J. S. v. DHS ( 2019 )


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  •              IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    J. S.,                           :
    Petitioner :
    : CASE SEALED
    v.              :
    : No. 1772 C.D. 2017
    Department of Human Services,    : Argued: December 13, 2018
    :
    Respondent :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                    FILED: November 15, 2019
    J.S. (Father) petitions for review of the November 3, 2017 order of the
    Department of Human Services (Department), Bureau of Hearings and Appeals
    (BHA), which adopted the recommendation of an administrative law judge (ALJ)
    denying Father’s appeal to expunge an indicated report of child abuse. We reverse.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    Father and Je.S. (Mother) are the biological parents of Ja.S. (Child).1
    Father and Mother divorced in 2013 and share custody of Child. In November 2015,
    Child was exhibiting behavior problems, and he was asked to leave the daycare
    center he attended. F.F. No. 2. Father and Mother jointly decided not to return Child
    to that center. F.F. No. 3. Child’s behavior issues continued, and Father “tried
    everything” to correct Child’s behavior. F.F. No. 4. Father had discussions with
    1
    Child was born in May 2011 and was four years old in February 2016, when the incident
    of alleged child abuse occurred. Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 1.
    Child about his conduct and took away privileges and other things. 
    Id. Father gave
    Child a stress ball to manage his anger, and Father tried various de-escalation
    techniques recommended by a school psychologist. Id.; Reproduced Record (R.R.)
    at 252a-53a.
    Father and Mother enrolled Child at a new daycare, where Child’s
    behavior problems persisted. On February 3, 2016, Father received a call and an
    email from the daycare informing him that Child had been misbehaving and needed
    to be picked up. F.F. No. 8. The email stated that Child’s misconduct included four
    specific behaviors: disrespecting his teachers; climbing on furniture; taking toys
    away from and being aggressive toward another child by trying to slam the child’s
    head into the ground and laughing; and “potty talk.” F.F. No. 9. Father picked Child
    up from the daycare shortly after 3:00 p.m. F.F. No. 8.
    When they arrived home, Father sent Child to his room. Father decided
    to try corporal punishment, a strategy his own parents had used, to help modify
    Child’s behavior. F.F. No. 10. Father had never spanked Child before; on his way
    to Child’s room, Father smacked his own leg multiple times “to make sure he did
    not hit [Child] too hard.” F.F. Nos. 11, 43. Father pulled Child’s outer pants down,
    read Child the email, bent Child over his knee, and hit Child with an open palm four
    times on his buttocks; afterward, Father hugged Child and they both cried. F.F. No.
    10.
    At approximately 3:40 p.m., Father took Child with him to basketball
    practice at the school where Father is an assistant coach. F.F. No. 12. A few minutes
    after they arrived, Father’s wife, who is employed at the same school as Father and
    Mother, picked Child up. F.F. No. 13. Later that evening, when Father’s wife gave
    Child a bath, Father noticed red marks on Child’s buttocks. F.F. No. 14. Although
    2
    Child did not complain of discomfort to Father or Father’s wife, Father called his
    parents. F.F. No. 15. Based on his parents’ advice, Father applied ice to Child’s
    buttocks that night and the following day; Child protested that the ice was cold. F.F.
    No. 16. Other than not attending daycare on Thursday and Friday, February 4-5,
    2016, Child went about his normal activities those days, and he rode his bike on
    Saturday, February 6, 2016. F.F. No. 17.
    Father did not contact Mother to advise her that he spanked Child or
    that he kept him home for two days. F.F. No. 18. Mother and Father “have a
    somewhat acrimonious relationship, do not communicate well and usually have no
    contact with each other when one of them has custody of [Child].” F.F. No. 19.
    Child returned to Mother’s home on Monday, February 8, 2016. F.F.
    No. 20. When Child undressed for a bath, Mother was shocked to see big bruises on
    his buttocks. F.F. No. 21. Child ran to his room and said that Father hit him so hard
    that it hurt; he wanted to scream and yell and hit Father back; and Father had put ice
    on his bottom. F.F. No. 22. Mother took photographs of Child’s buttocks that
    evening. F.F. No. 23. She recalled that Child went about his normal activities that
    night and had no complaints of pain or any issues with sitting. F.F. No. 24.
    On the night of February 8, 2016, the York County Office of Children,
    Youth and Families (CYF) received a referral alleging that Child had been physically
    abused by Father on February 3, 2016, when Father spanked Child. R.R. at 196a;
    5/31/17 Ex. C-5. CYF intake caseworker Irene Franzis initiated an investigation by
    interviewing Mother and Child on February 9, 2016. She then contacted Detective
    Donald Hopple of the York Area Regional Police Department, who assisted CYF
    with investigations. R.R. at 200a. Detective Hopple interviewed Father on February
    10, 2016. R.R. at 43a. Thereafter, Detective Hopple forwarded the case to an
    3
    assistant district attorney (ADA), who directed him to file a citation against Father
    for harassment based on the spanking incident.2 R.R. at 46a.
    A month later, on March 9, 2016, Mother sought a Protection from
    Abuse order (PFA) based on the February 3, 2016 spanking incident. F.F. No. 29.
    Custody litigation was ongoing at the time; the PFA was dismissed when Child’s
    parents entered into a new custody agreement. F.F. No. 30. There was no disruption
    to the custody or visitation schedule as a result of the allegations or the PFA. F.F.
    No. 31.
    As part of CYF’s investigation, Ms. Franzis interviewed Father, his
    wife, and Child; spoke with Child’s play therapist; consulted with law enforcement;
    attended the PFA hearing; reviewed Mother’s photographs of Child’s buttocks; took
    a photograph of Child’s buttocks and observed brownish-green markings; noted that
    Child did not seem to be fearful of Father; and received no information that Child
    suffered any impairment of functioning.3 F.F. No. 28.
    On March 15, 2016, CYF issued an indicated report of physical child
    abuse against Father to the ChildLine & Abuse Registry.4 On March 21, 2016,
    Father pled guilty to a summary offense citation of harassment. On or about April
    12, 2016, Father appealed the indicated report and requested an expunction hearing.
    2
    Harassment is defined as the “intent to harass, annoy or alarm another, the person strikes,
    shoves, kicks, or otherwise subjects the other person to physical contact.” Section 2709 of the
    Crimes Code, 18 Pa. C.S. §2709.
    3
    Neither parent sought medical attention for Child’s bruises. F.F. No. 27.
    4
    Section 6331(3) of the Child Protective Services Law (Law) states in part, “There shall
    be established in the department a Statewide database of protective services, which shall
    include . . . (3) Indicated and founded reports of child abuse.” 23 Pa. C.S §6331(3).
    4
    On April 14, 2016, CYF changed the status of its report to founded,5 based on
    Father’s guilty plea of harassment.
    A hearing was held in June 2016 for the limited purpose of determining
    whether CYF properly amended the report.                    On August 12, 2016, an ALJ
    recommended that Father’s appeal be sustained and that the founded report of child
    abuse be expunged. Certified Record, Item No. 5. The BHA adopted the ALJ’s
    findings by August 23, 2016 order.
    Thereafter, CYF filed an application for reconsideration with the
    Secretary of Human Services (Secretary) and requested a hearing on the former
    indicated report of child abuse. The Secretary granted reconsideration. On February
    28, 2017, the Secretary issued an order upholding the expungement of the founded
    report and remanding the matter to the BHA for a hearing on the merits of Father’s
    appeal of the indicated report.
    The ALJ held a hearing on May 3, 2017. H.M., Child’s daycare teacher,
    testified that Child had been in the daycare program since November 30, 2015. She
    described Child as having ongoing behavioral issues, including verbal and physical
    aggression. H.M. said that on February 3, 2016, she notified Child’s parents that
    Child was misbehaving and needed to be picked up from daycare. She stated that
    Child was verbally abusive to the teachers, was taking toys from other children and
    at one point tackled another child. R.R. at 23a-26a.
    Detective Hopple testified that he contacted Father on February 10,
    2016, and met with him that morning. Father explained that he received an email
    5
    A founded report of child abuse is made where, inter alia, there has been a judicial
    adjudication (including the entry of a guilty plea or a plea of nolo contendere or a finding of guilt
    to a criminal charge) that is based on a finding that a subject child has been abused and involves
    the same factual circumstances involved in the allegation of abuse. Section 6303 of the Law, 23
    Pa. C.S. §6303; J.M. v. Department of Public Welfare, 
    94 A.3d 1095
    , 1099 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
    5
    stating that Child was acting very aggressively with other children. Father said
    everything he had tried to improve Child’s behavior, such as timeouts and removal
    of privileges, had failed. Father admitted that he spanked Child. He described to
    Detective Hopple how he first hit himself on the leg to see how hard he might be
    spanking his son. Detective Hopple testified that Father felt terrible and expressed
    remorse for spanking Child. He said Father reported being shocked when he saw
    the marks on Child’s bottom. Father concluded that the spanking was obviously a
    mistake and said that he “did overdo it.” R.R. at 45a. Detective Hopple said he
    suggested that Father take parenting classes and they discussed that for a while
    before finishing the interview. R.R. at 43a-46a.
    Child was five-and-a-half years old at the time of the hearing. Child
    testified that he liked kindergarten, playing with his dad, and football. When asked
    what he would like to do on his upcoming birthday, Child said he would like to
    wrestle with his dad. Child said that when he gets in trouble, he normally is sent to
    his room. He remembered that Father once spanked him, but he did not recall why.
    Child testified that Father hit him with an open hand on his bottom and it really hurt.
    He said it happened just one time in his room and that Father struck him just once.
    He denied that anybody gave him ice and initially did not remember what he did
    afterwards or whether it hurt the next day. R.R. at 67a-90a.
    On cross-examination, Child testified that after the spanking, Father
    took him to basketball practice. Child said he sat and watched practice and was able
    to sit and ride his bike and do other activities. Child subsequently testified that he
    did not remember what he did the day after he was spanked or where he was before
    he arrived home with his dad. R.R. at 92a-99a.
    6
    Responding to questions from the ALJ, Child testified that he
    remembered hurting himself when he was about four years old and fell off his bike.
    He was wearing shorts and his knees hit rocks on the ground. Child said it hurt but
    he could not say how much. When the ALJ asked Child if the spanking was the
    worst pain Child ever felt, he said yes. Then he answered that his bottom did not
    hurt at all while he was sitting on his bed after the spanking. Immediately thereafter,
    Child said that he cried for a long time because it hurt a lot. He next stated that his
    bottom did not hurt when he was sitting in the basketball stands. Child concluded
    his testimony by stating that he “felt good” about both of his parents and that no one
    told him what to say at the hearing. R.R. at 101a-11a.
    Mother testified that under the parents’ custody arrangement, Child was
    with her on Mondays and Tuesdays, with Father on Wednesdays and Thursdays, and
    the parents alternated custody on weekends. Mother explained that she saw the
    February 3, 2016 email from daycare, but Father picked Child up because it was his
    custodial day.
    Mother stated that she picked Child up from daycare in the late
    afternoon on February 8, 2016. She said she first noticed something was wrong at
    approximately 7:00 p.m., when Child was getting ready for a bath, and she saw big
    bruises on his bottom. Mother described Child as ashamed and said he covered his
    bottom and ran back to his room. Child told her that Father had hit him and that it
    hurt so bad he wanted to yell and scream and hit him back. Child also said that it
    was his fault. Mother testified that she took pictures of Child’s bottom on the
    evening of February 8 and again the following day. Mother noted that Child returned
    to his ordinary activities on February 8 and February 9, 2016. R.R. at 121a-28a,
    130a-44a.
    7
    Mother testified that she allowed Father to have custody of Child on the
    following Wednesday and Thursday because she believed he was remorseful. She
    said she did not call him immediately afterward and has never discussed the incident
    with him. Mother stated that she had no motivation to cause Father to lose his job
    as a teacher and said that she tried very hard to keep the situation out of their school.
    She said that she eventually told a school administrator what was happening on the
    advice of her attorney. R.R. at 145a-57a, 169a-70a.
    Ms. Franzis testified that she made a finding of child abuse based on
    Child’s age, Child’s report that Father spanked him and it hurt, the visible bruising
    on Child’s bottom five and six days after the spanking, conversations with Father
    and his wife, the fact that ice had been applied to Child’s bottom, and the fact that
    Child cried. Ms. Franzis identified the photographs Mother had shown her and said
    she had considered those as well. However, Ms. Franzis acknowledged that when
    she viewed Child’s bottom on February 9, 2016, “there [were] possibly some
    marks,” but she did not see bruises. R.R. at 218a-19a. She added that she observed
    redness on Child’s bottom that could have been caused by sitting on the floor. R.R.
    at 198a, 212a-13a, 219a, 227a.
    Father testified that after using multiple alternatives, such as loss of
    privileges and de-escalation techniques, without success, he decided to try corporal
    punishment. Father stated that his parents had used this strategy when he was a
    child, and he believed it might help curb Child’s misbehavior. He testified that he
    wanted to discipline Child, not hurt him. Father described hitting his own thigh on
    his way to Child’s room to make sure he did not spank Child too hard. Father stated
    that he spanked Child four times, once for each infraction identified in the email.
    Father explained that he bent Child over his knee, hit Child’s “upper left butt cheek,
    8
    lower left butt cheek, upper right butt cheek, lower right butt cheek,” to avoid
    spanking Child twice in the same area. Afterward, he and Child hugged, they cried,
    and then it was over. Father testified that when he saw Child’s bare bottom that
    evening, he did not observe any bruising, only red marks, which were not raised.
    Father stated that “from the bottom of [his] heart, [he] never expected there to even
    be a mark based on how hard that [he] spanked [Child’s] butt.” R.R. at 255a-57a,
    259a, 272a-74a, 278a.
    Father said that he kept Child home from daycare on February 4 and
    February 5 to give both Child and daycare a fresh start. He explained that he and
    Mother had agreed in the past to keep Child home from daycare after disciplinary
    problems so Child could regroup. When asked if keeping Child home after the
    spanking was not suspicious, Father said that Child uses the bathroom on his own
    and no one at the daycare would have reason to see Child’s bottom. Father further
    testified that he did not inform Mother of the spanking or Child’s absence from
    daycare because Child was not injured and did not complain of pain. Father
    explained that he and Mother got along for a period after their divorce, but by
    February 2016, their communication was at a minimum. R.R. at 279a-92a.
    The ALJ found the testimony of each witness credible6 and issued the
    findings of fact summarized above. The ALJ began her analysis by noting the
    relevant statutory provisions. Section 6303(b.1) of the Law states that “[t]he term
    ‘child abuse’ shall mean intentionally, knowingly or recklessly doing any of the
    following: . . . Causing bodily injury to a child through any recent act or failure to
    act.” 23 Pa. C.S. §6303(b.1). Section 6303(a) of the Law defines “bodily injury” as
    “[i]mpairment of physical condition or substantial pain.” 23 Pa. C.S. §6303(a).
    6
    F.F. Nos. 35-39, 41-43.
    9
    The ALJ determined that Father “exercised poor judgement and made
    a bad decision.” R.R. at 320a. Although the ALJ credited Father’s testimony, she
    concluded that Father’s conduct was a gross deviation from the standard of care that
    a reasonable person would observe in the same situation and amounted to
    “recklessness, or criminal negligence.” R.R. at 320a-21a. The ALJ stated Father
    should have known that it was “practically certain” that his spanking Child “would
    result in injuries to [Child].” R.R. at 321a.
    Ultimately, the ALJ’s decision rested on her determination that Child
    suffered “substantial pain.” In making that determination, the ALJ repeatedly
    emphasized that bruises could be seen on Child’s buttocks five days after the
    spanking. R.R. at 320a-24a.
    [B]y definition, corporal punishment induces pain.
    [Child] credibly testified how [sic] when [Father ] spanked
    him on his bottom with his open hand it “really hurt” and
    he cried for a long time and then they went to basketball
    practice. [Child] relayed how [Father] applied ice to his
    buttocks. Ice was applied not just on the night of the
    spanking but the next day as well. While [Child] did not
    complain to either parent that he experienced pain from
    either sitting around or riding his bike at any point after
    [Father] utilized corporal punishment[,] and there was no
    medical testimony or evidence since neither parent took
    [Child] to see a doctor or administered medication for
    pain, the photographs of [Child’s] buttocks are particularly
    compelling.
    R.R. at 321a. The ALJ relied on reddish, brownish bruising, apparent five days after
    the spanking, Child’s testimony that the spanking “really hurt,” Father’s application
    of ice to Child’s buttocks over two days, Father’s failure to take Child back to
    daycare, and Father’s failure to inform Mother of the spanking to conclude that Child
    suffered substantial pain. 
    Id. at 321a-22a.
    The ALJ further observed:
    10
    There is no indication that [Child] was not able to go about
    his normal activities. There was, however, testimony from
    [Child], [Mother] and the caseworker, and documentary
    evidence, specifically photographs, which showed
    bruising and discoloration over the majority of [Child’s]
    buttocks five (5) days after [Father] utilized corporal
    punishment to discipline [Child]. . . .
    R.R. at 324a (emphasis added).
    The ALJ reasoned as follows. Intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly
    causing bodily injury to a child constitutes child abuse. 23 Pa. C.S. §6303(b.1).
    “Bodily injury” is defined as impairment of physical condition or substantial pain.
    23 Pa. C.S. §6303(a). The testimony of Child, Mother, and Ms. Franzis, along with
    the photographs showing bruising and discoloration five days later, supports a
    finding that Child experienced substantial pain. R.R. at 324a. While the Law
    recognizes a parent’s right to use reasonable force for the purpose of discipline, in
    this case Father’s actions went beyond the use of reasonable force. 
    Id. First, [Father’s]
    actions were reckless as they rose to the
    level of criminal negligence in that there was substantial
    evidence that [Father] acted negligently with respect to a
    material element of an offense when he should be aware
    of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the material
    element exists or will result from his conduct. The risk
    must be of such nature and degree that the actor’s failure
    to perceive it, considering the nature and intent of his
    conduct and the circumstances known to him, involves a
    gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable
    person would observe in the actor’s situation. [Father]
    admitted to “overdoing it” when he disciplined [Child].
    Reasonable persons, parents, in [Father’s] position who
    had unsuccessfully tried to correct their 4-year-old’s poor
    behavior would likely resort to spanking [Child] with an
    open hand with the child’s pants down but not as hard as
    [Father] did. [Father] realized that a substantial and
    unjustifiable risk would result from his conduct. [The
    Department] proved that [Father’s action] in hitting
    [Child] with an open palm was knowing.                 [The
    11
    Department] also showed by substantial evidence that
    [Father] was aware that his conduct was of that nature or
    that such circumstances exist or that his conduct would
    have resulted in [Child] sustaining bruising to his buttocks.
    R.R. at 324a. We interpret the above as a determination that Father’s conduct was
    criminally negligent because Father knowingly disregarded a substantial and
    unjustifiable risk, which was that his spanking Child would cause Child substantial
    pain.
    The ALJ concluded that the Department satisfied its burden to support
    the indicated report of child abuse with substantial evidence and recommended that
    Father’s appeal of the indicated report be denied.
    Father appealed. The BHA denied his appeal and adopted the ALJ’s
    recommendation in its entirety.
    II. Discussion
    A. Res judicata
    On appeal,7 Father first argues that CYF failed to present substantial
    evidence establishing child abuse at the first hearing and that the doctrine of res
    judicata barred a second hearing on the same issue.
    Res judicata encompasses two related, but distinct
    principles: technical res judicata and collateral estoppel.
    Technical res judicata provides, where a final judgment
    on the merits exists, a future lawsuit on the same cause of
    action is precluded. Collateral estoppel acts to foreclose
    litigation in a subsequent action where issues of law or fact
    were litigated and necessary to a previous judgment.
    7
    Our scope of review is limited to determining whether the record supports the necessary
    findings of fact, whether constitutional rights were violated, or whether errors of law were made.
    F.V.C. v. Department of Public Welfare, 
    987 A.2d 223
    , 225 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010).
    12
    [Where applicable], collateral estoppel bars a subsequent
    lawsuit where (1) an issue decided in a prior action is
    identical to one presented in a later action; (2) the prior
    action resulted in a final judgment on the merits; (3) the
    party against whom collateral estoppel is asserted was a
    party to the prior action, or is in privity with a party to the
    prior action; and (4), the party against whom collateral
    estoppel is asserted had a full and fair opportunity to
    litigate the issue in the prior action.
    C.J. v. Department of Public Welfare, 
    960 A.2d 494
    , 499 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008)
    (citations omitted).
    In response, the Department correctly observes that once CYF amended
    the status of the report to founded, the only issue that could be considered on appeal
    was whether Father’s guilty plea to the harassment charge supported a founded
    report of child abuse. See R.F. v. Department of Public Welfare, 
    801 A.2d 646
    , 649
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002) (holding that an appeal of a founded report was permissible
    where it was not a collateral attack on the underlying adjudication but only
    challenged whether the plea was one upon which a founded report could be based).
    Consequently, the BHA’s prior determination did not consider evidence, facts, or
    issues related to allegations in the indicated report.
    B. Substantial evidence
    Father next argues that CYF failed to support the indicated report of
    child abuse with substantial evidence. Section 6303 of the Law states that an
    indicated report of child abuse is made if an investigation by the Department or a
    county agency determines that “substantial evidence of the alleged abuse by a
    perpetrator exists based on any of the following: (i) Available medical evidence[;]
    (ii) The child protective service investigation[;] (iii) An admission of the acts of
    abuse by the perpetrator.” 23 Pa. C.S. §6303.
    13
    In making this argument, Father notes that no medical evidence was
    offered to establish either injury or pain.               He notes that while Mother took
    photographs, she did not take Child to a medical provider. Father also challenges
    the results of CYF’s investigation. He emphasizes Ms. Franzis’s admissions that
    she did not see any bruises on March 1, 2016; she did not note any discoloration on
    her contact summary sheet; and the bruising she referenced in the explanatory
    section of the indicated report was not bruising she personally observed, but was
    reported by Mother.8 R.R. at 218a-21a, 225a-27a. Lastly, Father argues that there
    are no admissions of acts of abuse.
    CYF counters that the record includes ample evidence that Father
    behaved recklessly and caused Child substantial pain. In particular, CYF cites
    Father’s testimony that he practiced striking his leg before hitting Child as an
    admission that Father knew of and disregarded the likelihood that he would cause
    8
    Regarding the basis of the indicated report, Ms. Franzis testified as follows:
    Q. [The indicated report] specifically says that [Child] was seen with
    injuries/bruising several days after the date of that incident. Was
    that referring to you seeing those bruises or to mother seeing those
    bruises?
    A. That was referring to mother seeing those bruises.
    Q. Okay. So you never actually saw those bruises.
    A. No.
    Q. But yet, you saw [Child] the same day she’s saying she saw those
    bruises?
    A. Yes.
    R.R. at 227a.
    14
    Child substantial pain. We cannot agree that the cited testimony, that Father struck
    himself because he did not want to hurt Child,9 establishes a knowing or intentional
    disregard of a likelihood of harm.
    CYF relies on “bruises [that were] still visible five days later” as
    evidence that Child suffered substantial pain. F.F. No. 23. We have held that
    photographic evidence may support a finding of severe pain,10 but we also have
    cautioned factfinders that they lack the expertise necessary to interpret medical
    evidence.     See, e.g., Zeigler v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Jones
    Apparel Group, Inc.), 
    728 A.2d 421
    , 424 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999) (holding that the
    workers’ compensation judge, “who of course was not qualified as an expert medical
    witness,” impermissibly relied on her own opinion to make findings concerning the
    medical significance of test results). Although we have yet to similarly caution
    factfinders in this context, we hold that a factfinder who is not a medical expert
    exceeds her authority by making what are essentially medical determinations to
    9
    “I smacked my leg to make sure that I didn’t hit him too hard. I didn’t want to spank him
    too hard.” R.R. at 256a.
    10
    See S.T. v. Department of Public Welfare, 
    962 A.2d 679
    , 683 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008). In
    S.T., the ALJ found:
    [T]he pictures of the subject child’s injuries are powerful evidence
    that the subject child suffered a serious physical injury. They show
    bruises over much of the child’s body. The picture of the extensive
    bruising from the child’s abdomen to his groin is especially graphic.
    As such, the pictures depict the result of a savage beating that was
    far removed from any acceptable corporal punishment. In sum, the
    only conclusion one can draw from these photographs is that the
    subject child suffered serious pain . . . .
    This Court likewise described the photographs as depicting a child with bruises over much of his
    body as well as cuts and dried blood on his right leg. We held that from the photographic evidence,
    “one can reasonably infer that the injuries caused severe pain.” 
    Id. 15 support
    necessary findings of fact. Here, to the extent the ALJ assumed a correlation
    between the duration of a bruise and a degree of pain, the ALJ erred.
    C. Section 6304(d)
    Finally, Father argues that the Department failed to consider his right
    as a parent to use corporal punishment to discipline Child. In Section 6304(d) of the
    Law, added by the Act of December 18, 2013, P.L. 1170, the legislature expressly
    excluded a parent’s use of reasonable force as a form of discipline from the definition
    of child abuse.
    Section 6304(d) of the Law states:
    (d) Rights of parents. — Nothing in this chapter shall be
    construed to restrict the generally recognized existing
    rights of parents to use reasonable force on or against their
    children for the purposes of supervision, control and
    discipline of their children. Such reasonable force shall
    not constitute child abuse.
    23 Pa. C.S. §6304(d). Where the allegation of child abuse involves a parent’s
    administration of corporal punishment for the purpose of disciplining a child, the
    ultimate question is whether the parent used “reasonable force.” 
    Id. Notably, the
    analysis focuses on the parent’s conduct rather than the result.                  See P.R. v.
    Department of Public Welfare, 
    801 A.2d 478
    (Pa. 2002)11; W.S. v. Department of
    Public Welfare, 
    882 A.2d 541
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005); J.B. v. Department of Public
    Welfare, 
    824 A.2d 342
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003).
    11
    This case was decided under a prior version of the Law that defined “child abuse” using
    the terms “nonaccidental” and “serious physical injury” rather than “intentionally, knowingly or
    recklessly” and “bodily injury.” However, decisions under the prior law are still helpful to our
    analysis. See Allegheny County Office of Children, Youth & Families v. Department of Human
    Services, 
    202 A.3d 155
    , 165 n.10 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019).
    16
    In P.R., a mother used a belt to administer corporal punishment to her
    six-year-old child after she found the child writing on the apartment walls. The child
    tried to evade the blows and the belt buckle struck the child’s eye. The mother
    immediately attended to the child’s injury and took the child to a clinic. Eventually,
    the resulting injury required surgery. An indicated report was filed naming the
    mother as the perpetrator of abuse. The mother’s request for expungement was
    denied based on the hearing officer’s determination that the injury was foreseeable.
    This Court reversed, finding that an intent to harm was required to sustain a finding
    of child abuse. Our Supreme Court affirmed, but on other grounds.
    The Supreme Court recognized the need to balance the competing
    objectives of protecting children from abuse while maintaining a parent’s right to
    use corporal punishment. The court concluded that the standard that appropriately
    resolves that tension is criminal negligence. Applying the criminal negligence
    standard to the facts presented, the Supreme Court stated:
    One can question the wisdom of a parent’s decision to use
    a belt with a buckle attached to administer a spanking.
    However, in most circumstances the decision to use a belt
    that bears a buckle cannot be viewed as a gross deviation
    from the standard of care a reasonable parent would
    observe in the same situation. Without substantial proof
    that this unusual injury was more than the regrettable
    result of corporal punishment, we cannot allow the oddity
    of the result itself to presuppose the element of
    unjustifiable risk that would lead to the finding of criminal
    negligence. On the record presented in this case, we
    cannot conclude that DPW presented substantial evidence
    to sustain a finding of child abuse.
    
    P.R., 801 A.2d at 487
    (emphasis added).
    17
    In W.S., a teenage child lied to her parents about her whereabouts, her
    poor report card grades, and her school suspensions. The father disciplined the child
    by hitting her in the ear several times, causing her to fall. Thereafter, an indicated
    report of child abuse was filed naming the father as the perpetrator. Evidence
    presented during an expungement hearing established that the child suffered bruising
    and contusions to her ear and swelling that significantly impaired her functioning.
    The child initially had a 20-decibel loss of hearing in her left ear, which improved
    to a normal level shortly thereafter. The ALJ found that the injuries significantly
    impaired the child’s physical functioning, either temporarily or permanently. The
    ALJ denied the expungement request, and that decision was upheld by the agency
    on appeal.
    On further appeal to this Court, we recognized the competing objectives
    discussed by the Supreme Court in P.R. “Parents must be permitted, in fact
    encouraged, to discipline their children, even though this may, at times, result in the
    administration of corporal punishment.” 
    W.S., 882 A.2d at 545
    . “At the same time,
    however, the Law must protect children from abuse.” 
    Id. Upon review,
    relying on
    P.R. and J.B.,12 we concluded that the agency did not establish that the child’s
    12
    In J.B., a teenage child was behaving aggressively and violently. The child was offered
    the choice between being spanked or being removed from the home, and the child opted to be
    spanked. The child removed his jeans and the mother’s boyfriend spanked the child with a large
    plastic serving spoon 10 to 12 times on his bottom while the mother held down the child’s wrists.
    Afterwards, the mother spanked the child’s bottom with the spoon three times. The blows to the
    child’s buttocks caused him to experience severe pain and temporary impairment. The next day,
    the child had trouble sitting, and photographs of the child’s bottom showed a series of red, oval-
    shaped bruising and welts. Thereafter, Blair County Children and Youth Services filed an
    indicated report of child abuse against the mother and her boyfriend. On appeal, their requests for
    expungement were denied.
    18
    injuries resulted from criminal negligence. We described the father as a “concerned
    parent who tried everything in his means to control his child” before resorting to
    physical 
    discipline. 882 A.2d at 548
    . We also noted that while the father was upset
    when he slapped the child, he exercised self-control by walking away after slapping
    On further appeal, this Court first found that the record did not support a finding of
    severe pain or severe impairment. “The testimony revealed that the child had bruises on his bottom
    and difficulty sitting for a few days. However, there was no mention of ‘severe pain,’ broken skin,
    external bleeding or a showing of substantial impairment. The existence of bruises alone [does]
    not establish proof [sic] of severe pain.” 
    J.B., 824 A.2d at 345
    .
    We next concluded that the record did not establish that criminal negligence caused
    the child’s injury:
    The agency also has a duty of showing that criminal negligence
    caused the injury. [The legislature has defined criminal negligence
    as follows:]
    A person acts negligently with respect to a material element of an
    offense when he should be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable
    risk that the material element exists or will result from his conduct.
    The risk must be of such a nature and degree that the actor’s failure
    to perceive it, considering the nature and intent of his conduct and
    the circumstances known to him, involves a gross deviation from the
    standard of care that a reasonable person would observe in the
    actor’s situation.
    Petitioner’s use of a plastic spoon to administer a spanking to the
    child did not amount to criminal negligence. In these circumstances
    the decision to use a plastic spoon to spank a child cannot be viewed
    as a gross deviation from the standard of care a reasonable parent
    would observe in the same situation. The record is absent of any
    malice, evil intent or emotional attack by the actors and does not
    reveal any substantial evidence that the child’s injury was more than
    the normal regrettable result of measured well intentioned corporal
    punishment. The resulting bruises do not allow us to presuppose an
    unjustifiable risk that would lead to the finding of criminal
    negligence.
    
    J.B., 824 A.2d at 345
    (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
    19
    the child’s ear for the third time.            We explained that the fact that the child
    “experienced a temporary hearing loss does not allow us to presuppose an
    unjustifiable risk that would lead to a finding of criminal negligence.” 
    Id. Instead, in
    W.S. we held that the father’s conduct did not constitute a gross deviation from
    the standard of care a reasonable person in the father’s circumstances would have
    exercised and that the child’s injury was a “regrettable result of corporal
    punishment,” rather than abuse. Id. (citing 
    P.R., 801 A.2d at 487
    ; 
    J.B., 824 A.2d at 345
    .)
    After the Law was amended in 2013, our Court clarified the analysis
    required under Section 6304(d) in Allegheny County Office of Children, Youth &
    Families v. Department of Human Services, 
    202 A.3d 155
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). In
    Allegheny County, a five-year-old child was picked up from school early due to
    misconduct and went to the home of her paternal grandmother. When her father
    came to the house, he smacked the child in the face, hit her on the thigh with his
    hand, and, while driving home, pinched her leg. After arriving home, the father
    started beating the child and smacked her on her bottom. The child said her injuries
    “hurt a 
    lot.” 202 A.3d at 157-58
    .
    The Allegheny County Office of Children, Youth and Families
    (Allegheny CYF) received two reports alleging child abuse.                         Following an
    investigation,13 Allegheny CYF filed two indicated reports of child abuse naming
    the father as the perpetrator. The father appealed. The ALJ found that the father’s
    13
    The caseworker assigned to investigate the allegations interviewed the child, the child’s
    mother, maternal grandparents, and the father. The caseworker also took photographs showing
    scratches and red marks on the child’s face and a long scratch on her thigh. The child’s pediatrician
    conducted an acute examination and opined that the child’s injuries, at the time she received them,
    caused her substantial 
    pain. 202 A.3d at 158-59
    .
    20
    actions were excluded from the Law’s definition of child abuse. The BHA affirmed,
    and Allegheny CYF appealed.
    Before this Court, Allegheny CYF argued that the ALJ erred in finding
    that reasonable force was used, where the child suffered bodily injury and substantial
    pain. According to Allegheny CYF, the case was analogous to the facts in F.R. v.
    Department of Public Welfare, 
    4 A.3d 779
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010), wherein we denied
    the parent’s request for expungement. Allegheny CYF maintained that, like the
    father in F.R., the father in Allegheny County lost control of his emotions and
    disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk when he struck his child in the face
    and pinched her leg.
    The Department argued that “the mere fact that [the child] suffered
    substantial pain at the time of the corporal punishment does not mean [that the father]
    used unreasonable force.” Allegheny 
    County, 202 A.3d at 166
    . The Department
    relied on W.S., in which we held that the father’s conduct did not rise to the level of
    criminal negligence, although the child had suffered a serious injury. In W.S., we
    cited evidence that “the father was a concerned parent who tried everything in his
    means to control his child and that, while he was upset at the time, he had
    demonstrated self-control by walking away from the situation after he made physical
    contact.” Allegheny 
    County, 202 A.3d at 166
    (citing 
    W.S., 882 A.2d at 548
    ).
    Our analysis in Allegheny County recognized that the relevant standards
    were set forth by the Supreme Court in P.R. “A finding of abuse begins with the
    discovery that a child has suffered a serious injury. The investigation then goes in
    reverse in an effort to ascertain how and why that injury occurred. . . . [The standard
    of c]riminal negligence intertwines the concepts of foreseeability and intent to a
    degree that this court finds appropriate for differentiating cases of accidental and
    21
    non-accidental injury . . . .” Allegheny 
    County, 202 A.3d at 166
    -67 (quoting 
    P.R., 801 A.2d at 486-87
    ).
    Further, in Allegheny County we noted that, after F.R. was decided, the
    legislature amended the Law to include Section 6304(d), codifying the right of
    parents to use reasonable force in the administration of corporal punishment.
    Reconciling the relevant legal principles, we held:
    [I]n cases where the child’s injury arises from the
    administration of corporal punishment, the factfinder must
    make a determination as to whether the force used was
    “reasonable force,” and in doing so, must consider
    whether the parent was criminally negligent in that he
    disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk or deviated
    from a standard of care that a reasonable person would
    observe in his situation.
    Allegheny 
    County, 202 A.3d at 167
    (citations omitted).                     We noted that the
    determination of whether the father was criminally negligent was a legal conclusion
    and determined that the evidence did not establish criminal negligence.
    Accordingly, we affirmed the BHA’s final order granting expungement.14
    14
    In doing so, we added:
    We take note that traditional acts of corporal punishment might
    include a form of spanking, slapping, or pinching but, as the ALJ
    did in this case, the factfinder must look at the specific
    circumstances of the case and determine if the corporal punishment
    was done in a manner that was unreasonable and, further, consider
    whether the actions were criminally negligent.
    Moreover, we observe that both this Court and the Supreme Court
    have sustained appeals of parents who injured their children far
    more severely and who used items to punish their children that, it
    would seem, had the capacity to inflict far more damage than an
    open hand. See 
    P.R., 801 A.2d at 480
    (use of a belt with a buckle to
    administer spanking that inadvertently hit the child’s eye and
    22
    From these cases we distill the following principles. First, by statute,
    physical impairment or substantial pain caused by a parent’s use of reasonable force
    for the purpose of disciplining his child is not child abuse. Consequently, where a
    child’s injury results from the administration of corporal punishment, a
    determination of child abuse begins with the finding of a serious injury. Thereafter,
    the critical inquiry is whether reasonable force was used. That determination
    requires application of the criminal negligence standard, which requires proof that a
    substantial and unjustifiable risk of bodily injury was disregarded. In that analysis,
    neither the occurrence of physical impairment nor an experience of substantial pain
    is dispositive as to whether a parent used unreasonable force. The focus of the
    inquiry is not on the nature of the injury, but the conduct of the parent or guardian,
    considered under the totality of the circumstances. Additionally, when evaluating
    the evidence, the ALJ is not to make factual inferences that require medical
    expertise.
    “In an expungement case, the county agency bears the burden of
    proving that the actions of the perpetrator constitute child abuse within the meaning
    of the Law.” 
    W.S., 882 A.2d at 544
    . In this matter, after thorough review, we
    conclude that the ALJ’s findings do not support a conclusion that the Department
    satisfied its burden of proof in the expungement proceeding. Although the ALJ did
    required surgery); W.S., 882 A.2d at [547-48] (slapping child’s ear
    causing short-term hearing loss, bruising, swelling, redness);
    Children and Youth Services for County of Berks [v. Department of
    Human Services (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1175 C.D. 2017, filed May 7,
    2018) (hitting child with a wooden stick and breaking it on the
    child’s leg causing a bruise).
    Allegheny 
    County, 202 A.3d at 168
    n.13.
    23
    consider whether, under Section 6304(d), Father used reasonable force, the ALJ’s
    analysis is not in accord with our previous rulings. The ALJ recognized Father’s
    belief that corporal punishment was appropriate, that other methods of discipline had
    failed, that Father did not intend to cause Child undue pain, and that he attempted to
    moderate the spanking by hitting himself first.15 However, the ALJ focused on the
    nature of Child’s injury, and Father’s subsequent regret, rather than Father’s conduct
    at the time of the corporal punishment and the attendant circumstances, to support
    her legal conclusion.
    III. Conclusion
    The ALJ’s determinations that Father disregarded a substantial and
    unjustifiable risk and caused Child substantial pain are both inconsistent with case
    law and unsupported by the record. P.R.; Allegheny County; W.S. “Without
    substantial proof” that Child’s pain “was more than the regrettable result of corporal
    punishment,” we will not rely on such result “to presuppose the element of
    unjustifiable risk” that would support a finding of criminal negligence. 
    P.R., 801 A.2d at 487
    .
    Accordingly, the BHA’s order is reversed.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    15
    F.F. Nos. 10, 11, 43. Compare 
    F.R., 4 A.3d at 788
    . In that case, we affirmed an ALJ’s
    determination that the father disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk when applying
    corporal punishment, causing the child to experience functional impairment and severe pain. The
    ALJ explained that while the father did not act with malicious intent, the father lost control of his
    emotions while disciplining his child.
    24
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    J. S.,                           :
    Petitioner :
    : CASE SEALED
    v.              :
    : No. 1772 C.D. 2017
    Department of Human Services,    :
    :
    Respondent :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 15th day of November, 2019, the November 3, 2017
    order of the Department of Human Services, Bureau of Hearings and Appeals, is
    REVERSED.
    __________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge