J.M.K. v. DHS

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 23, 2020
Docket1590 C.D. 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.M.K. v. DHS (J.M.K. v. DHS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.M.K. v. DHS, (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

J.M.K., : Petitioner : CASE SEALED : v. : No. 1590 C.D. 2019 : Submitted: May 29, 2020 Department of Human Services, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT1 FILED: October 23, 2020

J.M.K. (Stepmother), pro se, petitions for review of an adjudication of the Department of Human Services (Department) that denied her request to expunge an indicated report from the ChildLine and Abuse Registry (ChildLine) naming her as a perpetrator of child abuse.2 The Department, adopting the recommendation of the administrative law judge (ALJ), held that Stepmother acted recklessly by not removing certain antidepressant medications from the house, which her stepson, C.T. (Child), ingested. Stepmother did not believe these medications were dangerous or presented a substantial risk to Child. Accordingly, Stepmother argues the Department erred in holding that she committed child abuse within the meaning of the Child Protective Services Law.3 After review, we reverse.

1 This case was reassigned to the author on August 3, 2020. 2 ChildLine is “[a]n organizational unit of the Department which operates a Statewide toll-free system for receiving reports of suspected child abuse [and] . . . refers the reports for investigation and maintains the reports in the appropriate file.” 55 Pa. Code §3490.4. 3 23 Pa. C.S. §§6301-6387. The facts are undisputed. Child was 12 years old at the time he ingested the antidepressants. Child lives with Stepmother and his biological father, J.K. (Father). Stepmother has been involved in Child’s life since he was two years old, and Child’s biological mother is “not in the picture.” Certified Record (C.R.) at 12. Child suffers from depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and attention- deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Prior to the incident, Child had been receiving outpatient psychiatric therapy and attending a therapy session every Wednesday. On December 19, 2018, Stepmother noticed that Child appeared unusually tired after an appointment with his therapist and afterwards “passed out” asleep on the couch at home. ALJ Decision at 3, Findings of Fact, ¶8. She called Father who returned home and woke Child. Father found Klonopin in Child’s pockets, an anti-anxiety medication prescribed to Father. Stepmother went to Child’s bedroom where she found more Klonopin pills, which she gathered and put in her bedroom closet for later disposal. Stepmother and Father did not seek medical treatment for Child that evening, but Father slept with Child on the couch. The next morning, Child was groggy, and Father allowed him to stay home from school. Father took the Klonopin pills and discarded them. Father checked on Child at lunchtime, and he was eating lunch and watching television. When Stepmother returned home from work in the evening, she found Child unresponsive on the couch surrounded by pill bottles containing Seroquel, Wellbutrin, Flexeril, and Cetirina, a form of Benadryl. The Seroquel, Wellbutrin and Flexeril medications were prescribed to Stepmother and Father. Stepmother called 911. At the hospital, Child presented with acute hypoxia, respiratory failure, and altered mental status. Child was admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (ICU) as a result of his polysubstance ingestion.

2 During Child’s hospitalization, Stepmother met with a hospital social worker (Social Worker) and expressed surprise that Child had ingested the medications. She did not believe that Child’s depression was significant or that he would attempt suicide by taking pills. ALJ Decision at 4, Findings of Fact, ¶18. She suspected that Child had ingested Klonopin when he appeared to pass out on the couch; Child had researched the effects of Klonopin on an “electronic tablet.” Id. On December 21, 2018, Children and Youth Services (CYS) received a report from the hospital of Child’s drug overdose and began an investigation. A caseworker interviewed Stepmother, who again expressed her suspicion that Child had ingested Klonopin because Father had found the pills in Child’s pockets after Child fell asleep on the couch. Stepmother advised Caseworker that she and Father did not call the police because Father, who had a prior drug history, thought Child would “sleep [it] off.” ALJ Decision at 5, Findings of Fact, ¶23. Stepmother believed that Child’s therapist would have noticed during the December 19, 2018, appointment if anything was “off” with Child. Id. at 5, Findings of Fact, ¶25. Caseworker did not speak with Child because he was intubated and medically sedated. CYS filed an indicated report of child abuse against Stepmother on the basis that she had failed to secure all prescription medications in the home after Child had ingested Father’s Klonopin on December 19, 2018.4 Stepmother filed an appeal, and a hearing was conducted by an ALJ appointed by the Department’s Bureau of Hearings and Appeals.

4 CYS filed an indicated report against Father as well. C.R. 12. 3 At the hearing, CYS presented testimony from Social Worker, Caseworker, and an attending physician of Child at the ICU (Attending Physician). CYS also entered as evidence its investigation records and Child’s medical records. Stepmother testified that she knew Child would be alone the morning after he had ingested Klonopin, but she was not concerned that he would take any other medication. Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 8/5/2019, at 155. She asked Father to “check in on [Child] at lunch” because Father was working “in the [] area.” N.T. 136. She intended to call Child’s therapist, who had seen Child “the day before” but did not raise “[a]ny red flags” as a result of the visit. N.T. 136, 159. Stepmother asked Child about the Klonopin, and Child responded that he “had no idea what [she] was talking about.” N.T. 155. Stepmother testified that Father’s Klonopin was kept inside in a closet that she and Father “forgot about”; Child would have had to search the house to find it. N.T. 162-63. After Child ingested Klonopin, she and Father secured the remaining Klonopin pills, and Father removed them from the house the next day. Stepmother testified that the Seroquel, Flexeril, and Wellbutrin were kept inside a kitchen cabinet. She took no steps to secure them after Child’s ingestion of Klonopin because they were “just antidepressants” and not something one “takes to overdose on.” N.T. 151. On cross-examination, Stepmother maintained that she did not know that Child would take Seroquel, Flexeril, and Wellbutrin:

[Counsel]: [W]ould you consider the fact that [Child] took Klonopin a red flag that he might take other medication?

[Stepmother]: Not - no.

[Counsel]: That’s not a red flag in your mind?

4 [Stepmother]: No.

[Counsel]: A child that’s taking medication that’s not prescribed to them, doesn’t signal to you that they may be getting into things that they shouldn’t be and that there may be a risk that they might do so in the future?

[Stepmother]: Yes. So that’s why we have therapy.

[Counsel]: It does signal to you that there’s a risk that they might do it in the future?

[Stepmother]: It’s possible that anybody could.

N.T. 160-61. Stepmother denied telling Social Worker and Caseworker that Child had researched the effects of Klonopin. Rather, she testified that she told Caseworker that Child was listening to a rap song called “Klonopin” on an electronic tablet. N.T. 146. CYS acknowledged that it was required to establish “gross negligence” by Stepmother. N.T. 172. It argued that Stepmother exercised “poor judgment” in not removing the Seroquel, Flexeril, and Wellbutrin from the kitchen cabinet. N.T. 174.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
J.M.K. v. DHS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jmk-v-dhs-pacommwct-2020.