B.T. v. State (In Re State Ex Rel. K.T.) , 424 P.3d 91 ( 2017 )


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  •                This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2017 UT 44
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    STATE OF UTAH,
    In the interest of K.T., C.T., Ka.T., and Ca.T.,
    children under eighteen years of age.
    B.T. and S.T.,
    Appellants,
    v.
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee.
    Nos. 20160410, 20160386
    Filed August 8, 2017
    On Certification from the Court of Appeals
    Third District Juvenile, Salt Lake
    The Honorable Charles D. Behrens
    Nos. 1125972, 1125975, 11255977, 1125980
    Attorneys:
    Sheleigh A. Harding, Salt Lake City, for appellant B.T.
    Jordan Putnam, Cottonwood Heights, for appellant S.T.
    Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Carol L.C. Verdoia, John M. Peterson,
    Asst. Att’y Gens., Salt Lake City, for appellee
    Martha Pierce, Salt Lake City, for Office of Guardian ad Litem
    JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE,
    JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUSTICE HIMONAS joined.
    JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court:
    In the Interest of K.T., et al.
    Opinion of the Court
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶1 At the disposition hearing in their child welfare case,
    appellant parents stipulated to a set of facts, including a statement
    that one of the family’s children had “disclosed that [the mother] has
    spanked and disciplined her and her siblings with a belt.”
    Appellants also stipulated that the same child had disclosed that the
    father “has spanked the children with a belt historically.” The
    parents contend that this was an insufficient factual basis to permit
    the juvenile court to conclude that they had harmed the children
    within the meaning of the Utah Code. We agree that the juvenile
    court needed additional evidence before it could conclude by clear
    and convincing evidence that the children had been harmed. We
    reverse.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2 This case involves four children—K.T., C.T., Ka.T., and Ca.T.
    Appellant S.T. (Mother) is the mother of all four children. Appellant
    B.T. (Father) is the biological father of the younger two—Ka.T. and
    Ca.T. Father is the stepfather of the oldest two—K.T. and C.T.
    ¶3 The State filed a Verified Petition in February 2016 seeking
    to adjudicate the children as abused and neglected under Utah Code
    section 78A-6-105 (2008). 1 Following a preliminary shelter hearing,
    the juvenile court placed K.T., C.T., Ka.T., and Ca.T. into the custody
    of the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS).
    ¶4 The parties stipulated to a number of findings of fact. One
    stipulated finding indicated that “[K.T.] also disclosed [Mother] has
    spanked and disciplined her and her siblings with a belt. The mother
    uses a black belt with rhinestones. [Father] has spanked the children
    with a belt historically.” 2
    ¶5 Based on the stipulated findings of fact, the judge
    concluded:
    _____________________________________________________________
    1 This section of the Utah Code has since been amended. The
    parties cite, and we will therefore reference, the 2008 version of the
    code.
    2 Both Father and Mother responded to this fact under Utah Rule
    of Juvenile Procedure 34(e). All parties acknowledge that Mother
    and Father stipulated to this fact.
    2
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 44
    Opinion of the court
    1. Hitting a child with a belt or strap or another
    object is abuse.
    2. The pain caused by the striking is non-accidental
    harm.
    3. The court cannot envision a scenario where
    striking or hitting a child, of any age, would be
    appropriate or reasonable discipline.
    4. The court can envision a parent, as a child, being
    hit with a belt or strap as discipline at that time, in
    that day and age, many years ago that type of
    discipline was deemed appropriate and perfectly
    reasonable.
    5. As a society we’ve progressed to the point where
    it’s not acceptable to strike a child and certainly to
    strike a child, of any age, with an object, a belt, a
    strap, or a paddle or anything of that nature.
    6. We’ve evolved beyond it being appropriate to
    strike a child with an object.
    7. The simple striking of the child with a belt caused
    pain and is abuse.
    ¶6 The juvenile court determined that Mother and Father
    (collectively Parents) abused the children under Utah Code section
    78A-6-105.
    ¶7 Parents now appeal that conclusion. They contend that the
    stipulated facts do not support an abuse determination. More
    specifically, they argue that the juvenile court erred when it
    concluded that spanking a child with a belt, without any additional
    proof of harm, constitutes abuse within the meaning of Utah law.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶8 We review a juvenile court’s conclusions of law based upon
    stipulated facts for correctness. State ex rel. B.T., 
    2009 UT App 182
    ,
    ¶ 5, 
    214 P.3d 881
    .
    ANALYSIS
    ¶9 To find abuse under Utah law, a court must find harm. Utah
    Code section 78A-6-105(1)(a) defines “abuse,” in relevant part, as
    “nonaccidental harm of a child” or “threatened harm of a child.”
    And, in the 2008 version of the Code the parties cite, “harm” means,
    3
    In the Interest of K.T., et al.
    Opinion of the Court
    in relevant part, “physical, emotional, or developmental injury or
    damage.” 
    Id.
     § 78A-6-105(19). ”If, at the adjudication hearing, the
    [juvenile] court finds, by clear and convincing evidence, that the
    allegations contained in the petition are true, it shall conduct a
    dispositional hearing.” Id. § 78A-6-311(1). 3
    ¶10 Parents argue that the State failed to put evidence before the
    court that would allow it to conclude that the discipline Parents
    administered resulted in harm. “Simply put,” they argue, “there are
    no stipulated facts regarding ‘harm.’” Parents are correct. The State
    failed to introduce evidence that the parental discipline had harmed
    the children and left the court to speculate from the stipulated facts
    that the children had been harmed.
    ¶11 The juvenile court attempted to bridge the evidentiary gap
    with the conclusion that “[a]s a society we’ve progressed to the point
    where it’s not acceptable to strike a child and certainly to strike a
    child, of any age, with an object, a belt, a strap, or a paddle, or
    anything of that nature.” 4 Although not explicit in the juvenile
    court’s order, it appears from the argument’s transcript that the court
    may have relied on State ex rel. C.I. to reach that decision. 2009 UT
    App 141U (per curiam). In C.I., the “[m]other hit C.I. on his arms
    with a belt, and also hit C.I. near his eye.” Id. at *1. The record
    indicated that, as a result of the blows, C.I. suffered a “black eye and
    bruising.” Id. The mother argued that her actions did not constitute
    abuse because she “reasonably disciplined him.” Id. The court
    rejected the mother’s argument and found that “[s]triking a child
    _____________________________________________________________
    3The clear and convincing standard demands the introduction of
    evidence that makes “the existence of the disputed facts . . . very
    highly probable.” Lovett v. Cont’l Bank & Tr. Co., 
    286 P.2d 1065
    , 1067
    (Utah 1955). Translated to the case before the juvenile court, the State
    needed to present evidence that would allow the court to conclude
    that it was “very highly probable” that the children had been
    harmed. Essential Botanical Farms, LC v. Kay, 
    2011 UT 71
    , ¶ 24, 
    270 P.3d 430
     (citing Lovett, 286 P.2d at 1067).
    4 The juvenile court also reasoned that it could not “envision a
    scenario where striking or hitting a child, of any age, would be
    appropriate or reasonable discipline.” The parties did not argue, and
    we will not address, any reasonable discipline exception under Utah
    Code section 78A-6-105(1)(b)(i).
    4
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    Opinion of the court
    with a belt does not constitute the use of reasonable discipline as it is
    an ‘unreasonably cruel punishment.’” 
    Id.
     (citing State ex rel. L.P., 
    1999 UT App 157
    , ¶ 8, 
    981 P.2d 848
    ). The court in C.I. affirmed the
    juvenile court’s order because its determination that C.I. had been
    abused was not contrary to “the clear weight of the evidence.” 
    Id.
    The court of appeals’ seemingly definitive statement about striking a
    child with a belt may have given the juvenile court in this case
    comfort in announcing that “[h]itting a child with a belt or strap or
    another object is abuse.”
    ¶12 State ex rel. L.P., on which the per curiam C.I. relies, was not
    so definitive. Rather, L.P. listed a number of factors that a juvenile
    court should consider before determining whether a child has been
    abused within the meaning of the statute. 
    1999 UT App 157
    , ¶ 8.
    “Such factual findings may include, but are not limited to, the
    following: . . . evidence of any bruises, contusions, or abrasions on
    the child; . . .[and] evidence of unreasonably cruel punishment such
    as beatings with a belt . . . or other object.” 
    Id.
     L.P. clarified that
    “[n]one of the factors listed above is necessarily dispositive . . . .
    Instead, these evidentiary factors should guide the juvenile court as
    it exercises its broad discretion in making [an abuse] determination.”
    
    Id.
    ¶13 Moreover, we do not interpret C.I. as imposing a rule that
    every use of any object to discipline a child constitutes per se abuse.
    Although the C.I. court stated that striking a child with a belt cannot
    be reasonable discipline, the court in C.I. did not rely solely on the
    mother’s use of a belt to conclude that C.I. had been harmed. Rather,
    just as it did in L.P., the court of appeals relied on additional findings
    that spoke to the harm C.I. had suffered. For example, the court
    noted C.I.’s black eye and bruising. C.I., 2009 UT App 141U at *1.
    ¶14 To be clear, in this case the State would not have needed to
    forward much additional evidence to allow the juvenile court to
    infer harm. Had there been evidence of the effects of the spanking—
    as in C.I.—the court may have been able to conclude that the
    children had been harmed. Or, if there had been additional evidence
    about the particular way that Mother “uses a black belt with
    rhinestones,” the juvenile court could have inferred the existence of
    harm. But without such information, the court was presented with
    two options: improperly speculate about what the spankings and
    discipline mother administered looked like, or rely on a per se rule
    that harm occurs any time a child is struck with any object. The
    juvenile court opted for the per se rule.
    5
    In the Interest of K.T., et al.
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶15 The rule the juvenile court articulated—that “[h]itting a
    child with a belt or strap or another object is abuse”—is overbroad
    and alters the statutory meaning of “abuse.” See UTAH CODE § 78A-6-
    105(1). The juvenile court’s per se rule expands the definition of
    “abuse” to capture the myriad ways a parent might “hit a child”
    with “another object” that would not actually harm the child. For
    instance, under the rule the juvenile court announced, a parent
    throwing a pillow or a rolled up pair of socks at a child would be
    considered per se abusive. Hitting a child with a Nerf sword
    playfully as part of a game would also meet the definition. And
    although those situations are different than those confronting the
    juvenile court in this case, the need to resort to a per se rule exposes
    the problem with the factual record before the juvenile court.
    Although we might speculate that Mother was doing more than
    spanking her children with the belt lightly so that it did not cause
    physical or emotional injury within the meaning of the statute, we
    don’t know that.5 And we don’t know that with the level of certainty
    needed to meet a clear and convincing evidentiary standard.
    ¶16 In other words, while use of an object to spank or discipline
    a child might provide persuasive evidence that the child experienced
    harm, that evidence may not be dispositive. As the court of appeals
    has noted, “there are a myriad of circumstances with countless
    permutations, which may or may not justify intervention of the
    juvenile court.” L.P., 
    1999 UT App 157
    , ¶ 7. Because of the many
    ways adults interact with children, juvenile courts need the
    flexibility to examine situations as a whole. And it is incumbent
    upon the State to present the evidence the juvenile courts need to
    accurately assess the situation. Failure to provide that evidence
    invites speculation and increases the potential for reaching an
    erroneous conclusion.
    ¶17 Parents stipulated that “[K.T.] also disclosed [Mother] has
    spanked and disciplined her and her siblings with a belt. The mother
    uses a black belt with rhinestones. [Father] has spanked the children
    with a belt historically.” We have before us no additional relevant
    facts demonstrating harm. The juvenile court made no findings that
    inform us whether the children experienced any “physical,
    _____________________________________________________________
    5  The statute defines harm as “physical, emotional, or
    developmental injury or damage.” UTAH CODE § 78A-6-105(19).
    6
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    Opinion of the court
    emotional, or developmental injury or damage.” See UTAH CODE
    § 78A-6-105(19). It is unclear how hard Parents hit the children,
    whether the children suffered emotional or physical pain, and
    whether the children were injured. Without more, the juvenile court
    was forced to rely on a per se rule that has the potential to sweep
    non-abusive behavior into its net.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶18 The juvenile court erred when it concluded that the
    stipulated facts supported an abuse determination. We reverse.
    7