Gonzalez v. Santa Clara County Department of Social Services , 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 148 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 1/21/14; opinion following rehearing
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    VERONICA GONZALEZ,                                  H038241
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                    Super. Ct. No. CV204141)
    v.
    SANTA CLARA COUNTY
    DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES
    et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Appellant Veronica Gonzalez (Mother) was reported for child abuse after she
    spanked her 12-year old daughter, A.P. (Daughter), using a wooden spoon with enough
    force to produce visible bruises. The Santa Clara Department of Social Services
    (Department) concluded that the report was “substantiated,” and submitted it to the state
    Department of Justice for inclusion in the Child Abuse Central Index (CACI) under the
    Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act, Penal Code sections 11164 through 11174.3
    (CANRA or Act). Mother unsuccessfully sought relief by administrative appeal and by
    petition for administrative mandamus in the superior court. On appeal to this court, she
    contends that neither the Department nor the superior court gave sufficient weight, or any
    weight, to the right of a parent to impose reasonable discipline on his or her child. We
    will sustain this contention. We also sustain Mother’s contention that the hearing officer
    committed a palpable and prejudicial abuse of discretion by refusing to permit Daughter
    to testify, citing the rationale—which flew in the face of the only evidence before him—
    that she would be traumatized by the experience.
    In reaching these conclusions we neither consider nor decide whether spanking is
    a sound form of discipline. That is a question entrusted not to this court, but to the
    people’s representatives in the Legislature. We hold only that the Legislature has
    recognized the right of parents to impose reasonable corporate punishment on their
    children as a legitimate disciplinary measure. If the Legislature wishes to prohibit
    spanking, or to impose strict liability on parents where otherwise reasonable discipline
    causes bruising, it is more than competent to do so. Here the record does not show that
    any consideration whatever was given to the parents’ right to impose reasonable
    discipline on their children or to basic principles of fair procedure. We will therefore
    reverse the judgment of the superior court with directions to order the Department to
    either conduct a new hearing or set aside its finding that the report is “substantiated” and
    to inform the Department of Justice that the report is “unfounded.”
    BACKGROUND
    Prior to the events giving rise to this matter, Mother and her husband (Father) had
    become gravely concerned about Daughter’s declining academic performance and
    alarming social tendencies. As Father put it, Daughter “had decided that she did not have
    to do her school or home work, repeatedly lied to both of us, [and] started showing
    interest in gang culture.”1 Mother declared that Daughter had become “boy crazy and
    started to mingle with a new type of crowd,” and that they had found pictures and text
    messages on her mobile phone “in reference to gangs.” They “had many discussions”
    with Daughter about these developments, but to no avail: “She would hear us yet
    1
    Mother read her declaration into the record at the hearing. In anticipation of
    Father’s testimony, the hearing officer stated that Father did “not need to read this
    declaration but if he has anything he would like to add he is more than welcome to come
    in and make a statement.” We take this to mean that his declaration was accepted as
    direct testimony. The Department lodged no objection to that or any of the other
    14 declarations entered into the administrative record by Mother.
    2
    continued to go down this road . . . . [S]he began saying that her favorite color is red . . . .
    [S]he was not doing many of her school and homework assignments and even her
    teachers expressed . . . annoyance with her disregard for her work. We also discovered
    that [Daughter] had been lying to us about completing assignments and had been hiding
    test[s] with low scores that were supposed to have gotten signed by us.” Daughter’s older
    sister (Sister) also declared that Daughter’s “interest in gangs seemed to be growing.”
    She “started to become very irresponsible in school by being late to classes, having really
    bad grades because she was doing hardly any of her school and homework, was lying to
    my parents about lots of things, and started hanging around wanna-be gangster kids at
    school.” Daughter herself declared, “I have to admit, for a long time, starting in 6th
    grade, I was always getting to class late, not doing my school assignments, and lying to
    my parents.” She acknowledged that milder disciplinary measures had failed to
    influence her: “When I first started doing all this, my parents grounded me many times,
    by taking away all my fun stuff like my iPod, my T.V., my cell phone, and I was not
    allowed to hang out with friends. I don’t know why that stuff didn’t work on me, but I
    continued to not do what I was supposed to.”
    Mother described in more detail the failure of these less stringent methods of
    discipline: “[A]fter a few weeks of grounding when [Daughter] would get off of
    restriction she would do better for a short time, but then revert back to the same behavior,
    over and over. We would go through several sessions of groundings over several months,
    hoping it would finally make the difference, but grounding proved to be ineffective at
    setting [Daughter] back on the right path. At this point, we did not know what else to do
    to help [Daughter]. We talked again, and felt that the only other option out there, would
    be to try spanking. So the weekend before the incident in question, my husband and I sat
    [Daughter] down and explained to her that, since she kept lying to us repeatedly about
    completing assignments, she now needed to get her agenda signed by each teacher so we
    3
    could be sure she was really doing all of her work. We also informed her that if she
    continued with this irresponsible behavior, [such as] not doing her assignments, being
    late to class and lying to us, she would start to receive one spank on the bottom for each
    thing not done. She understood the new consequences. but still chose to continue the bad
    behavior.”
    According to the Mother, on each of the first three days of the new regime
    Daughter came home without having “complet[ed] her tasks.” This resulting in her being
    spanked by Father “with his hand, only on the buttocks, fully clothed, and in a calm
    manner.” (Capitalization removed.) When Mother picked Daughter up at school on
    Thursday, April 29, 2010, she had again failed to comply with her parents’ directives.
    She gave implausible excuses, a further violation of parental orders. Mother called
    Father “and told him that [Daughter] still wasn’t doing her work and was late again, and
    that he needed to come home and deal with this. He told me he wouldn’t be home until
    late that evening and that I needed to handle it, or else [Daughter] would not respect me
    or take me seriously as a parent. Because of my hand condition, he said I should just use
    a wooden spoon. I told him that I’d rather he just spank her when he gets home from
    work, but he insisted that I should handle it. I finally agreed and told [Daughter] that I
    would have to be the one to spank her this day and that I was going to use a wooden
    spoon because my hands hurt.” Father also declared that the idea of using a spoon had
    been his, and had arisen from the exigency of his not coming home until “very late that
    evening.”
    Mother declared that upon arriving home, she retrieved a wooden spoon and “gave
    [Daughter] around five or six spanks on the bottom, one for each thing not done and for
    making excuses. [Daughter] was fully clothed during the spanking. She was not crying
    or screaming during the spanking.” (Capitalization removed.) Family members declared
    unanimously that spankings had been a rarity in the family, that they had only been given
    4
    in response to misbehavior, that they were never given in the heat of anger, and that they
    were almost always given by Father, and always with an open hand.
    On the next day Daughter disclosed to some friends that she had been spanked
    with a wooden spoon. One of them reported, or “tricked” Daughter into reporting, the
    matter to school authorities.2 An unnamed “mandated child abuse reporter[]”—
    manifestly a school employee—filled out a “suspected child abuse report.” (Emphasis
    omitted.) Under “[i]ncident [i]nformation,” the reporter wrote, “Victim says she gets
    ‘smack’ by parents when she is not doing what parents are expecting from her. She said
    Mom hits her with a wooden spoon and Dad hits her with his hand. Last time she was hit
    was on 4/29/10 on her botto[m] / picture was taken.”3
    2
    Daughter declared without contradiction, “I did tell one of my classmates, J[.],
    that I got spanked . . . . She tried to convince me to tell the office, but I told her that I
    didn’t need to or want to. J[.] took me to the school office to tell them that I got spanked,
    but I didn’t know she was going to do that. She tricked me into going with her by saying
    she needed to pick up her sweater because she was cold.”
    Another friend declared, “I hung out with [Daughter] at lunch the day this whole
    thing happened at the school. [Daughter] was crying hard. I asked her what was wrong
    and she told me that stupid J[.] told the people in the office that her mom spanked her,
    and that they kept her in the office and wouldn’t let her leave, and they made her miss
    choir class. . . . She was crying about J[.] telling and how the office people wouldn’t let
    her go.”
    3
    School authorities reported that the photograph was taken at Daughter’s request,
    but Daughter flatly contradicted this: “I DID NOT ask the nurse to check my butt OR
    allow her to take pictures of it. They told me I HAD TO, as if I had no choice, and told
    me to take my pants down so they could take a picture, even though I was saying ‘no’
    and felt embar[r]assed and miserable.”
    Daughter returned to this subject near the end of her declaration: “I demand that
    any and all pictures of my butt be removed from any files and returned to me so that I can
    destroy them. I never gave permission to anyone to photograph my butt and my parents
    never gave permission either. I do not give anyone permission to look at any of those
    photos any longer. Thank you.” This demand was ignored. Worse, and astonishingly,
    the photograph or a copy was lodged with the administrative record in the superior court,
    apparently unsealed, and a photocopy of that exhibit is included in the clerk’s transcript
    5
    A social worker from the Department was summoned to the school. Daughter told
    the social worker that she had “not been getting along” with her mother due to declining
    grades. As reported by the social worker, Mother had “told [Daughter] if she does not get
    her planner signed by all her teachers to prove she complete [sic] her work or wrote [sic]
    down her assignment she would get hit with a wooden spoon.”4 Daughter supposedly
    told the social worker that on the previous day, “she was not feeling too well and did
    forget to get one of her teacher’s signatures and so when she got home [Mother] told her
    she was going to get four smacks on the butt with a wooden spoon for no signature and
    for making excuses. [Daughter] stated that her butt is very sore today and her friends
    asked what was wrong and she talked to them what happen [sic], even though her parents
    told her to never tell anyone about the spanking. [Daughter] started to cry and said she
    was scared of causing more trouble for herself.” According to the social worker,
    Daughter attributed statements to Mother that “she needs to smack her with a spoon so it
    will hurt more.” Daughter also supposedly reported that when receiving the spanking,
    on appeal. On our own motion, we have ordered that all copies in possession of this
    court, the trial court, or the parties, be filed under seal.
    4
    Daughter flatly denied or materially qualified nearly every statement attributed
    to her by the social worker. In this instance she declared, “It says that I said that I would
    get ‘hit’ with a spoon if I did not get my planner signed by my teachers. That is not what
    I said. What I said was, ‘I would get spanked if I kept lying and not doing my work and
    didn’t get my planner signed’. I never said it would be with a wooden spoon or that my
    mom would do it. I did not explain to them, and they didn’t ask, that my parents talked
    with me about starting spanking because grounding wasn’t working for all these months,
    and that my mom only used the spoon cuz of her hands and cuz my dad wouldn’t be
    home, and only this one time.”
    She also protested more generally about the attribution to her of the term “hit”: “It
    keeps saying that I said I got ‘hit’ but I did not say that. I said ‘spanked’. THEY kept
    saying ‘hit’ and I kept saying, ‘no, spanked’, but they would not listen to me.”
    6
    “she had to remove her clothes and bend over the bed.”5 Daughter reportedly “stated she
    is scared of [Mother and Father] and knows she needs to be good to avoid getting a
    smack, but sometimes she has a hard time.” The social worker also reported that
    Daughter “asked if she could stay [with] her paternal grandmother tonight because she
    was scared to go home,” and that Daughter “ha[d] thought about staying with her paternal
    grandmother because she seems to get along better with her and things are not so scary.”6
    The parents “came to the school,” where they were questioned by the social
    worker, as well as by police, whom the social worker had summoned. Mother told the
    social worker that Daughter “ha[d] been lying to her about doing her homework and her
    grades have been declining. [Mother] ha[d] been taking [Daughter’s] phone away and
    grounding her but nothing seem [sic] to work. [Mother] stated she talked to [Daughter]
    and warned her that she would begin to use smack and stated that she just started
    smacking [Daughter] with a wooden spoon last week and has been spanking her almost
    5
    All family members forcefully repudiated this statement. Daughter declared, “I
    NEVER, EVER told ANYONE that my mom spanked me without any clothes on and
    bent over. I don’t know where they got that from or why they would say that. That
    makes me really MAD.” Mother and Father also took strenuous exception to this
    suggestion, both insisting that spankings had always been administered over Daughter’s
    clothing. The older sister declared that the suggestion of spanking “without any clothes
    on and bent over the bed” was “just sick, and although I wasn’t there at that moment, I
    KNOW my mom would NEVER do something like that.”
    6
    Daughter: “I NEVER said I was scared of my mom and dad. [¶] . . . I NEVER
    said that I wanted to stay at my grandma’s house because things are not scary over there.
    I SAID, that I COULD go to my grandma’s house IF THEY did not allow me to go
    home, and I only said this because they asked me, ‘where would you want to go IF you
    could not go home?’. I DID tell them that I wanted to go home and relax, more than
    once. One of the cops even came in and asked me towards the end of this very long day,
    ‘what would you like to do now?’ and I replied, ‘I just want to go home and relax.’ So
    OBVIOUSLY, I’m NOT scared of my parents or uncomfortable at my home.”
    7
    every day.”7 Asked whether she thought this was effective, Mother reportedly stated that
    “she believes it was working and she is doing the best she can to raise [Daughter] right
    and [that she] did not want [Daughter] to end up like her with a limited education.
    [Mother] stated that she did not mean to leave marks but stated she had to use to a
    wooden spoon because she is so small her hand would not even be felt if she tried to
    smack [Daughter] with her hand.”8
    After Daughter and both parents had been questioned by a police officer, the
    anonymous reporter told the officer “she did not believe this case needed to go further.”
    Daughter “was reunited with her parents.”
    About two weeks later, the social worker visited the family home. Both Mother
    and Daughter told her that things seemed better between them, that Mother had
    administered no further physical discipline, and that they did not need counseling or other
    resources. Mother stated “she can’t believe that the report was done and that everyone
    thinks she is a bad parent. [She] stated she loves kids and it would be a great disservice if
    7
    All four family members declared that this was the only time Mother ever used a
    wooden spoon to spank Daughter.
    8
    Several versions of Mother’s reasons for using the spoon appear in the record.
    The police report attributes to Daughter the statement that “her Mother uses the spoon
    because [Mother’s] hand does not hurt,” which could mean either that Mother’s hand did
    not inflict pain on Daughter or that by using the spoon Mother avoided hurting her own
    hand. According to Mother, both of these were factors: “When the kids were smaller,
    either I or my husband would administer a spanking, but as the kids got bigger, they didnt
    even seem to blink if I spanked, particularly [Daughter]. She has a very sturdy and solid
    frame and it came to the point where my spank was so weak to her, she’d just scoff at me
    and walk away like nothing. Also, the older I’ve gotten, my hands are often in pain,
    making everyday tasks painful and difficult. Writing, typing, knocking on doors,
    flossing, cooking and preparing food, and holding the steering wheel are some examples
    of tasks that can bring on the pain, which is why in more recent years, if a spank was
    necessary, it was usually given by [Father].” This was compressed elsewhere in the
    police report to the statement that “hand spanking did not work. [Mother] is small and
    said it hurt her more than [Daughter].”
    8
    she would not be able to work with children. [She] is thinking about becoming a physical
    education teacher someday. [She] reports that she had confronted difficult kids and feels
    she has been successful in changing things around for them.”
    Nothing in the social worker’s report suggested that there was any violence in the
    home apart from disciplinary spankings. Daughter reported that her parents often
    disagreed, but she “d[id] not remember things ever getting physical.” Sister, when
    questioned by the social worker, confirmed Daughter’s report that Sister “did not have
    concerned [sic] at home or school, and is not scared of [the parents] and stated that she
    manages to stay out of trouble unlike [Daughter].”
    The social worker nonetheless concluded that there was “still some risk” to
    Daughter because Mother had resorted to spanking with a wooden spoon when frustrated,
    had persisted in this practice “even though the behaviors were not changing,” and had
    declined to pursue counseling when it was suggested earlier. The social worker
    concluded her report as follows: “The allegation of physical abuse is substantiated
    against [Mother]. [She] reported hitting [Daughter] with a wooden spoon after making
    other attempts to address [Daughter’s] behaviors. [Mother] decline services [sic] and
    need for resources for counseling [sic].[9] The undersigned did report [Mother] to the
    department of justice.”
    9
    Mother’s willingness to accept “services” was supremely irrelevant to the
    question whether she had inflicted reportable child abuse on her daughter. Further, the
    record on this subject is highly ambiguous. Although the transcription may be garbled,
    the social worker appeared to testify that efforts to get school counselors involved in the
    family had been underway when the events in question occurred, but had not yet borne
    fruit because the counselor had not yet spoken with Mother. The counselor, who was
    present during the social worker’s original questioning of Daughter, supposedly said then
    that Mother had “refused” to sign a required permission slip. But when asked whether he
    or she had “contacted” Mother, the counselor reportedly replied, “yes but we have not
    been able to touch base.” The social worker’s original report described Daughter as
    saying that Mother “did not want to sign” a permission slip, but also said Daughter was
    “unsure” whether Mother “did not want to consent to her getting counseling at school.”
    9
    On or about July 14, 2010, the social worker prepared a “child abuse summary
    report” for submission to the state Department of Justice. (Capitalization removed.) It
    described the abuse as “physical” and under “nature of injuries” listed “bruises on botom
    [sic].” Also prepared on that day was a “notice of child abuse central index listing,”
    (capitalization removed) addressed to Mother, stating that Department had “completed an
    investigation of alleged child abuse or neglect,” and had found the allegations
    “substantiated.” Daughter was named as the “alleged victim.” In a space for “the
    specific act(s) of abuse or neglect alleged against you,” the only entry was “physical
    abuse.” The notice indicated that if Mother “want[ed] to challenge [her] listing on the
    CACI,” she must submit a request for a “[g]rievance” hearing within 30 days.
    On a date not disclosed by the record, Mother submitted the required request for a
    hearing. After a number of continuances, the matter was heard on February 24, 2011.
    Early in the hearing, Mother informed the hearing officer that her attorney had
    “abandoned” her without notice a week earlier. She did not request a continuance,
    however, and the hearing officer began taking testimony. He first asked the social
    worker to “tell me exactly what [you] did in her investigation, just kind of give me an
    overview of what happened from the time you received the referral.” The ensuing
    narrative largely conformed to the written report. At its conclusion, the hearing officer
    may have attempted to convey to Mother that she was entitled to question the social
    worker. Possibly misunderstanding his rather vague remarks, Mother indicated that she
    wished to present her own testimony. She then gave her narrative of events, consisting
    largely of a reading of her declaration. The hearing officer refused to permit Daughter to
    Coupled with the counselor’s statements that efforts to establish communication had not
    yet succeeded, the implication seems to be that Mother was not willing to sign the “slip”
    without further explanation. Beyond this and the family’s expressed belief that it did not
    need services, nothing in the record supports the “refus[al]” attributed to Mother by the
    social worker’s report.
    10
    testify. (See pt. II, post.) Father then testified, taking particular issue with the social
    worker’s claim “about bending [Daughter] over the bed and spanking her on her bare
    butt, which has never happen and I do not know where that came from.” After Father
    concluded his testimony the hearing officer asked an additional question of the social
    worker, and counsel for the Department asked a question of Father. The transcript then
    abruptly ends. It appears from the declaration of the custodian of records, which
    accompanied the administrative record, that further proceedings took place, the record of
    which was lost. (See pt. IV, post.)
    On the next day the hearing officer issued his “recommendation and summary of
    findings.” (Capitalization removed.) He acknowledged the presence of “several points
    of contention in the case,” including the question whether the spanking was administered
    with pants down: “[Mother] is emphatic that she did not ask [Daughter] to pull down her
    pants before she spanked her and [Daughter]’s declaration supports this statement.
    However, the [social worker’s investigative narrative] states that [Daughter] told her that
    she had her pants down.” There is no indication of how the hearing officer resolved this
    or the numerous other conflicts between the social worker’s testimony and that of the
    family members. (But see pt. III, post.) He attributed a number of contentions to
    Mother, including that (1) Daughter’s bruising “is not a traumatic condition and does not
    meet the criteria in the Penal Code for Physical Abuse”; (2) the bruises “were not major,
    not intended . . .[,] not known during the spanking[,] and were an accident”; (3) the
    spanking did not “constitute[] Child Abuse”; and (4) it was not “unlawful corporal
    punishment or injury” as defined by statute. In apparent response to these contentions, he
    wrote, “The spanking administered by [Mother] was not an accident and was willful, and
    the fact that she did not intend to cause harm to her daughter does not make the bruise an
    accident. The evidence shows that [Mother] did spank her daughter with a wooden
    spoon, causing bruising to her daughter’s buttocks. Bruising is an injury and can be
    11
    considered a traumatic condition. [Mother]’s actions meet the definition of physical abuse
    and unlawful corporal punishment as defined in the penal codes. [¶] Therefore I am
    recommending that this referral continue to be classified as substantiated and that there
    be no change in the CACI.”
    On March 18, 2011, the then-director of the Department issued a concurrence in
    the hearing officer’s decision.
    On June 30, 2011, Mother filed a petition for writ of administrative mandamus
    (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) asking the superior court to command the Department “to set
    aside and revoke” the hearing officer’s order and the director’s concurrence. She filed an
    amended petition on November 29, 2011. Among the arguments set out in her supporting
    memorandum was that the “discipline of her daughter was a lawful form of corporal
    punishment [that] does not rise to the level of child abuse under Penal Code § 11165.6.”
    (Capitalization removed.)
    At the hearing on the petition, the court expressed its view that the case presented
    no factual issues for resolution, and that the court was not empowered to determine
    whether the record established a case of child abuse. The court ultimately ruled from the
    bench as follows: “[A]s I have already indicated my position here is not to agree or
    disagree with the findings of the administrative hearing. My job, I believe, is to
    determine whether or not there was a proper administrative hearing and or whether this
    was abuse of discretion. [¶] . . . I can’t look to the consequences then look back and try
    to make a decision about whether or not the administrative hearing was correct. [¶] It’s
    an unfortunate situation, but in my role here I believe that there has not been sufficient
    basis set forth to grant the writ. So, based upon that I am going to [deny the writ].”
    Counsel for Mother requested a statement of decision. The court expressed doubt
    that she was entitled to one, but invited counsel to “submit something to me and I will
    consider it.” On the next day the court issued an order stating that Mother had made a
    12
    timely request for a statement of decision, and directing counsel for the Department to
    prepare and submit a tentative statement of decision. Slightly over a month later, the
    court executed a 12-page statement of decision prepared by county counsel. The
    statement included factual recitals drawn largely from statements attributed to Daughter
    by the social worker. It did not mention conflicting evidence, including Daughter’s own
    contrary averments. For example, the statement recited as a fact that “[t]he child said that
    the mother told her that she used the wooden spoon because it would hurt more,” despite
    testimony and declarations from family members to the effect that Mother used the spoon
    because her hands were sensitive and she was unable to strike hard enough to make an
    impression. (See fn. 8, ante.) The statement recited that Daughter “let the school nurse
    check her behind and take a picture of it,” disregarding Daughter’s unequivocal averment
    that she was coerced into exposing her buttocks. The statement also adopted the social
    worker’s report that Daughter had told her “that the mother made her remove her clothes
    and bend over the bed when she hit her,” without acknowledging Daughter’s vehement
    denial that she had made any such assertion and all four family members’ strenuous
    contradiction of the assertion itself. The statement recited that Daughter had said she “is
    afraid of her parents,” without noting the qualification—reflected in the social worker’s
    own live testimony—that Daughter had said she was afraid she had gotten into more
    trouble because of the classes missed due to her lengthy interrogations over this incident.
    In its recital of background facts the statement of decision acknowledged Mother’s
    assertions that she “had not abused the child but had only attempted to discipline her.”
    The statement addressed that issue as follows: “The mother attempts to avoid the import
    of Sections 11165.4 and 11165.5 by arguing that she was only a concerned parent who
    was at her wits end trying to get her child’s attention when all previous disciplinary
    measures had failed. But the legislature, in its wisdom, has elected not to include a ‘good
    intentions’ exception to these statutes, which are designed to prevent child abuse. This
    13
    Court finds that the Review Officer did not abuse his discretion in determining that the
    mother’s physical discipline of the child on April 29, 2010, constituted child abuse.”
    The statement acknowledged that, contrary to the court’s statements at the hearing,
    it was obliged to exercise its independent judgment to determine whether the findings
    necessary to sustain the hearing officer’s decision were in turn supported by the evidence
    in the administrative record. The statement recited that the court had “re-reviewed the
    evidence independently following the hearing.” The statement concluded that the hearing
    officer’s findings were supported by the weight of the evidence.
    The court issued both a judgment and a separate order denying the petition for writ
    of mandate and finding that “proper procedures were followed and there was no abuse of
    discretion.” Mother filed this timely appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Parental Disciplinary Privilege
    A. Standards of Review
    Because recordation in CACI as a probable child abuser impinges upon
    fundamental rights, the superior court must exercise its independent judgment in
    determining whether the evidence before the Department established that the report is
    “substantiated.” (Saraswati v. County of San Diego (2011) 
    202 Cal. App. 4th 917
    , 928
    [independent review warranted by “the right to familial and informational privacy
    impacted when a parent is publicly identified as a possible abuser of his or her child”].)
    On appeal from the trial court’s judgment in such a case, the precedents do not authorize
    the reviewing court to exercise its independent judgment with respect to the trial court’s
    factual findings. Rather the court is required to apply the substantial evidence rule, under
    which the trial court’s findings must be upheld if supported by substantial evidence. (Roy
    v. Superior Court (2011) 
    198 Cal. App. 4th 1337
    , 1346, quoting Griffiths v. Superior
    Court (2002) 
    96 Cal. App. 4th 757
    , 767-768 [“After the trial court exercises its
    14
    independent judgment in reviewing the facts, the appellate court confines itself to
    determining whether substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings.”].)10 With
    respect to questions of law, of course, the appellate court exercises its independent
    judgment. (Ibid.) And where the controlling facts are undisputed, their effect is a
    question of law. (8 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Extraordinary Writs, § 279,
    p. 1193, citing David Kikkert & Associates v. Shine (1970) 
    6 Cal. App. 3d 112
    , 116.)
    B. Applicability of Privilege to CANRA
    The question before the hearing officer, and the trial court, was whether the
    evidence established a “substantiated” report of “child abuse.” (Pen. Code, § 11169,
    subd. (a).) A report is “ ‘[s]ubstantiated’ ” if the conduct reported is “determined by the
    investigator who conducted the investigation to constitute child abuse or neglect . . . ,
    based upon evidence that makes it more likely than not that child abuse . . . occurred. A
    substantiated report shall not include a report . . . [found by] the investigator who
    conducted the investigation . . . to be false, inherently improbable, to involve an
    accidental injury, or to not constitute child abuse or neglect as defined in section
    11165.6.” (Pen. Code, § 11165.12, subd. (b).) In addition to “ ‘neglect,’ ” which is not at
    issue here, the Act recognizes five categories of “ ‘child abuse,’ ” two of which are
    arguably implicated here. (Pen. Code, § 11165.6.) The first, “ ‘willful harming or
    injuring of a child,” is defined as “willfully caus[ing] or permit[ting] any child to suffer,
    or inflict[ing] thereon, unjustifiable physical pain or mental suffering.” (Pen. Code,
    § 11165.3.) The second, “ ‘unlawful corporal punishment or injury,’ ” is defined as
    10
    This approach continues to hold sway although it has been criticized by the
    leading commentator on California procedure. (See 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed.
    2008) Appeal, §§ 385-387, pp. 441-445, citing with approval, Moran v. Board of Med.
    Examiners of Calif. (1948) 32 C.2d 301, 317 (dis. opn. of Traynor, J.); Lacy v. California
    Unemp. Ins. App. Bd. (1971) 
    17 Cal. App. 3d 1128
    , 1135, fn. 2.)
    15
    “willfully inflict[ing] upon any child any cruel or inhuman corporal punishment or injury
    resulting in a traumatic condition.” (Pen. Code, § 11165.4.)
    These definitions have been borrowed almost verbatim from the statutes defining
    two forms of criminal child abuse. Penal Code section 273a makes it a crime to
    “willfully cause[] or permit[] any child to suffer, or inflict[] thereon unjustifiable physical
    pain or mental suffering.” (Pen. Code, § 273a, subds. (a), (b).) Penal Code section 273d,
    subdivision (a), makes it a crime to “willfully inflict[] upon a child any cruel or inhuman
    corporal punishment or an injury resulting in a traumatic condition.”
    It has long been held in prosecutions for these and similar crimes against children
    that, “a parent has a right to reasonably discipline his or her child and may administer
    reasonable punishment without being criminally liable.” (People v. Clark (2011) 
    201 Cal. App. 4th 235
    , 249 (Clark), citing People v. Whitehurst (1992) 
    9 Cal. App. 4th 1045
    ,
    1050 (Whitehurst); see People v. Curtiss (1931) 
    116 Cal. App. Supp. 771
    , 775-780
    (Curtiss); People v. Stewart (1961) 
    188 Cal. App. 2d 88
    , 91.) A similar privilege is
    recognized in tort law: From 1931 to 1971, parents in California possessed a blanket
    immunity from liability to their children. (See Trudell v. Leatherby (1931) 
    212 Cal. 678
    ,
    680, overruled in Gibson v. Gibson (1971) 
    3 Cal. 3d 914
    , 923.) Before abolishing that
    rule entirely, the Supreme Court limited it to negligence cases. (Emery v. Emery (1955)
    
    45 Cal. 2d 421
    , 429-430.) In doing so the court held that parents’ “wide discretion in the
    performance of . . . parental functions” did not extend to the wilful infliction of injuries
    “beyond the limits of reasonable parental discipline.” (Id. at p. 430.) Thus parents are
    privileged to “administer reasonable punishment with impunity,” but the parent who
    “exceeds that limit . . . commits a battery and is civilly liable for the consequences.”
    16
    (Gillett v. Gillett (1959) 
    168 Cal. App. 2d 102
    , 104; 5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th
    ed. 2005) Torts, § 28, pp. 88-91; see Rest.2d, Torts, §§ 147-155.)11
    In criminal cases the privilege is embodied in a pattern instruction informing
    jurors that the use of “physical force” against a child is justified “if a reasonable person
    would find that punishment was necessary under the circumstances and that the . . .
    physical force used . . . was reasonable.” (CALCRIM No. 3405; see 
    id., Nos. 821
    [in
    prosecution of parent for child abuse likely to produce great bodily harm or death, state
    must prove that parent was not “reasonably disciplining a child”], 822 [same, prosecution
    for criminal infliction of physical punishment on child].)
    As the language of the instruction indicates, successful assertion of the privilege
    requires both a reasonable occasion for discipline and a punitive measure that is
    reasonable in kind and degree. (See 
    Clark, supra
    , 201 Cal.App.4th at p. 250, quoting
    
    Whitehurst, supra
    , 9 Cal.app.4th at p. 1050 [“ ‘corporal punishment is unjustifiable when
    it is . . . not necessary, or when such punishment, although warranted, was excessive’ ”].)
    It may also be said that the privilege requires a genuine disciplinary motive, as distinct
    from “an intent to endanger the health and safety of the child, or to achieve an unlawful
    purpose.” (People v. Checketts (1999) 
    71 Cal. App. 4th 1190
    , 1192 [father properly
    convicted of false imprisonment where he ordered daughter to remain in attic so that
    social worker would not see her black eye]; see People v. Senior (1993) 
    3 Cal. App. 4th 765
    , 781 [parent entitled to custody cannot ordinarily commit kidnapping, but “is liable
    for kidnapping if he or she exercises custodial rights for an illegal purpose”].)
    11
    In a somewhat similar vein, the dependent child law provides that in the
    absence of “serious physical injury,” the “serious physical harm” that will warrant
    assertion of juvenile court jurisdiction “does not include reasonable and age-appropriate
    spanking to the buttocks.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300, subd. (a).)
    17
    Mother invoked this privilege implicitly at the administrative hearing and
    explicitly in the trial court, citing many of the authorities discussed above for the
    proposition that parents are entitled to impose reasonable discipline upon their children.
    She argued as a factual matter that the discipline imposed here was reasonable. Neither
    the hearing officer nor the trial court acknowledged such an entitlement and neither
    appeared to give any consideration to the question whether the spanking at issue fell
    within the zone of reasonable discipline. The first question, then, is whether a parent
    accused of child abuse for purposes of reporting under CANRA may rely on the same
    disciplinary privilege that limits a parent’s criminal culpability and civil liability. Our
    study of the statutory text and history of the Act, as well as relevant precedent, compels
    us to answer this question in the affirmative, at least in the context of the facts presented
    here.
    Foremost of the considerations leading us to this conclusion is the Legislature’s
    explicit acknowledgment of a parental disciplinary prerogative in conjunction with its
    adoption of CANRA in 1980. In an uncodified statement of intention, the Legislature
    declared that “the reporting of child abuse and any subsequent action by a child
    protective agency involves a delicate balance between the right of parents to control and
    raise their own children by imposing reasonable discipline and the social interest in the
    protection and safety of the child. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to require
    the reporting of child abuse which is of a serious nature and is not conduct which
    constitutes reasonable parental discipline.” (Stats. 1980, ch. 1071, § 5, p. 3425.)
    This plain expression of intent could end our analysis, but we find additional
    support for our reading elsewhere as well. First, as already noted, the two forms of child
    abuse most directly implicated here (Pen. Code, §§ 1165.3, 1165.4) are defined in terms
    materially identical to those used to define parallel forms of criminal child abuse (Pen.
    Code, §§ 273a, subds. (a), (b), 273d). “Where a statute is framed in language of an
    18
    earlier enactment on the same or an analogous subject, and that enactment has been
    judicially construed, the Legislature is presumed to have adopted that construction.”12
    (People v. Harrison (1989) 
    48 Cal. 3d 321
    , 329; People v. Masbruch (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 1001
    , 1007; see Los Angeles County Dependency Attorneys, Inc. v. Department of
    General Services (2008) 
    161 Cal. App. 4th 230
    , 240.) This is a rule of long standing.
    (See, e.g., Ex parte Nowak (1921) 
    184 Cal. 701
    , 705-706, disapproved on another point
    in Ex parte Trombley (1948) 
    31 Cal. 2d 801
    , 804-805; Union Oil Associates v. Johnson
    (1935) 
    2 Cal. 2d 727
    , 734-735.) It has previously been applied to questions of what
    constitutes reportable child abuse under CANRA. (See People ex rel. Eichenberger v.
    Stockton Pregnancy Control Medical Clinic, Inc. (1988) 
    203 Cal. App. 3d 225
    , 234 [by
    incorporating criminal definition of sexual assault, CANRA made consensual sex
    between 21-year old and 14-year old reportable; Legislature was “presumed to know the
    meaning given statutes by the courts”].)
    As already noted, courts had recognized disciplinary privilege as a defense to
    criminal child abuse charges long before CANRA was enacted. The seminal case was a
    prosecution under Penal Code section 273a involving a teacher whom the court viewed as
    standing “in loco parentis” for purposes of disciplining her pupils. 
    (Curtiss, supra
    , 
    116 Cal. App. Supp. 771
    , 775.) The privilege was applied to cases of unlawful discipline,
    12
    As originally adopted in 1980, CANRA did not repeat the definitions of the
    criminal statutes in haec verba, as it does now, but incorporated them by reference. (See
    former Pen. Code, § 11165, subd. (g), as adopted by Stats. 1980, ch. 1071, § 4, p. 3421
    [defining child abuse to include “any act or omission proscribed by Section 273a (willful
    cruelty or unjustifiable punishment of a child) or 273d (corporal punishment or injury)”].)
    The earliest reference to either statute appears in the 1974 amendments to the predecessor
    statute, which imposed a duty to report when it “appear[ed] . . . that any injury prohibited
    by the terms of Section 273a has been inflicted upon the minor.” (Former Pen. Code,
    § 11161.5, subd. (a), as amended by Stats. 1974, ch. 348, §	 1, p. 680; repealed by
    Stats.1980, ch. 1071, §	 1.) The definitional sections involved here were adopted in more
    or less their present form in 1987. (Stats. 1987, ch. 1459, §§ 9, 10, p. 5519.)
    19
    prosecuted under the predecessor to Penal Code section 273d, in People v. 
    Stewart, supra
    , 
    188 Cal. App. 2d 88
    , 91. (See also 
    Whitehurst, supra
    , 
    9 Cal. App. 4th 1045
    , 1050;
    
    Clark, supra
    , 
    201 Cal. App. 4th 235
    , 250.) From this history we may infer that the
    Legislature intended the disciplinary privilege to inform the definition of at least those
    forms of reportable child abuse.
    Further, the Legislature elected to place CANRA in the Penal Code, specifically in
    Part IV (“Prevention of Crime and Apprehension of Criminals”), Title One
    (“Investigation and Control of Crimes and Criminals”), rather than in, say, the Welfare
    and Institutions Code, the Government Code, or the Health and Safety Code. Its
    placement in the code governing criminal culpability and prosecution tends to suggest
    that it was addressed to conduct that was criminal in character. Of course, in construing a
    code provision, “ ‘chapter and section headings cannot be resorted to for the purpose of
    creating ambiguity when none exists.’ ” (Woodland Park Management, LLC v. City of
    East Palo Alto Rent Stabilization Bd. (2010) 
    181 Cal. App. 4th 915
    , 924, fn. 5, quoting
    City of Berkeley v. Cukierman (1993) 
    14 Cal. App. 4th 1331
    , 1340.) But where the
    intended application of a statute is doubtful, “organization and section headings may
    properly be considered in determining intent,” and may even be “ ‘ “entitled to
    considerable weight.” [Citations.]’ ” (Ibid., quoting People v. Hull (1991) 
    1 Cal. 4th 266
    ,
    272.) Here, the placement of CANRA supports an inference that it was aimed at criminal
    conduct, and that the Legislature expected its application to be guided by at least some of
    the substantive principles of criminal law. (See Planned Parenthood Affiliates v. Van de
    Kamp (1986) 
    181 Cal. App. 3d 245
    , 267 [CANRA “contemplate[s] criminal acts of child
    abuse”].)
    We find yet another clue in the text of the original Act. In adopting it the
    Legislature was required to determine whether it mandated local expenditures that would
    be subject to subvention—meaning, in essence, reimbursement from state funds. (See
    20
    Cal. Const., art. 13B, § 6; Gov. Code, § 17561; former Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 2231,
    2234.) The Legislature found that subvention was not required because the Act came
    within an exemption for enactments “creat[ing] a new crime or infraction, eliminat[ing] a
    crime or infraction, or chang[ing] the penalty for a crime or infraction.” (Stats. 1980, ch.
    1071, § 6, p. 3426, citing former Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 2231, 2234; see Cal.Const., art.
    13B, § 6, subd. (a)(2); Gov. Code, § 17556, subd. (g).) While this may not furnish
    sufficient ground to find the definition of reportable child abuse perfectly congruent with
    the outlines of pertinent penal statutes, it certainly lends support to the conclusion that
    well settled principles limiting culpability for criminal child abuse should be consulted in
    applying parallel provisions of CANRA.13
    We also recognize that CANRA explicitly exempts three specific categories of
    conduct, not including parental discipline, from the definition of “ ‘unlawful corporal
    punishment or injury.’ ” (Pen. Code, § 11165.4.)14 This suggests an occasion to invoke
    the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius, under which “the enumeration of things
    to which a statute applies is presumed to exclude things not mentioned.” (O’Grady v.
    13
    Nothing we say should be construed as importing a new rule under which a
    person accused of child abuse under CANRA may erect as an obstacle any fact or
    circumstance that might impede criminal conviction for the same conduct. We hold no
    more than that CANRA must be understood to incorporate the parental privilege of
    reasonable discipline, at least insofar as it affects the two forms of child abuse at issue
    here.
    14
    “It does not include an amount of force that is reasonable and necessary for a
    person employed by or engaged in a public school to quell a disturbance threatening
    physical injury to person or damage to property, for purposes of self-defense, or to obtain
    possession of weapons or other dangerous objects within the control of the pupil, as
    authorized by Section 49001 of the Education Code. It also does not include the exercise
    of the degree of physical control authorized by Section 44807 of the Education Code. It
    also does not include an injury caused by reasonable and necessary force used by a peace
    officer acting within the course and scope of his or her employment as a peace officer.”
    (Pen. Code, § 11165.4.)
    21
    Superior Court (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1423
    , 1443.) Like nearly all “rules” of statutory
    construction, however, this doctrine is most properly viewed as a preference or guideline
    which must be balanced against other indications of legislative intent, and must yield
    when they preponderate against it. (See Ocean Harbor House Homeowners Ass’n v.
    California Coastal Com’n (2008) 
    163 Cal. App. 4th 215
    , 241-242, quoting Estate of
    Banerjee (1978) 
    21 Cal. 3d 527
    , 539 [maxim is “ ‘no magical incantation, nor does it refer
    to an immutable rule,” but “[l]ike all such guidelines, . . . has many exceptions’ ”]; see 
    id. at p.
    242, quoting Burns v. California Fair Plan (2007) 
    152 Cal. App. 4th 646
    , 656
    [maxim “ ‘does not apply where its application would run counter to a well-established
    principal of law’ ” or where operation “ ‘ “ ‘would contradict a discernible and contrary
    legislative intent’ ” ’ ”].) Here, as we have noted, the Legislature expressly declared its
    intention to preserve the right of parents to physically discipline their children. The
    failure to reiterate that intention in defining specific forms of child abuse does not permit
    us to disregard it.
    We conclude that the parental privilege to impose reasonable physical discipline
    upon a child must be incorporated into CANRA’s definitions of what constitutes
    “ ‘willful harming or injuring of a child’ ” (Pen. Code, § 11165.3) and “ ‘unlawful
    corporal punishment or injury’ ” (Pen. Code, § 11165.4). It follows that Mother’s
    conduct here was not reportable child abuse if it constituted the reasonable imposition of
    discipline.
    C. Application
    The trial court refused to consider whether Mother’s conduct constituted
    reasonable parental discipline. Instead its statement of decision—written by counsel for
    the District—erected a straw man in the form of a “ ‘good intentions’ exception” which
    “the legislature, in its wisdom, has elected not to include.” We agree that there is no
    22
    “good intentions” defense, as such, to a charge of unlawful discipline.15 That begs the
    question posed by Mother, however, which is whether her conduct fell within the
    privilege of a parent to impose reasonable discipline on his or her child. As we have
    concluded, a genuine disciplinary intention can furnish a bar to a finding of child abuse
    under CANRA when the circumstances present a reasonable occasion for discipline and
    the discipline imposed is reasonable in kind and measure. The trial court did not
    acknowledge, let alone consider, these principles, despite Mother’s explicit assertion of
    such a right and her citation of several of the relevant authorities. This was error, and it
    can withstand appellate scrutiny only if we can say that it could not affect the outcome,
    i.e., that the trial court, applying the principles we have described, could not find that
    Mother’s conduct fell within the privilege. We do not believe the record supports such a
    conclusion.
    As we have said, a successful assertion of the parental disciplinary privilege
    requires three elements: (1) a genuine disciplinary motive; (2) a reasonable occasion for
    15
    At least this is true in most jurisdictions including California. Something like
    the rule posited by the trial court once prevailed, and may still prevail, in some
    jurisdictions. (See State v. Pendergrass (1837) 
    19 N.C. 365
    [1837 N.C. LEXIS 42], cited
    in 
    Curtiss, supra
    , 
    116 Cal. App. Supp. 771
    , 776 [parent was immune from legal
    consequences for physical discipline unless it “result[ed] in disfigurement of or
    permanent injury,” or was “inflicted maliciously”]; 
    Curtiss, supra
    , at p. 777 [citing
    additional cases following this approach]; J.B. v. Department of Public Welfare (Pa.
    Commw. Ct. 2003) 
    824 A.2d 342
    , 345, citing Boland v. Leska (Pa. Super. Ct. 1982) 308
    Pa.Super. 169, 176 [
    454 A.2d 75
    , 78] [“In Pennsylvania, a parent may use corporal
    punishment as a means of discipline provided that the parent does not act with malicious
    intent and there is not a substantial risk of death, disfigurement, serious bodily injury,
    gross degradation, extreme pain or mental distress.”].) The court in Curtiss rejected this
    rule in favor of the “more enlightened view” that neither a severe injury nor a malicious
    intent is required to establish culpability; rather, “both the reasonableness of, and the
    necessity for, the punishment [are] to be determined by a jury, under the circumstances of
    each case.” 
    (Curtiss, supra
    , at p. 777, citing Clasen v. Pruhs (1903) 
    95 N.W. 640
    , 642
    [
    69 Neb. 278
    ]; see 
    id. at p.
    778 [citing additional cases].)
    23
    discipline; and (3) a disciplinary measure reasonable in kind and degree. Here there is no
    room for serious debate about the first and second elements. The social worker
    characterized Mother’s actions as born out of “frustrat[ion],” apparently meaning to
    imply that she was acting irrationally, in desperation. Nothing in the record supports
    such a view, or otherwise supports a rejection of the parents’ and Daughter’s consistent
    reports that the spanking was entirely the product of a genuine and deliberate disciplinary
    purpose, i.e., to arrest troubling behavior patterns exhibited by Daughter. There was no
    evidence of any other reason for Mother’s actions. The social worker failed to uncover
    evidence of any more general tendency toward violence in the home. There was no hint
    of eagerness or self-gratification in the parents’ resort to spanking. On the contrary,
    Mother testified without contradiction that she acted with great reluctance and regret.
    Nor does the record suggest any reason to doubt that the circumstances furnished a
    reasonable occasion for discipline. All family members reported that Daughter’s conduct
    gave great cause for concern over the months preceding the spanking. Academically her
    grades were declining, she was failing to complete her homework, she was failing to
    arrive in class on time, and she was making false excuses about these failures. Her
    attention seemed to be shifting away from school toward less salutary objects; she was
    becoming “boy crazy” and, worst, showing an unhealthy interest in street gang culture.
    The parents “had many discussions with [her] about this new crowd, these alarming text
    messages, and her new lack of responsibility. She would hear us, yet continued to go
    down this road[.]” They had tried lesser disciplinary measures, but none had produced
    any lasting effects. After discussing the problem between themselves, the parents
    concluded that “the only other option out there, would be to try spanking.”
    The only question presenting any difficulty is whether the measure actually
    applied—spanking with a wooden spoon, with resulting bruises—was reasonable in kind
    and degree. To overlook as harmless the trial court’s failure to entertain the reasonable
    24
    discipline privilege, it would have to appear as a matter of law either that a wooden spoon
    was an unreasonable means to administer the spanking, or that it was applied with
    excessive force.
    We cannot say that the use of a wooden spoon to administer a spanking
    necessarily exceeds the bounds of reasonable parental discipline. Although no published
    California decision addresses this issue, the Attorney General has concluded that “[i]t is
    not unlawful for a parent to spank a child for disciplinary purposes with an object other
    than the hand,” provided that “the punishment [is] necessary and not excessive in relation
    to the individual circumstances.” (80 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 203, 204 (1997); see In re Adam
    D. (2010) 
    183 Cal. App. 4th 1250
    , 1254, 1257 [trial court found only “age appropriate
    spanking,” where mother admitted using hand and belt]; cf. In re Jasmine G. (2000) 
    82 Cal. App. 4th 282
    , 291 [dictum that hitting child with belt and switch “crossed the line
    over into abuse”].) Opinions from other jurisdictions preponderate to similar effect.
    (See, e.g., In Interest of J.P. (1998) 294 Ill.App.3d 991, 1005 [
    692 N.E.2d 338
    , 346]
    [reversing finding of child abuse based on repeated spankings with wooden spoon; “the
    use of an object . . . should not blind a court to the many other factors which should and
    must be considered when weighing the evidence to determine the ‘reasonableness’ of the
    discipline”]; Johnson v. Smith (Minn. Ct. App. 1985) 
    374 N.W.2d 317
    , 320 [evidence,
    including spanking with wooden spoon, did not sustain finding that child’s health or
    development was endangered, where there was no evidence of injury or that child was
    fearful of mother].)
    Nor do we think that the infliction of visible bruises automatically requires a
    finding that the limits of reasonable discipline were exceeded. Certainly the presence of
    lasting bruises or other marks may support a finding that a parent crossed the line
    between permissible discipline and reportable abuse. (Brown v. Department of Social
    Services (2006) 66 Mass.App.Ct. 1103 [
    845 N.E.2d 1223
    ], citing Cobble v.
    25
    Commissioner of the Dept. of Social Servs. (1999) 
    430 Mass. 385
    , 393 [
    719 N.E.2d 500
    ,
    507] [temporary redness reported by child did not satisfy state’s threshold of “substantial
    risk of harm”; “evidence that soft tissue swelling or skin bruising occurred or is likely to
    occur is necessary”]; see also State v. Allen (Me. 2006) 
    892 A.2d 456
    , 460 [in battery
    prosecution, photographs of bruises were pertinent to parental discipline defense because
    they showed that “it was more probable than not that the marks were not temporary”];
    G.A.C. v. State ex rel. Juvenile Department of Polk County (Or. Ct. App. 2008) 219
    Or.App. 1, 13 [
    182 P.3d 223
    , 229] [striking child on arms with wooden spoon was abuse,
    not reasonable discipline, where it “caused substantial welts, bruising, and pain”].)
    However, such effects alone do not compel a finding of child abuse. (See Hildreth v.
    Iowa Dept. of Human Services (Iowa 1996) 
    550 N.W.2d 157
    , 160 [divided court reverses
    finding of abuse where, in view of “marginal nature” of red marks on daughter’s buttocks
    and their disappearance within a few days, father “could not reasonably have foreseen”
    that spanking with spoon “would produce a physical injury”]; Raboin v. North Dakota
    Dept. of Human Services (N.D. 1996) 
    552 N.W.2d 329
    , 335 [under statute defining
    reportable child abuse to include “a serious ‘negative change[] in a child's health,’ ” no
    child abuse occurred in measured spankings with a plastic spoon, even assuming some
    “slight bruising”].)
    It has been suggested that the reasonableness of a given instance of corporal
    punishment “depends on four factors: the age of the child, the part of the body that was
    struck, the instrument used to strike the child, and the amount of damage inflicted.”
    (Meriwether, Child Abuse Reporting Laws: Time for a Change (1986) 20 Fam. L.Q. 141,
    157, fn. omitted, citing Fraser, A Glance at the Past, A Gaze at the Present, A Glimpse at
    the Future: A Critical Analysis of the Development of Child Abuse Reporting Statutes
    (1978) 54 Chi.-Kent. L. Rev. 641, 652, fn. 62.) We believe that visible bruising
    demarcates, or at least very nearly approaches, the outer limit for the quantum of
    26
    “damage” to be tolerated. However, we do not believe that it necessarily compels a
    finding of abuse unless there are grounds to find that the parent intended to inflict bruises,
    knew his or her conduct would do so, or should have known that bruises were likely to
    result from the amount of force applied and the method of its application.
    We see no reason to believe that this test is satisfied here. Nothing in the record
    suggests that Mother should have known she was inflicting bruises. As one court said,
    “The laws of physics are such that when even a moderate degree of force is administered
    through an instrument that makes contact with only a small area of the body, the pressure
    visited upon that point may be more than will reasonably be anticipated.” (Hildreth v.
    Iowa Dept. of Human 
    Services, supra
    , 
    550 N.W.2d 157
    , 160.) The evidence was in
    conflict as to whether Daughter had ever been spanked with a wooden spoon before, but
    assuming she had, there was no evidence that she had ever sustained visible bruises from
    it. Nor was there any basis to find that Mother would have been aware of any such
    bruising if it occurred. According to the family, the spankings were always administered
    on the child’s fully clothed bottom. There was no suggestion of any occasion on which
    either parent might have observed bruising. It is true that, according to the social worker,
    Daughter said this particular spanking had been administered on her bare bottom. But
    even accepting that version of events, it does not follow that Mother knew the spanking
    was producing, or would produce bruises. Moreover, the family members denied this
    version of events with such consistency and vehemence that we question whether the
    social worker’s version would or could be credited in a properly conducted hearing. (See
    pt. II, post.)
    Under CANRA, a report of child abuse is “ ‘[u]nfounded’ ” if it “involve[s] an
    accidental injury.” (Pen. Code, § 11165.12, subd. (a).) “In its plain and ordinary sense,
    ‘accidental’ means ‘arising from extrinsic causes; occurring unexpectedly or by chance[;
    or] happening without intent or through carelessness.’ ” (St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.
    27
    Co. v. Superior Court (1984) 
    161 Cal. App. 3d 1199
    , 1202, italics added.) There can be no
    doubt that Mother’s conduct—striking her Daughter’s buttocks with a wooden spoon—
    was intentional. The resulting bruises, however—the only “injury” even arguably
    involved—appear to have been “accidental” in that they “happen[ed] without intent,” and
    at most “through carelessness.”16 In such circumstances, at least, the fact that a spanking
    resulted in bruises cannot be enough by itself to sustain a finding that the spanking
    amounted to reportable child abuse.17
    It follows that the trial court erred in categorically rejecting Mother’s assertion that
    the conduct reported as child abuse constituted a reasonable attempt to discipline her
    child. The court acted on the ground not that the assertion of a disciplinary right was
    unsupported by the facts, but that such a purpose was categorically irrelevant. The
    16
    CANRA originally defined “ ‘[c]hild abuse’ ” to include “a physical injury
    which is inflicted by other than accidental means on a child by another person.” (Former
    Pen. Code, § 11165, subd. (g), enacted by Stats. 1980, ch. 1071, § 4, p. 3421; repealed by
    Stats. 1987, ch. 1459, § 1, p. 5517.) This phrase describes a substantially narrower range
    of circumstances than “accidental injury.” For example, the application of reasonable
    force during an arrest might conceivably result in a broken arm; the injury itself might
    well be “accidental” even though the means by which it was suffered—the deliberate
    application of force—was not. Even under the prior formula, however, the Attorney
    General opined that injuries caused by reasonable force during a lawful arrest could not
    be viewed as reportable child abuse. (70 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 38.) The opinion rested
    largely on the broad statement of legislative intent to which we have previously alluded.
    That statement makes no specific reference to police officers, but it explicitly preserves
    the right of parents to impose reasonable discipline. The definition of “accidental
    injury,” as applicable to cases of parental discipline, should also be informed by that
    expressed intention.
    17
    In its petition for rehearing, the Department accuses us of injecting a new
    element into child abuse cases by “making the applicability of the parental privilege
    dependent on the mental state of the parent . . . .” All we have said is that where the only
    indication of excessive discipline is visible bruising on a child’s buttocks, the fact that the
    bruising was inadvertent will support a finding that the parents’ conduct fell within the
    privilege to impose reasonable discipline.
    28
    hearing officer appeared to adopt the same approach, which explains in part his apparent
    willingness to exclude the testimony of Mother’s most important witness, the victim of
    the reported child abuse. (See pt. II, post.) If the report before us is to be held
    substantiated over Mother’s challenge, it must be upon the basis of a reasoned finding,
    supported by substantial evidence, that the spanking did not constitute reasonable
    discipline. The matter must therefore be returned to the Department with instructions
    either to conduct a new hearing at which that issue is addressed, or to modify its decision
    to find the report unfounded and to notify the Department of Justice that the report must
    be expunged from CACI.
    II. Exclusion of Daughter’s Testimony
    A. Proceedings Below
    Mother contends that the hearing officer abused his discretion and denied her a
    fair hearing by preventing Daughter from testifying. This contention is sound.
    Early in the hearing Mother expressed the intention to call Daughter as a witness. After
    determining that Daughter was then 13 years old, the officer told Mother that he “ha[d]
    the option” of preventing Daughter from testifying and that he might well do so because
    he was “not sure that her testimony will really inform my decision anymore than what is
    in the record and what’s not in the record.”
    The issue arose again after Mother completed her testimony. At that time the
    hearing officer said that he was not inclined to allow Daughter to testify, suggesting that
    it would be “pretty traumatic” and that her testimony would be superfluous in view of
    Mother’s submission of her declaration. Counsel for the Department asked to “see
    [Daughter’s] report,” apparently meaning the declaration. The hearing officer declared a
    break. Afterwards, an attendee described only as “Ronni Smith with DFCS
    Administration”—apparently the Department’s assigned lay representative at the
    hearing—told the hearing officer, “[Daughter] is very eager and wanted to talk to you.
    29
    She stopped me in the hall . . . .” The officer did not respond to this information. In his
    recommendation and summary of findings he described himself as having ruled during
    the hearing that “I would not allow [Daughter] to testify as we had her declaration and
    that it would be traumatic for [her] to testify. I said that I would accept her declaration as
    her testimony (Complainant Exhibit 2).”
    In her petition for administrative mandate, Mother asserted this ruling as a basis
    for relief. The trial court concluded that the hearing officer had not abused his discretion
    by preventing Daughter from testifying.
    B. Standard of Review
    The statute governing judicial review of adjudicatory administrative proceedings
    identifies three areas into which the court may inquire: “whether the [agency] has
    proceeded without, or in excess of, jurisdiction; whether there was a fair trial; and
    whether there was any prejudicial abuse of discretion.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5,
    subd. (b).) The last may be found where the agency “has not proceeded in the manner
    required by law, the order or decision is not supported by the findings, or the findings are
    not supported by the evidence.” (Ibid.)
    The statute’s requirement of a “ ‘fair trial’ ” means that there must have been “a
    fair administrative hearing.” (Pomona College v. Superior Court (1996) 
    45 Cal. App. 4th 1716
    , 1730, citing Guilbert v. Regents of University of California (1979) 
    93 Cal. App. 3d 233
    , 241.) “A challenge to the procedural fairness of the administrative hearing is
    reviewed de novo on appeal because the ultimate determination of procedural fairness
    amounts to a question of law.” (Nasha L.L.C. v. City of Los Angeles (2004) 
    125 Cal. App. 4th 470
    , 482; see Anserv Insurance Services, Inc. v. Kelso (2000) 
    83 Cal. App. 4th 197
    , 205; Clark v. City of Hermosa Beach (1996) 
    48 Cal. App. 4th 1152
    ,
    1169-1170; Rosenblit v. Superior Court (1991) 
    231 Cal. App. 3d 1434
    , 1443-1444;
    30
    Duncan v. Department of Personnel Admin. (2000) 
    77 Cal. App. 4th 1166
    , 1174; Lewin v.
    St. Joseph Hospital of Orange (1978) 
    82 Cal. App. 3d 368
    , 387.)
    However, insofar as the agency relied on findings of fact—as the officer did here
    to the extent he found that testifying would be traumatic for Daughter—the finding “must
    be upheld so long as it is supported by substantial evidence.” (People v. Franzen (2012)
    
    210 Cal. App. 4th 1193
    , 1205; see Evid.Code, § 400 et seq.; 3 Witkin, Cal. Evidence (5th
    ed. 2012) Presentation at Trial, §§ 60, 61, 75, pp. 109-111, 124-125.)
    The questions thus presented are (1) whether the officer denied Mother a fair
    hearing by preventing Daughter from testifying, and (2) whether the record contains
    substantial evidence to sustain a finding of trauma, or other ground sufficient to justify
    the exclusion of her testimony.
    C. Good Cause
    There is no evidence in this record that Daughter would have suffered distress of
    any kind or degree—let alone “trauma”—from testifying at the hearing. The only
    evidence before the hearing officer was to the opposite effect. The representative of the
    Department at the hearing told the officer that she had encountered Daughter outside the
    hearing room and that Daughter was “very eager” to talk to him.
    Echoing the Department’s memorandum in opposition to the writ petition, the trial
    court’s statement of decision suggests that it would have been inherently traumatic for
    Daughter to “sit next to her mother and tell a group of strangers that her mother had hit
    her.” This is sheer speculation; nothing in the record suggests that Daughter would have
    found such an experience traumatic, particularly after the humiliations to which she had
    already been subjected in the course of the Department’s investigation. Again, the only
    evidence before the hearing officer on this subject was Daughter’s own statement to the
    31
    Department’s representative that she was “very eager” to tell her story. The trauma
    asserted by the Department, and found by the trial court, appears entirely imaginary.18
    We recognize that at the time of the hearing Daughter was 13, and that this is a
    tender age by most reckonings. But children far younger than 13 have testified in
    countless cases about experiences far worse than anything here. As the manual
    governing hearings of this kind states parties to such proceedings are generally entitled to
    “call witnesses to the hearing and question the witnesses called by the other party.”
    (Calif. Department of Social Services Health & Human Services Agency, Manual of
    Policies and Procedures [for] Child Welfare Services, § 31-021.66, p. 24.4 (effective
    9/3/10) (CWS Policy Manual).)19 The manual contains specific provisions for dealing
    with the testimony of children in such matters. It provides, first, that the hearing officer
    “may prevent the presence and/or examination of a child at the grievance hearing for
    good cause, including but not limited to protecting the child from trauma or to protect his
    or her health, safety, and/or well-being.” (CWS Policy Manual, supra, § 31-021.662,
    p. 24.4; italics added.) It then provides that a child may testify only if the hearing officer
    finds that his or her “participation in the grievance hearing is voluntary and the child is
    capable of providing voluntary consent.” (Id., § 31-021.663, p. 24.4.) It invites the
    hearing officer to “interview the child outside the presence of county staff, complainant
    18
    In its petition for rehearing, the Department asserts that trauma could be
    inferred from the contradictions between Daughter’s supposed statements to the social
    worker and the contrary statements in her declaration—the suggestion being, apparently,
    that the latter were the product of undue influence by her parents, against whose wishes
    she would have been compelled to testify truthfully. This entire construct presupposes
    that the social worker had accurately reported Daughter’s statements to her—a premise
    cast in serious doubt at many points in the record. The hearing officer could not fairly
    resolve these conflicts in the evidence while refusing, without substantial cause, to hear
    from the only percipient witness other than the social worker.
    19
    Available at  (as of
    Jan. 8, 2014).
    32
    and/or any other party in order to determine whether the participation of the child is
    voluntary, or whether good cause exists for preventing the child from being present or
    testifying at the grievance hearing.” (Id., § 31-021.663(a), p. 24.4.)
    In other words, before admitting or excluding the testimony of a child the hearing
    officer must determine whether the child is capable of consenting, does consent, and
    would be testifying of his or her own volition. If those questions are answered in the
    affirmative, the hearing officer must decide whether there is “good cause” to prevent the
    child from testifying. This may require the officer to “interview the child.” Here the
    presiding officer made no effort whatever to determine whether there was “good cause”
    to exclude Daughter’s testimony. He appeared to believe himself vested with
    unregulated discretion to exclude her testimony or that of any child whom Mother, or
    anyone else in her position, might seek to call as a witness. In this he was mistaken. In
    the absence of some particularized reason to conclude otherwise, Mother was entitled to
    present relevant evidence in support of her challenge to the Department’s findings. This
    most definitely included the testimony of her “very eager” daughter. The exclusion of
    that testimony without a finding of good cause, and without any evidentiary basis on
    which such a finding might have been able to rest, rendered the proceeding
    fundamentally unfair.
    D. Materiality
    Both the hearing officer and the trial court seemed to conclude that, apart from any
    supposed traumatic effect, Daughter’s testimony could be dispensed with as immaterial,
    or at least superfluous. Two grounds for such a conclusion were suggested. The first is
    that given the undisputed facts, nothing Daughter could have said would have cast any
    legal doubt on the conclusion that Mother’s conduct amounted to reportable child abuse.
    The Department defends this suggestion only in passing, stating, “because the only issue
    in this case is whether the spanking that [Daughter] received from the mother constituted
    33
    ‘unlawful corporal punishment or injury’ under Penal Code section 11165.4, having
    [Daughter] testify about what she did or did not say to the social worker at school on
    April 30, 2010, would have served no useful purpose.” This of course ignores the
    question of whether the spanking was privileged as a reasonable imposition of parental
    discipline. The reasonableness of the spanking in turn may have depended on such
    questions as whether the spoon was applied to bare skin, as the social worker said
    Daughter had told her, or whether Daughter was fully clothed, as she and three other
    family members emphatically insisted. The hearing officer could not fairly resolve this
    or the many other similar conflicts in the evidence without hearing Daughter’s own
    testimony.
    This brings us to the second suggestion of superfluity, which flows from the
    hearing officer’s expressed willingness to receive Daughter’s declaration in lieu of her
    testifying on the stand. The short answer to this suggestion is that declarations are no
    substitute for live testimony, particularly in a case presenting sharp conflicts between the
    parties’ versions of events. Here the Department relied entirely on the social worker’s
    report and live testimony, both of which consisted largely of statements attributed to
    Daughter. Daughter emphatically denied saying many of the things thus attributed to her.
    If the hearing officer had credited those written denials, there might be a sound basis for
    deeming her live testimony superfluous. But there is no evidence that he credited them,
    and indeed all indications are to the contrary—that insofar as she denied matters
    attributed to her by the social worker, the hearing officer accepted the latter’s account as
    true. Thus, for all this record shows, the finding of child abuse rested upon such
    controverted facts as the administration of the spanking to bare skin, Daughter’s
    supposed fear of going home, Mother’s resort to the spoon because it “hurt more,” and so
    on. (See also pt. III, post.)
    34
    It verges on a kind of juridical fraud to tell a party that proffered testimony is
    unnecessary and then, in its absence, to lend full credence to the version of events it
    would have tended to controvert. If the hearing officer intended to resolve his doubts
    against the veracity of Daughter’s direct averments, and to credit instead hearsay
    statements attributed to her by another witness, he could not fairly conclude that her live
    testimony would have added nothing. Before disbelieving her, he owed it to her—and to
    her mother, upon whom he intended to fasten a lifetime stigma as a child abuser—to see
    and hear her recount her version of events.
    The exclusion of Daughter’s testimony cannot be justified on the ground that it
    would be immaterial or redundant. Given the entire absence of evidence on which a
    finding of good cause might rest, that exclusion must be held an abuse of discretion.
    III.    Hearing Officer’s Misapprehension of Powers
    Although the point is not raised by Mother, the record raises another serious
    concern which we mention for the guidance of the Department should this matter be
    heard again. Early in the hearing, in discussing the issues presented, Mother stated, “I do
    not feel that I abuse my daughter, this was not a case of child abuse.” In response, the
    officer stated as follows: “Okay, I say these [sic] probably 10 times today [sic], so bare
    [sic] with me. All I can deal with, all this hearing is about is whether the County properly
    made the decision to submit your name to DOJ.” Later, when Father expressed
    consternation over the school’s conduct in the matter, the hearing officer disclaimed any
    power not only over the school but also over “the county” and “some of the things in the
    record that you would like to dispute.” He added, “[I]f you want to question the records
    with the county again I do not have any jurisdiction over that whatsoever and you can
    talk to the county about how that what your concerns are and I do not know what they
    will do to be honest, but you need to deal with them directly. I do not want you to think
    that I can handle that because I do not so . . . .”
    35
    In his findings and recommendations, the hearing officer recounted the above
    exchange with Mother as follows: “[Mother] stated that some of what was in the report
    was not accurate and that the school should not have reported. I advised [Mother] that
    this hearing was to determine if the referral had appropriately been sent to the
    Department of Justice and listed on the CACI; and that she should follow up with the
    school and Social Services Agency if she has concerns about other parts of the
    investigation.”
    Although the foregoing remarks are marked by the vagueness that pervades much
    of the record of the hearing, they appear to suggest some belief on the part of the hearing
    officer that he had little if any power to question the veracity of evidence relied on by the
    social worker in finding the report to be substantiated. If he indeed entertained such a
    belief, he was grossly mistaken. Two years before the hearing, CANRA had been held to
    violate due process, basically for failing to provide adequate “procedural safeguards” to
    permit effective challenge of an investigator’s initial finding that a report of child abuse
    had been substantiated. (Humphries v. City of Los Angeles (9th Cir. 2008) 
    554 F.3d 1170
    , 1192, 1200-1201, reversed on other grounds in Los Angeles County v. Humphries
    (2010) 562 U.S. ___, ___ [
    131 S. Ct. 447
    , 454].) Another court had construed the Act as
    impliedly providing a right of administrative review—implicitly recognizing, no doubt,
    that in the absence of such procedures it would offend due process. (Burt v. County of
    Orange (2004) 
    120 Cal. App. 4th 273
    , 285 [in response to due process argument,
    construing act to “impliedly recognize that a person named as a suspected child abuser is
    entitled to present a timely challenge to a previously filed report and must be given a
    reasonable opportunity to rebut the charge”].) The Legislature did not address this
    problem until 2011, when it amended the Act to expressly grant the reported abuser a
    right to challenge administratively the initial decision to submit a report for inclusion in
    CACI. (Pen. Code, § 11169, subd. (d), adopted by Stats. 2011, ch. 468, § 2; see Sen.
    36
    Rules Com., Off. of Sen. Floor Analysis, 3d reading analysis of Assem. Bill 717 (2011-
    2012 Reg. Sess.), as amended Aug. 30, 2011, pp. 6-7,  (as of
    Jan. 8, 2014).) Although the amendment had not yet taken effect when the hearing below
    took place, state child welfare authorities had adopted specific procedures for
    administrative review.20 These required the hearing officer to “make a determination
    based upon the evidence presented at the grievance hearing, whether the allegation of
    child abuse and/or neglect is [unfounded, inconclusive, or] substantiated.” (Calif.
    Department of Social Services Health & Human Services Agency, Manual of Policies
    and Procedures [for] Child Welfare Services, former § 31-021.81, p. 24.5 (effective
    9/31/10), as promulgated in Errata for Manual Letter No. CWS 10-01 (Jan. 11, 2011).)
    These procedures manifestly imposed upon the hearing officer not only the power
    but the duty to evaluate the evidence before him and decide whether the report was
    substantiated, quite independently of the decision reached by the investigating social
    worker. Insofar as he failed to perform that duty, he defeated the whole purpose of the
    proceeding. Administrative review which is impotent to overturn erroneous findings is
    not a safeguard; it is a charade. Should this matter be heard by the Department again, the
    presiding officer must weigh and consider the evidence and reach an independent
    determination whether the facts establish child abuse as distinct from reasonable parental
    discipline.
    20
    These were apparently the product of a settlement agreement between state
    child welfare authorities and persons challenging CANRA for lack of adequate
    safeguards. (See Settlement Agreement and Order, filed Oct. 3, 2007, in Gomez v.
    Saenz, Los Angeles Superior Ct., No. BC284896,  (as of
    Jan.8, 2014).)
    37
    IV. Missing Record
    Mother also complains that the Department failed to comply with its obligation to
    provide a complete record of the “grievance” hearing because, as it conceded, the
    recording of the last part of the hearing was lost. The Department insists that the error
    was harmless because the missing portion contained only the arguments of the parties.
    Mother suggests that the missing record would show some cross-examination of the
    social worker by Mother. We can find no competent record support for Mother’s
    characterization. We need not delve into the matter, however, for our disposition will
    ensure that Mother receives either a new hearing or the expungement of the challenged
    report from CACI. This renders moot the question whether the loss of the recording
    warrants any relief in its own right.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment denying the petition for administrative mandamus is reversed and
    the court is directed to issue the requested writ, commanding the Department to either
    conduct a new hearing on the matter or to issue a decision finding the report in question
    unfounded and to notify the state Department of Justice of that finding.
    38
    ______________________________________
    RUSHING, P.J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    PREMO, J.
    ____________________________________
    ELIA, J.
    39
    Trial Court:                                    Santa Clara County Superior Court
    Superior Court No.: CV204141
    Trial Judge:                                    The Honorable
    Mark H. Pierce
    Attorneys for Plaintiff and Appellant           Law Office of Gradstein & Gorman
    Veronica Gonzalez:                              Seth F. Gorman
    Attorneys for Defendants and Respondents        Lori E. Pegg,
    Santa Clara County Department of Social         Acting County Counsel
    Services et al.:
    Harrison D. Taylor,
    Deputy County Counsel
    41