Court Opinion

ID: 4671295
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-25 14:12:42.040665+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:30.571969
License: Public Domain

[J-105-2020]
                      IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                  MIDDLE DISTRICT

  SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                :   No. 33 MAP 2020
                                             :
                                             :   Appeal from the Order of the Superior
                      Appellant              :   Court at No. 3538 EDA 2018 dated
                                             :   8/21/19, reconsideration denied
                                             :   10/25/19, reversing the judgment of
                                             :   sentence dated 6/19/17 of the Bucks
                 v.                          :   County Court of Common Pleas,
                                             :   Criminal Division, at No. CP-09-CR-
                                             :   0005878-2016 and remanding for a new
H.D.,                                        :   trial
                                             :
                      Appellee               :   ARGUED: December 2, 2020

                                        OPINION

CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR                                  DECIDED: March 25, 2021

        The Legislature has prescribed that a defendant is innocent of the crime of

“interference with custody of children” when he or she believed that intrusive actions

were necessary to spare the subject child from danger.             In this appeal, the

Commonwealth contends that the belief element of this offense should be construed to

encompass only beliefs that are held reasonably.

        Appellee and her husband separated in June 2015, divorce proceedings were

initiated, and an agreement governing the shared custody of their five-year-old child

was consummated.         Appellee, however, repeatedly and intentionally violated this

custody agreement. In June 2016, she absconded with the child ultimately to Florida,

where the child remained for the balance of the forty-seven days during which she
remained separated from her father. Appellee claimed that the father was abusive, her

attempts to secure assistance from the local children and youth agency had been

rebuffed, and she had no option but to remove the child from the father’s care.

       Appellee was apprehended and charged with the offense of interference with

custody of children under Section 2904 of the Crimes Code, which generally pertains if

an individual “knowingly or recklessly takes or entices any child under the age of 18

years from the custody of its parent, guardian or other lawful custodian, when he [or

she] has no privilege to do so.” 18 Pa.C.S. §2904(a). Among several defenses internal

to this statute, the General Assembly provided -- in Section 2904(b)(1) -- that criminal

liability does not attach where “the actor believed that his action was necessary to

preserve the child from danger to its welfare[.]” Id. §2904(b)(1).

       At trial, the Commonwealth presented testimony from the father, a social worker,

and a detective to the effect that Appellee’s allegations of child abuse were false and/or

unfounded. A clinical psychologist also attested that the child made no disclosures of

any abuse across several counseling sessions. In the defense case, Appellee said that

she had been advised by a nanny that the child had disclosed an incident of offensive

touching by the father, and that subsequently the child repeatedly made statements to

Appellee personally which were indicative of abuse. Appellee sought assistance from

various governmental agencies to no avail, she maintained, leading to her ultimate

decision to defy the custody agreement to protect her child. Appellee also presented

the nanny’s corroborative testimony, and her cousin attested that the child had apprised

her of inappropriate touching as well.

       The suggested jury charge for interference with custody of children under Section

2904, prepared by the Criminal Jury Instructions Subcommittee of the Committee on

Proposed Standard Jury Instructions, indicates that a defendant is not guilty of

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interference with the custody of a child where “the defendant believed that [his] [her]

action was necessary to preserve the child from danger to [his] [her] welfare[.]” PA.

STANDARD SUGGESTED JURY INSTRUCTIONS (CRIM.) §15.2904 (Pa. Bar Inst. 2016)

(emphasis added; interlineations in original). The Subcommittee recognized that “there

is a debate about whether the defendant’s belief that that his or her actions were

necessary to preserve the welfare of the child must be reasonable.” Id., Subcommittee

Note. Further, the Subcommittee explained that drafters of Section 212.4 of the Model

Penal Code -- after which Pennsylvania’s interference with custody of a child statute

was fashioned -- had explicitly rejected a reasonableness standard, “as it may implicate

a parent who honestly thought he or she was protecting his or her child from danger,

even if the belief may have been objectively unreasonable.” Id. (citing MODEL PENAL

CODE & COMMENTARIES, pt. II, §212.4, cmt. 3, at 259 (Am. Law Inst. 1980) [hereinafter

“MPC & COMMENTARIES”]).          Ultimately, the Committee omitted the reasonableness

criterion from the suggested instruction, since there is no mention of it in Section

2904(b)(1). See id.

       Courts generally are not wed, however, to the suggested instructions.               See

Commonwealth v. Eichinger, 631 Pa. 138, 178, 108 A.3d 821, 845 (2014) (“The

Suggested Standard Jury Instructions themselves are not binding and do not alter the

discretion afforded trial courts in crafting jury instructions; rather, as their title suggests,

the instructions are guides only.”).1 Accordingly, the Commonwealth filed a contested

pretrial motion seeking an instruction that the relevant defense to interference with the

custody of a child should turn on whether the defendant had a reasonable belief, a

1 Of course, a court would be bound by language included in the suggested instructions
that is made mandatory by a precedential judicial decision.

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position that had been adopted in a published decision by a county court.              See

Commonwealth v. Chub, 3 Pa. D.&C. 3d 676, 680 (C.P. Cumberland 1977).

       The trial court granted the Commonwealth’s motion and, at trial, the court

instructed the jury that “[if] you find the defendant reasonably believed that [the child’s]

welfare was in imminent danger, you must find the defendant not guilty.” N.T., March

20, 2017, at 104 (emphasis added). During deliberations, the jurors asked the following

questions:

              [W]hat does the actual statute say in terms of the defense
              clause and how should we interpret the statute with respect
              to the judge’s instruction[?]

              Second, what constitutes reasonable belief of the defendant
              to justify the defendant’s withholding of the custody of the
              minor[?]
Id. at 112. The trial court responded by reiterating the charge as previously rendered.

See id. at 114-117.

       Appellee was convicted and sentenced and, although she did not initially pursue

a direct appeal, her direct-appeal rights were reinstated in a post-conviction proceeding.

In the ensuing appeal proceedings, the Superior Court reversed the judgment of

sentence and remanded for a new trial. See Commonwealth v. H.D., 217 A.3d 880 (Pa.

Super. 2019).

       The intermediate court’s core reasoning was as follows:

              The language of Section 2904(b)(1) is straightforward.
              There is no mention of a reasonable person standard. . . .

                                       *      *        *
              The defense provided in Section 2904(b)(1) is a purely
              subjective test: whether the defendant “believed that his
              action was necessary to preserve the child from danger to its
              welfare.” This is strictly a credibility decision to be made by
              the jury as to the belief of the defendant. This statute does

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              not provide an opportunity for a jury to compare the actions
              of the defendant with a “reasonable person” under similar
              circumstances.    If the Legislature intended to provide
              otherwise, it is within the discretion of the Legislature to
              amend the statute.
Id. at 886-87. The court also highlighted the consistency of its ruling with the suggested

jury instructions and the Model Penal Code. See id. at 887.

       In the present discretionary appeal proceedings, the Commonwealth argues that

the Superior Court’s interpretation of Section 2904(b)(1) heralds “absurd and

unreasonable results and undermines the very purpose of this criminal statute.” Brief

for Appellant at 16. In this regard, the Commonwealth finds it perverse that defendants

may avoid criminal responsibility “merely by asserting their belief, true or not, that the

child was in danger.” Id.

       It is the Commonwealth’s position that the Legislature intended to criminalize

precisely the type of parental kidnapping that occurred in this case. Along these lines,

the Commonwealth complains:

              Under the Superior Court’s interpretation, Appellee here --
              who absconded with her five-year old daughter, moved her
              to another state to live with virtual strangers, thereby
              depriving the child’s father of his court-ordered custody for a
              period of 47 days, and refused to reveal his daughter’s
              location even after arrest -- would suffer no criminal
              consequence because she subjectively, but unreasonably,
              believed her daughter was in danger of abuse. In other
              words, Appellee would be permitted to avail herself of a
              complete defense to her crime despite the fact that her
              justification -- an alleged danger to her daughter’s welfare --
              and the many accusations she made against the child’s
              father, were all deemed unfounded.
Id. at 18.

       The Commonwealth acknowledges its awareness that that a statute’s plain

language is generally the best indicator of legislative intent. See id. at 18 (citing, inter

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alia, 1 Pa.C.S. §1921(b) (“When the words of a statute are clear and free from all

ambiguity, the letter of it is not to be disregarded under the pretext of pursing its

spirit.”)). But, citing Chubb, it argues that Section 2904(b)(1) is susceptible to different

interpretations. Moreover, the Commonwealth reiterates that the Legislature has also

instructed courts to presume that it doesn’t intend results that are “absurd, impossible of

execution or unreasonable.”         1 Pa.C.S. §1922(1).         Particularly because the

Commonwealth believes that the Superior Court’s interpretation conflicts with the

asserted legislative objective to “criminalize parental kidnapping,” it asks us to turn to

principles of statutory interpretation pertaining in the face of ambiguity or non-

explicitness, including consideration of the occasion and necessity for a statute, the

mischief to be remedied, and the consequences of a particular interpretation. Brief for

Appellant at 19-20.

       Throughout its brief, the Commonwealth stresses that the Section 2904(a)

offense was designed to protect the custodial rights of a parent against unlawful and

unjustified interference by another person, including another parent. See id. at 29. The

Commonwealth proceeds to highlight commentary from the Model Penal Code

explaining that that Code’s corollary provision seeks to advance “an independent

protection of the custodial relationship from unwarranted interference by persons who

have no legal privilege to do so.” Id. at 21 (quoting MPC & COMMENTARIES, pt. II, art.

212, Introductory Note, at 209 (emphasis added)). Consistently, the Commonwealth

emphasizes, the report of the Joint State Government Commission proposing the

enactment of Section 2904 states that: “[T]his section would apply to a parent who

willfully defies a custody order by taking the child from the parent who was awarded

custody.” Id. at 22 (quoting JOINT STATE GOV’T COMM’N REPORT, PROPOSED CRIMES

CODE   FOR   PA. 106 (1967)). “In short,” the Commonwealth maintains, “it is clear that in

                                      [J-105-2020] - 6
adopting this statute, the legislature intended not to criminalize all custody disputes, but

to criminally punish those persons, including parents, who would defy lawful custody

orders by taking a child from a parent who has legal custody.” Id.2

       The Commonwealth also advances the Chubb court’s position that, absent a

requirement of a reasonable belief of danger, “no one could be convicted of this offense

if he simply states that he believed that his action was necessary to preserve the child

from a ‘danger to its welfare.’” Id. at 24 (quoting Chubb, 3 Pa. D.&.C. at 680). The

Commonwealth otherwise recognizes, however, that even under the interpretation of

Section 2904(b)(1) which would allow for an unreasonable-belief defense, it is within the

purview of the factfinder to reject the defense where the defendant’s belief is found to

be insincere. See id. at 25. Nevertheless, in the Commonwealth’s judgment, this is

equally unsatisfying and unreasonable, since criminal liability would turn “simply on how

successfully [the defendant] can pretend to have held such a belief.”            Id. at 25

(emphasis in original).3

       Further, the Commonwealth highlights that other justification-based defenses

delineated in the Crimes Code require a reasonable belief, for example, throughout the

Code’s general justification provisions set forth in Chapter 5. See, e.g., 18 Pa.C.S.

§501 (prescribing that “believes” or “belief,” for purposes of the series of justification

defenses set forth in Chapter 5, means “reasonably believes” or “reasonable belief”).

2 As illustrated by this summary, the Commonwealth intermittently frames its arguments
in a way that would admit of no belief-based defense to the crime of interference with
custody of children.

3 The argument that criminal liability can be avoided via skilled deception may be
directed to a host of mens rea provisions throughout the Crimes Code and does not
serve as a basis to disregard legislative judgments discernable from the plain language
of a statute or through the application of other principles of statutory construction.
Accordingly, this contention will be considered no further here.

                                     [J-105-2020] - 7
Thus, the Commonwealth posits that the General Assembly would not have otherwise

permitted a defendant to escape criminal liability based on a wholly unreasonable belief.

See Brief for Appellant at 27.

       Upon review, we find that the Commonwealth’s arguments are too tenuous to be

credited. For example, as noted, the Commonwealth references commentary from the

Model Penal Code discussing the general purposes of criminalizing interference with

custody. But it omits any reference to the specific commentary directed to the defense

in issue in this appeal -- highlighted by both the Superior Court and the Criminal Jury

Instructions Subcommittee -- which squarely contradicts its position, as follows:

              It might be plausible . . . to exculpate from liability for
              interference with custody only those who can show a
              reasonable belief in the necessity of their actions. . . . On
              the other hand, it may seem extravagant to demand
              reasonableness from a participant in a custody dispute over
              his own child, and in any event, most borderline cases can
              be handled under the more individualized consideration of
              the contempt power. For these reasons, it was thought
              preferable to preclude conviction of this offense merely on
              proof of negligence, and [the relevant defense] therefore
              requires only an honest belief that the actor’s conduct was
              “necessary to preserve the child from danger to its welfare.”
MPC & COMMENTARIES, pt. II, §212.4, cmt. 3, at 259 (emphasis adjusted; footnote

omitted); see also Model Penal Code Tentative Draft 11, art. 212, §212.4, at 23 (Am.

Law Inst. 1960) (stressing the special treatment contemplated for “estranged parents

struggling over the custody of children” and opining that “such situations are better

regulated by custody orders enforced through contempt proceedings”).4 We decline the

4 Notably, to the degree there would be any ambiguity, the Court has previously
referenced the Model Penal Code in undertaking statutory construction. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth v. Rushing, 627 Pa. 59, 73-74, 99 A.3d 416, 424-25 (2014) (relying, in
part, upon the Model Penal Code in construing Section 2901(a) of the Crimes Code).

                                    [J-105-2020] - 8
Commonwealth’s invitation to infer that the General Assembly blindly patterned Section

2904(b)(1) after Section 212.4 of the Model Penal Code, without any apprehension of

the overt policy choice underlying that provision which was made manifest in its terms.5

       Additionally, while the Commonwealth correctly highlights that the Legislature

has explicitly required a reasonable belief to support justification defenses under

Chapter 5 of the Crimes Code, see 18 Pa.C.S. §§501-510, this in no way supports a

rule that all justification defenses should be predicated upon reasonable belief. Instead,

Chapter 5 illustrates that the General Assembly knows how to insert a reasonable-belief

element into a defense when that is its intention.6

5 According to the dissent, although the General Assembly may have copied provisions
from model legislation, it “simply does not specify” whether it intended the meaning
ascribed to those terms by the model code’s authors. Dissenting Opinion, slip op. at 3.
In our judgment, however, it would be extraordinary for lawmakers to attempt to impose
a materially different connotation on borrowed terminology without saying so. This is
particularly so when the plain language adopted by the General Assembly is wholly
consistent with these authors’ developed explanation. See infra note 6.

In this line of discussion, the dissent observes that a publisher’s editorial note attending
Section 2904 refers to the statute as being “similar” to Section 212.4 of the Model Penal
Code. We note, however, that the language of material significance here -- i.e., the
Section 2904(b)(1) defense -- is, in fact, identical. Compare 18 Pa.C.S. §2904(b)(1),
with MPC & COMMENTARIES, pt. II, §212.4(1)(a), at 248 (prescribing a defense to the
proposed crime of interference with custody where “the actor believed that his action
was necessary to preserve the child from danger to its welfare”).

6 The dissent for its part, opines that the plain language of word “believed” connotes
only a reasonable belief. See Dissenting Opinion, slip op. at 2. In point of fact, a
reasonableness qualifier is generally employed, where deemed appropriate, precisely
because “believed” is a broader term that does not intrinsically turn on reasonableness.
See,    e.g.,    Believe,    MERRIAM-W EBSTER       DICTIONARY,       https://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/believe (defining “believe,” inter alia, as “to consider to be true”);
see also Belief, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed.. 2014) (defining “reasonable belief”
as one of several subcategories of “belief”). This is why, contrary to the dissent’s view,
the Legislature’s approach of omitting such a reasonableness qualifier, in the Section
2904(b)(1) defense, does not stand on equal footing with the omission of any specific
(continued…)
                                      [J-105-2020] - 9
       We do not foreclose that there may be some instances in which a reviewing

court might infer that the Legislature intended an unstated reasonableness condition in

the face of unreasonable results that would flow from a statute’s application in the

absence of such a condition. Here, however, it is not irrational for the Legislature to

credit the explicit premises of the model law from which Section 2904(b)(1) was derived,

i.e., that consideration should be given to the emotional dynamic of custody disputes,

and that the courts’ contempt powers are sufficient to address unreasonable-belief

intrusions upon child custody falling short of kidnapping. See MPC & COMMENTARIES,

pt. II, §212.4, cmt. 3, at 259; accord Model Penal Code Tentative Draft 11, art. 212,

§212.4, at 23.7 The alternative avenue readily available to the General Assembly would

have been to insert a reasonableness term into the Section 2904(b)(1) defense, as with

(…continued)
reference to unreasonable beliefs. In short, the unqualified word selected by the
General Assembly -- “believed” -- facially encompasses beliefs that are reasonably held
as well as those that are not reasonable.

7 We recognize that Section 2904 applies to persons who are not parents and who may
not be subject to judicial custody orders. There are many instances in which model or
suggested legislation is not fully theorized and, where adopted, merits ongoing
evaluation with experience. Thus, for example, to the degree that the Legislature relied
on the contempt-power justification, it may wish to consider limiting the unreasonable-
belief defense to parents subject to custody orders, or for that matter, it may wish to
reconsider whether to insert a reasonableness requirement into the statute applying to
all persons including parents. These are quintessentially legislative judgments;
whereas, our role is limited to assessment of the Legislature’s intent when it enacted
Section 2904(b)(1) in 1972, premised upon the corollary provision of the Model Penal
Code. See JOINT STATE GOV’T COMM’N REPORT, PROPOSED CRIMES CODE FOR PA. at 106
(“This section is derived from Section 212.4 of the Model Penal Code[.]”).

In any event, those not privileged in any manner to take children from a parent’s
custody incur greater risk of violating other criminal-law statutes to the extent that they
hostilely intercede in custodial affairs. In other words, as reflected in the Model Penal
Code Commentaries, the primary line of thinking associated with Section 212.4 was
centered on interference by parents and caretakers involved in custodial disputes.

                                    [J-105-2020] - 10
other justification-based defenses, and as some other jurisdictions have done relative to

interference with child custody. See, e.g., Wis. Stat. §948.31(4)(a)(1). In the present

circumstances, consistent with the Superior Court’s able analysis, we find the absence

of any such designation to be dispositive.

       Finally, we take no issue with the dissent’s position that the Legislature could

have made a policy choice to condition the belief element of the Section 2904(b)(1)

defense on reasonableness. See Dissenting Opinion, slip op. at 3. Again, our holding

is premised on the fact that there is a dearth of evidence that intended to do so.8

       The order of the Superior Court is affirmed.

       Justices Baer, Todd, Donohue, Dougherty and Wecht join the opinion.

       Justice Mundy files a dissenting opinion.

8 The dissenting opinion suggests that the concept of reasonability is so inherent in the
law’s overarching domain that courts should infer that lawmakers intend to integrate it
into all manner of statutes, including criminal-law ones prescribing the mens rea
necessary to support a defense. See Dissenting Opinion, slip op. at 2. The dissent,
however, fails to cite any authority for this proposition, and, in our judgment, no such
broad-based characterization of the law is reasonably possible. Notably, moreover, in
some scenarios at least, extension of such an approach to criminal mens rea defenses
would squarely conflict with the principle of lenity which generally applies to ambiguous
penal law provisions. See Commonwealth v. Fithian, 599 Pa. 180, 194-95, 961 A.2d
66, 74 (2008) (explaining that, if an ambiguity exists in a penal statute, the ambiguity
should be resolved in the light most favorable to the accused).

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