Court Opinion

ID: 4355104
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-12-28 21:35:30.355342+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:46:06.258385
License: Public Domain

[J-57-2018]
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                MIDDLE DISTRICT

 IN THE INTEREST OF: L.J.B., A MINOR           :   No. 10 MAP 2018
                                               :
                                               :   Appeal from the Order of the Superior
 APPEAL OF: A.A.R., NATURAL                    :   Court at No. 884 MDA 2017 dated
 MOTHER                                        :   December 27, 2017 Vacating the
                                               :   Order of Clinton County Court of
                                               :   Common Pleas, Juvenile Division,
                                               :   dated May 24, 2017 at No. CP-18-DP-
                                               :   0000009-2017 and remanding for
                                               :   further proceedings.
                                               :
                                               :   ARGUED: September 25, 2018

                                 DISSENTING OPINION

JUSTICE MUNDY                                           DECIDED: December 28, 2018
        “The term ‘child abuse’ shall mean intentionally, knowingly or recklessly . . .

[c]ausing bodily injury to a child through any recent act or failure to act.” 23 Pa.C.S.

§ 6303(b.1)(1). A recent act is defined as “[a]ny act or failure to act committed within two

years of the date of the report to the department or county agency.” Id., § 6303(a).

Because Mother caused bodily injury to L.J.B. through a recent act, Mother perpetrated

child abuse. Id. (defining perpetrator as “[a] person who has committed child abuse as

defined in this section”).

       The plurality concludes that “at the time the individual committed the act that

caused or was reasonably likely to have caused bodily injury to a child, he or she must

have been a ‘perpetrator’ as defined.” OAJC at 10-11. Asserting that “[b]y reaching back

to consider conduct while Mother was pregnant, the Superior Court failed to account for

the fact that at any time prior to the birth of Child, Mother could not be a perpetrator of
child abuse because a perpetrator must be ‘the parent of a child.’” I conclude that the

individual is a perpetrator at the time the injury is manifested, not solely at the time of the

act or failure to act that caused the injury. As the plain language of the statute states,

child abuse is defined as “causing bodily injury.” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(b.1)(1).

       In a majority of cases the act and the resultant injury occur in close temporal

proximity, such as when a child is injured through physical force. The instant facts,

however, present a scenario where the act and the injury do not occur simultaneously.

The facts in this matter more closely resemble neglect cases where the injury manifests

at some point in time after the neglect as in cases of malnourishment from lack of food,

or suffering from a severe diaper rash from failure to routinely change diapers. Child

abuse by neglect is defined as “causing serious physical neglect to a child.”              Id.,

§ 6303(b.1)(7). When a malnourished child, or the baby suffering severe diaper rash are

reported, the first determination made is whether the child has been abused. The inquiry

then proceeds to ascertaining who perpetrated the abuse. The failure to provide food or

change a diaper on one isolated occasion is not going to necessarily rise to an act of

abuse, but the repeated failure to properly care for the child that causes serious physical

neglect, is child abuse by definition. Similarly, when a person has caused a physical

injury, they have committed child abuse, and they are the perpetrator.1

       Determining whether a child is a victim of child abuse first requires a determination

that there is abuse, followed by a determination of who perpetrated the abuse. See In re

L.Z., 111 A.3d 1164, 1165 (Pa. 2015) (examining “whether the child at issue in this case

1 Admittedly, these are not completely analogous scenarios because the perpetrator
would meet the definition of perpetrator throughout the duration of the neglect. The
important component is that in this scenario child abuse is “causing serious physical
neglect.” The child abuse determination is triggered at the time the serious physical
neglect manifests. Likewise, child abuse manifests when a serious physical injury is
caused. At the time a serious physical injury occurred, Mother met the statutory definition
of perpetrator, and child met the statutory definition of child. 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a).

                                       [J-57-2018] - 2
suffered abuse and whether that abuse was perpetrated by his mother”). L.J.B. suffered

bodily injury after birth when she began exhibiting withdrawal symptoms. The bodily injury

L.J.B. suffered was a direct result of a recent act of Mother, the use of illegal narcotics.

Therefore, Mother was the perpetrator of the abuse on L.J.B., after birth, notwithstanding

the fact that she ingested the drugs prior to birth. Accordingly, Mother was “a parent of

the child” and “caused bodily injury through a recent act.” See 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a),

(b.1)(1).

       In my view, under the plain language of the statute, the Superior Court correctly

determined Mother committed child abuse.         Therefore, because I would affirm the

Superior Court, I dissent.

       Justice Todd joins this dissenting opinion.

                                      [J-57-2018] - 3