J-A07003-19


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 N.P.                                      :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                           :         PENNSYLVANIA
                     Appellant             :
                                           :
                                           :
               v.                          :
                                           :
                                           :
 K.C.P.                                    :    No. 3386 EDA 2018

             Appeal from the Order Entered October 12, 2018
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Civil Division at
                           No(s): 2010-33309


BEFORE:      OLSON, J., DUBOW, J., and STEVENS*, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.:                               FILED APRIL 02, 2019

        Appellant, N.P. (hereinafter “Mother”), appeals from the order entered

on October 12, 2018, which denied her exceptions to a temporary order of

child support. We quash this appeal.

        Mother and K.C.P. (hereinafter “Father”) married in 1999 and separated

in April 2011. The parties have two children together: K.K.P. (born in 1999)

and J.N.P. (born in 2006). On October 11, 2013, Father was ordered to pay

$296.26 per month in support for his two children.           Trial Court Order,

10/11/13, at 1.     This order “was administratively changed, per order, on

August 17, 2017, from two children to ‘one child only,’ due to the emancipation

of the oldest child.” Trial Court Opinion, 11/30/18, at 1.

        On April 30, 2018, Father filed a pro se petition for modification of the

child support order. Father’s petition requested the following relief:



____________________________________
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
J-A07003-19


        Please decrease or terminate order based on prolonged
        homelessness I can not continue to survive and pay support.

Father’s Petition for Modification, 4/30/18, at 2.

      On June 19, 2018, the parties appeared for a hearing on Father’s

modification petition.     On June 27, 2018, the hearing officer entered the

following interim order:

                                    ORDER

        [Father] filed a petition to modify on April 30, 2018.

        Father participated by telephone.

        It is hereby ordered that [Father’s] financial obligation is set
        to a numerical value of zero effective April 30, 2018 because
        [Father] is unable to pay, has no known income or assets and
        there is no reasonable prospect that [Father] will be able to
        pay in the foreseeable future. Arrears are remitted without
        prejudice.

        Either parent is to provide medical insurance coverage if and
        when available at a reasonable cost. The parent who obtains
        medical coverage at a reasonable cost is to enroll the
        child(ren) in the coverage and provide a copy of the insurance
        card to the Domestic Relations Section. [Father] is to pay $0
        per month in cash medical support.

        The financial obligation is to be reviewed for further
        modification upon [Father] attaining employment income, or
        assets that are available to pay support. [Father] is ordered
        to immediately report to the Domestic Relations Section any
        changes in [his] employment, income or assets.              If
        incarcerated, [Father] must report to the Domestic Relations
        Section within one week of release from incarceration for
        further determination of ability to pay support.

        If it is determined that [Father] has committed fraud or
        otherwise materially misrepresented [his] income or arrears,
        and/or if [Father] fails to comply with any provision of this
        order, the prior order and arrears may be reinstated.


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        Review in [Domestic Relations Office] in 90 days. Father to
        provide signed updated Physician’s Verification Form and
        status of Social Security claim.

Hearing Officer Interim Order, 6/27/18, at 1 (some capitalization omitted).

     Mother filed timely exceptions to the hearing officer’s interim order and

the trial court scheduled an October 11, 2018 oral argument on the

exceptions.   See Mother’s Exceptions, 7/16/18, at 1-2; Trial Court Order,

7/25/18, at 1-2. On October 12, 2018, the trial court entered the following

memorandum and order:

                       MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

        A review of the notes of testimony shows that the
        recommendation and order of the hearing officer is
        appropriate.

        As part of that order, the hearing officer ordered a “review in
        [the Domestic Relations Office] in 90 days.” Further, the
        hearing officer ordered “[F]ather to provide signed updated
        Physician Verification Form.”

        The [trial] court will address the above in the order it enters
        this date.

                                   ORDER

        AND NOW, this 12th day of October, 2018, after a review of
        the record, the notes of testimony, [Mother’s] brief, and oral
        argument by [Mother’s] counsel, [Father] not filing a brief or
        appearing at oral argument, the following is ORDERED:

        1. [Mother’s] exceptions are DENIED.

        2. Domestic Relations Office is directed to forthwith conduct
        the review conference as ordered by the hearing officer’s
        order, the 90 day period having passed.



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        3. [Father] has complied with the hearing officer’s order by
        sending to [the Domestic Relations Office] an updated
        Physician Verification Form signed by [Father’s] California
        treating physician on October 2, 2018, which form is in the
        [Domestic Relations Office] file and a copy of which the [trial
        court] gave to [Mother’s] counsel at the October 11, 2018
        oral argument.

        4. When [Father’s] spousal support complaint and [Mother’s]
        alimony pendente lite claim, contained within [Mother’s]
        recently filed divorce complaint, having together been
        certified as “complex,” are ready to be scheduled for a
        hearing before a support officer, it shall be scheduled before
        Support Hearing Officer[] Mindy A. Harris, Esquire, in that
        she has recently held a hearing on child support, the topic of
        these exceptions, and is familiar with this family.

Trial Court Order, 10/12/18, at 1-2 (some capitalization omitted).

      On November 8, 2018, Mother filed a notice of appeal from the trial

court’s October 12, 2018 order. We now quash this appeal.

      As we have explained, this Court is obligated to “first ascertain whether

the [order appealed from] is properly appealable, because the question of

appealability implicates the jurisdiction of this [C]ourt.” Commonwealth v.

Borrero, 692 A.2d 158, 159 (Pa. Super. 1997). “The general rule is that,

unless otherwise permitted by statute, only appeals from final orders are

subject to appellate review.” Commonwealth v. Sartin, 708 A.2d 121, 122

(Pa. Super. 1998). In relevant part, Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure

341 defines a “final order” as any order that “disposes of all claims and of all

parties.” Pa.R.A.P. 341(b)(1).

      We have held that, in the context of a child support award, the final,

appealable order is the one that “dispos[es] of all claims as related to [the]



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award of child support.” Deasy v. Deasy, 730 A.2d 500, 502-503 (Pa. Super.

1999). In the case at bar, however, the trial court’s October 12, 2018 order

did not “dispos[e] of all claims as related to [the] award of child support.”

See id. As such, the order is interlocutory and unappealable.

       Here, although the hearing officer’s June 27, 2018 interim order granted

Father’s modification petition and set Father’s child support obligation to zero

dollars, the interim order specifically declared that Father’s child support

obligation must be reviewed, in the Domestic Relations Office, in 90 days.

Hearing Officer Interim Order, 6/27/18, at 1. The order further provided that

Father must “provide signed updated Physician’s Verification Form and status

of Social Security claim” at or before the office conference.     Id.   The trial

court’s October 12, 2018 order expressly incorporated the above provisions,

declaring:    “Domestic Relations Office is directed to forthwith conduct the

review conference as ordered by the hearing officer’s order, the 90 day period

having passed.” Trial Court Order, 10/12/18, at 1.

       Thus, in essence, the hearing officer and trial court continued the

proceedings on Father’s child support modification petition for 90 days and

sent the case back to the conference officer, to hold an office conference and,

there, consider Father’s “updated Physician’s Verification Form and status of

Social Security claim.”1 Further, following the office conference, the case will,

____________________________________________


1Mother’s claims on appeal highlight the fact that the trial court’s October 12,
2018 order is interlocutory. Mother complains on appeal that the trial court



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again, proceed in accordance with Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure

1910.12.2     See Pa.R.C.P. 1910.12 (“Office Conference. Hearing. Record.

Exceptions. Order”).

       The trial court’s October 12, 2018 order explicitly contemplates that

there will be further proceedings on Father’s modification petition. Therefore,

the order is not final. See also West v. West, 446 A.2d 1342, (Pa. Super.

1982) (“‘interim order’ compelling [the husband] to pay [the wife] ‘$180 per

week for support and maintenance until further order’” was not a final,

appealable order because it “invite[d the husband] back into court”) (some

internal capitalization and corrections omitted).




____________________________________________


“erred in denying [Mother’s] exceptions since the hearing officer erred in
relying on an unsigned Physician Verification Form.” Mother’s Brief at
9 (emphasis added) (some capitalization omitted). Regardless of whether the
hearing officer, in fact, relied upon Father’s unsigned Physician Verification
Form in fashioning its interim order, one of the primary reasons the hearing
officer and trial court ordered the proceedings continued was so that Father
could “provide [a] signed updated Physician’s Verification Form” at the
office conference. Hearing Officer Interim Order, 6/27/18, at 1 (emphasis
added); see also Trial Court Order, 10/12/18, at 1-2; Trial Court Opinion,
11/30/18, at 6 (the trial court declared that its October 12, 2018 order was
“temporary in nature, in that by its very terms it is to be DRO reviewed within
90 days to receive updated information”).

2  In accordance with Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1910.10,
Montgomery County has “certified to the Domestic Relations Procedural Rules
Committee that support proceedings are conducted in accordance with” Rule
1910.12. Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Domestic Relations Procedural Rules
Committee, Judicial District Alternate Hearing Procedures, at 2 (found at
http://www.pacourts.us/assets/files/setting-5190/file-5591.pdf?cb=50cd2e).


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       Further,    while    interlocutory      orders   are   appealable   in   certain

circumstances, none of those circumstances apply to the case at bar. Our

Supreme Court has explained:

         in addition to an appeal from final orders of the Court of
         Common Pleas, our rules provide the Superior Court with
         jurisdiction in the following situations: interlocutory appeals
         that may be taken as of right, Pa.R.A.P. 311; interlocutory
         appeals that may be taken by permission, Pa.R.A.P. [312];
         appeals that may be taken from a collateral order, Pa.R.A.P.
         313; and appeals that may be taken from certain distribution
         orders by the Orphans' Court Division, Pa.R.A.P. 342.

Commonwealth v. Garcia, 43 A.3d 470, 478 n.7 (Pa. 2012) (internal

quotations omitted), quoting McCutcheon v. Phila. Elec. Co., 788 A.2d 345,

349 n.6 (Pa. 2002).

       Here, the challenged order is not defined as appealable as of right (per

Pa.R.A.P. 311), Mother did not ask for or receive permission to appeal the

interlocutory order (per Pa.R.A.P. 312), and Mother has not provided this

Court with any argument as to whether – or how – the order could satisfy the

collateral order doctrine (per Pa.R.A.P. 313).3 Thus, since we do not have
____________________________________________


3 The trial court’s Rule 1925(a) opinion declared that its October 12, 2018
order was “temporary in nature, in that by its very terms it is to be DRO
reviewed within 90 days to receive updated information.” Trial Court Opinion,
11/30/18, at 6. The trial court, therefore, recommended that we quash
Mother’s current appeal. Id. We note that Mother did not address the trial
court’s appealability concerns within her brief and Mother did not explain how
the October 12, 2018 order could be considered final. See Mother’s Brief at
1-21. In view of these circumstances, we distinguish this case from prior
decisions such as Hrinkevich v. Hrinkevich, 676 A.2d 237 (Pa. Super.
1996). In Hrinkevich, the order under review designated specific obligations
payable by husband as child support and spousal support. We held that we



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jurisdiction over this appeal, we are required to quash the appeal. See 42

Pa.C.S.A. § 742.

       Appeal quashed. Jurisdiction relinquished.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 4/2/19




____________________________________________


enjoyed jurisdiction to review the portions of the order dealing with child
support, notwithstanding the pending nature of certain matters pertaining to
equitable distribution. Id. at 239. We distinguished child support obligations
from spousal support obligations in light of then-recent amendments to our
procedural rules, which permitted immediate review of child support orders
despite ongoing litigation concerning economic matters. Id. The instant case
involves an entirely different jurisdictional hurdle. It is not the pending nature
of a divorce decree or other economic matters that bars review in this case.
Instead, the order from which appeal has been taken expressly provides that
it is temporary in nature and subject to further review. Hence, the order is
not final and appealable because it does not resolve the parties’ child support
claims, which are central to Mother’s objections.



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