[J-104-2014]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
EASTERN DISTRICT
CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, STEVENS, JJ.
IN INTEREST OF: L.Z., A MINOR CHILD : No. 26 EAP 2014
:
: Appeal from the Judgment of Superior
APPEAL OF: L.Z. : Court entered on 04/29/2014 affirming in
: part and vacating in part the Order dated
: 01/06/2012 in the Court of Common Pleas,
: Family Division, Philadelphia County at
: CP-51-DP-0002428-2011, FID: 51-FN-
: 004522-2011
:
: ARGUED: November 19, 2014
OPINION
MR. JUSTICE BAER DECIDED: March 25, 2015
We granted review to consider whether the Superior Court exceeded its scope
and standard of review in substituting its judgment for that of the trial court in
determining whether the child at issue in this case suffered abuse and whether that
abuse was perpetrated by his mother. This inquiry necessarily entails a determination
of whether the Superior Court misapplied the Child Protective Services Law’s (CPSL)
definition of child abuse and whether the court misconstrued the evidentiary
presumption of 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d), which provides that when a child incurs abuse not
ordinarily suffered absent acts or omissions of a parent or other person responsible, the
fact of abuse suffices to establish prima facie evidence of abuse by the parent or person
responsible. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.
On December 3, 2011, twenty-one-month-old L.Z. (Child) was brought to
Abington Memorial Hospital by L.F., his mother (Mother), and R.F., his maternal-aunt
(Aunt), who lived and cared for child together, to be treated for a deep cut nearly
halfway around the base of his penis. The physicians also observed a dark bruise in
the buckle area (above the jawbone and below the cheekbone) of Child’s right cheek
and another on his left cheekbone, as well as a severe diaper rash and yeast infection
on the front of his body. Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 1/6/12, at 6-7. Child was also
unkempt with very dirty legs and feet. N.T. at 14. As discussed below in more detail,
the presentation of these injuries was consistent with abuse and inconsistent with
several explanations given by Mother and Aunt, which led the treating physicians to
suspect that the injuries were non-accidental. The hospital staff filed a report with the
Philadelphia Department of Human Services (DHS or Appellant).1
After initial emergency proceedings, the court placed the child in protective
custody, with physical custody given to Child’s maternal grandfather (Grandfather). At
an adjudicatory hearing on January 6, 2012, at which Mother was present and
represented by counsel but, significantly, did not testify, the court considered DHS’s
dependency and aggravated circumstances petitions. A caseworker testified that
Mother acknowledged at the hospital that she and Aunt were Child’s primary caregivers,
but claimed that she had been staying with her paramour for the two days prior to the
hospital visit, while Child was with Aunt. N.T. at 8. She noted that the Child Protective
Services (CPS) report indicated Aunt, rather than Mother, as the perpetrator of the
abuse. N.T. at 19.
1
DHS is technically designated an appellee before this Court, presumably
because the Superior Court affirmed the trial court’s grant of DHS’s dependency
petition. Although nominally an appellee, DHS files a brief as a “participant” in favor of
Child, the Appellant before this Court.
[J-104-2014] - 2
Dr. Deborah Silver, the Medical Director of Abington Memorial’s Pediatric
Inpatient Unit, who examined Child in the hospital, testified at the adjudication hearing
as an expert in pediatric medicine. She opined that Child was abused. N.T. at 46.
Regarding the penile laceration, the expert indicated that it was an “extremely
uncommon presentation.” N.T. at 37. She rejected Aunt’s extrajudicial claim that Child
caused the laceration when he tugged on his penis during a diaper change; instead, the
doctor testified that Child was not strong enough to cause the injury and that the
laceration was linear, rather than having jagged edges, which would have been
consistent with ripping the skin. N.T. at 39-40. The doctor also opined that Child would
have suffered severe pain. N.T. at 37.
Speaking to the bilateral cheek bruising, the doctor testified that it was a
“common abuse injury” caused by an adult planting a thumb in one cheek and
squeezing the child’s face between the thumb and fingers. N.T. at 42. She explained
that injuries to the buckle of the cheek are inconsistent with a fall onto a table, as
Mother had claimed, which would instead cause injury to the protruding parts of the face
such as the cheekbone or orbital area. N.T. at 41. The expert opined that Child’s
bruises were more than a day but less than a week old. N.T. at 42. Significantly, after
detailing the dark bruising and their likely cause, the doctor was asked whether that
would “cause a child severe pain,” and responded, “I am sure it couldn’t have been very
comfortable.”2 N.T. at 42.
2
It appears that the trial judge viewed this as an affirmative (if somewhat
facetious) response to whether the child suffered severe pain given the court’s finding
that Child suffered multiple “serious physical injuries.” Tr. Ct. Op. at 8 (applying 23
Pa.C.S. § 6303(a)). In contrast, the Superior Court Majority read her response literally
to suggest only that the child was not comfortable when his face was squeezed so hard
as to cause large, dark bruises that remained days later. It is certainly reasonable to
interpret this statement, as the trial court apparently did, to indicate that the child was in
severe pain. We discuss this more fully infra.
[J-104-2014] - 3
Turning to the yeast infection and diaper rash, the doctor rejected Mother’s out-of
-court claim that the severe skin condition resulted from sustained diarrhea that did not
respond to treatment with diaper rash creams. The doctor explained that Child’s rash
was inconsistent with diarrhea, which would be on the buttocks area, given that the rash
was on Child’s front and thighs, which was “usually from being in urine for extended
periods of time.” N.T. at 42-43. Thus, the doctor testified that the injuries (the penile
laceration, cheek bruises and diaper rash/yeast infection) were “consistent with a
pattern of suspected child abuse” and that Child was a “victim of child abuse.” N.T. at
46-47.
After the hearing, the trial court entered an order finding Child dependent. The
court specifically found that it was in Child’s best interest to be removed from Mother’s
home and that preventive services were not necessary prior to the removal because of
the need for emergency placement. Significantly, the court found that Child was a
victim of child abuse as defined at 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303,3 and that Mother was the
3
The trial court relied upon subsections (i), (iii), and (iv) of Section 6303(b), which
at the time of the court’s decision provided in full as follows:
(b) Child abuse.--
(1) The term “child abuse” shall mean any of the following:
(i) Any recent act or failure to act by a perpetrator which
causes nonaccidental serious physical injury to a child under
18 years of age.
****
(iii) Any recent act, failure to act or series of such acts or
failures to act by a perpetrator which creates an imminent
risk of serious physical injury to or sexual abuse or sexual
exploitation of a child under 18 years of age.
(iv) Serious physical neglect by a perpetrator constituting
prolonged or repeated lack of supervision or the failure to
(continuedI)
[J-104-2014] - 4
perpetrator of such abuse. Dependency Order of Jan. 6, 2012. The court transferred
temporary legal custody to DHS and placed Child in Grandfather’s physical custody,
with Child’s parents receiving supervised weekly visitation. The trial court also entered
an order finding that aggravated circumstances existed because Child was “the victim of
physical abuse resulting in serious bodily injury, sexual violence, or aggravated neglect
by the parent; proven as to Mother.” Aggravated Circumstances Order of Jan. 6, 2012.
(Icontinued)
provide essentials of life, including adequate medical care,
which endangers a child's life or development or impairs the
child's functioning.
23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(b) (prior to revision); see also Tr. Ct. Op. at 7. “Serious physical
injury” was defined as “[a]n injury that: (1) causes a child severe pain; or (2) significantly
impairs a child's physical functioning, either temporarily or permanently.” Id. § 6303(a)
(prior to revision).
The definition was amended, effective December 31, 2014, to broaden the term
“child abuse” significantly. As relevant to the facts of this case, Section 6303(b) now
provides:
Child abuse.--The term “child abuse” shall mean
intentionally, knowingly or recklessly doing any of the
following:
(1) Causing bodily injury to a child through any recent act or
failure to act.
****
(5) Creating a reasonable likelihood of bodily injury to a child
through any recent act or failure to act.
****
(7) Causing serious physical neglect of a child.
23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(b.1). “Bodily injury” is now defined as “[i]mpairment of physical
condition or substantial pain,” which is considerably broader than the prior requirement
of “serious physical injury.” Id. § 6303(a). The references in the body of this opinion
refer to the prior version of Section 6303 unless specifically noted.
[J-104-2014] - 5
Accordingly, the court concluded that DHS did not need to make further efforts to
reunify Child with Mother.
In a subsequent Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the court elaborated that “clear and
convincing evidence existed that the Child was without parental care” and that “Child’s
injuries would not have occurred but for Mother’s omissions as his primary caretaker.”
Tr. Ct. Op. at 6. The court cataloged the following injuries, which it noted were
inconsistent with Mother and Aunt’s explanations: “an untreated yeast infection and
diaper rash from being in urine for extended periods of time,” the very deep penile
laceration, and the inflicted rather than accidental bilateral cheek bruising “caused by
someone grabbing the face and squeezing it between their fingers.” Id. at 7. The court
then concluded,
Based on those facts, the Court determined that Mother was
the perpetrator of the abuse because the Child was in her
care. Whether or not she inflicted the injuries directly was
irrelevant. She failed to act and protect the Child from the
serious physical injuries he suffered. The medical evidence
established that the Child's injuries were consistent with child
abuse.
Id. at 7-8. As discussed infra, a dependency court’s finding that an individual
perpetrated abuse allows for the filing of a founded report of child abuse with the
Department of Public Welfare and inclusion in the statewide ChildLine Registry, which
inter alia restricts an individual’s ability to engage in employment related to children.
See 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6331, 6338(a), 6344-6344.2, and 6355.
Mother appealed the orders to the Superior Court claiming that the trial court
erred in finding that Mother was responsible for the child abuse under 23 Pa.C.S.
§ 6303. The Superior Court initially entered an opinion of a three-judge panel, affirming
the adjudication of dependency but vacating the trial court’s determination that Mother
was the perpetrator of abuse.
[J-104-2014] - 6
Subsequently, the Superior Court granted the Guardian ad litem’s (GAL or
Appellant) petition for reargument en banc. The en banc panel again affirmed the
dependency adjudication and vacated the abuse determination, after recognizing that
Mother had waived certain issues by voluntarily relinquishing her parental rights to Child
prior to reargument.4 In re L.Z., 91 A.3d 208, 212 (Pa. Super. 2014).
In deciding whether Mother had perpetrated abuse on Child, the court first
considered which of Child’s injuries constituted abuse. While the trial court viewed the
laceration, the cheek bruising, and the diaper rash as abuse, the Superior Court
Majority concluded that only the penile laceration was proven by clear and convincing
evidence to have resulted from “non-accidental serious physical injury” and therefore
constituted child abuse pursuant to Section 6303(b). Id. at 215-16. It rejected labeling
the dark bilateral bruising on Child’s cheeks as abuse based upon the medical expert’s
comment that Child “couldn’t have been very comfortable.” Id. at 215; see supra at 3
n.2. Likewise, the court dismissed the yeast infection and severe diaper rash, in part
because “it responded well to treatment” in the hospital. Id. at 216.
The panel next considered whether the trial court erred in determining Mother to
be the perpetrator of the laceration, the only injury it found to constitute abuse. The
court recognized that 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d) provides for prima facie evidence of abuse
in certain situations:
Evidence that a child has suffered child abuse of such a
nature as would ordinarily not be sustained or exist except
by reason of the acts or omissions of the parent or other
person responsible for the welfare of the child shall be prima
4
Mother initially challenged the trial court’s holdings that aggravated
circumstances existed and that DHS need not make reasonable efforts at reunification.
As Mother waived those claims by voluntarily relinquishing her parental rights, we will
not discuss these claims further.
[J-104-2014] - 7
facie evidence of child abuse by the parent or other person
responsible for the welfare of the child.
23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d). In interpreting the statutory section, the en banc panel quoted its
prior decision in In re J.G., 984 A.2d 541, 547 (Pa. Super. 2009), which stated that
Section 6381(d) only applies if the abuse is of such a nature that it “would ordinarily not
be sustained or exist except by reason of the acts or omissions [of the person], and the
person is proved to have had responsibility for the welfare of the child at the time
of the abuse.” L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216 (emphasis in L.Z.).
The en banc Majority emphasized the final phrase of the J.G. quotation regarding
“time of abuse.” The court looked to prior Superior Court and Commonwealth Court
caselaw utilizing the “time of abuse” terminology in cases involving multiple caregivers.
In those multiple caregiver cases, some intermediate appellate courts have opined that
“[w]here the record is unclear as to which parent or person was responsible for the child
at the time of the abuse, ‘the viability of the presumption in [§ 6381(d)] is questionable.’”
Id. (citing In re J.G., 984 A.2d at 547; C.E. v Dep’t of Pub. Welfare, 917 A.2d 348, 356-
57 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007)); but see In the Interest of J.R.W., 631 A.2d 1019 (Pa. Super.
1993) (applying Section 6381(d) presumption in multi-caregiver situation). In multiple
caregiver cases, the court continued, “the presumption in 23 [Pa.C.S.] § 6381(d) is
inherently self-rebutting, and applying it to one or both persons alleged to be the
perpetrators would be arbitrary and capricious.” L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216 (quoting J.G., 984
A.2d at 548). Given this precedent, the en banc panel held that “Section 6381(d) does
not, however, permit the court to designate a parent a perpetrator of abuse where the
record fails to establish that the child was in the parent's care at the time of the injury.”
L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216.5
5
Seemingly, under the Superior Court’s current holding, a children and youth
services (CYS) agency, such as DHS, seeking a finding of abuse would have to prove
(continuedI)
[J-104-2014] - 8
The en banc Majority proceeded to apply this reading of Section 6381(d) to the
facts of the case at bar. It recognized that there was no dispute that Mother and Aunt
were Child’s primary caregivers. The en banc Majority, then, set forth the facts as
Mother and Aunt supplied them to the case worker at the hospital as if there were no
dispute regarding their truth, even though neither Mother nor Aunt testified at the
hearing and the hospital staff and trial judge found their assertions regarding Child’s
injuries implausible. Thus, the Superior Court Majority, essentially, made a finding of
fact that Mother had not seen Child for two days before Aunt told her that Child’s penis
was bleeding. Id. at 217. Given that the doctor testified that the laceration was less
than twenty-four hours old when it was examined in the hospital, the Majority proceeded
to make the factual finding that the injury “was inflicted at a time when Child was not in
Mother’s care.” Id.
As it found Mother was not present at the time of the laceration, it held that
Mother could not be presumed under Section 6381(d) to have perpetrated the abuse or
to be responsible for the abuse through omission, assuming without evidentiary support
that Mother had not been home when Child’s penis was cut and that she had no
“reason to believe that Aunt, or anyone else, would inflict such abuse upon Child.” Id. at
218-19. The court did not consider the application of Section 6381(d) to the cheek
bruising or the diaper rash and yeast infection as it parsed those injuries from the penile
laceration and concluded that they did not meet the definition of child abuse as
discussed above. Accordingly, while the Superior Court found that the record clearly
(Icontinued)
that the parent was physically present at the moment of the abuse and that no other
adult was responsible for the child before a court could apply the presumption of
Section 6381(d).
[J-104-2014] - 9
supported a finding of dependency, it vacated the order finding Mother committed child
abuse.
Judge Panella authored a dissenting opinion joined by Judges Bender and
Wecht. The dissent did not view Child’s injuries in isolation but instead “focus[ed] on
the totality of Child’s injuries” to determine whether Child suffered abuse. L.Z., 91 A.3d
at 221 (Panella, J., dissenting). The dissent found “that the cumulative effect of Child's
penile laceration, cheek bruising, and severe diaper rash resulted in severe pain
sufficient to support a finding of child abuse pursuant to Section 6303(b)(1)(i) or
(b)(1)(iii).” Id.
Moreover, the dissent determined that the record supported the trial court’s
conclusion that Mother perpetrated the abuse. In so doing, the dissent opined that the
Majority had erred in limiting the application of the evidentiary presumption of Section
6381(d) to find prima facie evidence of an abuser’s identity only when the abuser is
proven to be present at the time of the injuries. Id. at 222-23 (relying upon J.R.W., 631
A.2d at 1024). The dissent emphasized Pennsylvania caselaw observing that a parent
can be a perpetrator of child abuse through omission, given that a parent has a duty not
merely to refrain from harming a child, but also a duty to protect a child from others who
may inflict harm. Id. at 222 (discussing In re R.P., 957 A.2d 1205 (Pa. Super. 2008) and
C.S. v. Dep’t of Public Welfare, 972 A.2d 1254, 1259 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009)).
The dissent recognized that the case at bar is “the exact type of case which
demonstrates the Legislature's wise decision to establish the prima facie standard; a
case where horrendous child abuse is inflicted, but none of the adults providing
supervision for the child account for the time periods during which the abuse occurred.”
Id. at 222. The dissent observed that child abuse cases often involve “an apparent
conspiracy of silence,” where all the parents and caregivers refuse to explain who was
[J-104-2014] - 10
responsible for the child at the exact moment of injury. Id. at 223 (referencing In re J.G.,
984 A.2d at 547). It recognized that the presumption of Section 6381(d) addresses this
problem by balancing the need to protect the child and other children from future abuse
against the rights of the parent, noting that a finding of child abuse does not require the
same protections as would an adjudication of guilt. Echoing the sentiments previously
expressed in J.R.W., 631 A.2d 1019, the dissent opined, “The Legislature has
determined that the likelihood clearly established abuse has occurred, other than at the
hands of the custodian, is so small that prima facie evidence the custodian has caused
the injury, either by acts or omissions, is all that is required.” Id. at 222 (emphasis
omitted).
Applying this caselaw to the facts at bar, the dissent observed that Mother and
Aunt were primarily responsible for Child. It emphasized that neither of the persons
responsible for Child provided any testimony regarding who had responsibility for Child
at the time of his injuries. Thus, “while [Mother] may or may not have been present
when some of the injuries occurred, it was Mother’s failure to properly care for and
protect Child which necessitates that she be listed as a perpetrator [of child abuse].” Id.
at 224.
Turning to Mother’s responsibility for the individual injuries, the dissent
emphasized the brutality of the penile laceration and the implausible explanation given
by Aunt. It further opined that even if Mother did not inflict the lacerations, her actions
related to the injury “evidence[d] a dereliction of parental duties sufficient to support a
finding that Mother is a perpetrator of child abuse by actions or omissions.”6 Id. at 224-
25. Regarding the cheek bruising, the dissent rejected the Majority’s reading of the
6
The dissent observed the notation in the record that Mother and Aunt stopped at
Dunkin’ Donuts during the course of transporting Child to the hospital.
[J-104-2014] - 11
doctor’s testimony, and instead opined that the doctor found that Child had suffered
severe pain when his face was squeezed, even if expressed in a colloquial phrase, after
noting that the bilateral cheek bruising is a common abuse injury. The dissent stressed
that Mother admitted to being present when Child suffered the cheek bruising and
provided an incredible explanation regarding how these injuries occurred. Thus, the
dissent would have held Mother responsible under Section 6381(d) for the cheek
bruises whether she inflicted the injuries or failed to protect Child from sustaining them.
The dissent further noted the trial court’s recognition that Child suffered physical neglect
as evidenced by the severe diaper rash and untreated yeast infection, which was
inconsistent with the explanation Mother gave to the hospital caseworker during Child’s
time in the hospital. Given that the record supported the trial court’s determinations, the
dissent would have affirmed the court’s findings that the injuries constituted abuse.
We granted review, as sought by GAL, to consider whether the Superior Court
exceeded its scope and standard of review in substituting its judgment for the trial court,
and further whether it misconstrued the CPSL’s definition of child abuse and the
evidentiary presumption of 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d), which provides that when a child
incurs abuse not ordinarily suffered absent acts or omissions of a parent or other person
responsible, the fact of abuse suffices to establish a prima facie case of abuse by the
parent or responsible person.7 DHS also filed a brief as a participant in support of
7
Specifically, we granted review of the following issues as stated by Child’s GAL:
(1) Whether the Superior Court, in holding that a parent may
only be designated a perpetrator of abuse if the child is “in
the parent's care at the time of the injury,” disregarded the
Child Protective Services Law (CPSL) 23 Pa.C.S.A. §§
6301–6386 and departed from established precedent which
define “child abuse” to include “acts or omissions” and which
permit the dependency court to identify a parent as a
(continuedI)
[J-104-2014] - 12
Child, primarily addressing the second issue regarding the interpretation of Section
6381(d).
GAL’s first question addresses factual and credibility determinations primarily
related to the then-applicable definition of child abuse under Section 6303.8 GAL
asserts that the Superior Court disregarded (1) the trial court’s factual finding that the
penile laceration and the bilateral cheek bruising constituted physical abuse, (2) the trial
court’s conclusion that Child’s injuries were consistent with a pattern of abuse,9 and (3)
(Icontinued)
perpetrator based on prima facie evidence that the abuse
would not have occurred but for the acts or omissions of the
parent and clear and convincing evidence that the child was
the victim of child abuse?
(2) Whether the Superior Court erred and exceed[ed] its
scope and standard of review in vacating the trial court's
finding of abuse against Mother, by disregarding important
findings of fact of the trial court, by reweighing the evidence,
by making assessments of credibility and by substituting its
judgment for that of the trial court, where the trial court found
that the child's multiple injuries were consistent with a
pattern of abuse, that Mother provided explanations
inconsistent with the injuries, that Mother was responsible for
the child's care and protection, and that Mother failed to act
to protect the child from the serious physical injuries he
suffered?
In re L.Z., 96 A.3d 989 (Pa. 2014). Child’s GAL reverses the order of these issues in its
briefing, a sequence which we will also adopt.
8
While we apply the prior definition to the case at bar, we recognize that our
consideration of this issue may have limited significance going forward given the recent
amendments broadening the definition of child abuse. See supra at 4 n.3.
9
GAL observes that the Superior Court omitted from its block quotation of the trial
court’s factual findings the paragraph summarizing Dr. Silver’s determination that
Child’s “injuries were consistent with a pattern of suspected child abuse.” Tr. Ct. Op. at
(continuedI)
[J-104-2014] - 13
the court’s determination that Mother’s out-of-court explanations were inconsistent with
the presentation of Child’s injuries. GAL recites long standing case law that an
appellate court should defer to the fact finding and credibility determinations of a trial
court which has benefitted from observing the witnesses. GAL emphasizes that the
Superior Court altered the trial court’s recitation of the facts to decide that Mother was
definitively not present when Child’s laceration occurred, when the trial court merely
noted that Mother “claimed” to have been staying with her paramour when Child
suffered the injury, a claim which is suspect given the other assertions Mother and Aunt
made to explain Child’s injuries, to say nothing of the fact that Mother never testified.
GAL’s Brief at 29, citing Tr. Ct. Op. at 7.
Based on the facts as found by the trial court, GAL contends that the court was
presented with clear and convincing evidence that Child suffered abuse for purposes of
the then-applicable Section 6303. GAL further maintains that the record in the case at
bar supports the trial court’s conclusions that Mother was responsible for Child’s injuries
given that “Mother either was directly responsible for the child's condition or left the child
with inappropriate caretakers[.]” GAL’s Brief at 28.
In response, Mother avers that the Superior Court correctly determined that only
the penile laceration was a non-accidental injury resulting in severe pain sufficient to
constitute child abuse under the then-applicable Section 6303(b). She relies upon the
Superior Court’s reading of Dr. Silver’s testimony to conclude that the bilateral cheek
bruising did not constitute child abuse because it merely was “not comfortable,” which
(Icontinued)
5. GAL fails to recognize that, while the trial court accurately described the doctor’s
testimony, it did not frame its own findings or conclusions in terms of a “pattern of
abuse,” nor was such a finding necessary, given that the court found Child’s injuries met
the statutory requirements when considered separately.
[J-104-2014] - 14
Mother claims is not a serious physical injury sufficient for child abuse. While
acknowledging that she and Aunt were Child’s primary caretakers, she continues to
claim that she had not seen Child for two days prior to the hospital visit, and thus could
not have inflicted the laceration which the doctor testified was less than twenty-four
hours old when presented to the hospital.
Community Legal Services, Inc. and the Allegheny County Bar Foundation
(Amici), both of which serve as parent advocates in dependency proceedings, filed an
amici curiae brief in support of Mother. Amici argue that the Superior Court properly
concluded that the diaper rash and bruising did not constitute abusive injuries because
they did not cause Child severe pain or impair his functioning.10 Moreover, Amici
contend that the diaper rash and bruising could have arisen while Mother was not caring
for Child. Amici additionally reject the dissenting opinion’s reliance on a pattern of
abuse given that the statutory definition of child abuse in Section 6303(b) references the
singular “an injury” and in their view does not provide for an aggregation of harms.
Regardless, Amici contend that the injuries, even if aggregated, only show inadequate
caretaking, rather than child abuse. Amici further argue that Mother cannot be
responsible for injuries that occurred while Child was with Aunt, as no evidence was
produced that she knew or had reason to know that Aunt would abuse Child, obligating
her to remove Child from harm. They argue that to presume Mother liable for Aunt’s
actions when Mother was not present would be irrational and, thus, in violation of due
process.
Initially, we reiterate that “the standard of review in dependency cases requires
an appellate court to accept the findings of fact and credibility determinations of the trial
10
Amici acknowledges that Child’s injuries may constitute child abuse under the
amended definition of Section 6303(b) effective December 31, 2014, supra at 4 n.3.
Amici’s Brief at 9 n.3.
[J-104-2014] - 15
court if they are supported by the record, but does not require the appellate court to
accept the lower court's inferences or conclusions of law.” In re R.J.T., 9 A.3d 1179,
1190 (Pa. 2010). We review for abuse of discretion, id., and first consider whether the
Superior Court overstepped its authority in rejecting the trial court’s consideration of the
cheek bruising and severe diaper rash in determining whether Child suffered abuse.
As set forth above, the applicable version of the CPSL defined “child abuse” to
include “any recent act or failure to act” which causes “nonaccidental serious physical
injury;” “any recent act, failure to act or series of such acts or failures to act” “which
creates an imminent risk of serious physical injury;” or “serious physical neglect” “which
endangers a child’s life or development or impairs the child’s functioning.” 23 Pa.C.S.
§ 6303(b)(1)(i), (iii), (iv), set forth in full supra at 4 n.3. In turn, the CPSL defined
“serious physical injury” as an injury that causes “severe pain” or “significantly impairs”
the child’s physical functioning temporarily or permanently. Id. § 6303(a). While a
petitioning party must demonstrate the existence of child abuse by the clear and
convincing evidence standard applicable to most dependency determinations, 42
Pa.C.S. § 6341(c) (recognizing clear and convincing evidence as the necessary
standard for concluding that a child is dependent), the identity of the abuser need only
be established through prima facie evidence in certain situations as discussed infra.
We agree with GAL that the Superior Court erred and violated its standard of
review when it rejected the trial court’s factual determinations which served as the basis
of the court’s conclusion that Child suffered abuse, defined by Section 6303(b), as a
result of “serious physical injuries” and “physical neglect.” Tr. Ct. Op. at 7. We note
that the trial court concluded that Child suffered “serious physical injuries,” which
necessarily encompasses more than one injury and would therefore logically include the
cheek bruising as well as the laceration. Id.
[J-104-2014] - 16
There is no dispute that the penile laceration constituted child abuse.
Nevertheless, because the parties dispute whether Mother can be held responsible for
the laceration as discussed infra, it is appropriate that we also decide whether Child
suffered serious physical injury when his cheeks were squeezed so hard as to cause
dark bruising that remained for several days in a pattern recognized as indicative of
child abuse. We hold that the record, specifically Dr. Silver’s testimony, amply supports
the trial court’s findings that the dark bilateral cheek bruising constituted “serious
physical injury” which would have caused Child “severe pain” for purposes of the then
applicable definition of “child abuse” under Section 6303(a) and (b), notwithstanding Dr.
Silver’s somewhat flippant answer when asked about the pain Child suffered.11
We note that only the trial court observed and heard Dr. Silver and was therefore
in a position to assess the tone, context, and, ultimately, meaning of her “I’m sure it
couldn’t have been comfortable” comment. The court implicitly found that the Doctor’s
testimony conveyed, albeit in a flippant manner, that the injuries caused severe pain.
The record supports this conclusion. Indeed, after describing the large bruises in detail
and observing that the pattern of bruising was a common abuse injury inflicted by
squeezing the child’s face, one can imagine that the doctor might have viewed the
question as somewhat inane and responded as she did, indicating that it was obvious
that the child suffered severe pain. It was thus improper for the Superior Court Majority
to reverse the trial court on the basis of the literal language of the cold record. Finally,
we conclude that the record supports the trial court’s finding that the severe diaper rash
11
We observe that both the laceration and the bilateral bruising on Child’s cheek
would clearly be encompassed by the current definition of child abuse which is defined
to include “intentionally, knowingly or recklessly . . . [c]ausing bodily injury to a child,”
where “bodily injury” is defined as “[i]mpairment of physical condition or substantial
pain.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a), (b) (as amended).
[J-104-2014] - 17
and yeast infection constituted “serious physical neglect,” justifying a finding of abuse
under Section 6303(b)(1)(iv), especially when considering that Mother’s explanations for
the weeks Child suffered severe diaper rash were rejected by Dr. Silver and the trial
court.12
Having determined that clear and convincing evidence supported the trial court’s
conclusion that Child suffered abuse, we next consider whether the Superior Court
erred in rejecting the trial court’s determination that Mother perpetrated the abuse.13 At
the heart of this issue is a pure question of law: whether the Superior Court erred in
relying upon prior intermediate appellate court decisions refusing to apply Section
6381(d) in multiple caregiver cases and extending this limitation by categorically
rejecting the presumption in cases “where the record fails to establish that the child was
in the parent's care at the time of the injury.” L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216.
In essence, the Superior Court is requiring a CYS agency to prove that, at the
moment of injury, the parent or caregiver was physically present and that no other adult
was responsible for the child, before the CYS agency can argue for the application of
12
We additionally question the Superior Court’s refusal to look at Child’s injuries
holistically. It would be unreasonable to conclude that a child did not suffer abuse
merely because the individual acts did not constitute “serious physical injury,” when the
aggregation of the injuries substantially harmed the child. Nevertheless, given the
expansive definition of child abuse recently adopted by the Legislature, we doubt that a
situation would arise again where a child who has clearly suffered abuse as commonly
understood would not be able to meet the legal definition of abuse when looking at the
injuries individually.
13
We recognize that the Superior Court only considered the applicability of Section
6381(d)’s presumption in regard to the laceration injury. Nevertheless, we will address
the application of the presumption to the laceration, the cheek bruising, and the diaper
rash as we find all to constitute abuse. We can presume from the Superior Court’s
reliance on recent caselaw, as discussed infra, that the court would have concluded that
the presumption would also not apply to the cheek bruising and diaper rash because
Aunt and Mother had joint responsibility for the child during the relevant times.
[J-104-2014] - 18
the presumption of Section 6381(d), which provides that “prima facie evidence of child
abuse by the parent or other person responsible for the welfare of the child” exists
based upon “[e]vidence that a child has suffered child abuse of such a nature as would
ordinarily not be sustained or exist except by reason of the acts or omissions of the
parent or other person responsible for the welfare of the child.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d).
Ironically, in a case where an agency can meet the Superior Court’s burden, there
would be no need for the presumption. Thus, as detailed below, the Superior Court has
written the statutory mandated presumption out of the law.
Appellants14 urge this Court to hold that Section 6381(d) applies to all cases
where the injuries would not ordinarily have been sustained but for the acts or omission
of the parents or responsible person, even absent evidence that the parent or
responsible person was present at the time of injury.15 DHS additionally asks the Court
to standardize the interpretation of Section 6381(d) as it applies to dependency cases
addressed by the Superior Court, such as the case at bar, and expungement cases
addressed by the Commonwealth Court.
Prior to addressing the parties’ arguments, we review the interrelation of the
relevant statutory provisions and the relevant intermediate court decisions as this Court
has not spoken specifically to Section 6381(d). This case arises as a dependency
action governed by the Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6375, but also involves child
14
As noted above, DHS, the CYS agency involved in this case, joins GAL as a
participant in addressing this issue, see supra at 2 n.1. As GAL’s and DHS’s analysis of
this issue substantially overlaps, we will summarize their arguments jointly as
“Appellants.”
15
Appellants acknowledge, as will be discussed, that the presumption of Section
6381(d) may be rebutted with evidence that the parent or responsible person was
absent at the time of the injury and not otherwise responsible for the injury by failing to
secure proper care for the child.
[J-104-2014] - 19
abuse which is defined and addressed by the CPSL. 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6386. The
Juvenile Act permits a court to adjudicate a child dependent based upon clear and
convincing evidence, 42 Pa.C.S. § 6341(c), which in this case involved evidence of child
abuse as defined by the Section 6303 of the CPSL, discussed supra.
As part of the dependency adjudication, a court may find a parent to be the
perpetrator of child abuse, which in some cases may be established by prima facie
evidence pursuant to Section 6381(d), as discussed in detail below. If the court finds
the parent to have perpetrated abuse, the relevant CYS agency would file with the
Department of Public Welfare a “founded report” as defined by Section 6303(a) of the
CPSL,16 which would trigger inclusion on the statewide ChildLine Registry, which is also
governed by the CPSL, specifically 23 Pa.C.S. § 6331. The finding of child abuse in a
dependency proceeding can be appealed to the Superior Court, as Mother did in the
case at bar. An individual can also petition to expunge the founded report from
ChildLine through a Department of Public Welfare administrative process that would
eventually be subject to appeal in Commonwealth Court.17
16
A founded report was defined as follows:
A child abuse report made pursuant to this chapter if there
has been any judicial adjudication based on a finding that a
child who is a subject of the report has been abused,
including the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or a
finding of guilt to a criminal charge involving the same factual
circumstances involved in the allegation of child abuse.
23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a) (prior to amendment). The definition has been amended, effective
December 31, 2014, to list various types of judicial adjudications that would result in a
founded report, including a finding of dependency under 42 Pa.C.S. § 6341(c).
17
This process will be further addressed in our review of Commonwealth Court
case law infra.
[J-104-2014] - 20
Additionally, inclusion on the ChildLine Registry can be triggered outside of the
Juvenile Act’s dependency process through the filing by a CYS agency or the
Department of Public Welfare of an “indicated report”18 of child abuse when “substantial
evidence” exists that an individual perpetrated child abuse as defined in Section
6303(a). 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6303(a), 6331(3). Indeed, in this case, DHS filed an indicated
report against Aunt while the dependency case was pending. As with a founded report,
an individual may petition for the expungement of an indicated report through DPW’s
administrative process that could eventually be appealed to the Commonwealth Court.
As noted, because findings of child abuse perpetration have been decided in both the
Superior and Commonwealth Court and the combined precedent has culminated in the
Superior Court decision under review, we find it necessary to review the application of
the presumption of Section 6381(d) as developed through the precedent of both
intermediate appellate courts.
The Superior Court in dependency cases has long recognized the applicability
and importance of the evidentiary presumption in Section 6381(d) regarding the identity
of the abuser. Over twenty years ago, the Superior Court explored this issue in In the
Interest of J.R.W., 631 A.2d 1019 (Pa. Super. 1993), which involved a two-month-old
who exhibited tell-tale signs of shaken-baby syndrome, likely suffered while under the
care and control of both parents. As in the case at bar, the parents did not dispute the
18
Prior to December 2014, the CPSL defined an “indicated report” as “[a] child
abuse report made pursuant to this chapter if an investigation by the county agency or
the Department of Public Welfare determines that substantial evidence of the alleged
abuse exists based on any of the following: (1) Available medical evidence[,] (2) The
child protective service investigation[,] (3) An admission of the acts of abuse by the
perpetrator.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303 (prior to amendment). Along with the other revisions,
the legislature amended the definition of “indicated report” to expand the concept and
also to allow explicitly for an indicated report “regardless of the number of alleged
perpetrators.” Id. (amended).
[J-104-2014] - 21
trial court’s determination that the child was dependent, but, inter alia, challenged the
court’s determination that both parents were the perpetrators of abuse when the court
could not distinguish which parent actually shook the child. The parents claimed that
the identity of the abuser could not be established for purposes of a founded report
based only on prima facie evidence that the abuse would have been unlikely absent the
act or omissions of the parents, as provided by Section 6381(d), but had to be
demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence as required for a finding of dependency
under Section 6341(c) of the Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 6341(c).
Judge Tamilia cogently rejected the parents’ argument, explaining the
Legislature’s “wise and necessary” decision for allowing the identity of the abuser to be
established based upon the rebuttable presumption of Section 6381(d):
Prima facie evidence is not the standard that establishes the
child has been abused, which must be established by clear
and convincing evidence; it is the standard by which the
court determines whom the abuser would be in a given case.
There is no conflict, constitutional or otherwise, with the clear
and convincing evidence standard imposed by the [Juvenile]
Act to establish child abuse. The Legislature has determined
that the likelihood clearly established abuse has occurred,
other than at the hands of the custodian, is so small that
prima facie evidence the custodian has caused the injury,
either by acts or omissions, is all that is required. We find no
defect in this reasoning. Such a standard provides maximum
protection for the child victim or other children in the
community who might be subject to similar abuse if the
alleged abuser was not identified and permitted free access
to the victim or other vulnerable children. It is not equivalent
to a finding of guilt in a criminal proceeding which could
result in deprivation of freedom. Thus the [L]egislature has
balanced the needs of society and children for protection
against the abuser's possible patterned behavior and his/her
right to freedom unless found guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.
[J-104-2014] - 22
Id. at 1024. The Superior Court, thus, affirmed the trial court’s determination that both
parents had perpetrated the abuse, given the prima facie evidence that both parents
were “the primary custodians during the time of the abuse,” despite the absence of any
information demonstrating which parent inflicted the injury. Id. at 1025.
In the years since J.R.W., the Superior Court applied the presumption of Section
6381(d) in cases where multiple caregivers were responsible for care and protection of
a child, even when the evidence failed to demonstrate definitively which individual
inflicted the abuse. See R.P., 957 A.2d at 1217-18 (applying § 6381(d) in case where
child suffered severe injuries over an extended period of time while in care of mother
and father, where mother was found to have perpetrated abuse by omission even if she
did not inflict any of the injuries); In the Matter of A.H., 763 A.2d 873, 876 (Pa. Super.
2000) (finding prima facie evidence that mother perpetrated abuse where she was the
sole caretaker and child’s injuries could not have occurred except by her acts or
omissions; rejecting mother’s explanations for the injuries as not credible; and
recognizing her attempt to blame her boyfriend as indicative of her failure to protect
child from abuse).
In 2009, the Superior Court addressed Section 6381(d) in dicta in a case relied
upon extensively but erroneously as binding precedent by the en banc Majority in the
case at bar. In re J.G., 984 A.2d 541. In J.G., the trial court determined that an infant
suffered abuse and was dependent, but did not find that parents perpetrated the abuse,
instead concluding that the abuse could have been inflicted by the babysitter while the
parents were at work. The CYS agency appealed this determination. The Superior
Court, however, dismissed the appeal, finding that the agency was not aggrieved given
that the trial court found the child dependent as requested by CYS, rendering the
[J-104-2014] - 23
discussion in J.G., relied upon by the Superior Court herein, unnecessary for the case’s
disposition and thus pure dicta. Id. at 548.
In this dicta, the Superior Court spoke to the applicability of Section 6381(d) in a
multi-caregiver situation. First, the court correctly refused to read Section 6381(d)’s use
of “by the parent or other person” “as a disjunctive clause mandating strict proof that
either one or the other” was responsible for the child’s welfare in order for the
presumption to apply. Id. at 547. “Rather, to effectuate the underlying intent of the
statute and preserve the health and welfare of the child, we find that the phrase, ‘by the
parent or the other person,’ is a term simultaneously encompassing both the singular
and the plural.” Id. Properly following its prior decision in J.R.W., the court further
explained that “proof of the nature of the child's harm, alone, is prima facie evidence of
child abuse by anyone and/or all who are found to be ‘responsible for the welfare of the
child’ during the time of the alleged injuries.” Id.
The Superior Court in J.G., however, focused in dicta upon whether the parent or
responsible person had responsibility for the child at the time of the injury. The court
improperly concluded that “the viability of the presumption of [Section 6381(d)] is
questionable” and “inherently self-rebutting,” such that it “would be arbitrary and
capricious” to apply the presumption in cases where the trial court finds that it cannot
determine if the parent had responsibility for the child. Id. at 547-48.
Having explained the Superior Court’s decisions relating to the presumption of
Section 6381(d) in dependency cases, we will hold our discussion of its erroneous
statutory construction until later and turn next to the Commonwealth Court’s application
of Section 6381(d)’s presumption in expungement cases, which in fact appear to have
lead the Superior Court astray. As noted, the Commonwealth Court generally
addresses Section 6381(d) in the context of appeals from administrative decisions
[J-104-2014] - 24
regarding petitions to expunge founded and indicated reports under the CPSL. While
dependency determinations must be supported by clear and convincing evidence under
6341(c) of the Juvenile Act, the CPSL requires substantial evidence of the abuser's
identity to support a denial of a petition to expunge.
The Commonwealth Court first addressed the application of Section 6381(d)'s
presumption in the expungement case of J.B. v. Department of Public Welfare, 898
A.2d 1221 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). The case involved a toddler who suffered severe
immersion burns on his feet which only could have been inflicted by his mother or her
boyfriend given the timing and circumstances of the injury. While no direct evidence
implicated the boyfriend, prima facie evidence existed, pursuant to Section 6381(d), that
he was a perpetrator of the abuse given that he had responsibility for the child and was
in the house at the time of the injury. After CYS filed an indicated report of abuse
against him, the boyfriend petitioned to expunge it claiming that the indicated report
could only be supported by substantial evidence of the identity of the abuser as required
by Section 6303 and could not be based upon prima facie evidence pursuant to Section
6381(d) presumption.
On appeal from the denial of expungement, the Commonwealth Court properly
rejected the boyfriend's argument based upon the Superior Court's analysis in
J.R.W. Id. at 1225-26.19 The Commonwealth Court recognized that the General
Assembly “established a different evidentiary standard for finding child abuse by a
parent or person responsible for the child’s care[.]" Id. at 1225. The court emphasized,
however, the presumption established in Section 6381(d) "can be rebutted, like other
statutory presumptions, with countervailing competent, substantial evidence." Id. at
19
The Commonwealth Court later overruled the conclusion in J.B. that Section
6381(d) could apply in multiple caregiver cases, as recognized by B.B. v. Department of
Public Welfare, 898 A.2d 1221 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), as discussed infra at 29.
[J-104-2014] - 25
1226. While the boyfriend had testified, the trial court found his explanation
inconsistent with the child’s injuries and therefore not credible. The Commonwealth
Court, accordingly, concluded that the boyfriend failed to rebut the presumption that he
perpetrated the abuse and denied the petition to expunge.
Starting with C.E. v. Department of Public Welfare, 917 A.2d 348 (Pa. Cmwlth
2007), the Commonwealth Court began to diverge in dicta from the Superior Court’s
caselaw originating in J.R.W. and its own decision in J.B., erroneously limiting the
applicability of Section 6381(d)’s evidentiary presumption. C.E. involved an appeal from
the Department’s denial of a petition to expunge an indicated report of child abuse
involving an allegation of sexual abuse of a three-year-old girl by her mother’s boyfriend
during a day when the child was in the care of the boyfriend but also spent time in the
care of her paternal relatives.
The Commonwealth Court vacated the denial based on what it determined were
prejudicial violations of the rules of hearsay, but also spoke to CYF’s assertion that the
denial of expunction could be affirmed based upon the application of Section 6381(d)’s
presumption as set forth in J.B. The court rejected the argument as having been
waived by CYS at the hearing. In dicta, given that the Section 6381(d) issue was
deemed waived, the court opined that the presumption did not apply because the
petitioner-boyfriend had only been responsible for the child for a portion of the day, such
that the injury could have occurred while she was in the care of her paternal relatives.
The Superior Court in the case at bar relies upon this very limited analysis contained in
dicta addressed to a waived issue. L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216.
Two years later, the Commonwealth Court further distanced itself from the solid
analysis of J.R.W. and J.B. in a case involving a father’s request for an administrative
hearing on his expungement petition. C.S. v. Department of Public Welfare, 972 A.2d
[J-104-2014] - 26
1254 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). The child in C.S. suffered injuries consistent with shaken-
baby syndrome, where the symptoms presented when the child was in the parents’ care
and the parents failed to provide reasonable explanations for the observed injuries. The
court in the dependency action utilized tentative language in finding parents perpetrated
the abuse, noting, for example, that the court “could not determine with absolute
certainty” that the parents perpetrated the abuse and that the evidence made it possible
but unlikely that the injury could have happened earlier in the day when the child was
with other caregivers. Id. at 1256 (emphasis removed).
The court in C.S. held that a remand for an administrative hearing was required
prior to the denial of an expungement petition unless there was “substantial evidence to
support the findings made in the dependency proceeding that the appellant was the
perpetrator of the abuse[.]” Id. at 1263 (emphasis removed; distinguishing its prior
decision in K.R. v. Department of Public Welfare, 950 A.2d 1069, 1080 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2008), which concluded that a remand for an expungement hearing was not necessary
where prima facie evidence had been presented and not rebutted in the dependency
proceedings). In essence, the court required an evaluation in the expungement matter
of the dependency record to consider whether substantial evidence of abuse existed,
even though the finding of the abuser’s identity in the dependency matter was properly
based on prima facie evidence of abuse pursuant to Section 6381(d). It concluded that
the record in C.S. did not provide substantial evidence that the father perpetrated the
abuse. Accordingly, it remanded for a hearing on the expungement petition.
Critical to the court’s ultimate disposition in C.S. was its conclusion that the use
of prima facie evidence to support a finding of the perpetrator’s identity in a dependency
adjudication could not meet the substantial evidence standard required for maintaining
an indicated child abuse report under the CPSL. It reasoned that the presumption of
[J-104-2014] - 27
Section 6381(d) could not apply to expungement cases under the CPSL, inexplicably
opining that the presumption, as set forth in Section 6381(d) of the CPSL, only applies
to dependency cases under the Juvenile Act. Id. at 1259-60. While the court held that
dependency proceedings are fundamentally different from expungement proceedings, it
failed to explain why an evidentiary provision of the CPSL would not apply to
expungement proceedings governed by the CPSL.20
Subsequently, the Commonwealth Court has departed even further from the
holdings in J.R.W. and J.B. and held that Section 6381(d) was inapplicable in cases
involving multiple caregivers.21 First, the court explored the issue, again in dicta, in J.W.
v. Department of Public Welfare, 9 A.3d 270, 273 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010). J.W. involved
petitions to expunge indicated reports against three caregivers of a toddler who was
brought to a medical center for a well-baby visit with healing burns, bruises, and broken
bones, some of which appeared to have occurred ten to fourteen days prior to the
appointment. The ALJ initially denied the petition to expunge based upon Section
6381(d)’s presumption with the following convincing reasoning,
[I]t would appear that the purpose of 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d) is
to prevent multiple caregivers from “circling the wagons.”
While [Petitioners] in this case may have chosen to “circle
the wagons” so that the identity of the abuser(s) could not be
determined, none of them offered any credible evidence to
rebut the presumption. The intent of the presumption is to
shift the burden to the caregivers to offer substantial
20
As discussed below, we reject the court’s conclusion that Section 6381(d) does
not apply to expungement proceeding, see infra at 34 n.23.
21
Given that C.S. held that CYS agencies cannot rely on prima facie evidence in
expungement proceedings generally, C.S., 972 A.2d at 1264, the same would seem to
be true for expungement proceedings involving multiple caregivers. Thus, while the
courts relied on C.S. for support, it is not clear why C.S. would not have controlled these
decisions outright.
[J-104-2014] - 28
countervailing evidence that would rebut the presumption.
The presumption is not conclusive proof the caregivers
committed the abuse[;] it merely prevents them from sitting
back and having the court play a guessing game[,] which is
not the nature of judging.
Id. at 272 (quoting decision of ALJ). The ALJ denied the petitions because each
caregiver had control of the child during the period of abuse and none presented
credible evidence to rebut the presumption of Section 6381(d).
The Commonwealth Court, however, concluded that CYS had waived the
application of Section 6381(d) by failing to raise it at the hearing. The court,
nonetheless, opined in dicta that Section 6381(d) did not apply to the multiple caregiver
situation because the language of the statute referencing “the parent or other person
responsible for the welfare of the child” should be read in the singular and “apply only
when it is possible to determine that a particular person was responsible for the welfare
of the child during the period of the abuse.” Id. at 273. Moreover, relying on C.S. it
reasoned that the denial of expungement required substantial evidence that the
petitioners were the perpetrators of the abuse. Id.
Similarly, in B.B. v. Department of Public Welfare, 17 A.3d 995 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2011), the Commonwealth Court addressed a case of child abuse involving multiple
caregivers, where CYS filed an indicated report against the grandmother. The ALJ
denied the grandmother’s petition to expunge because she was responsible for the
children during the "injury occurrence window," and concluded that the presumption of
Section 6381(d) applied and had not been rebutted. Id. at 998.
The Commonwealth Court reversed the ALJ’s denial of the petition to expunge
based on an improper construction of Section 6381(d). It relied upon the statute's use
of the singular terms of “parent” and “person,” which it viewed as providing that "the
presumption embodied [by Section 6381(d)] cannot be applied where more than one
[J-104-2014] - 29
individual was entrusted with a child's care during the period in which medical evidence
shows the injuries were inflicted." Id. at 1001. The court explicitly rejected application
of the rule of statutory construction that “[t]he singular shall include the plural, and the
plural, the singular." Id. at 1002 (quoting 1 Pa.C.S. § 1902). Applying the holding to
the facts before it, the court held that the standard could not be met because multiple
people had cared for the children during the potential window of abuse.
Given this summary of the relevant law in the intermediate appellate courts, we
turn to the parties’ arguments on the issue before us regarding whether the Superior
Court erred in limiting the application of the Section 6381(d) presumption to cases
where the abused child “was in the parent’s care at the time of the injury,” which it
derived from the Commonwealth Court’s recent caselaw forbidding the application of
Section 6381(d) in multi-caregiver situations. L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216.
Appellants assert that the court erred in deviating from the Superior Court’s
longstanding application of Section 6381(d) in cases involving multiple caregivers. They
contend that Judge Tamilia properly enunciated the purpose of Section 6381(d) in
J.R.W., supra at 22-23, which Appellants deem a “risk management model.” Under this
model, Appellants argue that the Legislature properly balanced the need to protect an
abused child as well as potential future victims with the need to protect the rights of the
alleged perpetrator.
Echoing the dissent below, Appellants emphasize that, in cases to which Section
6381(d) would apply, objective witnesses will rarely, if ever, be willing to testify to the
abuse first hand and the abused children are often too young and/or too fearful to
implicate their parents or other responsible persons in the abuse. In such cases,
Appellants argue that the Legislature enacted Section 6381(d) intending to err in favor
of protecting children, rather than protecting the alleged perpetrator, especially
[J-104-2014] - 30
considering that the sanction results only in inclusion on the ChildLine Registry rather
than criminal sanctions, which would require greater protection of the alleged
perpetrator.
Appellants contend that the Superior Court’s current decision endangers
children's safety by allowing one responsible for the abuse of a child to avoid application
of the Section 6381(d) presumption and “escape responsibility for [the] child's abuse by
simply telling DHS that he/she was not with the child when the abuse occurred.” GAL’s
Brief at 32. Appellants maintain that Section 6381(d) was instead designed to address
the “conspiracy of silence” that is often displayed in child abuse cases, where the abuse
is evident but none of the adults responsible for the child provide information accounting
for the abuse, as occurred in this case. Appellants observe that the rebuttable
presumption of Section 6381(d) properly transfers the burden of proof in these limited
cases to the parents and caregivers who hold the relevant information regarding their
involvement in the child’s injuries, such that they can refute the presumption.
Appellants assert that the Superior Court in the case at bar has improperly
focused on the phrase “during the time of the abuse” which has been employed in prior
Superior Court multi-caregiver cases but is conspicuously missing from the statute,
without recognizing that the focus of the prior analysis had been on whether the parents
or responsible persons were the primary custodians for the child rather than on whether
they were physically present at the time of the injury. GAL’s Brief at 48 n.13.22
Appellants urge this Court to reject the restriction of Section 6381(d), as applied
by the Superior Court in the case at bar. Instead, they argue in favor of uniformly
applying the Section 6381(d) prima facie evidence standard in dependency and
22
Even this analysis misses the mark by requiring demonstration that the parent is
“responsible for the child,” as will be discussed infra at 33.
[J-104-2014] - 31
expungement cases to protect children in the limited cases where the abuse is unlikely
to have occurred absent acts or omissions of the parent or caregiver, even in situations
where multiple individuals were responsible for the child, and in cases of omission
where the caretaker was not present at the time of the injury but should have provided
for the child’s protection. DHS’s Brief at 46-47.
In contrast, Mother agrees with the Superior Court’s rejection of the application of
Section 6381(d) in cases where the evidence does not definitely demonstrate that the
child was in the presence of the alleged perpetrator at the time of the injury. Similarly,
she avers that we must guard against the presumption being applied arbitrarily or
capriciously when the child is under the care of multiple people and “the evidence is
inconclusive as to who had control or supervision over the child at the time of the
abuse[,]” as described by the Superior Court in J.G., 984 A.2d at 548. Mother’s Brief at
9. Accordingly, she urges this Court to affirm the Superior Court’s reversal of the trial
court.
Parent advocates Community Legal Services and the Allegheny County Bar
Foundation, acting as amici for Mother, assert that the Superior Court correctly rejected
an attempt to expand Section 6381(d) “beyond its statutory and constitutional bounds.”
Amici’s Brief at 1. Amici attempt to reframe the argument of Appellants as advocating
that a parent be held “strictly liable for the abuse committed by a caregiver,” even when
the abuse occurs outside the parent’s presence such as at school or church. Amici’s
Brief at 1. They contend parents would jeopardize their constitutional rights to the care
and control of their children when they leave children with others, even without reason
to suspect abuse by the caregiver. Amici’s Brief at 22. Moreover, they argue that this
construction puts an unfair burden on parents to rebut the presumption that they are
responsible for the abuse.
[J-104-2014] - 32
After review, we reject the en banc Superior Court’s Majority’s conclusion, as
championed by Mother and Amici, holding that the Section 6381(d) presumption only
applies to cases where the abused child was “in the parent’s care at the time of the
injury.” L.Z., 91 A.3d at 216. We agree with DHS that the Superior Court, in this case
and other recent precedent, and Commonwealth Court, in its caselaw, have erred in
multiple respects.
First, to the extent that the courts have required a parent’s physical presence
during the injury based upon the phrase “responsible for the child,” we reject the
application of this phrase to “parents.” Instead, we observe that the phrase modifies the
immediately preceding term, “other person,” understandably limiting the class of other
persons who can be held presumptively accountable for any injuries suffered by a child.
Conversely, parents are always responsible for their children, absent extenuating
circumstances, such that it would be repetitive to apply the limiting phrase to parents.
Additionally, we note that the plain language of the statute neither mentions nor
focuses upon the parent or responsible person’s physical presence at the time of the
injury, but rather extends to both acts and omissions of the parent or responsible
person. The inclusion of “omissions” encompasses situations where the parent or
responsible person is not present at the time of the injury but is nonetheless responsible
due to his or her failure to provide protection for the child.
Moreover, we recognize that the Superior Court’s physical presence limitation
arises from erroneous recent precedent of the Commonwealth Court prohibiting
application of the Section 6381(d) presumption in cases involving multiple caregivers.
Id. As noted above, the caselaw rejecting the application of Section 6381(d) to multi-
caregiver situations is rooted in the intermediate courts’ conclusion that subsection (d)
only applies when the injury would not have occurred but for the acts or omissions of an
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individual person, based on the use of the singular in the phrase “the acts of omissions
of the parent or other person responsible for the welfare of the child.”
The courts’ erroneous focus on the singular form of parent and person,
however, violates the Rules of Statutory Construction, which specifically provide that
“[t]he singular shall include the plural, and the plural, the singular." 1 Pa.C.S § 1902.
More significantly, the restriction on the presumption of Section 6381(d) to an individual
actor fails to appreciate the Legislature’s intent, which requires consideration of how the
presumption interacts with the Juvenile Act and other sections of the CPSL.
Both the Juvenile Act’s dependency proceedings relevant to Superior Court
caselaw and the CPSL’s expungement proceedings relevant to Commonwealth Court
precedent generally require CYS agencies to meet a relatively high standard of proof,
demanding, respectively, clear and convincing evidence to find a child dependent and
substantial evidence to deny an expungement petition.23 The Legislature, however,
carved out a very limited exception to these more stringent evidentiary standards,
allowing for the possibility of identifying the perpetrator of abuse based on prima facie
evidence in cases where the abuse is "of such a nature as would ordinarily not be
sustained or exist except by reason of the acts or omissions of the parent or other
person responsible for the welfare of the child." 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d). To read this
23
Rejecting the Commonwealth Court’s holding in C.S that Section 6381(d) does
not apply to expungement proceedings, we observe that Section 6381, entitled
“Evidence in court proceedings,” explicitly provides that “[i]n addition to the rules of
evidence provided under 42 Pa.C.S. Ch. 63 (relating to juvenile matters), the rules of
evidence in this section shall govern in child abuse proceedings in court or in any
department administrative hearing pursuant to section 6341 (relating to amendment or
expunction of information).” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(a). The “rules of evidence in this
section” necessarily include subsection (d)’s provision relating to prima facie evidence.
Id. § 6381(d).
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section as only applying when one parent or one responsible person is present would
so restrict its applicability as to negate its existence.
As noted in the discussion of the relevant precedent, child abuse cases often
involve a child presenting to a hospital with significant injuries that are entirely
consistent with common types of child abuse and entirely inconsistent with the
implausible explanations concocted by the parents and responsible persons to avoid
allegations of child abuse. As noted, in cases where multiple caregivers are involved,
the individuals frequently "circle the wagons" or alternatively point fingers at each
other. As the children may be too young or fearful to describe the abuse, CYS agencies
are left to prove their case with only the physical evidence of injuries that would not
ordinarily be sustained but for the action of the parents or responsible persons and the
implausible statements of the parents and responsible persons. Thus, while they can
prove the existence of abuse rather easily, they have no ability to assign responsibility
for the heinous act among the responsible adults. As Judge Tamilia observed in 1993,
“the Legislature deemed it wise and necessary to establish a different evidentiary
standard” by enacting Section 6381(d)’s presumption to avoid this evidentiary
conundrum and protect children from future abuse. J.R.W., 631 A.2d at 605. We
emphasize that, when a child is in the care of multiple parents or other persons
responsible for care, those individuals are accountable for the care and protection of the
child whether they actually inflicted the injury or failed in their duty to protect the child.
Moreover, the Legislature balanced the presumption of Section 6381(d) by
making it rebuttable as it merely establishes “prima facie evidence” that the parent
perpetrated the abuse. 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d). As commonly understood, prima facie
evidence is “[s]uch evidence as, in the judgment of the law, is sufficient to establish a
given fact, or the group or chain of facts constituting the party’s claim or defense, and
[J-104-2014] - 35
which if not rebutted or contradicted, will remain sufficient.” Black’s Law Dictionary 825
(6th ed. abridged 1991). Accordingly, evidence that a child suffered injury that would not
ordinarily be sustained but for the acts or omissions of the parent or responsible person
is sufficient to establish that the parent or responsible person perpetrated that abuse
unless the parent or responsible person rebuts the presumption. The parent or
responsible person may present evidence demonstrating that they did not inflict the
abuse, potentially by testifying that they gave responsibility for the child to another
person about whom they had no reason to fear or perhaps that the injuries were
accidental rather than abusive.24 The evaluation of the validity of the presumption
would then rest with the trial court evaluating the credibility of the prima facie evidence
presented by the CYS agency and the rebuttal of the parent or responsible person.
Applying Section 6381(d) as set forth above to the case at bar, we affirm the trial
court’s determination that Mother perpetrated the abuse in the form of the laceration,
the cheek bruising, and the severe diaper rash and yeast infection. First, because the
medical evidence presented by DHS demonstrated that Child’s injuries were neither
accidental nor self-inflicted and because Child was only in the care of Mother and Aunt,
the injuries were shown to be “of such a nature as would ordinarily not be sustained or
exist except by reason of the acts or omissions of the parent or other person
responsible for the welfare of the child[.]” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d). Ergo, either Aunt or
Mother or both inflicted the abuse Child suffered or failed to protect him from the other’s
24
We reject Amici’s argument that Section 6381(d) would make the parent or
caregiver responsible for the abuse a child suffers while at school or church. As the
presumption only applies in situations where it is unlikely that the child could have
suffered the injuries but for the acts of omissions of the parent or caregiver, a parent or
caregiver would only be deemed a perpetrator of abuse suffered at the hands of a
teacher or clergy if the parent or caregiver should have known of the danger into which
they placed the child.
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abuse. Mother failed to rebut the presumption by presenting evidence or testimony
from her, Aunt, or her boyfriend establishing that Child was not in her care when the
injuries were suffered and that she had no reason to question her decision to leave
Child in Aunt’s care. Likewise, neither Aunt nor anyone on her behalf testified. Mother
and Aunt’s self-serving claims made at the hospital were neither under oath nor subject
to cross-examination. They were outside-the-record and do not constitute rebuttal
evidence.25
Instead, ample, uncontested, unrebutted evidence existed for the trial court to
presume that Mother perpetrated abuse on Child. In regard to the diaper rash, it was
put into evidence that Mother acknowledged to the hospital staff her awareness of the
condition and blamed it on weeks of diarrhea. Dr. Silver testified rejecting Mother’s
extrajudicial contention because the rash was on the front of Child’s body, indicative of
prolonged contact with urine, rather than on the buttocks, which would have been
consistent with diarrhea. Thus, the trial court was well within its discretion and fully
supported by the record when it properly concluded that Child suffered physical neglect
as a result of the severe diaper rash and yeast infection due to his caregivers’ failure to
change his diaper (or to obtain medical treatment).
Additionally, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in discrediting Mother’s
implausible out-of-court explanation and instead crediting the treating doctor’s
testimonial determination that the cheek bruising was classic child abuse. The court
found Dr. Silver credible given the pattern of bruises showing that someone squeezed
Child’s face between her thumb and fingers, bruising which could have occurred during
the window of time Mother acknowledged having control of Child and bruising that the
25
Moreover, we would not fault a trial court for failing to credit any explanations that
would have been given considering the implausibility of the other assertions provided at
the hospital regarding Child’s injuries.
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doctor testified would have caused Child severe pain. Moreover, even assuming
Mother did not inflict the penile laceration or the cheek bruising, she is still responsible
for Child’s injuries by failing to protect him from Aunt, absent rebuttal from Mother that
she had no reason to fear leaving Child with Aunt.
We conclude that the presumption of Section 6381(d) is applicable to this case
and that Mother offered no testimony to rebut it. Thus, the trial court properly found
Mother perpetrated the abuse on Child either by inflicting the injuries or failing to protect
Child from Aunt. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Superior Court and
reinstate the trial court’s order.
Former Chief Justice Castille did not participate in the decision of this case.
Mr. Chief Justice Saylor, Mr. Justice Eakin, Madame Justice Todd and Mr.
Justice Stevens join the opinion.
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