T.G. v. DHS ( 2022 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    T.G.,                                             :    SEALED CASE
    Petitioner                :
    :
    v.                               :
    :
    Department of Human Services,                     :    No. 600 C.D. 2021
    Respondent                       :    Submitted: March 18, 2022
    BEFORE:          HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    JUDGE COVEY                                                    FILED: October 26, 2022
    T.G. petitions this Court for review of the Department of Human
    Services’ (DHS) April 29, 2021 order denying her request for rehearing or
    reconsideration.        There are two issues before this Court: (1) whether T.G.’s
    Application for Leave to File Reply Brief Late (Application to File Reply Brief)
    should be granted; and (2) whether DHS’s Office of Children, Youth, and Families’
    (CYF) Application to Dismiss T.G.’s appeal (Application to Dismiss) should be
    granted.
    Facts
    On June 2, 2017, DHS informed T.G. that she was listed on the
    ChildLine and Abuse Registry (ChildLine Registry)1 as a perpetrator of child abuse.
    1
    Section 3490.4 of DHS’s Regulations defines “ChildLine” as
    [a]n organizational unit of [DHS] which operates a [s]tatewide toll-
    free system for receiving reports of suspected child abuse
    established under [S]ection 6332 of the [Child Protective Services
    On June 15, 2017, T.G. filed an expungement appeal from DHS’s determination to
    the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals (BHA) and requested a hearing. On January
    25, 2018, a BHA Administrative Law Judge issued a Rule to Show Cause (Rule)
    directing T.G. to show cause why the appeal should go to a hearing rather than be
    dismissed. The Rule expressly directed T.G.
    to timely respond to th[e] Rule within thirty (30) days
    from the date of its entry by filing a written response that
    specifically addresses the above concern with a concise
    explanation detailing the basis for the party’s argument
    that the appeal should not be dismissed and must provide
    citation to any relevant statutory, regulatory or decisional
    authority in support of the party’s argument.
    Certified Record (C.R.) at 19 (emphasis in original). The Rule warned: “Failure to
    timely respond in writing will result in the dismissal of the appeal.” C.R. at 20
    (bold and underline emphasis in original). T.G. did not file a response.
    On March 27, 2018, the BHA dismissed T.G.’s appeal because a
    dependency court found that the subject child was a victim of abuse, that T.G. was
    one of the perpetrators of the abuse, that the same factual circumstances gave rise to
    a founded report of abuse, and that T.G. was “afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
    that said finding was not related to the above-captioned allegations of child abuse or
    that the outcome should not result in dismissal of these matters on the basis of
    collateral estoppel.” C.R. at 25. The BHA’s March 27, 2018 order specifically
    informed:
    Either party to this proceeding has fifteen (15) calendar
    days from the date of this decision to request
    Law (]CPSL[), 23 Pa.C.S. § 6332] (relating to establishment of
    [s]tatewide toll-free telephone number), refers the reports for
    investigation and maintains the reports in the appropriate file. . . .
    
    55 Pa. Code § 3490.4
    . “The ChildLine Registry is maintained in accordance with the [CPSL.]” In
    re: S.H., 
    96 A.3d 448
    , 450 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
    2
    reconsideration by the Secretary of [DHS]. To seek
    reconsideration, you must fully complete the enclosed
    application/petition     for   reconsideration.         The
    application/petition shall be addressed to the Secretary,
    but delivered to the Director, [BHA], P.O. Box 2675,
    Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 17105-2675, and must be
    received in the [BHA] within fifteen (15) calendar days
    from the date of this [o]rder. This action does not stop the
    time within which an appeal must be filed to
    Commonwealth Court [of Pennsylvania]. The
    Applicant/Petitioner shall serve a copy of the
    application/petition on the opposing party(ies).
    The appropriate party(ies), where permitted, may take
    issue with this [a]djudication[] and [o]rder, and may
    appeal to the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania,
    within thirty (30) days from the date of this order. . . .
    
    Id.
     (underline emphasis in original). T.G. did not request reconsideration within 15
    days, nor did she appeal to this Court within 30 days.
    On April 8, 2021, T.G., through counsel (Counsel), filed a “Request for
    Hearing on Child Abuse Expunction [(Request for Hearing)]” with the BHA. C.R.
    at 27. Counsel also filed a “Memorandum of Law in Support of Application for
    Child Abuse Expunction [(Memorandum of Law)]” arguing therein that, because it
    was determined that both parents were responsible for the entirety of the abuse
    without any specific determinations relative to who was responsible for which abuse,
    T.G. is entitled to an administrative hearing before the DHS Secretary to determine
    whether the underlying adjudication of child abuse supports a founded report of
    abuse against her specifically. C.R. at 29; see C.R. at 29-31. On April 29, 2021,
    DHS denied T.G.’s request, stating: “[T]he request for rehearing or reconsideration
    filed by [T.G.] is DENIED because the request for rehearing or reconsideration was
    not timely filed.” C.R. at 39.
    On June 1, 2021, T.G. appealed to this Court. On June 22, 2021,
    Philadelphia County DHS (County DHS) filed a notice of intervention. On July 26,
    3
    2021, CYF filed the Application to Dismiss, alleging therein that T.G.’s request for
    reconsideration is not a “good cause” appeal request pursuant to Section 6341(a)(1)
    of the Child Protective Services Law (CPSL) but, instead, challenges whether
    sufficient evidence exists to support a founded report that T.G. committed child
    abuse or if expunction is appropriate. Thus, CYF argues that T.G. only had 15 days
    from the BHA’s March 27, 2018 order dismissing her appeal to file such a challenge.
    On July 26, 2021, County DHS joined CYF’s Application to Dismiss.
    On August 2, 2021, T.G. filed an Answer to the Application to Dismiss,
    wherein, for the first time she averred:
    6. At the time of the abuse, [T.G.] lacked the information
    [T.G.] now possesses. Despite [DHS’s] refusal to
    acknowledge this, [T.G.] has averred the presence of
    “newly discovered evidence” that deserves to be presented
    at a hearing.
    7. Simultaneously, [T.G.] is prepared, with the newly
    discovered evidence, to prove that she “does not represent
    a risk” of committing child abuse. The fact that she has
    had and continues to have sole custody of her children is
    partial evidence of this.
    T.G. Answer ¶¶ 6-7. On August 5, 2021, CYF filed a Reply to T.G.’s Answer to the
    Application to Dismiss. Also on August 5, 2021, County DHS joined in CYF’s
    Reply to T.G.’s Answer to the Application to Dismiss. By August 24, 2021
    Memorandum and Order, this Court directed that the Application to Dismiss shall
    be listed with the merits of the Petition for Review (Petition), and that CYF’s and
    County DHS’s replies to T.G.’s Answer to the Application are stricken as
    unauthorized.
    On August 30, 2021, CYF filed an Application to Strike T.G.’s Brief
    and Reproduced Record pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure
    (Appellate Rule) 123 (Application to Strike), asking this Court to direct T.G. to refile
    4
    both documents in accordance with the Appellate Rules. Also on August 30, 2021,
    County DHS joined CYF’s Application to Strike. By September 24, 2021 Order,
    this Court granted the Application to Strike, ordered T.G.’s brief stricken, and
    directed T.G. to file and serve an amended brief that complies with the Appellate
    Rules on or before October 8, 2021. This Court denied CYF’s request that T.G.’s
    reproduced record be stricken. On October 12, 2021, T.G. filed an Application for
    Leave to File an Addendum to her amended brief (Addendum Application).2 By
    October 19, 2021 Order, this Court denied T.G.’s Addendum Application pursuant
    to Appellate Rule 1951 because the Addendum was not part of the certified record,
    and directed that T.G.’s Reply to CYF’s Answer to the Addendum Application be
    stricken.3
    On November 29, 2021, T.G. filed the Application to File Reply Brief.
    On December 3, 2021, CYF filed an Answer to T.G.’s Application to File Reply
    Brief.       On December 6, 2021, County DHS joined CYF’s Answer to T.G.’s
    Application to File Reply Brief. By December 6, 2021 Order, this Court directed
    that T.G.’s Application to File Reply Brief shall be listed with the merits of the
    appeal.
    Discussion
    Application to File Reply Brief
    In her Application to File Reply Brief, T.G. avers:
    On October 14, 2021, CYF filed an Answer to T.G.’s Addendum Application. Also on
    2
    October 14, 2021, County DHS joined CYF’s Answer to T.G.’s Addendum Application. On
    October 18, 2021, T.G. filed a Reply to CYF’s Answer to T.G.’s Addendum Application.
    3
    On October 26, 2021, T.G. filed an Application for Admonishment of CYF and County
    DHS (Admonishment Application) for repeated failures to comply with the Appellate Rules. Also
    on October 26, 2021, County DHS filed an Answer to T.G.’s Admonishment Application. On
    October 27, 2021, CYF filed an Answer to T.G.’s Admonishment Application. By October 29,
    2021 Order, this Court denied T.G.’s Admonishment Application.
    5
    1. [T.G.’s amended brief] was timely filed October 8,
    2021, with this Court electronically pursuant to the Court’s
    scheduling Order.
    2. [CYF’s brief] was timely filed November 8, 2021[,]
    with this Court electronically.
    3. [T.G.’s] [r]eply [b]rief was due on November 22, 2021.
    4. [T.G.] has filed her [r]eply [b]rief . . . on November 29,
    2021.
    5. [T.G.] miscalculated the 14[]days in which the [r]eply
    [b]rief was due, in part, due to the Thanksgiving holiday
    and, in part, due to significant time spent working on a pro
    bono custody matter.
    6. [T.G.] was not aware that the [r]eply [b]rief of [T.G.]
    was filed 7 days late until notice was kindly provided by
    Attorney Jeffrey Hoelich for [CYF].
    7. The acceptance of [T.G.’s] [r]eply [b]rief filed on
    November 29, 2021, will not prejudice [CYF].
    8. This Honorable Court has not begun reviewing the
    instant appeal; the case has not been submitted to a panel
    of this Court as of November 29, 2021.
    9. This Honorable Court has the authority to accept the
    filing of [the] [r]eply [b]rief of [T.G.] late pursuant to
    [Appellate Rule] 105(b).
    Appl. to File Reply Br. ¶¶ 1-9. In its Answer thereto, CYF requests this Court to
    deny T.G.’s Application to File Reply Brief, strike T.G.’s reply brief as prejudicial
    and noncompliant with the Appellate Rules, and preclude T.G. from filing a reply
    brief for continued failure to comply with the Appellate Rules and the failure to
    comply with this Court’s October 19, 2021 Order.
    This Court’s review of T.G.’s Appendix to her reply brief and T.G.’s
    Addendum Application reveals that the Appendix to her reply brief and the proposed
    Addendum are the same document, i.e., a verified statement dated October 12, 2021,
    concerning T.G.’s knowledge of child abuse and neglect, which this Court denied
    6
    pursuant to Appellate Rule 1951, as not being part of the certified record. Due to
    the untimeliness of T.G.’s reply brief, and the fact that it relies upon and attaches a
    document which this Court previously denied as not being a part of the certified
    record, this Court denies T.G.’s Application to File Reply Brief, strikes T.G.’s reply
    brief as prejudicial and noncompliant with the Appellate Rules, and precludes T.G.
    from filing a reply brief.
    Application to Dismiss
    CYF argues that T.G. is precluded from challenging BHA’s March 27,
    2018 order because she failed to timely appeal therefrom. CYF contends that T.G.’s
    April 6, 2021 Request for Hearing and Memorandum of Law were not a “good
    cause” appeal but, rather, a challenge to BHA’s March 27, 2018 order estopped by
    the doctrine of collateral estoppel. CYF further asserts that, because T.G. is
    challenging BHA’s March 27, 2018 order, neither the BHA nor this Court have
    jurisdiction to address the appeal. T.G. rejoins that, because she has evidence neither
    known nor knowable at the time of the dependency hearing and during the initial
    appeal before the BHA, her appeal falls within the “good cause shown” clause of
    Section 6341(a)(1) of the CPSL and, thus, both the BHA and this Court have
    jurisdiction to review it.
    Section 6341(a) of the CPSL provides, in relevant part:
    General rule.--Notwithstanding [S]ection 6338.1 [of the
    CPSL, 23 Pa.C.S. § 6338.1] (relating to expunction of
    information of perpetrator who was under 18 years of age
    when child abuse was committed):
    (1) At any time, the [DHS S]ecretary may amend or
    expunge any record in the [s]tatewide database under this
    chapter upon good cause shown and notice to the
    appropriate subjects of the report. The request shall be in
    writing in a manner prescribed by [DHS]. For purposes of
    7
    this paragraph, good cause shall include, but is not
    limited to, the following:
    (i) Newly discovered evidence that an indicated report of
    child abuse is inaccurate or is being maintained in a
    manner inconsistent with this chapter.
    (ii) A determination that the perpetrator in an indicated
    report of abuse no longer represents a risk of child abuse
    and that no significant public purpose would be served by
    the continued listing of the person as a perpetrator in the
    [s]tatewide database.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 6341(a) (text emphasis added).
    T.G. insists, at this time, that because she has new evidence, she is
    entitled to a new hearing under Section 6341(a)(1) of the CPSL. However, she did
    not claim in either her Request for Hearing or her Memorandum of Law that she had
    new evidence to present to the BHA. Further, T.G.’s purported new evidence is the
    verified statement dated October 12, 2021, concerning T.G.’s knowledge of child
    abuse and neglect that T.G. unavailingly attempted to add to her amended brief and
    include in a reply brief. See supra (Addendum Application denied; Application to
    File Reply Brief denied). Rather, in her Memorandum of Law, T.G. relied upon J.F.
    v. Department of Human Services, 
    245 A.3d 658
     (Pa. 2021), for the proposition that
    she was denied due process at the time her indicated report of child abuse was
    designated founded.
    In J.F., the county agency designated J.F.’s indicated report of child
    abuse founded, and filed a motion to dismiss J.F.’s appeal based on J.F.’s entry into
    the Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program (ARD) for two counts of
    endangering the welfare of a child. J.F. filed a response thereto within 15 days. The
    motion to dismiss was granted without a hearing based on the probable cause
    affidavit, wherein J.F. admitted to leaving her children alone at 1:00 a.m. to go to a
    bar where she ended up drinking to the point that she lost consciousness. J.F.
    8
    appealed to this Court, which reversed DHS’s order. DHS petitioned for allowance
    of appeal with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, which accepted the appeal. Our
    Supreme Court held that, because the founded report was based on ARD as opposed
    to a criminal conviction or a dependency adjudication, there was no agency hearing
    in which J.F. had an opportunity to be heard. Accordingly, the J.F. Court held that,
    in the absence of another appropriate forum to challenge DHS’s adjudication of child
    abuse in a recorded evidentiary hearing, a named perpetrator in a report designated
    as founded based upon the perpetrator’s voluntary entry into ARD is entitled to an
    administrative hearing. Here, T.G.’s indicated report of child abuse was designated
    founded based on a dependency adjudication wherein T.G. had both notice and an
    opportunity to be heard. Accordingly, J.F. is inapposite.
    The Rule notified T.G. that her indicated report of child abuse was
    designated founded based on the dependency court’s adjudication and further
    specified that T.G. had 15 days to respond. That was the appropriate time for T.G.
    to raise the argument she now sets forth, i.e., because both parents were found to
    have committed child abuse, there was no specific determination relative to who was
    responsible for which abuse. However, T.G. did not do so. Thus, DHS properly
    treated T.G.’s Request for Hearing as a late-filed Petition for Reconsideration
    (Reconsideration Request).
    Having determined that T.G’s Request for Hearing was a
    Reconsideration Request rather than a request for hearing under Section 6341(a) of
    the CPSL, this Court now addresses CYF’s argument that neither the BHA nor this
    Court have jurisdiction to entertain T.G.’s challenge to the BHA’s March 27, 2018
    order.
    Section 6341(g) of the CPSL mandates:
    Reconsideration and appeal.--Parties to a proceeding or
    hearing held under subsection (c.2) have 15 calendar days
    9
    from the mailing date of the final order of the [BHA] to
    request the [DHS S]ecretary to reconsider the decision.
    Parties to a proceeding or hearing held under this section
    have 30 calendar days from the mailing date of the final
    order of the [BHA] to perfect an appeal to Commonwealth
    Court. The filing for reconsideration shall not toll the 30
    days provided.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 6341(g).
    Further,
    [t]he General Rules of Administrative Practice and
    Procedure [(GRAPP)] provide, with exceptions not
    relevant here, that an application for reconsideration of an
    administrative decision “may be filed by a party to a
    proceeding within 15 days . . . after the issuance of an
    adjudication or other final order by the agency.” [Section
    35.241(a) of GRAPP,] 
    1 Pa. Code § 35.241
    (a). This [15]-
    day time limit was expressly set forth in the [Rule] sent to
    [T.G]. [T.G.] did not seek reconsideration of the [BHA’s
    March 27, 2018 order] until [almost 3 years] after the
    expiration of the mandatory [15]-day time limit. Because
    [T.G.’s] request for reconsideration was not filed within
    the mandatory time limit imposed by [Section] 35.241(a)
    [of GRAPP], [DHS] was without jurisdiction to consider
    [T.G.’s] request for reconsideration. Therefore, [DHS’s
    order denying T.G.’s Reconsideration Request] was not a
    valid order from which [T.G.] could appeal.
    A.P. v. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare, 
    884 A.2d 974
    , 976 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005); see also Sloan
    v. Dep’t of Hum. Servs. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1167 C.D. 2017, filed June 4, 2018); B.B.T.
    v. Dep’t of Hum. Servs. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 2121 C.D. 2016, filed Aug. 31, 2017).4
    Accordingly, CYF’s Application to Dismiss is granted.
    4
    Unreported Commonwealth Court opinions issued after January 15, 2008, may be cited
    for their persuasive value. See Section 414(a) of the Commonwealth Court’s Internal Operating
    Procedures, 
    210 Pa. Code § 69.414
    (a).
    10
    Conclusion
    For all of the above reasons, T.G.’s Application to File Reply Brief is
    denied. CYF’s Application to Dismiss is granted. T.G.’s appeal is dismissed.
    _________________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    11
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    T.G.,                                  :   SEALED CASE
    Petitioner           :
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    Department of Human Services,          :   No. 600 C.D. 2021
    Respondent            :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 26th day of October, 2022, T.G.’s Application for
    Leave to File Reply Brief Late is DENIED. The Department of Human Services’
    Office of Children, Youth, and Families’ Application to Dismiss T.G.’s Appeal is
    GRANTED. T.G.’s appeal is DISMISSED.
    _________________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 600 C.D. 2021

Judges: Covey, J.

Filed Date: 10/26/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2022