either child.” 
    Id. at 1110
     (record citation omitted)). Instead, this
    Court observed that if the children attended school in the mother’s school
    district, they could get a bus directly across the street from the mother’s
    residence.     
    Id. at 1109
    .   Further, the greater distance and travel times
    required the children to awaken earlier to accommodate the additional travel
    time, and attending school district where the mother resided would have a
    favorable impact on the children’s ability to establish friendships with children
    who lived in the immediate vicinity. 
    Id. at 1109-1110
    . The Fox Court held
    that “[s]ince the children live primarily with [their m]other, the record
    supported the conclusion that they should attend school where they reside.”
    
    Id. at 1110
    .
    Here, Mother’s and Father’s physical custody schedule is markedly
    different from the schedule in Fox. Child spends equal time in both homes,
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    albeit on a week on/week off schedule. Therefore, the predominant feature
    in Fox, that the children lived primarily with one of the parents, is not present
    here. Therefore, Mother’s arguments based on Fox merit no relief.
    Moreover, although Mother argues that it would be more convenient for
    her and Paternal Grandmother for Child to attend school in Williamsport, the
    trial court appropriately focused on the best interests of Child. The trial court
    considered the inconvenience to Mother of making two trips to South
    Williamsport to take the Child to and from school on her weeks of custody.
    See Trial Ct. Op. at 5. However, the trial court reasoned that by having Child
    attend kindergarten in South Williamsport, Mother will drop off and pick up
    Child on her weeks of custody. See 
    id.
     During Father’s weeks of custody,
    Father will drop off or walk Child to school and Grandmother will pick up Child
    and taken him back to Father’s house. See 
    id.
     The trial court concluded that
    this significantly reduced the amount of back-and-forth that Child would
    encounter during Father’s weeks of custody and provided the more consistent
    and stable schedule for Child as he transitions into kindergarten. See id. at
    5-6.
    In sum, after considering the record, as well as the trial court’s rationale,
    we discern no abuse of discretion or error of law in the trial court’s conclusion
    that it is in Child’s best interest to attend school in South Williamsport.
    Accordingly, Mother’s first issue fails. See M.J.M. 
    63 A.3d at 334
    .
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    In her remaining issue, Mother claims that by denying her a right to
    custody of Child when Father needs to utilize the services of a babysitter for
    more than three hours, the trial court awarded Paternal Grandmother “de
    facto visitation.” Mother’s Brief at 37. Mother asserts that including a right
    of first refusal would foster the best interests of Child by prioritizing Child’s
    time with his parents as opposed to third parties. Id. at 35. Mother argues
    that the parties previously included a right of first refusal in the custody order
    and that the trial court’s failure to include such a provision in the May 14,
    2019, order precludes her from caring for Child when Father is at work and
    Child has a school break. Id. at 35-36.
    Mother acknowledges that Paternal Grandmother was not a party to the
    custody litigation, but contends that Grandmother lacked standing to seek
    physical custody pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 5325.6 Id. at 37-39. Mother further
    argues, pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 5327,7 that there is a presumption in favor
    of a parent over third parties in custody matters. Id. at 41. Moreover, Mother
    ____________________________________________
    6 Section 5325 sets forth limited situations where grandparents and great-
    grandparents can file an action for partial physical custody or supervised
    physical custody. See 23 Pa.C.S. § 5325. Mother also references 23 Pa.C.S.
    § 5324, which delineates the individuals who may file an action for any form
    of physical or legal custody.
    7 In pertinent part, Section 5327 provides: “In any action regarding the
    custody of the child between a parent of the child and a nonparent, there shall
    be a presumption that custody shall be awarded to the parent.              The
    presumption in favor of the parent may be rebutted by clear and convincing
    evidence.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 5327(b).
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    asserts, “the law protects the natural parent’s relationship with his or her child
    and will not interfere unnecessarily with that relationship, even at the cost of
    estrangement to the extended family.” Id. Mother contends:
    This well-known abductive reasoning test applies: if it looks like a
    duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably
    is a duck. In this case, if it looks like an award of visitation, sounds
    like an award of visitation, and acts as an award of visitation, it
    probably is.
    Id. at 42-43. Additionally, Mother argues that the trial court failed to consider
    Child’s sibling relationship with Mother’s infant daughter. Mother’s Brief at 45.
    The trial court rejected Mother’s argument, reasoning:
    Mother alleges that this [c]ourt abused its discretion in denying
    her request for a modified inclusion of a long-standing mutual
    babysitter/first option clause in the final custody Order. Mother
    further alleges that this essentially gave a third party de facto
    visitation in lieu of Mother’s ability to provide childcare. Mother
    cites 23 Pa.C.S. § 5324 in her Concise Statement. The [c]ourt
    initially notes that Mother’s reliance on this statute in support of
    her position is misplaced. 23 Pa.C.S. § 5324 describes certain
    individuals who may file an action for any form of physical or legal
    custody. In the instant case, [Paternal Grandmother] was not
    requesting to intervene in the current custody case, nor was she
    seeking any defined period of custody of [Child]. The [c]ourt
    heard testimony from [Paternal Grandmother] that she retired in
    March of 2016 and started to babysit her grandchild, and had
    watched him every day since then. [Paternal Grandmother] also
    babysits her other grandchildren, one of whom is very close with
    [Child]. For years, [Paternal Grandmother] babysat [Child] with
    the consent of both parties, including during Mother’s periods of
    custody. It is evident to this [c]ourt that there is a very close
    bond between [Child] and [Paternal Grandmother], and that she
    has consistently played an important role in his life as a caregiver.
    This [c]ourt’s decision did not grant [Paternal Grandmother] any
    type of standing or any defined period of visitation or physical
    custody of [Child]. Instead, it simply gave Father the opportunity
    to make his own arrangements for childcare if needed when
    [Child] is in his custody. Nothing in this [c]ourt’s Order precludes
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    J-A30016-19
    Father from offering Mother additional time with the Child during
    his weeks of custody when he is working or during the summer.
    It merely gives Father the freedom to choose what is most
    convenient for him in terms of childcare while allowing him to
    maintain the important long-standing bond between [Paternal
    Grandmother] and [Child].
    Trial Ct. Op. at 2-3.
    The record supports the trial court’s conclusion. Mother acknowledged
    that Paternal Grandmother previously provided care for Child when both
    Mother and Father worked. N.T., 5/13/19, at 164. However, Mother testified
    that she now stays at home with her new baby and Child. Id. While Mother
    confirmed that Child’s relationship with Paternal Grandmother is important,
    Mother explained that she wants to watch both of her children to foster their
    relationship and “would love to watch [Child] everyday, be with him and
    encourage the relationship.” Id. at 165-66. Mother testified that she was
    most concerned with including a right of first refusal for summer vacation and
    school holidays when Child would be cared for by Paternal Grandmother for
    the whole day while Father works. Id. at 167.
    Father testified that Paternal Grandmother provided care for Child for
    the prior three years, during both Father’s and Mother’s custodial time. Id.
    at 80, 113. Father noted that Child has a very close relationship with his
    cousin, N., and that Paternal Grandmother also provides care for both
    children. Id. at 94-95. Father explained that he objected to including a right
    of first refusal because he wanted Child to have a relationship with his family
    during his custodial time. Id. at 111.
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    J-A30016-19
    Paternal Grandmother testified that she started caring for Child and her
    two other grandchildren when she retired in March 2016. Id. at 28. Initially,
    Grandmother watched Child during both Mother’s and Father’s custodial time,
    as both had to work. Id. at 30-31. However, after Mother went on maternity
    leave in early 2019, Mother provided most of the daytime care for Child. Id.
    at 30-31, 33, 54-55. Paternal Grandmother testified that Child and Child’s
    cousin, N., are good friends and enjoy spending time together. Id. at 32-33.
    When Paternal Grandmother cares for Child during the summer, N. is typically
    with her as well, and Grandmother takes the children swimming and hiking,
    and to the library. Id. at 28-29.
    Contrary to Mother’s argument, the trial court did not confer upon
    Paternal Grandmother any right to visitation or physical custody when it
    denied Mother a right of first refusal.8           Rather, it permitted Father, in his
    ____________________________________________
    8 We note that “visitation” is not among the awards of custody contemplated
    by the current version of the Act. The predecessor to the Act treated “custody”
    and “visitation” as distinct awards.          See 23 Pa.C.S. § 5302 (defining
    “visitation” as “[t]he right to visit a child. The term does not include the right
    to remove a child from the custodial parent’s control”) (repealed eff. 2011).
    The current Act eliminates this distinction. See 23 Pa.C.S. § 5322(b) (stating
    that “[i]n a statutory provision other than in this chapter, when the term
    ‘visitation’ is used in reference to child custody, the term may be construed to
    mean: (1) partial physical custody; (2) shared physical custody; or (3)
    supervised physical custody”). In this instance, the most analogous provision
    regarding Paternal Grandmother’s care of Child is partial physical custody,
    which the Act defines as “[t]he right to assume physical custody of the child
    for less than a majority of the time.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 5322(a).
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    J-A30016-19
    discretion, to utilize third parties, including Grandmother, to care for Child
    during his custodial time.9 In short, we discern no merit to Mother’s argument
    that the trial court awarded Grandmother any form of custody.
    Moreover, the trial court’s decision was guided by Child’s best interests.
    In concluding that it would not include a right of first refusal, the trial court
    focused on the fact that Father has the freedom to choose what is most
    convenient for him in terms of childcare while also allowing Father to maintain
    the important long-standing bond between Grandmother and Child. See Trial
    Ct. Op. at 3. After a review of the record, we conclude that the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion when it did not to include a right of first refusal in its
    May 14, 2019, custody order.
    Order affirmed.
    ____________________________________________
    9 Mother’s argument suggests that, in all instances, a parent must be given
    the option to take custody of their child from a care provider. However, in
    Johnson v. Lewis, 
    870 A.2d 368
     (Pa. Super. 2005), a case predating the
    Act, the mother argued that the trial court should have made a provision for
    her to have physical custody during the periods when the father worked the
    night shift. 
    Id. at 374
    . Relatedly, the panel considered whether the trial court
    erred by allowing any third party, even a competent nanny, to care for the
    child when the father worked overnight, where the mother, a fit parent, would
    be available to watch the child. 
    Id. at 374-75
    . The panel examined the
    number of waking hours that the child would spend with both parents under
    the trial court’s order if the father would work the night shift. 
    Id. at 375
    . The
    panel determined that it would disrupt the child’s stability to provide the
    mother with custodial time during the nights when the father would work. 
    Id.
    The panel held that maintaining the stable consistency of a weekly shift in
    physical custody, even if the father would alter his work schedule, was
    reasonably in the child’s best interest. 
    Id.
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    J-A30016-19
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 02/28/2020
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