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

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
Docket14 EDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Int. of: M.M. Appeal of: M.M. (In the Int. of: M.M. Appeal of: M.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: M.M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37 IN THE INTEREST OF: M.MCC., A IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MINOR PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: M.M. No. 14 EDA 2019

Appeal from the Order Dated November 30, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Family Court at No(s): CP-51-DP-0000553-2017

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., LAZARUS, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E. MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED JULY 23, 2019 M.M. (Appellant) appeals from the order dated November 30, 2018, finding child abuse of M.MCC. (Child), born in December of 2012, by Appellant

pursuant to the Child Protective Services Law (CPSL), 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301 et

seq.' We affirm. In its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the trial court stated that it had heard

testimony from nine witnesses over the course of four hearings, which were

held on May 4, 2018, August 8, 2018, September 21, 2018, and November 30, 2018. The court explained that in the transcript of the November 30th hearing, it addressed "its findings of child abuse against [Appellant] and [its]

determination to change the indicated report of child abuse ... to a founded report of child abuse ...." Trial Court Opinion (TCO), 2/26/19, at 2 (emphasis in original). In order to address Appellant's issues raised on appeal, we set

' Although some of the parties in their briefs identify Appellant as Child's stepfather, he is the live-in boyfriend of Child's mother. J -S29001-19

forth the court's discussion of its findings of abuse sustained by Child that the

trial court concluded were perpetrated by Appellant, as follows:

So, we started the abuse hearing on May 4th of this year. And at that time, this [c]ourt, based on the tender years motion filed by the Child Advocate on behalf of [Child], found that [Child] was unavailable as a witness. Dr. Theodorson, o[f] Abington Hospital, testified and indicated that [Child] presented to the ER in January of 2017, with his grandmother and a coworker of this grandmother, due to injuries that he had sustained. He had numerous bruises over his body. Entered into evidence was [the Department of Human Services] DHS Exhibits A through I, which were pictures taken when he presented at the hospital of his injuries. The testimony from Dr. Theodorson was that the pattern of bruises [Child] had were not consistent with bruising for a child of this age. The appearance of the bruises indicated that they had occurred within a few days prior to him presenting at the ER. They had different shades of color, which reflected that they were evolving and healing. He had multiple contusions, and Dr. Theodorson was able to say to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the bruises were inflicted and non -accidental and that [Child] would have been in substantial pain at the time they occurred and for sometime thereafter. Dr. Theodorson indicated-he was unable to say-whether the doctor was male or female, that's irrelevant-that they were unable to say how long the pain would have lasted, but that the pain would have existed at the time the injuries were infl[i]cted; that the number of bruises could have impaired the child's ability to walk, to sit, to sleep. The other person that testified was a forensic nurse from Abington Hospital, Trish Crowe, and she is a forensic nurse/examiner, and indicated that she is consulted when there's suspicion for abuse and children are brought into the hospital. And she is the one that took the photos that were entered into evidence. She indicated that she also had concerns for abuse, the bruising was concerning, the multiple stages of healing was concerning, and ... she indicated that as she was taking

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information on the day he presented around the injuries, the identified alleged perpetrator was [Appellant], mom's boyfriend. Michelle Kline of [the Philadelphia Children's Alliance] PCA also testified, having been qualified as someone who had done hundreds of interviews for children when there are allegations of abuse. She testified that she interviewed [Child], and [Child] said that [Appellant] slapped him all over his body, hit him with a hammer, put him in a hot shower. She did identify concerns that [Child] was being coached not to disclose what had happened to him. Her competency evaluation of [Child] indicated that he knew the difference between the truth and a lie and as such was telling the truth when she interviewed him. And she was unable to give a time frame of how long the abuse had concern [sic]. But, again, [Child] identified [Appellant] as the individual who inflicted the abuse. DHS social worker, Rudy Petruzzelli, who was ... the intake worker at the time, indicated that - he indicated the report [was] based on the bruising that he observed and based on his investigation. He did indicate that [Appellant] denied that he caused the injuries, but he indicated [Appellant] as the perpetrator of the abuse as to [Child] based on medical evidence. His testimony was that [Child] would not talk to him at the time that he interviewed. We had a Rosalie Gonzales (sp), who had been a babysitter, identified for also taking care of [Child], and she indicated that she knew mom because they worked together. She is the individual who discovered the bruises on [Child's] body and reported them to mom. She indicated that he had burn marks on his hand, his eye was swollen, his face was swollen on a previous incident, and she had taken him to the hospital. She testified, and I found her testimony credible, as I did Dr. Theodorson's and Nurse Crowe['s] and Michelle Kline['s]. She testified that mom had disclosed to her that [Appellant] spanked [Child]. She also indicated that at one point she dropped [Child] off at [Appellant's] house and [Child] started crying hysterically and did not want to get out of her car. Morgan Webb, [Child's] [Children's Crisis Treatment Center] CCTC trauma therapist, also testified, and testified that [Child] was referred to her based on allegations of child abuse by [Appellant], and he was diagnosed with adjustment disorder and anxiety. -3 J -S29001-19

... [Child] disclosed to [Ms. Webb] that [Appellant] burned his hands with hot water, flicked his pee -pee, gave him bruises. We had additional testimony from Carla Fletcher, [Child's] child advocate social worker, and that when she spoke with [Child], [Child] initiated a discussion with her where he said that "[Appellant] gave me bruises," that he was afraid of [Appellant] and that he reported that he was told he would get a present if he said [Appellant] didn't do it. Step -maternal grandmother, Ms. Pettit, also testified in May that [Child] was still very much afraid of [Appellant], and actually just the name [M.] - and when a relative came to the family's home for Easter and mentioned his name as [M.] that [Child] froze, his eyes got wide, and he said he wanted to leave.

When we came back on 9/21, ... paternal grandmother And that was [Appellant's] testified in [Appellant's] defense. mother, to be clear as to the paternal grandmother. Her testimony attempted to refute that [Appellant] was ... babysitting [Child] during the time that the injuries occurred to [Child]. She indicated that [Child], [H.S. (Child's Mother)], and ... [Appellant] resided with her when [Appellant] came home on house arrest, and she testified that she never saw ... [Appellant] strike [Child]. I did not find - based on the overwhelming evidence from the other witnesses, I did not find paternal grandmother's testimony to be very relevant in terms of eliminating [Appellant] as the alleged perpetrator of the abuse. With respect to the request from DHS and Child Advocate, the request was that this [c]ourt find child abuse as to [Appellant] based on [23 Pa.C.S.

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