In the Int. of: M.M., Appeal of: E.M.

2023 Pa. Super. 159, 302 A.3d 189
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 2023
Docket439 EDA 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2023 Pa. Super. 159 (In the Int. of: M.M., Appeal of: E.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Int. of: M.M., Appeal of: E.M., 2023 Pa. Super. 159, 302 A.3d 189 (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-S23016-23

2023 PA Super 159

IN THE INTEREST OF: M.M., A : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MINOR : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: E.M. : : : : : No. 439 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered January 18, 2023, in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Juvenile Division at No(s): CP-51-DP-0002129-2015.

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and KING, J.

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED AUGUST 30, 2023

In this matter, we decide whether a juvenile court’s dependency

adjudication may serve as a basis to amend a non-party’s report of child abuse

from “indicated” to “founded,” pursuant to the Child Protective Services Law

(CPSL). See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6303(a) (definition of “founded report”).

Pursuant to the CPSL, certain judicial adjudications – including a dependency

adjudication under the Juvenile Act1 – may serve as the basis for designating

a report as “founded,” so long as the judge determined there was clear and

convincing evidence of child abuse. See id. When a report is “founded,” the

name of the perpetrator is placed on a statewide registry, which in turn

triggers a litany of consequences. In this case, the Juvenile Division of the

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas (the juvenile court) adjudicated

dependent M.M., the 12-year-old son of J.D.-S. The dependency proceedings ____________________________________________

1 See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6341. J-S23016-23

began after the death of M.M.’s sibling. Allegations of child abuse were made

against J.D.-S. (Mother) and E.M. (Appellant), a family friend. In its

adjudicatory order, the court found child abuse and determined that the

reports of Mother and Appellant should be amended from “indicated” to

“founded.” Appellant appealed, maintaining that the juvenile court exceeded

its authority under the CPSL, because she was not a party to the underlying

dependency action. After careful review, we agree, and therefore we vacate

that provision of the adjudicatory order pertaining to Appellant.

The record discloses the following factual history. Philadelphia

Department of Human Services (DHS) had been intermittently involved with

Mother and her Children for over a decade.2 In December 2021, Appellant

moved into Mother’s home to help Mother care for the Children. At the time,

the Children (son M.M., daughter C.S., and son Ch.S.) were 11, 12, and 13

years old, respectively. On February 19, 2022, C.S. (Decedent) died; she had

just turned 13. The circumstances surrounding her death are tragic.

The [child protective services] report alleged that the [Decedent] was taken to Saint Christopher’s Hospital for Children by emergency medical services after she was found nonresponsive that morning. CPR was administered without success, and the [Decedent] was pronounced dead at the hospital. The report alleged that Mother and a family friend, [Appellant], resided in the home with the [Decedent] and the [two other] Children. The CPS report further alleged that Mother and [Appellant] felt the [Decedent’s] anorexia ____________________________________________

2 W.M. (Father) appeared at the adjudicatory hearing.However, he wished to be excused from the proceedings, and without objection, the juvenile court granted his request. Father was not otherwise involved in this matter.

-2- J-S23016-23

was [reoccurring] because she had not been eating as much as normal. [Appellant] stated that when she checked on the [Decedent] around 7:00 AM, she was slow to respond, disoriented, and her heartbeat was racing. [Appellant] checked on the [Decedent] two hours later and she was nonresponsive. The report further alleged that the [Decedent] was taken to the hospital wearing an adult diaper. This report was indicated.

That same day, DHS received a supplemental [child protective services] report alleging that once the [Decedent] arrived at the hospital, staff performed CPR for 25 minutes, which proved to be unsuccessful. It was also reported to the Philadelphia Police Department that the [Decedent] had lividity[3] in her right cheek, right earlobe, back, and buttocks, and that her pupils were dialed six inches. The report further alleged that Mother and [Appellant] resided in the home […]. Based on the lividity of the [Decedent’s] body, the Philadelphia Police Department [] believed that [Appellant’s] account that the [Decedent] was alive at 7:00 AM was incorrect. This raised concerns that there was a delay in medical care that could have contributed to her death.

On February 22, 2022, DHS received [another] supplemental [child protective services] report […]. This report alleged that the [Decedent] slept in the same bed as [Appellant]. The report further alleged that the [Decedent] had been refusing food for days and that she was wearing a diaper because she was too weak to walk to the bathroom. The [] report alleged that at 7:00 AM, the [Decedent] reportedly woke up and [Appellant] noticed that her heart was racing. The report alleged that [Appellant] left the room, went back to sleep, and when she returned two hours later, the [Decedent] was cold to the touch and nonresponsive.

____________________________________________

3 “Lividity” refers to “reddish to bluish-purple discoloration of the skin due to

the settling and pooling of blood following death.” Lividity, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/lividity.

-3- J-S23016-23

Trial Court Opinion, 3/8/23 (T.C.O.), at 2-3 (style adjusted) (footnote added)

(citations to the record omitted).

In March 2022, DHS obtained an order of protective custody for the

Decedent’s surviving brothers, M.M. and Ch.S. Two days after the order of

protective custody, Ch.S. went “AWOL.”4 Meanwhile, DHS filed a dependency

petition against Mother, alleging that M.M. was without proper parental care

or control. In April 2022, DHS determined there was substantial evidence of

abuse, and thus DHS “indicated” the report of child abuse and named Mother

and Appellant as perpetrators for their failure to provide the Decedent with

necessary medical care.

The juvenile court conducted dependency proceedings over the course

of four dates: May 4, 2022; July 19, 2022; October 20, 2022; and January

18, 2023. Evidently, the proceedings were continued on each on the first

three dates, culminating with a substantive adjudicatory hearing on January

18, 2023. Only the transcript for the final January date was made a part of

the record. As far as we can discern from record, the appellate briefs and the

T.C.O., the following procedural history transpired:

On the first hearing date, May 4, 2022, Appellant appeared before the

dependency court in answer to a witness subpoena.5 At the conclusion of that

4 DHS had yet to locate Ch.S. as of January 18, 2023, the date of the order

from which Appellant appealed.

5 We note that the only subpoena in the record is for Appellant’s presence on

January 18, 2023 – the last hearing date.

-4- J-S23016-23

first date, the dependency court appointed counsel to represent Appellant in

an “unassigned role.” Also on this date, DHS notified Appellant, pursuant to

CPSL, that the report of child abuse against her was deemed “indicated.” The

court evidently heard testimony from DHS about the death of Decedent, and

the Agency’s subsequent investigation. See DHS’s Brief at 3. Later that

month, on May 26, 2022, Mother was criminally charged with third-degree

murder and endangering the welfare of a child.

The dependency proceedings resumed on July 19, 2022. On this second

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Bluebook (online)
2023 Pa. Super. 159, 302 A.3d 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-int-of-mm-appeal-of-em-pasuperct-2023.