DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, ETC. VS. T.G. (DIVISION OF CHILD PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2019 )


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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    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5307-17T4
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN
    AND FAMILIES, DIVISION OF
    CHILD PROTECTION AND
    PERMANENCY
    Petitioner-Respondent,
    v.
    T.G.
    Respondent-Appellant.
    _____________________________
    Argued September 16, 2019 – Decided December 16, 2019
    Before Judges Messano and Susswein.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of Children
    and Families, Division of Child Protection and
    Permanency, Docket No. AHU 17-0229.
    Thomas Ercolano, III argued the cause for appellant
    (Forster Arbore Velez, attorneys; Thomas Ercolano, III,
    on the briefs).
    Joshua Paul Bohn, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Joshua Paul Bohn, on the
    brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Respondent, T.G., appeals from a final administrative decision by the
    Division of Child Protection and Permanency (Division) to substantiate an
    allegation of child neglect. Respondent does not dispute that she neglected her
    four-year-old daughter by driving under the influence of alcohol while the
    toddler was in the car and not properly secured in a child safety harness.
    Respondent contends, however, that the incident should have been classified as
    "established" rather than "substantiated" under the tiering system established in
    N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.3(c).
    The distinction between a "substantiated" violation and an "established"
    one is significant. The Division will not issue a license to a child daycare facility
    if that facility employs a staff member who has a record of a "substantiated"
    incident of child abuse or neglect.      N.J.S.A. 30:5B-6.2.      Here, respondent
    operates a daycare center.
    After reviewing the record, we conclude that the final agency decision is
    supported by sufficient credible evidence and was not arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable. We therefore have no basis upon which to substitute our own
    judgment for that of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) or the Division in this
    A-5307-17T4
    2
    case. Accordingly, we affirm the "substantiated" classification of respondent's
    neglectful conduct.
    I.
    A.
    We begin our analysis by acknowledging the deferential standard of
    review that governs this appeal. An appellate court may reverse a decision of
    an administrative agency only if it is "arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable, or
    if it is not supported by substantial credible evidence in the record as a whole."
    P.F. v. N.J. Div. of Developmental Disabilities, 
    139 N.J. 522
    , 529-30 (1995)
    (citing Dennery v. Bd. of Educ., 
    131 N.J. 626
    , 641 (1993)). Agency actions are
    presumed valid and reasonable, and the plaintiff bears the burden to overcome
    this presumption. Bergen Pines Cty. Hosp. v. N.J. Dep’t of Human Servs., 
    96 N.J. 456
    , 477 (1984).
    Generally,
    [c]ourts can intervene only in those rare circumstances
    in which an agency action is clearly inconsistent with
    its statutory mission or other state policy. Although
    sometimes phrased in terms of a search for arbitrary or
    unreasonable action, the judicial role is generally
    restricted to three inquiries: (1) whether the agency's
    action violates express or implied legislative policies,
    that is, did the agency follow the law; (2) whether the
    record contains substantial evidence to support the
    findings on which the agency bases its action; and (3)
    A-5307-17T4
    3
    whether, in applying legislative policies to the facts, the
    agency clearly erred in reaching a conclusion that could
    not reasonably have been made on a showing of the
    relevant factors.
    [In re Musick, 
    143 N.J. 206
    , 216 (1996) (citing
    Campbell v. Dep’t of Civil Serv., 
    39 N.J. 556
    , 562
    (1963)).]
    Furthermore, it is well settled that a reviewing court cannot substitute its
    own judgment in place of the agency judgment, even if the court would have
    reached a different result. In re Stallworth, 
    208 N.J. 182
    , 194 (2011) (citing In
    re Carter, 
    191 N.J. 474
    , 483 (2007)). This is particularly true when, as in this
    instance, we are reviewing an issue related to an agency's special "expertise and
    superior knowledge of a particular field." Id. at 195 (quoting In re Herrmann,
    
    192 N.J. 19
    , 28 (2007)).
    B.
    To understand the context of respondent's contention, it is appropriate to
    briefly review the regulatory classification framework the Division uses to
    determine whether a child abuse or neglect allegation is "established" or
    "substantiated."      The regulations governing child abuse and neglect
    investigations     authorize   four   possible   outcomes:    "unfounded,"    "not
    established," "established," and "substantiated." N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.3(c). The
    A-5307-17T4
    4
    present appeal requires us to consider the distinction between the latter two
    classifications.
    An allegation is "established" when "the preponderance of the evidence
    indicates that a child is an 'abused or neglected child' . . . but the act or acts
    committed or omitted do not warrant a finding of 'substantiated.'" N.J.A.C.
    3A:10-7.3(c)(2). An allegation is "substantiated" when "the preponderance of
    the evidence indicates that a child is an 'abused or neglected child' . . . and either
    the investigation indicates the existence of any of the circumstances in N.J.A.C.
    3A:10-7.4 or substantiation is warranted based on consideration of the
    aggravating and mitigating factors listed in N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5." N.J.A.C.
    3A:10-7.3(c)(1).
    Accordingly, the Division can find a "substantiated" case of abuse by
    means of two distinct and independently sufficient methods. First, N.J.A.C.
    3A:10-7.4 lists six circumstances 1 that are sometimes referred to as the
    1
    The six absolute circumstances are:
    1. The death or near death of a child as a result of abuse
    or neglect;
    2. Subjecting a child to sexual activity or exposure to
    inappropriate sexual activity or materials;
    (continued)
    A-5307-17T4
    5
    "absolute" circumstances. N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4. If any one of these enumerated
    circumstances is proven by a preponderance of the evidence, the Division must
    find the incident to be "substantiated."
    The second classification method involves a greater degree of discretion.
    Under this method, the Division considers seven aggravating factors 2 and four
    3. The infliction of injury or creation of a condition
    requiring a child to be hospitalized or to receive
    significant medical attention;
    4. Repeated instances of physical abuse committed by
    the perpetrator against any child;
    5. Failure to take reasonable action to protect a child
    from sexual abuse or repeated instances of physical
    abuse under circumstances where the parent or
    guardian knew or should have known that such abuse
    was occurring; or
    6. Depriving a child of necessary care which either
    caused serious harm or created a substantial risk of
    serious harm.
    [N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4.]
    2
    The aggravating factors are:
    1. Institutional abuse or neglect;
    2. The perpetrator's failure to comply with court orders
    or clearly established or agreed-upon conditions
    designed to ensure the child's safety, such as a child
    safety plan or case plan;
    3. The tender age, delayed developmental status, or
    other vulnerability of the child;
    (continued)
    A-5307-17T4
    6
    mitigating factors. 3 N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5. If the applicable mitigating factors
    outweigh the aggravating factors, the case is "established." See 
    ibid.
     If the
    aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors, the case is "substantiated."
    See ibid.
    4. Any significant or lasting physical, psychological,
    or emotional impact on the child;
    5. An attempt to inflict any significant or lasting
    physical, psychological, or emotional harm on the
    child;
    6. Evidence suggesting a repetition or pattern of abuse
    or neglect, including multiple instances in which abuse
    or neglect was substantiated or established; and
    7. The child's safety requires separation of the child
    from the perpetrator.
    [N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5(a).]
    3
    The mitigating factors are:
    1. Remedial actions taken by the alleged perpetrator
    before the investigation was concluded;
    2. Extraordinary, situational, or temporary stressors
    that caused the parent or guardian to act in an
    uncharacteristic abusive or neglectful manner;
    3. The isolated or aberrational nature of the abuse or
    neglect; and
    4. The limited, minor, or negligible physical,
    psychological, or emotional impact of the abuse or
    neglect on the child.
    [N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5(b).]
    A-5307-17T4
    7
    II.
    A.
    We next consider the particular circumstances surrounding the incident of
    child neglect at issue in this appeal. We refer to this episode as the DWI
    incident. On December 7, 2015, around 1:16 p.m., a police officer responded to
    a report that someone was driving a car erratically with a child inside. The
    officer pulled over respondent's vehicle after determining that it matched the
    description in the report. While speaking with respondent, the officer detected
    the odor of alcohol and noticed that she was chewing gum, which the officer
    interpreted to be an attempt to mask the smell of alcohol. Respondent failed all
    three field sobriety tests that were administered and was placed under arrest for
    driving while intoxicated.
    After being arrested but while still on the scene, respondent attempted to
    prevent the officer from closing the door of the police vehicle by keeping her
    foot outside of the car. She also attempted to remove her handcuffs. As she was
    being transported from the scene, respondent screamed at the officer and
    attempted to kick out the windows of the police vehicle.         Once at police
    headquarters, respondent refused to provide a breath sample for testing.
    A-5307-17T4
    8
    The Division case worker assigned to conduct the investigation
    interviewed respondent at the police station. The case worker immediately
    could tell that respondent was intoxicated because she was lethargic and slurring
    her words.   The case worker's investigation determined that in addition to
    driving while intoxicated, respondent also failed to properly secure her four-
    year-old daughter, R.V., in a child car seat. At the time of the DWI incident,
    R.V. was wearing a lap belt but was not secured in the five-point harness.
    Respondent told both the police officer and case worker that she had properly
    secured R.V. in the harness, and she claimed that R.V. must have removed it
    herself. Based on the foregoing circumstances, the case worker removed R.V.
    from respondent's care.
    The DWI incident was not the first time the Division removed R.V. On
    July 13, 2015, respondent called the police to report an incident of domestic
    violence. Police arrived and saw that respondent was bruised and bleeding and
    that there were broken dishes in the home. Respondent's two children, R.V. and
    M.C., were present in the home but were not injured.    Respondent appeared to
    be intoxicated. M.C.'s father, A.C., was not present when the police arrived, but
    the police eventually located him. A.C. gave the police a video that showed
    A-5307-17T4
    9
    respondent harming herself in front of her children. Based on this episode and
    the video, the Division removed both children from the house.
    The July incident went before a Family Part judge on October 26, 2015.
    The Division concluded that the July incident constituted an "established" case
    of neglect. Respondent did not appeal that determination.
    Following the DWI incident, respondent undertook efforts to address her
    mental health and substance abuse problems. Respondent spent five days at a
    detoxification facility before being transferred to another rehabilitation facility
    that offers a "dual diagnosis" 4 program that focuses on the mental health of the
    patients. Respondent was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and was prescribed
    medication. Respondent stayed in the residential program for 28 days after
    which she entered a mental health intensive outpatient program.
    III.
    On February 9, 2016, the Division determined that the DWI incident
    constituted a "substantiated" incidence of child neglect. The letter sent to
    respondent on that date explained, "[t]he Division's investigation determined
    that child neglect was Substantiated for Substantial Risk of Physical
    4
    This term refers to the diagnosis and treatment of persons who suffer from co -
    occurring substance abuse and a mental health disorders.
    A-5307-17T4
    10
    Injury/Environment Injurious to Health and Welfare – 10/60 with regard to
    [R.V.]. You have been identified as a person responsible for the neglect."
    (capitalization and bold face in original). Appellant filed a timely appeal of the
    "substantiated" determination and the matter was referred to the Office of
    Administrative Law (OAL).
    An ALJ conducted an evidentiary hearing on February 5, 2018. At that
    hearing, the Division case worker testified as to the methodology she used to
    classify the neglect as "substantiated," explaining that she considered and
    weighed the aggravating and mitigating factors enumerated in N.J.A.C. 3A:10-
    7.5. Specifically, the case worker found that the following aggravating factors
    applied: (1) the tender age of the child, who was four; (2) the Division had to
    remove the child for safety; and (3) there was a pattern of neglect. With respect
    to the pattern of neglect, the case worker noted that this was the third time the
    Division was involved with respondent for alcohol-related reasons, and this was
    the second time that the Division removed the child. The case worker found that
    one mitigating factor applied because respondent participated in rehabilitation
    programs while the investigation was still ongoing. 5 Considering all of these
    5
    The case worker explained that the "remedial actions" mitigating factor only
    applies only with respect to actions taken during the investigation, which must
    (continued)
    A-5307-17T4
    11
    circumstances, the case worker concluded that the aggravating factors "clearly
    outweighed the mitigating factors."
    The ALJ decided the case on April 30, 2018, upholding the Division's
    "substantiated" classification and rejecting respondent's argument that the
    neglect should have been classified as "established." The ALJ's decision rests
    on two independent grounds. The ALJ first found that an absolute substantiating
    circumstance set forth in N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4 applied.6 Specifically, the ALJ
    concluded that the Division had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that
    by driving a vehicle while intoxicated with an unsecured child, respondent
    be completed within sixty days. See N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5(b)(1). Respondent
    argued at the OAL hearing that the judge should have looked at her ongoing
    rehabilitation efforts beyond the time period of the Division's investigation of
    the July 2015 DWI incident. The ALJ found that respondent had presented very
    little evidence of her rehabilitation. We would only add that this is not a parental
    rights termination proceeding. The only issue before us is whether a specific
    incident of child neglect is "substantiated." We therefore decline to expand the
    temporal scope of the remedial action mitigating circumstance defined in
    N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5(b)(1).
    6
    The Division did not originally rely on the absolute method of establishing a
    "substantiated" incidence of neglect. Rather, the case worker's recommendation
    was based on her weighing of the aggravating and mitigating factors set forth in
    N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.5. We do not believe that the classification method employed
    by the case worker precluded the ALJ from applying the absolute classification
    method to the facts elicited by the Division at the evidentiary hearing. The
    Division has since adopted the findings and rationale of the ALJ with respect to
    both methods for finding that the allegation of child neglect was "substantiated."
    A-5307-17T4
    12
    "deprived a child of necessary care that created a substantial risk of serious
    harm." See N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4(6). As we have already explained, that finding
    of an absolute circumstance by itself was sufficient to support the
    "substantiated" classification of the incident.    Indeed, under the Division's
    regulatory framework, that finding necessitated a "substantiated" classification.
    Respondent on appeal nonetheless urges us to rely on excerpted language
    from our decision in N.J. Div. of Child Prot. & Permanency v. V.E., 
    448 N.J. Super. 374
     (App. Div. 2017), to overturn the ALJ's reliance on this absolute
    circumstance as the basis for ruling that the neglect was "substantiated." In V.E.
    we noted that a "'substantiated' finding applies to the most severe cases, and
    specifically results in matters involving death or near death, inappropriate sexual
    conduct, serious injuries requiring significant medical intervention, or repeated
    acts of physical abuse." Id. at 389. We also commented that "the regulatory
    differentiation between the 'substantiated' and 'established' findings appears to
    be a question of the degree of harm and, possibly, the strength of the gathered
    proofs." Ibid. Based on these dicta, respondent urges us to reject the absolute
    circumstance found by the ALJ because the DWI incident is not a sufficiently
    severe example of child neglect to warrant an automatic "substantiated"
    classification.
    A-5307-17T4
    13
    Respondent's reliance on the above-quoted dicta in V.E. is misplaced. The
    issue in that case was whether the respondent was entitled to an administrative
    hearing after the Division had determined that the allegation of child abuse and
    neglect was "established." We had no occasion in V.E. to consider whether a
    particular set of facts should be classified as "established" rather than
    "substantiated."    Moreover, our characterization that selected absolute
    circumstances in N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4 represent "severe" situations, specifically,
    those "involving death or near death, inappropriate sexual conduct, serious
    injuries requiring significant medical intervention, or repeated acts of physical
    abuse," was not meant to impliedly amend the regulation so that only those
    particular circumstances would meet the "substantiated" threshold. Nor did we
    have occasion in V.E. to modify the regulations by authorizing the Division to
    exercise discretion and determine on a case-by-case basis whether a proven
    absolute circumstance was sufficiently serious to warrant a "substantiated "
    classification.
    The point simply is that the dicta in V.E. that respondent relies on was
    meant to highlight the differences between an "established" and "substantiated"
    finding in the context of determining whether an evidentiary hearing is required
    as a matter of due process of law, not to alter the regulatory framework's criteria
    A-5307-17T4
    14
    or process for deciding between these two classifications. It bears emphasis,
    moreover, that our comments in V.E. did not even mention the sixth enumerated
    absolute circumstance—"depriving a child of necessary care which either caused
    serious harm or created a substantial risk of serious harm"—which happens to
    be the one the ALJ in this case found. V.E. should not be read to invalidate that
    circumstance as an independently sufficient basis to substantiate an allegation
    of child abuse or neglect.
    We would only add with respect to respondent's argument that in our view,
    her conduct in this case—drunk driving with an improperly restrained four-year-
    old in the car—presents a grave and entirely foreseeable risk of death or serious
    harm that, thankfully, did not come to fruition. We are not prepared to exempt
    such conduct from the ambit of the absolute method for determining the
    appropriate classification of child abuse or neglect. In sum, we conclude that
    the ALJ properly found, applying the preponderance of the evidence standard of
    proof, that respondent created a substantial risk of serious harm to her daughter
    by driving under the influence while the child was not properly restrained in the
    rear seat.
    As we have already noted, the ALJ employed what might be described as
    a "belts and suspenders" approach by considering both methods for determining
    A-5307-17T4
    15
    that the DWI incident was "substantiated." Although not necessary given the
    finding that an absolute factor under N.J.A.C. 3A:10-7.4 had been proven, the
    ALJ also applied the balancing test the case worker had used in recommending
    a "substantiated" classification.   The ALJ found the same aggravating and
    mitigating factors that the case worker had found, and the ALJ concluded that
    the aggravating factors outweighed the sole mitigating factor. We conclude
    from our review of the record that the ALJ's determination that the aggravating
    factors outweighed the mitigating factor was not arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable, and was supported by sufficient credible evidence presented at
    the hearing. This determination by the ALJ and the Division provides an
    independent and sufficient basis for the "substantiated" classification.
    Affirmed.
    A-5307-17T4
    16