DCPP VS. T.M. IN THE MATTER OF D.M. AND B.T.(FN-20-0114-11, UNION COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)(RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2017 )


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  •                              RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4132-14T3
    NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD
    PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    T.M.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _____________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF D.M. and B.T.,
    Minors.
    _____________________________
    Argued June 7, 2017 – Decided          July 5, 2017
    Before Judges Alvarez, Accurso and Lisa.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Union
    County, Docket No. FN-20-0114-11.
    Clara S. Licata, Designated Counsel, argued
    the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, attorney; Ms. Licata, on
    the brief).
    Julie B. Colonna, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Christopher
    S. Porrino, Attorney General, attorney;
    Andrea M. Silkowitz, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel; Ms. Colonna, on the
    brief).
    Olivia Belfatto Crisp, Assistant Deputy
    Public Defender, argued the cause for minor
    D.M. (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    Law Guardian, attorney; Ms. Crisp, on the
    brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant T.M. appeals from a January 31, 2012 order of the
    Family Part, now final, finding she abused and neglected her
    five-year-old daughter D.M. (Della)1 by excessive corporal
    punishment in violation of N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21c.    Because we agree
    with the Division of Child Protection and Permanency and the Law
    Guardian that substantial credible evidence in the record
    supports the trial judge's finding of abuse and neglect, we
    affirm.
    The essential facts adduced at the hearing are easily
    summarized.   The referral to the Division came from Della's
    father's fiancé.    She testified that when Della came to spend
    the prior weekend with them, she had "big bruises on her left
    leg, . . . on her arms too.   And she had a big bump . . . on her
    forehead."    Della claimed she got the bruises from a beating by
    her mother and her mother's boyfriend.    According to the child,
    1
    We refer to the child by a fictitious name in order to protect
    her privacy.
    2                          A-4132-14T3
    the bump on her forehead happened when her mother threw a
    hairbrush at her.
    Because this was not the first time the fiancé had seen
    bruises on the child, and the bruises were "still fresh," the
    fiancé photographed all the bruises she saw, including those on
    the child's buttocks, thighs and "by her private area."     At the
    hearing, she identified each of the photos she took, when she
    took them, and described the bruises she saw depicted in the
    photos, their color and size.2
    Della's father testified he viewed the photographs taken by
    his fiancé of his daughter and, after seeing the actual bruises,
    decided his fiancé should contact the Division to report what
    they saw.   He confirmed the photos admitted in evidence, which
    he reviewed in the course of his testimony, were consistent with
    the bruising he observed on his daughter.   He also testified
    that sometime around the weekend when he and his fiancé observed
    those bruises, T.M. told him not to bathe Della when she dropped
    the child off for the weekend.   He testified he thought it odd
    2
    When T.M.'s counsel objected to having only been provided with
    black and white photocopies of the pictures, the judge permitted
    all counsel to examine the color photographs the Division had
    lodged with the court prior to cross-examining the witness. She
    also required the Division to provide all counsel with color
    photocopies of the photos.
    3                          A-4132-14T3
    that T.M. would not want the five-year-old to wash for two or
    three days.
    Upon receipt of the referral, a Division caseworker spoke
    to T.M. and confirmed Della spent the prior weekend with her
    father and his fiancé.   The caseworker testified that T.M.
    admitted disciplining Della by "us[ing a] belt to hit her on the
    butt."
    The caseworker interviewed Della and her nine-year-old
    sister, both of whom reported that their mother and her
    boyfriend hit them with a belt when they were bad.    The nine-
    year-old told the caseworker that she had heard her mother and
    her mother's boyfriend beat Della the prior Wednesday or
    Thursday for her "bad behavior in school."   Della was in her
    mother's bedroom with her mother and the boyfriend.   Although
    the nine-year-old had not seen her sister get hit, the child
    told the caseworker "[s]he heard her [sister] cry and scream."
    Upon examining Della with T.M.'s consent, the worker saw a
    light, three-inch bruise on the child's inner thigh, which
    appeared to be healing and a circular bruise, one or two inches
    above her right knee.    The worker observed no other bruising.
    4                         A-4132-14T3
    The caseworker testified she interviewed T.M.'s boyfriend3
    and a woman temporarily residing with the family.    The boyfriend
    admitted physically disciplining the nine-year-old on three or
    four occasions.    Although he also admitted disciplining Della
    the week before, he claimed it was the first time he had done
    so.   According to the case worker, the boyfriend told her he hit
    Della with a belt for misbehaving at school, being disrespectful
    to her teachers and throwing toys at other students.   The
    boyfriend, who admitted being 5'10" and weighing 285 pounds,
    claimed he hit Della, a slim child standing about three feet, no
    more than ten times.   Asked to estimate how hard he hit the
    child on a scale of one to ten, with ten being the hardest, he
    rated it a four.   The woman living with the family told the
    caseworker that T.M. used non-physical forms of discipline with
    the children but also disciplined them by beating them with a
    belt.
    The caseworker testified she re-interviewed T.M. and both
    children several days later, after receiving the photographs
    3
    The boyfriend was identified as defendant O.G. The Division
    later learned he pled guilty in 2002 to sexual assault of a
    child under thirteen and criminal sexual contact with another
    child under sixteen and was sentenced to five years in State
    prison and required to register for community supervision for
    life under Megan's Law. Although the judge found he had abused
    Della by administering excessive corporal punishment, he did not
    appeal and is thus not part of this proceeding.
    5                           A-4132-14T3
    from the fiancé.     The caseworker claimed she was startled by the
    pictures, because it appeared Della had been beaten "pretty
    bad."   She showed the pictures to Della, who confirmed the
    bruises depicted were the result of the beating she had received
    the prior week from her mother and the boyfriend, who had hit
    her with a belt and a hairbrush.
    The caseworker also showed the photos to T.M., who admitted
    the beating may have resulted in the bruising depicted on the
    child's buttocks.    She also admitted the bruise to Della's inner
    thigh, near "the private area" and her outer thigh could also
    have been from the belt.
    The worker testified that after consulting with Dr.
    Gladibel Medina, the board certified pediatrician and child
    abuse specialist who examined both children, the Division
    substantiated both T.M. and her boyfriend for abuse and neglect
    and removed the children from their home.     When asked why, she
    explained, "for a five-year-old, I mean, these were severe
    beatings. . . .     [I]t wasn't like a light tap or . . . one or
    two hits.   It was all over her body.   [I]t was clear to us from
    the pictures that it was excessive and it was forceful."      The
    worker also explained that this was the Division's fourth
    encounter with this family, and that T.M. had previously
    attended parenting classes, and thus had been instructed on
    6                         A-4132-14T3
    appropriate ways of disciplining her children.4      Indeed, T.M. had
    agreed not to use corporal punishment on the children in
    connection with one of the earlier referrals.
    The Division's expert, Dr. Medina, testified to her
    examination of the children and the opinions she developed as a
    result of those examinations and the photos taken of Della's
    bruises by her father's fiancé.       The doctor recounted the
    statements both children made to her that their mother would hit
    them with a belt when they misbehaved.      Dr. Medina reviewed the
    color photographs taken by the fiancé and described multiple
    linear bruises she claimed demonstrated "[r]epeated forceful
    impacts" delivered with enough force to cause trauma in the form
    4
    The Division's first contact with T.M. was in 2004 when Della's
    sister, then two years old, was found wandering outside
    unattended. T.M. admitted leaving the child at home alone for
    over an hour while she ran an errand. The Division
    substantiated T.M. for neglect, and she was criminally charged
    with child endangerment and entered the pre-trial intervention
    program. In 2007, the sister's daycare contacted the Division
    when the child revealed she had received the bruise on her lip
    when her mother "popped" her because she had misplaced a domino.
    The Division closed that referral as unfounded when the worker
    did not observe any bruising, and the child clarified her mother
    would only "tap" her on the lips when she lied. T.M., however,
    agreed to forgo corporal punishment of the children in the
    future. In 2009, the school reported the child, then seven
    years old, had red and blue bruises on her forearm and inner
    thigh. The child claimed her father, who was caring for her
    while her mother was in the hospital, had beaten her for poor
    grades. Although both parents admitted to hitting the child,
    those allegations were also deemed unfounded.
    7                              A-4132-14T3
    of broken blood vessels.    Dr. Medina described several bruises
    of a purple-greenish discoloration on the child's buttocks and
    thighs, numerous red, green and purple bruises to the area of
    Della's lower buttocks, and a greenish abrasion to her left
    upper thigh.   She testified on the basis of the photos that
    sixty percent of the child's buttocks had been bruised and fifty
    percent of both thighs.
    Although testifying she had initially characterized the
    bruising depicted in the photos as life-threatening, she
    explained that was because she believed the pictures of Della's
    legs were of her abdomen, and thus close to vital organs, and
    that all were taken at the same time.    She clarified that her
    ultimate opinion, that Della had been physically abused by
    excessive force, was not changed based on several of the photos
    having been taken earlier, and that the child's injuries were
    not life-threatening.     Asked about the lack of bruising when she
    examined the child only days after the photos were taken, Dr.
    Medina testified the absence of any significant bruising was
    consistent with the timeframe of three days to two weeks in
    which those injuries would normally heal.
    The Division played a tape of Della's interview by the
    Union County Prosecutor's Office at the fact-finding hearing.
    In it, the child described the beating administered by her
    8                         A-4132-14T3
    mother and the boyfriend and claimed both had beaten her at
    least ten times before.
    Although T.M. did not testify, she presented the testimony
    of the Director of Della's preschool and one of her teachers.
    Both claimed Della was prone to make up stories and neither
    claimed ever to have seen any bruises on the child.     A third
    witness, T.M.'s friend and Della's godmother, testified for T.M.
    as well.   Although the friend denied ever seeing bruises on
    Della, she acknowledged that T.M., in addition to taking away
    toys or privileges, would "spank" her daughters.   She claimed
    T.M. would only do so as a last resort, "on occasion" with a
    belt while they were dressed.   She also testified to seeing T.M.
    hit the children on occasion with her hands when their pants
    were down.   She maintained she never saw T.M. inappropriately
    discipline her children.
    After the conclusion of the testimony, Judge Kenny
    determined that T.M. had abused Della by engaging in excessive
    corporal punishment.   In a thorough and thoughtful opinion
    delivered from the bench, the judge recapped the testimony of
    the witnesses and made credibility findings.   She reviewed the
    relevant exhibits, most notably the color photographs taken by
    Della's father's fiancé and discussed, in detail, the
    controlling cases.
    9                           A-4132-14T3
    Noting that T.M. admitted to striking Della with a belt and
    inflicting at least one of the bruises depicted in the photos in
    evidence, the judge found there was no "serious question" but
    that the injuries inflicted on the child were inflicted by T.M.
    and her boyfriend, and "really nothing to contradict the
    Division's prima facie case."    The judge found "the Division
    . . . met its burden by a preponderance of the evidence and more
    as to how those injuries were inflicted on her."
    Addressing the photographs, the judge noted the opportunity
    she had
    to review those pictures. And we can analyze
    case law, but I don’t know how you . . .
    beat a child in such a way to show the
    bruises that I see in the exhibits that the
    State offered of this child which the child
    corroborated. The child testified in her
    [recorded statement to the prosecutor],
    that's me, those are the bruises on me that
    they – that they hit me with [a belt and a
    hairbrush]. I . . . don't know how you can
    say that it's not excessive, particularly in
    light of the purported reason for . . .
    giving her, a . . . barely five-year-old
    child this kind of beating.
    Turning to the question of whether the punishment inflicted
    was excessive, the judge noted
    an incident will be considered excessive if
    there's a pattern of inappropriate corporal
    punishment or if the motivation for the
    corporal punishment is unreasonable, and I
    find both of those instances have been met –
    10                        A-4132-14T3
    the proofs have been met by the Division in
    this case.
    Observing that "[p]unishment is excessive if the child suffers
    lacerations or the punishment is severe given the circumstances
    and the child's age," the judge relied on Dr. Medina's testimony
    regarding the repeated forceful impacts necessary to have
    inflicted the extent of the bruising on the child's thighs and
    buttocks.
    Judge Kenny concluded:
    So with all of this, I have a barely
    five-year-old child being left with the –
    the kinds of welts and abrasions that I see
    in the pictures here. I don't have the color
    photographs out here with me, but . . .
    they're pretty horrifying to think that a
    tiny little girl five years old could be
    beaten in that way or to be beaten at all
    with an implement and without her clothes
    on. For what? For as much as I can
    determine, it's for being bad at school
    . . . .
    [I]'m satisfied that the Division . . . has
    established by a preponderance of the
    evidence that there were repeated acts –
    repeated times that there were beatings of —
    of this little child. And I'm satisfied that
    as minimum, on this last occasion, the welts
    left there, the use of a belt, the use of
    two people, two people beating this child
    'til she's crying and screaming that her
    sister can hear her, that — that two or
    three Days later someone seeing the bruising
    is . . . upset and horrified by it enough to
    call DYFS which she was right to do, I'm
    satisfied that excessive corporal punishment
    was used.
    11                          A-4132-14T3
    The only issue defendant raises for our consideration
    concerns the absence of the original photographs in the record
    on appeal.   Following the filing of the notice of appeal,
    defendant's appellate counsel sought the color photographs
    admitted at trial.   Unable to obtain them from the court or any
    of the other parties, counsel made a motion for remand "to
    clarify whether the judge saw actual photographic prints or was
    looking at the scanned color photocopies."   If the judge relied
    on color prints, counsel requested that we order the Division to
    produce the photographs.
    We granted the motion for remand.    Judge Kenny convened
    trial and appellate counsel and made clear for defendant's
    appellate counsel that original photographs were produced at the
    fact-finding hearing.   Although defendant's trial counsel was
    not present, the court and all other trial counsel confirmed
    that each of the lawyers and the witnesses were looking at one
    set of fourteen original photographs that were marked in
    evidence.    Unfortunately, the original photographs, which the
    Division believed were in the court's file at the conclusion of
    the fact-finding hearing and court staff believed were returned
    to Division's counsel, were lost, leaving only the color
    12                           A-4132-14T3
    photocopies the Division provided to the court and counsel for
    their use at trial.
    Judge Kenny wrote to this court, providing a comprehensive
    recap of the situation, and confirmed that in rendering her
    decision, she viewed and referenced the fourteen color
    photographs admitted into evidence without objection on the
    first day of the fact-finding hearing.   Judge Kenny further
    noted "[t]he color copies, which are still available, depict a
    good deal of the bruising on [Della's] legs, inner thighs, and
    buttocks, but, unfortunately, not as vividly as the originals."
    The judge, however, underscored that her "finding of the
    use of excessive corporal punishment did not rest on the
    photographs alone, compelling as they are" but also on the
    credible testimony of the witnesses, including Della, and T.M's
    admissions of striking the child with a belt.   The judge also
    referenced the odd request by T.M. to Della's father not to
    bathe the child.   The father and his fiancé ignored that request
    and in the course of bathing Della, the fiancé discovered the
    bruising.   Judge Kenny found T.M.'s apparent effort to conceal
    the child's bruises, demonstrated "her consciousness of the
    excessive nature of the corporal punishment."
    Defendant contends we should vacate the judgment "because,
    without the missing photographic prints, there is no evidence
    13                          A-4132-14T3
    that the corporal punishment [T.M.] administered was excessive."
    Counsel further argues that in the absence of "the actual
    photographs, an appropriate merits argument cannot be made for
    [T.M.]" depriving her of the effective assistance of appellate
    counsel.   We reject those arguments as utterly without merit.
    See State v. Gaskin, 
    325 N.J. Super. 563
    , 571-72 (App. Div.
    1999), certif. denied, 
    164 N.J. 190
     (2000) (rejecting as without
    merit the defendant's argument that the trial court's failure to
    preserve two photographs introduced by the State without
    objection at trial required vacation of the conviction).
    Our review of the trial court's factual findings in a Title
    9 abuse and neglect proceeding is limited to determining whether
    those findings are supported by adequate, substantial, and
    credible evidence in the record.    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family
    Servs. v. Z.P.R., 
    351 N.J. Super. 427
    , 433 (App. Div. 2002).      If
    the findings have such support in the record, we are bound by
    them in deciding the appeal.   Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v.
    Investors Ins. Co. of Am., 
    65 N.J. 474
    , 484 (1974).
    Title 9 defines an "abused or neglected child" as including
    a child whose physical, mental, or emotional
    condition has been impaired or is in
    imminent danger of becoming impaired as the
    result of the failure of his parent or
    guardian, as herein defined, to exercise a
    minimum degree of care . . . (b) in
    providing the child with proper supervision
    14                           A-4132-14T3
    or guardianship, by unreasonably inflicting
    or allowing to be inflicted harm, or
    substantial risk thereof, including
    the infliction of excessive corporal
    punishment . . . .
    [N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21c(4)(b).]
    Although "excessive corporal punishment" is not defined,
    the Supreme Court has noted that "by qualifying the prohibition
    with the term, 'excessive,' the statutory language plainly
    recognizes the need for some parental autonomy in the child-
    rearing dynamic that, of necessity, may involve the need for
    punishment."    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. P.W.R., 
    205 N.J. 17
    , 36 (2011).   Determining when corporal punishment has
    become "excessive" requires the exercise of the judgment reposed
    in the judges of the Family Part.    While "[a] slap of the face
    of a teenager as a form of discipline — with no resulting
    bruising or marks — does not constitute 'excessive corporal
    punishment' within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21(c)(4)(b),"
    ibid., "there is absolutely nothing reasonable about inflicting
    harm, in the form of paddling, upon a five-year-old child
    because the child told a neighbor that their home was without
    electricity."   Dep't of Children & Families v. C.H., 
    414 N.J. Super. 472
    , 481 (App. Div.), adhered to on reconsideration, 
    416 N.J. Super. 414
     (App. Div. 2010), certif. denied, 
    207 N.J. 188
    (2011).
    15                          A-4132-14T3
    Having reviewed the record, we are convinced that, as in
    C.H., defendant's hitting her five-year-old daughter repeatedly
    with a belt with enough force to leave sixty percent of the
    child's buttocks and fifty percent of both thighs badly bruised
    is excessive corporal punishment within the meaning of N.J.S.A.
    9:6-8.21c(4)(b).   The unavailability of the actual photographs
    of the child's bruises, at this point in the proceedings, does
    not change that result or deprive defendant of any meritorious
    argument.
    Our inability to see the actual photographs is no different
    than our inability to see and hear the witnesses testify.     It is
    in the nature of appellate review, and explains precisely why we
    are so dependent on the diligence and good judgment of the
    judges of the Family Part.   We defer to a trial court's factual
    findings because the trial judge "has the opportunity to make
    first-hand credibility judgments about the witnesses who appear
    on the stand" and get "a feel of the case that can never be
    realized by a review of the cold record."   N.J. Div. of Youth &
    Family Servs. v. E.P., 
    196 N.J. 88
    , 104 (2008) (citation and
    internal quotations marks omitted).   The record we review "can
    never adequately convey the actual happenings in a courtroom."
    16                           A-4132-14T3
    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. F.M., 
    211 N.J. 420
    , 448
    (2012).5
    Having reviewed the record and Judge Kenny's careful
    findings, including her assessment of the testimony of the
    witnesses who saw the actual bruises, and her own assessment of
    the original photographs, we find no basis to second-guess the
    judge's considered judgment in this matter.
    Affirmed.
    5
    While perhaps not conveying the bruises inflicted on this small
    child as vividly as the actual photographs admitted at the fact-
    finding hearing, the photocopies in the appendix are certainly
    sufficient to convey the injuries Judge Kenny described.
    17                           A-4132-14T3