Vk v. Child and Family Services Agency

14 A.3d 628, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 31, 2011 WL 534292
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 2011
Docket08-AA-1105
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 A.3d 628 (Vk v. Child and Family Services Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vk v. Child and Family Services Agency, 14 A.3d 628, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 31, 2011 WL 534292 (D.C. 2011).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Associate Judge:

Petitioner V.K. challenges the decision of a District of Columbia Child and Family Services Agency (the “Agency” or “CFSA”) hearing officer upholding the Agency’s decision to place his name on the District of Columbia Child Protection Register, a “confidential index of cases of abused and neglected children.” 1 Under the limited review that we are authorized to undertake in this case, we conclude that we must affirm the decision of the hearing officer.

I.

CFSA is required by law to maintain a Child Protection Register (the “Register”), which must include, for each “substantiated” or “inconclusive” report of child abuse or neglect, “the identity of the person responsible for the abuse or neglect.” D.C.Code §§ 4-1321.03(b)(3) and 4-1302.02(a)(2) (2001). 2 Access to information contained in the Register is available to specified law enforcement and child welfare agencies. See id. § 4-1302.03(a). The statute also provides that access to some information contained in substantiated reports of child abuse shall be given to the “chief executive officers or directors of day care centers, schools, or any public or private organizations working directly with children, for the purpose of making employment decisions regarding employees and volunteers or prospective employees and volunteers” upon a request that is “made in writing and clearly articulates the basis for the request,” and that “is accompanied by a notarized consent for *630 release of information from the Child Protection Register signed by the employee or volunteer or prospective employee or volunteer.” Id. § 4-1302.08(a-1)(1).

A person who is identified in the Register as responsible for the abuse of a child is entitled to a fair hearing at which he may “challenge information which he or she alleges is incorrect or establish that a report is unfounded.” Id. § 4-1302.06; see also id. § 4-1302.05(b)(3) and 29 DCMR § 5903.2 (2002). At a fair hearing, the appellant and CFSA may call and examine witnesses, cross-examine opposing witnesses, introduce documentary evidence, and submit rebuttal evidence. 29 DCMR § 5909.4. “CFSA shall bear the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence at any fair hearing.” Id. § 5909.7. “An appellant who is aggrieved by the Hearing Officer’s decision may seek judicial review before the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in accordance with the contested case provisions of the District of Columbia’s Administrative Procedure Act, D.C.Code § 2-510.” Id. § 5911.1. CFSA is required to expunge from the Register “[a]ny material successfully challenged as incorrect.” D.C.Code § 4-1302.07(c)(2). However, “[njotwith-standing any other provision of law, substantiated reports shall not be expunged from the Child Protection Register.” Id. § 4-1302.07(a).

II.

On June 12, 2007, CFSA notified petitioner that it had entered his name into the Register on the basis of an investigation (by CFSA social worker Brian Brown) that substantiated allegations that petitioner had abused his (then thirteen-year-old) son E.K. by hitting him. 3 After an informal review 4 did not resolve the matter, a CFSA hearing officer presided over a fair hearing on March 18, 2008. At the hearing, CFSA presented the testimony of social worker Brown and introduced photographs of scars on E.K.’s body that the child said were the result of his father’s disciplining him by hitting him with a cord or other object. Petitioner testified and denied any recent use of corporal discipline and also presented testimony by one of E.K.’s former teachers and two family friends. After the hearing, the hearing officer issued an April 18, 2008 Decision and Order in which she upheld CFSA’s decision and ordered that “[pjetitioner’s name shall remain in the Child Protection Registry.” Petitioner filed exceptions to the decision. In a July 4, 2008 Decision and Order, the hearing officer declined to disturb her ruling. This petition for review followed.

Petitioner contends (1) that the hearing officer’s decision was not supported by substantial evidence; (2) that the hearing officer erred as a matter of law in finding that petitioner abused E.K. through physical discipline; and (3) that the hearing officer erred in denying his request, made at the time he filed exceptions to the April 18, 2008 decision, to supplement the record.

*631 III.

We can dispose quickly of petitioner’s second and third contentions; the first merits a more extensive discussion.

The hearing officer sustained the charge of abuse upon finding that petitioner caused injuries to E.K. through inappropriate physical discipline. Petitioner argues that, in so doing, the hearing officer erred as a matter of law, because she failed to consider “what ... circumstances may have been present if and when physical discipline was employed.” Petitioner emphasizes that whether the force used in disciplining a child is unreasonable or excessive depends on, inter alia, the “gravity of the offense for which the child is being punished,” and that the hearing officer made no findings about the reason(s) for the discipline that purportedly caused the scars on E.K.’s body. Petitioner is correct (and, at oral argument, counsel for CFSA acknowledged) that the relevant statutory provisions do not dictate that physical discipline of a child of E.K’s age that causes injury is unreasonable per se or necessarily constitutes abuse. 5 Nevertheless, this court has viewed as at least “a close question” whether hitting a child with a belt “harshly and with some regularity when she was disobedient” constitutes excessive corporal punishment. In re A.B., 999 A.2d 36, 46-47 (D.C.2010) (reasoning that “[t]he use of an object such as a belt is not necessarily excessive, but it certainly is a ‘relevant’ consideration”). We also recognized in A.B. that “from [what the court found was] the falsity of [the parent’s] denial that he had hit [the child] at all,” the court could infer the absence of extenuating circumstances that justified severe punishment, id. at 47 — an observation that is apropos here as well. In light of our reasoning in A.B., we cannot say that the hearing officer erred as a matter of law when — having concluded that it was more likely than not that petitioner repeatedly hit and injuréd E.K. with a cord or other instrument — she treated that discipline as excessive.

We likewise reject petitioner’s claim that the hearing officer erred by declining his request to supplement the record.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

J.C. v. DC
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2018
J.C. v. Dist. of Columbia
199 A.3d 192 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2018)
DC Dept. of Public Works v. DC Office of Human Rights & Jeffrey Dickerson
195 A.3d 483 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2018)
Mathis v. District of Columbia Housing Authority
124 A.3d 1089 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2015)
Com. v. O'Connor, K.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2014

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 A.3d 628, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 31, 2011 WL 534292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vk-v-child-and-family-services-agency-dc-2011.