Court Opinion

ID: 4022760
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-08-09 14:09:31.666016+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:28.831379
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

S.D.,                                 :
                   Petitioner         :
                                      :   CASE SEALED
            v.                        :   No. 1814 C.D. 2015
                                      :   Submitted: April 8, 2016
Department of Human Services,         :
                 Respondent           :

BEFORE:     HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
            HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
            HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT                                 FILED: August 9, 2016

            S.D. petitions, pro se, for review of an adjudication of the Department
of Human Services’ Bureau of Hearings and Appeals that dismissed S.D.’s appeal
requesting expungement of an indicated report of child abuse. The Bureau’s order
adopted the recommendation of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who
concluded that S.D.’s appeal was untimely and should not be allowed nunc pro
tunc. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
            On February 4, 2008, S.D was named as a perpetrator of child abuse
in a report filed by the Department’s Western Region Office of Children, Youth
and Families. On February 12, 2008, the Department notified S.D. by letter that
her name had been placed on the ChildLine registry as a perpetrator of child abuse.
The letter informed S.D. that she had 45 days to request expungement of the
indicated report. On February 29, 2008, S.D. requested the Department to review
the indicated report. On May 5, 2008, the Department notified S.D. by letter that
after review it had decided not to expunge the indicated report from the ChildLine
registry. Its letter stated:

                We have completed our review of your request to amend the
                report of child abuse in which you are listed as one of the
                perpetrators of the act(s) of abuse. We believe the report is
                accurate and being maintained in a manner consistent with the
                Child Protective Services Law.[1] Thus the report will remain on
                file as originally reported.
                However, you do have the right to a hearing before the
                Secretary of the Department of [Human Services] or their
                designee, the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals.
                If it is your desire to have a hearing, please submit your request
                in writing within 45 days of the date of this letter to Child
                Abuse Appeals at the above address. Please include a
                telephone number where you can be contacted. Your request
                will be forwarded to the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals who
                will schedule a hearing and notify you of the time and place for
                the hearing.
                If you have any questions about the law or appeal process
                please write to Child Abuse Appeals or contact that office at
                717-772-7016.

Certified Record (C.R.) Item No. 3, Exhibit C-3 (emphasis in original). S.D. did
not request a hearing or otherwise respond in writing to the Department’s letter.
                On May 12, 2015, the Department sent S.D. another letter advising
her as follows:

                The Pennsylvania Child Protective Services Law requires that
                certain Indicated or Founded child abuse reports entered into
                the Statewide Database, must be destroyed when the child
                reaches 23 years of age.

1
    23 Pa. C.S. §§6301-6386.

                                             2
            If a social security number (SSN) or a date of birth appears
            above, your information as a perpetrator will remain on file
            indefinitely. You may obtain a copy of the report by writing to
            me at the below address. The name and address of the child,
            and all other subjects, have been destroyed. If neither a SSN
            nor a date of birth appears above, your name and address have
            also been destroyed.

C.R. Item No. 3, Exhibit C-4 (emphasis added). Because the letter contained
S.D.’s social security number and date of birth, this meant that S.D.’s indicated
report would not be destroyed when the child victim reached age 23 but, rather,
would remain on the ChildLine Registry indefinitely.
             S.D. responded in a letter the Department received on June 8, 2015,
that requested that her “name be expunged from the Perpetrator files … as well as
the ChildLine [Report] dated 12/13/07.” C.R. Item No. 3. S.D. asserted that her
name was mistakenly added because the charges were actually filed against her
husband in 2007. She was never, in fact, a perpetrator of abuse against the subject
child.
            On July 23, 2015, the ALJ conducted a hearing to consider whether
S.D.’s appeal was timely and, if not, whether sufficient reasons existed for the
appeal to proceed nunc pro tunc. S.D. testified on her own behalf. Mary Lou
Warchola and Tiffinee McClendon-Spencer testified on behalf of the Department.
            S.D. acknowledged that she received the Department’s May 5, 2008,
notice denying her request for review of the indicated report and advising her that
she had 45 days to appeal. Counsel for the Department questioned S.D. regarding
why she waited approximately seven years to appeal:

            [Counsel for the Department]: And so you were made aware,
            then, of the Department of Human Services’ decision that they
            reviewed your request to amend the report, and that they did, in
            fact, review it, and that their determination was that they were

                                        3
            going to keep it as it was, which is that you’re still listed as a
            perpetrator; correct?
            [S.D.]: Correct. And I told you I was challenging it.
            [Counsel for the Department]: And I understand your reason for
            challenging it. But it also says in that letter that you had 45
            days from the date of that letter to request a hearing in this
            matter. Okay. And you did not do so; correct?
            [S.D.]: I did do so.
            [Counsel for the Department]: How did you do it, and what did
            you do?
            [S.D.]: I did it by phone.

Notes of Testimony, 7/23/2015, at 18-19 (N.T. ___). When pressed further about
her telephone call to the Department, Claimant could not recall on what date she
called or to whom she spoke.
            McClendon-Spencer testified that the Department had no record of
S.D. calling to appeal the indicated report. This prompted the following exchange
with the ALJ:

            [ALJ]: You do accept appeals orally?
            [McClendon-Spencer]: I’m sorry, I didn’t ---. No. No, not at
            all. I misunderstood what you said.
            [ALJ]: That’s okay. So you only accept appeals that are in
            writing; correct?
            [McClendon-Spencer]: In writing, yes.

N.T. 51.
            On August 7, 2015, the ALJ recommended that S.D’s appeal be
dismissed as untimely. The ALJ explained:

                                         4
              [S.D] testified at the hearing that she filed a timely appeal of the
              May 5, 2008 notice by telephone. However, [S.D.] could not
              recall who she spoke with at ChildLine, nor could she recall the
              nature of the conversation. Therefore, I do not find her
              testimony to be credible. In addition, Ms. McClendon-Spencer,
              who has been employed with ChildLine for nearly 20 years,
              testified that it is not ChildLine’s procedure to accept oral
              appeals, and further, the May 5, 2008 notice clearly instructs
              [S.D.] to send her request for a hearing “in writing.” Thus,
              even if [S.D.] did file a timely appeal by telephone, it was not a
              valid appeal.

ALJ Adjudication at 4. The ALJ further concluded that because the notice was
sent to S.D.’s address and the Department followed its standard operating
procedures, S.D.’s delay in filing was not caused by a breakdown in the
administrative process. Accordingly, S.D.’s appeal could not be accepted nunc pro
tunc. The Bureau of Hearings and Appeals adopted the ALJ’s adjudication and
dismissed S.D.’s appeal on August 10, 2015. S.D. petitioned for this Court’s
review.
              On appeal,2 S.D. contends that her appeal was timely because she
appealed by telephone within 45 days of the May 5, 2008, notice.                      In the
alternative, S.D. claims that her appeal should be accepted nunc pro tunc because
there was a breakdown in the administrative process. Specifically, S.D. asserts that
the May 5, 2008, notice to appeal was defective because it included a phone
number, which suggested the Department would accept appeals by phone. The
Department counters that an appeal by telephone is impermissible, as was stated in
the May 5, 2008, notice. We agree with the Department.

2
  This Court’s review is to determine whether the petitioner’s constitutional rights have been
violated, an error of law was committed, or necessary findings of fact were unsupported by
substantial evidence. G.M. v. Department of Public Welfare, 957 A.2d 377, 379 n.1 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2008).

                                              5
                  At the time the Department sent its notice to S.D., Section 6341(a)(2)
of the Child Protective Services Law stated, in relevant part, as follows:

                  Any person named as a perpetrator ... in an indicated report of
                  child abuse may, within 45 days of being notified of the status
                  of the report, request the secretary to amend or expunge an
                  indicated report on the grounds that it is inaccurate or it is being
                  maintained in a manner inconsistent with this chapter.

23 Pa. C.S. §6341(a)(2).3                The Department’s regulation governing appeal
procedures provides:

                  (a) A perpetrator may appeal the Secretary’s decision to deny
                  the request to expunge an indicated report by filing an appeal
                  with the Secretary.
                                                  ***
                  (c) The request shall be made to the Secretary and postmarked
                  within 45-calendar days of the date of the notification letter
                  from the Secretary to either grant or deny the request to
                  expunge the report.

55 Pa. Code §3490.106a.4

3
    Section 6341(a)(2) was amended in 2013 to read as follows:
          Any person named as a perpetrator, and any school employee named, in an
          indicated report of child abuse may, within 90 days of being notified of the status
          of the report, request an administrative review by, or appeal and request a hearing
          before, the secretary to amend or expunge an indicated report on the grounds that
          it is inaccurate or it is being maintained in a manner inconsistent with this chapter.
          The request shall be in writing in a manner prescribed by the department.
23 Pa. C.S. §6341(a)(2) (emphasis added). These amendments were effective December 31,
2014.
4
  In its brief, the Department relies on 55 Pa. Code §3490.106. However, this section concerns
“[h]earings and appeals proceeding for reports received by ChildLine prior to July 1, 1995.” 55
Pa. Code §3490.106 (emphasis added). The regulation at 55 Pa. Code §3490.106a concerns
“[h]earings and appeals proceeding for indicated reports received by ChildLine after June 30,
(Footnote continued on the next page . . .)
                                                    6
               It is undisputed that S.D. received the Department’s May 5, 2008,
letter. She did not file a written appeal until May 19, 2015, seven years beyond the
45-day deadline.       Even assuming S.D. telephoned the Department before the
deadline, as she testified, it is of no moment. The Department’s regulation requires
that a perpetrator “file” an appeal and that it be “postmarked” within 45 days of the
notification letter.    S.D.’s telephone call did not perfect an appeal under the
applicable statute and regulation. Accordingly, the Bureau did not err in holding
that S.D.’s appeal was untimely.5
               We next consider whether S.D. was entitled to appeal nunc pro tunc.
An untimely appeal deprives the Department of jurisdiction, and the time for
taking an appeal cannot be extended as a matter of grace or mere indulgence. J.C.
v. Department of Public Welfare, 720 A.2d 193, 197 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998).
Nevertheless, in limited circumstances, the deadline for filing an appeal can be
extended nunc pro tunc. Id. A nunc pro tunc appeal may be allowed only when
the delay was caused by extraordinary circumstances involving fraud or a
breakdown in the administrative process, or due to non-negligent circumstances
related to the appellant, her counsel or a third party. Id.
               S.D. argues that she was misled by the May 5, 2008, notice because it
listed a phone number, which implied that appeals could be made by telephone.

(continued . . .)
1995.” Because the indicated report regarding S.D. was filed in 2008, the latter regulation is
applicable.
5
  S.D. does not argue that the Department’s May 12, 2015, notice triggered a new 90-day
limitations period for challenging an indicated report. See 23 Pa. C.S. §6341(a)(2) (quoted in fn.
3, supra). We will not raise the issue sua sponte. We note, however, that S.D. can request an
amendment or expungement of the indicated report at any time “upon good cause shown.” See
23 Pa. C.S. §6341(a)(1) and fn. 6, infra.

                                                7
We reject this argument. The notice stated: “If it is your desire to have a hearing,
please submit your request in writing within 45 days of the date of this letter[.]”
C.R. Item No. 3, Exhibit C-3 (emphasis in original). In an entirely separate
paragraph the notice states: “If you have any questions about the law or appeal
process please write to Child Abuse Appeals or contact that office at 717-772-
7016.” Id. By prefacing the phone number with the statement “If you have any
questions,” the notice limited the purpose of the phone number. Because the notice
unambiguously stated that the appeal had to be in writing, S.D. did not demonstrate
a breakdown in the administrative process by reason of the language of the
notification letter. The Bureau did not err in denying nunc pro tunc relief.
               For these reasons, the order of the Bureau is affirmed.6

                                         _____________________________________
                                         MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge

6
  We note that a 2014 amendment to the Child Protective Services Law provides another avenue
to challenge a listing on the ChildLine Registry. It means that a listing may not be “forever” even
where a hearing request is denied as untimely. The statute now provides, in relevant part:
        At any time, the secretary may amend or expunge any record in the Statewide
        database under this chapter upon good cause shown and notice to the appropriate
        subjects of the report. The request shall be in writing in a manner prescribed by
        the department. For purposes of this paragraph, good cause shall include, but is
        not limited to, the following:
                (i) Newly discovered evidence that an indicated report of child
                abuse is inaccurate or is being maintained in a manner inconsistent
                with this chapter.
                (ii) A determination that the perpetrator in an indicated report of
                abuse no longer represents a risk of child abuse and that no
                significant public purpose would be served by the continued listing
                of the person as a perpetrator in the Statewide database.
23 Pa. C.S. §6341(a)(1) (emphasis added).

                                                8
         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

S.D.,                              :
                 Petitioner        :
                                   :
           v.                      :   No. 1814 C.D. 2015
                                   :
Department of Human Services,      :
                 Respondent        :

                                ORDER

           AND NOW, this 9th day of August, 2016, the order of Department of
Human Services’ Bureau of Hearings and Appeals dated August 17, 2015, in the
above-captioned matter is hereby AFFIRMED.

                                ______________________________________
                                MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge