IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
DIVISION OF FAMILY §
SERVICES, § No. 175, 2016
§
Respondent Below, § Court Below—Family Court
Appellant, § of the State of Delaware
§
v. § File No: CN16-01443
§ Petition No: 16-03036
MARK O’BRYAN,1 §
§
Petitioner Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: May 3, 2017
Decided: May 31, 2017
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VAUGHN, and SEITZ, Justices.
Upon appeal from the Family Court: AFFIRMED.
Victoria Witherell, Esquire (argued) and Jonathan Harting, Esquire, Department of
Justice, Wilmington, Delaware for Respondent Below, Appellant Division of Family
Services.
Mark O’Bryan, Petitioner Below, Appellee, pro se.
Leslie B. Spoltore, Esquire, Fox Rothschild LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; George R.
Tsakataras, Esquire, The Law Office of George R. Tsakataras, P.A., Wilmington,
Delaware; Achille C. Scache, Esquire (argued), Giordano, DelCollo, Werb &
Gagne, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Amicus Curiae in Support of Petitioner Below,
Appellee, Mark O’Bryan.
SEITZ, Justice:
1
The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supreme Court Rule 7(d).
The Child Protection From Sex Offenders Act (the “Sex Offenders Act” or
“Act”) establishes “a rebuttable presumption that no sex offender shall be awarded
sole or joint custody of any child, that no child shall primarily reside with a sex
offender, and that no sex offender shall have unsupervised visitation with a child.”2
With certain exceptions, the sex offender can rebut the presumption by
demonstrating his compliance with the conditions in the statute.
This appeal raises one issue—whether the Sex Offenders Act and its
rebuttable presumption operate outside of Family Court custody proceedings. We
conclude, as did the Family Court, that the General Assembly intended that the Act
and its rebuttable presumption to operate only when the Family Court determines
custody, residency, and visitation as part of a Family Court custody proceeding. We
therefore affirm the Family Court’s order.
I.
The facts of this case are essentially undisputed.3 Mark O’Bryan lives in
Delaware with his wife, their daughter, and his wife’s two daughters. They lived
together as a family for over eight years. O’Bryan is the sole financial provider for
the family.
2
13 Del. C. § 724A(a).
3
DFS argued that the Family Court inaccurately described O’Bryan’s criminal history
since 2002. Opening Br. at 7. Regardless, DFS agrees that “the issue presented is a
question of law and not one of fact.” Id.
On January 13, 2016, O’Bryan’s wife hit and scratched him during an
argument. O’Bryan called the police to de-escalate the situation. The police ended
up filing criminal charges only against O’Bryan’s wife. Although not involved in
the altercation, one of O’Bryan’s stepdaughters (then age 17) and his biological
daughter (then age 2) were present during the incident. Because the children were
witnesses to the fight, DFS conducted a follow up investigation.
DFS learned as part of its investigation that O’Bryan was a Tier II sex offender
because of his 2002 guilty plea to rape fourth degree.4 DFS went to the family home
on February 3, 2016, and told O’Bryan that, based on his status as a Tier II sex
offender,5 and children living in the home, O’Bryan had to leave. O’Bryan left the
family home that night.
The next day, O’Bryan filed a petition in the Family Court to return home.
The Family Court granted the petition on an ex parte basis pending a hearing
scheduled for February 9, 2016. At the February 9 hearing, DFS argued that the Sex
Offenders Act prohibited O’Bryan from primarily residing with any child unless he
rebutted the statutory presumption. O’Bryan, his wife, and a DFS representative
testified at the hearing. His wife testified that she wanted her husband to return
4
The incident involved a fifteen-year-old when O’Bryan was twenty-one years old.
5
In Delaware, an individual designated as a sex offender is assigned to one of three Risk
Assessment Tier levels. 11 Del. C. § 4121(c). The tier assignment is based on the
seriousness of the offense committed, with Tier III being the most restrictive. Id. § 4121(d).
2
home, and that she had no concern about him being around her or her children.6
O’Bryan admitted that if the Act applied, he was unable to rebut the presumption
because he did not complete his sex offender therapy.7
The Family Court judge asked the DFS witness whether there were concerns
about the children’s safety. The DFS witness testified that DFS had “no proof of
anything” and had “no reason to believe that anything specifically ha[d] happened
to these kids other than there had been domestic violence in their presence.”8
O’Bryan also was not under any restrictions as a Tier II sex offender, such as
restrictions limiting his contact with children.
On March 8, 2016, the court granted O’Bryan’s petition to return home, and
held that:
13 Del. C. § 724A does not on its face provide for the removal of a
parent from the home of an intact family, nor can the Court conclude
that the legislature intended for the statute to apply in such a manner.
Section 724A merely creates a presumption that a sex offender parent
will not be awarded custody, primary residency[,] or unsupervised
visitation by the Court, without first rebutting the presumption. The
Court is not awarding any type of custody or residency in instances
where there is no dispute between parents or between a parent and DFS.
In instances where there is no ongoing custody issue, the registered
party is not required to rebut the presumption and there actually is no
forum in which to apply the presumption.9
6
App. to Opening Br. at 15 (Hearing Transcript, February 9, 2016).
7
Id. at 10.
8
Id. at 13.
9
M.O. v. Div. of Family Servs., 2016 WL 3128334, at *3 (Del. Fam. Feb. 9, 2016).
3
DFS has appealed the Family Court’s order and argues that the Sex Offenders
Act prohibits any children from residing with a Tier II or III sex offender unless the
sex offender first rebuts the Act’s presumption by satisfying the six conditions in the
Act. In response, O’Bryan contends that the Family Court correctly interpreted the
Sex Offenders Act. According to O’Bryan, the Act only operates in Family Court
custody proceedings. In other words, the Act does not grant DFS authority to require
a sex offender to leave a family home. Our review of the Family Court’s
interpretation of the Act is de novo.10
II.
The General Assembly enacted the Sex Offenders Act “to protect children
from sex offenders by presuming that it is not in the best interests of a child to be
placed in a custodial, residential or unsupervised visitation arrangement with a sex
offender, regardless of whether the sex offender’s victim was an adult or a child.”11
A “sex offender” is “any person designated by the courts of this State as a Risk
Assessment Tier II or III sex offender under § 4121 of Title 11, or a person
designated and treated as such by a court or a jurisdiction outside of Delaware,
regardless of whether the sex offender’s victim was an adult or a child.”12 Section
724A of the Act imposes a rebuttable presumption “that no sex offender shall be
10
See Cordero v. Gulfstream Dev. Corp., 56 A.3d 1030, 1035 (Del. 2012).
11
13 Del. C. § 722A.
12
Id. § 723A.
4
awarded sole or joint custody of any child, that no child shall primarily reside with
a sex offender, and that no sex offender shall have unsupervised visitation with a
child.”13 With certain exceptions, a sex offender can overcome the presumption by
satisfying the six factors listed in the Act.14 The Family Court decided that the
rebuttable presumption operated only in pending custody proceedings, which can
include not just legal custody, but also residency and visitation determinations by
the Family Court.
DFS’s argument on appeal is relatively simple. Recognizing that “custody”
is “awarded” under the statute, which implies a pending Family Court custody
proceeding, DFS parses the language of § 724A into “three separate and distinct
dependent clauses”: (1) the “Custody Clause” – “that no sex offender shall be
awarded sole or joint custody of any child”; (2) the “Residency Clause” – “that no
child shall reside primarily with a sex offender”; and (3) the “Visitation Clause” –
13
Id. § 724A.
14
Under 13 Del. C. § 724A(b):
(1) There is not a criminal sentencing order prohibiting same;
(2) There have been no further sexual offenses or criminal acts of violence; and
(3) The sex offender is in compliance with the terms of probation, if applicable; and
(4) The sex offender has successfully completed an intensive program of evaluation
and counseling designed specifically for sex offenders and conducted by a public
or private agency or a certified mental health professional, and as a result of such,
does not pose a risk to children; and
(5) The sex offender has successfully completed a program of substance abuse
counseling if the court determines such counseling is appropriate; and
(6) The best interests of the child would be served by giving residential or custodial
responsibilities for the child or visitation with the child to the sex offender.
5
“that no sex offender shall have unsupervised visitation with a child.”15 According
to DFS, if each of the clauses operate independently, the Residency Clause “states
clearly and unequivocally that no child shall reside with a sex offender” and “does
not limit the residency prohibition to children who are the subject of a pending
petition.”16 Thus, according to DFS, it had the power to require O’Bryan to leave
the family home until he rebutted the statutory presumption.
By isolating the clauses in § 724A, however, and treating them as independent
requirements, DFS violates a fundamental rule of statutory construction—that a
statute’s words and phrases should not be read in isolation.17 Instead, the statute
must be read as a whole, mindful of the legislative intent expressed in the purpose
of the statute.18 When the clauses referring to “custody,” “residency,” and
“visitation” are placed in their proper statutory context, it is apparent that they are
all terms of art used in custody proceedings and do not operate as stand-alone
15
Opening Br. at 9.
16
Id. at 10.
17
“Statutory construction . . . is a holistic endeavor. A provision that may seem ambiguous in
isolation is often clarified by the remainder of the statutory scheme—because the same
terminology is used elsewhere in a context that makes its meaning clear . . . .” Terex Corp. v. S.
Track & Pump, 117 A.3d 537, 543 (Del. 2015) (quoting United Sav. Ass’n of Tex. v. Timbers of
Inwood Forest Assoc., 484 U.S. 365, 371 (1988)); see also Coleman v. State, 729 A.2d 847, 851
(Del. 1999) (“Statutory enactments must be read as a whole and not in parts. ‘Consequently, each
part of the statute must be read in context to produce a harmonious whole.’” (quoting Daniels v.
State, 538 A.2d 1104, 1110 (1988))).
18
See Zambrana v. State, 118 A.3d 773, 776 (Del. 2015); see also Dawson v. State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co., 980 A.2d 1035, 1038-39 (Del. Super. 2009) (“[T]he Court must construe the statute
in a way that will promote its apparent purpose and harmonize it with other statutes within the
statutory scheme. In other words, the statute must be read as a whole in a manner that avoids
absurd results.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
6
restrictions. Thus, the General Assembly intended § 724A’s rebuttable presumption
to operate only when the Family Court determines custody, residency, and visitation
as part of a Family Court custody proceeding.
A.
The Sex Offenders Act is part of Subchapter II of Chapter 7A of Title 13,
which deals exclusively with Family Court custody proceedings. In a Family Court
custody proceeding, the court determines “the legal custody and residential
arrangements for a child in accordance with the best interests of the child.”19
Whether the parents are awarded joint custody or one parent has sole legal custody,
the Family Court must determine “with which parent the child shall reside and a
schedule of visitation with the other parent . . . .”20 Thus, it is logical that the Sex
Offenders Act would refer not just to the court’s custody “award,” but also to its
residency and visitation determinations in custody proceedings. Indeed, the statutes
governing custody proceedings require that the custody determination be made in
compliance with the Sex Offenders Act—“[a] custody proceeding between parents
19
13 Del. C. § 722(a). Legal custody involves a parent’s decision-making authority over the child,
while residential custody concerns residential placement and visitation scheduling. See Batch v.
Anderson, 47 A.3d 971, 2012 WL 2282506 (Del. June 18, 2012) (TABLE) (affirming Family
Court’s award of residential custody to the mother and awarding the father joint legal custody with
regular visitation); Ross v. Ross, 992 A.2d 1237, 2010 WL 1404220 (Del. Apr. 7, 2010) (TABLE)
(dispute arose over mother’s confusion of the difference between legal and residential custody);
Re: K.T. v. S.T., 2017 WL 2080297, at *1 (Del. Fam. Apr. 10, 2017) (parents filed cross petitions
for primary residential custody and for legal custody regarding medical decisions).
20
13 Del. C. § 728(a). As the statutory scheme contemplates, residency and visitation are
both integral parts of custody proceedings.
7
shall be determined in accordance with §§ 722, 729, and Chapter 7A [The Child
Protection from Domestic Violence and Sex Offenders Act] of this title, whichever
shall apply.”21
B.
Turning to the language of the Sex Offenders Act, DFS’s interpretation cannot
be reconciled with the General Assembly’s use of the term “rebuttable presumption.”
A rebuttable presumption “is a true rule of evidence and its only effect is to shift the
burden of producing evidence.”22 Without a pending case, there is no burden of
proof to shift. Here, the only way O’Bryan could have rebutted the presumption—
as DFS suggested he should—is if a proper party in a custody case under Chapter 7
of Title 13 brought a petition under that Chapter for custody, residency, or visitation
against him.23
21
Id. § 721(e) (emphasis added). In other parts of Title 13 Chapter 7 the terms “residency”
and “visitation” refer exclusively to a Family Court’s determination as part of a custody
proceeding. See id. § 722(a) (listing factors a court must consider when awarding primary
residency to a parent); id. § 722(b) (no presumption that a court should award primary
residency to one parent based on their sex); id. § 728(a) (requiring the court to determine
with which parent the child will primarily reside and to schedule visitation with the other
parent); id. § 729(b) (permits the court to modify an order concerning custody or residency
entered with the parties’ consent in accordance with the standards listed in § 722); id. §
729(c) (permits the court to modify an order concerning custody or residency entered after
a hearing if certain conditions are met); id. § 728(b) (if after a hearing, the court finds that
a parent has interfered with the other parent’s court-ordered visitation or residency, the
court may award extra visitation or temporarily transfer custody or primary residency to
the other parent).
22
Francis H. Bohlen, The Effect of Rebuttable Presumptions of Law Upon the Burden of
Proof, 68 U. PA. L. REV. 307, 307 (1920).
23
13 Del. C. §§ 721-33.
8
DFS’s interpretation is also inconsistent with the stated purpose of the Act.
The General Assembly enacted the legislation “to protect children from sex
offenders by presuming that it is not in the best interests of a child to be placed in a
custodial, residential or unsupervised visitation arrangement with a sex offender,
regardless of whether the sex offender’s victim was an adult or a child.”24 The use
of the word “placed” necessarily means that there must be an underlying petition to
determine placement in a custody, residency and visitation proceeding. As the
Family Court held, “[i]f there is no pending action, the children are not being placed
anywhere.”25
The provisions surrounding § 724A also reinforce the conclusion that its
rebuttable presumption applies only to Family Court custody proceedings. Section
725A and its requirements apply only when the Family Court “grant[s] custody,
residential responsibilities or visitation to a sex offender under this chapter.”26
Likewise, § 727A provides specific instructions for modifying orders entered by the
court under the Act.27 And, § 728A prohibits mediation in any custody or visitation
proceeding in which one party is a sex offender.28 Thus, when Section 724A is read
in the context of other provisions in the Chapter within which it rests, those
24
13 Del. C. § 722A (emphasis added).
25
M.O., 2016 WL 3128334 at *2.
26
13 Del. C. § 725A (emphasis added).
27
Id. § 727A.
28
Id. § 728A (emphasis added).
9
provisions lead to the conclusion that § 724A’s rebuttable presumption was meant
to apply only in Family Court custody proceedings.
Finally, the statute does not provide a basis for DFS to remove a parent from
an intact home. Section 724A(d) lists two specific instances when DFS may become
involved,29 neither of which are applicable in this case. DFS only became involved
with O’Bryan’s family when he and his wife fought in the presence of two of their
children—an altercation in which his wife, not he, was eventually charged. Because
the circumstances in § 724A(d) were not met, and coupled with DFS’s admission
that it had “no reason to believe that anything specifically has happened to these kids
other than there has been domestic violence in their presence,” § 724A did not
provide a basis for DFS to remove O’Bryan from his family home.
DFS does have broad authority to bring custody proceedings under another
chapter of Title 13 if it believes a child or children must be protected. That statute—
Chapter 25 of Title 13—encompasses situations where DFS believes a child is in
danger of being sexually violated.30 But, in those proceedings, DFS has the burden
29
Id. § 724A(d):
In those cases in which more than 1 party is a sex offender, or where the party
currently having custodial rights has permitted the sex offender to exercise
residential or custodial responsibilities for the child or have visitation with the child,
in violation of a criminal or civil court order, the case shall be referred by the court
to the Division of Family Services of the Department of Services for Children,
Youth and Their Families for investigation as to whether the child is abused,
dependent or neglected as a result of these circumstances.
30
The statute provides:
10
of persuasion,31 and the presumption in § 724A does not apply. DFS has not brought
an action under Chapter 25, even though the sex offender status of a parent or
guardian may be relevant in a petition for custody under that Chapter.32
III.
The statute, 13 Del. C. § 724A, unambiguously establishes a rebuttable
presumption that the Family Court should not award custody, primary residency, or
unsupervised visitation to a sex offender in a pending custody proceeding. Here,
there was no such petition, and thus the statute did not provide DFS authority to
order O’Bryan to leave his family home.
The judgment of the Family Court is affirmed.
[T]he Court may issue an ex parte order awarding emergency custody to DSCYF
and order removal of a child from the home upon the establishment that: (1)
Continuation in the home is contrary to the welfare of the child; and (2) Probable
cause exists to believe that: a. A child continues to be in actual physical, mental or
emotional danger or there is a substantial imminent risk thereof or; b. Immediate or
irreparable harm may result to the child if such an order is not issued. Id. § 2512.
31
Id. § 2511 (requiring DFS to make allegations as part of its petition for custody).
32
See, e.g., Dep’t of Servs. for Children, Youth & Their Families v. M.G., 2015 WL 6456760 at
*2 (Del. Fam. July 20, 2015).
11