Michelle Mammaro v. DCP&P

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 19, 2016
Docket15-1448
StatusPublished

This text of Michelle Mammaro v. DCP&P (Michelle Mammaro v. DCP&P) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michelle Mammaro v. DCP&P, (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

No. 15-1448 _____________

MICHELLE MAMMARO

v.

NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY, formerly known as DIVISION OF YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES; WATCHUNG POLICE DEPARTMENT; KARA P. WOOD, in her official capacity as Director of DCP&P; ALLISON BLAKE, in her official capacity as the Commissioner of the Department of Children and Families; JOSEPH R. CINA, in his official capacity as Acting Chief of Police of the Watchung Police Department; ALIREICHEN GRAZIANI, in her individual capacity; BENJAMIN REHIG, in his individual capacity; SUAN HACKER, in her individual capacity; REBECCA LABARRE, in her individual capacity; KRISTA DEBROUX, in her individual capacity; OMEGA LABOATORY INC; ANDREW HART, in his individual capacity; SCOTT TALLMADGE, in his individual capacity; PATRICK MINNO; JOHN DOES 3-8, POLICE OFFICERS OF WATCHUNG POLICE DEPARTMENT, in their individual capacities

The New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency; Commissioner Allison Blake; Director Kara P. Wood; Alireichen Graziani; Benjamin Rehig; Rebecca LaBarre; and Krista DeBroux,

Appellants ________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil Action No. 3-13-cv-06483) District Judge: Honorable Freda L. Wolfson ________________

Argued October 7, 2015

Before: McKEE, Chief Judge, AMBRO, and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed: February 19, 2016)

John J. Hoffman, Esquire Acting Attorney General of New Jersey Michael C. Walters, Esquire (Argued) Randall B. Weaver, Esquire Benjamin H. Zieman, Esquire Office of Attorney General of New Jersey

2 Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex 25 Market Street Trenton, NJ 08625

Counsel for Appellants

Kenneth J. Rosellini, Esquire (Argued) 636A Van Houten Avenue Clifton, NJ 07013

Counsel for Appellee ________________

OPINION OF THE COURT ________________

AMBRO, Circuit Judge

Appellee Michelle Mammaro filed this civil rights action claiming that the temporary removal of her child from her custody by the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency (the “Division”) was a violation of her substantive due process right as a parent. On a motion to dismiss, the District Court held that several individual caseworkers were not entitled to qualified immunity. The caseworkers filed this interlocutory appeal, and for the reasons that follow we conclude that they are immune from suit. I. Because this case comes to us on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the facts are drawn from the allegations contained in Mammaro’s amended complaint, which we

3 accept as true. James v. City of Wilkes-Barre, 700 F.3d 675, 679 (3d Cir. 2012). On July 22, 2011, Mammaro first came to the Division’s attention when she was taken to a hospital for injuries inflicted by her husband, Damon. Although D.M., Mammaro’s one and a half year old child, was not harmed, Mammaro met with a child protective services worker from the Division—then known as the New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services. She agreed to send D.M. to stay with her brother-in-law for that night and was treated for her injuries and released the same day. Damon was charged with several criminal offenses, including second degree aggravated assault, and Mammaro sought a restraining order against him. At the first hearing on the restraining order, a Division caseworker was present and told Mammaro that someone had made allegations against her of child neglect based on drug use. The caseworker threatened to separate Mammaro and D.M. unless she submitted to a drug test. Mammaro complied and tested positive for marijuana. (She admits to using a small amount of marijuana to calm herself after coming home from the hospital.) At the final restraining order hearing, the caseworker appeared again and demanded that Mammaro take another drug test. She again complied and again tested positive, with the second test showing a smaller level of marijuana than the first.1 Following these

1 A hair follicle test in November 2011 showed a very small amount of marijuana and cocaine, but the amount found was too low to meet the standard for a positive test.

Although Chief Judge McKee joins this opinion in its entirety, he notes his concern with the misleading nature of the Division’s brief on this point. The brief stated that

4 Mammaro “submitted to a hair follicle drug test, which was positive for cocaine and marijuana.” However, at oral argument, after counsel for Mammaro represented that she never tested positive for cocaine, the Division’s counsel (who was involved in drafting the brief) was given an opportunity to clarify whether the hair follicle test for cocaine was positive, as represented in the brief, or negative. Counsel first responded that the result was “inconclusive,” but then conceded that Mammaro’s hair follicle analysis was “negative” for cocaine.

Mammaro’s test showed 100 picograms/milligram (“pg/mg”) of cocaine. The Division’s guidelines for concluding if a person has used cocaine requires at least 500 pg/mg. Omega Laboratories requires that a test result must be “greater than its above listed cutoff” of 100 pg/mg. The testing equipment has a margin for error of 20 percent. Accordingly, given the thresholds employed by the lab and the Division’s own guidelines, Mammaro’s test results were negative.

Chief Judge McKee believes that it is (at best) unfortunate and (at most) disingenuous and intentionally misleading for the Division to have stated, without qualification or explanation, that Mammaro was using cocaine. The failure to explain or qualify such an assertion is particularly egregious here where the focus of our inquiry is the reasonableness of the challenged interference with Mammaro’s custody of her child, and the alleged bad faith of the Division. Moreover, the misstatement in the brief should not be minimized merely because the removal of Mammaro’s child preceded the disputed cocaine analysis. By its own statement, the Division provided the misleading lab results for “background

5 drug tests, and based on allegations from Damon and Mammaro’s brother-in-law that Mammaro had used drugs in front of D.M., the Division filed for temporary guardianship of D.M. Mammaro alleges that the Division does not have a policy of pursuing every positive drug test as a case of child abuse. While the petition for temporary guardianship was pending, the Division placed Mammaro and D.M. in a safe house for victims of domestic violence. There, Mammaro’s interaction with D.M. was supervised by Division employees. Sometime later, Mammaro notified the Division that she was unable to get an extension to stay in the house, but it failed to make arrangements for Mammaro to remain there. Without notifying any Division representative, Mammaro then moved with D.M. to a private home. When the Division learned that Mammaro was no longer in supervised housing, it had police remove D.M. from Mammaro’s custody. Mammaro challenged the removal in New Jersey Superior Court, and within a few days the Division returned D.M. to her and approved the new housing. In June 2012, the Superior Court dismissed the petition for temporary guardianship and found that she had not abused or neglected D.M. Mammaro thereafter filed a complaint in the District of New Jersey against numerous defendants, including the Division and five Division employees (the employees include two supervisors and three caseworkers, but for ease of reference we refer to them collectively as caseworkers

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Michelle Mammaro v. DCP&P, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelle-mammaro-v-dcpp-ca3-2016.