In the Int. of: X.P., Appeal of: K.J.P. ( 2021 )


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  • J-A03010-21
    
    2021 PA Super 55
    IN THE INT. OF: X.P., A MINOR              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    APPEAL OF: K.J.P., MOTHER                  :
    :
    :
    :
    :
    :   No. 1106 MDA 2020
    Appeal from the Dispositional Order Entered August 3, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County
    Juvenile Division at No(s): CP-06-DP-0000209-2019
    BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and MURRAY, J.
    OPINION BY MURRAY, J.:                                FILED MARCH 30, 2021
    K.J.P. (Mother) appeals from the amended order of adjudication and
    disposition with respect to her teenage son, X.P. (Child), which found Mother
    recklessly caused serious mental injury to Child.1 Upon careful review, we
    affirm.
    The trial court summarized the procedural background as follows:
    Commencing in May of 2019, and throughout much of 2019, Berks
    County Children and Youth Services (“BCCYS”) investigated
    reports that Mother was emotionally abusive toward Child and his
    half-sibling twin sisters.[2] On November 20, 2019, a Dependency
    Petition was filed by BCCYS alleging that Child and his twin sisters
    . . . were without proper parental care and control, and delineating
    the numerous reports of mental abuse by Mother against Child
    which were investigated.
    ____________________________________________
    1The record indicates the whereabouts of Child’s father was unknown to Berks
    County Children and Youth Services.
    2Child’s twin sisters, born in May of 2009, are not part of this appeal. N.T.,
    4/8/20, at 5.
    J-A03010-21
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 1.
    Prior to the dependency hearing, on December 22, 2019, Mother
    participated in a psychiatric evaluation with Maria Ruiza Yee, M.D. Amended
    Dependency Petition, 1/17/20, at ¶ 31. On January 6, 2020, Child, then 16
    years old, participated in an emotional abuse evaluation with Allison Hill,
    Ph.D., a licensed psychiatrist. Id. at ¶ 33; Trial Court Opinion 9/25/20, at 4.
    As a result of those evaluations, on January 17, 2020, BCCYS filed an
    amended dependency petition.           BCCYS alleged “Mother is a perpetrator of
    child abuse in accordance with 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303, in that Child is an abused
    child. . . . Child has suffered a serious mental injury due to Mother’s knowing,
    intentional, or reckless actions.” Id. at ¶ 34.
    A hearing commenced on January 30, 2020, and continued on April 8,
    2020. The court explained:
    At this hearing, Dr. Allison Hill, an expert in the field of mental
    health and emotional abuse evaluations, testified about her
    evaluation of Child. In addition, Child himself testified. At the
    conclusion of the hearing, this [c]ourt found by clear and
    convincing evidence that Child is a dependent child. Temporary
    legal and physical custody was transferred to BCCYS for
    placement purposes.[3] Child’s siblings were also adjudicated
    dependent, with legal and physical custody remaining with
    Mother.
    ____________________________________________
    3 At the conclusion of the evidence, Mother and BCCYS, through their counsel,
    agreed on the record in open court to Child’s adjudication and his placement
    in kinship care. N.T., 1/30/20, at 69. The court issued an order of
    adjudication and disposition dated January 30, 2020.
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    An additional hearing was held on April 8, 2020 on the issue of
    child abuse. The testimony of Dr. Ruiza Yee, who had performed
    a psychiatric evaluation of Mother, was taken at that time as well
    as the testimony of Mother and two BCCYS caseworkers. In an
    Amended Order of Adjudication and Disposition dated July 28,
    2020,[4] this [c]ourt found, by clear and convincing evidence, that
    Child had sustained “serious mental injury” as defined by 23
    Pa.C.S. § 6303(b.1). This [c]ourt further found that Mother is a
    [p]erpetrator of abuse within the meaning of 23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a)
    and 18 Pa.C.S. § 302. This appeal followed on August 27, 2020.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 1-2.
    On appeal, Mother presents a single issue:
    Did the trial court abuse its discretion and commit an error of law
    by finding that [M]other recklessly caused serious mental injury
    to [C]hild where the record does not contain clear and convincing
    evidence that [M]other caused serious mental injury or that she
    acted recklessly?
    Mother’s Brief at 7.5
    It is well settled that our standard of review in dependency cases
    “requires an appellate court to accept the findings of fact and credibility
    determinations of the trial court if they are supported by the record, but does
    not require the appellate court to accept the lower court’s inferences or
    conclusions of law. Accordingly, we review for an abuse of discretion.” In
    the interest of A.C., 
    237 A.3d 553
    , 557 (Pa. Super. 2020) (citations
    omitted). “The trial court is free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence
    presented and is likewise free to make all credibility determinations and
    ____________________________________________
    4   The order was docketed on August 3, 2020.
    5   Child’s guardian ad litem has filed a brief in support of the court’s order.
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    resolve conflicts in the evidence.” In re M.G., 
    855 A.2d 68
    , 73-74 (Pa. Super.
    2004) (citation omitted).
    While dependency proceedings are governed by the Juvenile Act, 42
    Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6375, the Child Protective Services Law (CPSL), 23 Pa.C.S.
    §§ 6301-6387, pertains to a court’s finding of “child abuse,” which must be
    supported by clear and convincing evidence. In the Interest of J.R.W., 
    631 A.2d 1019
     (Pa. Super. 1993). Our Supreme Court explained in In re L.Z.,
    
    111 A.3d 1164
    , 1176 (Pa. 2015), that as “part of [a] dependency adjudication,
    a court may find a parent to be the perpetrator of child abuse,” as defined by
    the CPSL.
    The relevant statute provides:
    (b.1) Child abuse.— The term “child abuse” shall mean
    intentionally, knowingly or recklessly doing any of the following:
    ...
    (3) Causing or substantially contributing to serious mental injury
    to a child through any act or failure to act or a series of such acts
    or failures to act.
    ...
    23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(b.1)(3). “Serious mental injury” is defined as follows:
    A psychological condition, as diagnosed by a physician or licensed
    psychologist, including the refusal of appropriate treatment, that:
    (1)     renders a child chronically and severely anxious,
    agitated, depressed, socially withdrawn, psychotic or in
    reasonable fear that the child’s life or safety is threatened;
    or
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    (2)    seriously interferes with a child’s ability to
    accomplish age-appropriate developmental and social
    tasks.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a) (“Serious mental injury”).
    For purposes of the CPSL, the terms “intentionally,” “knowingly,” and
    “recklessly” have the same meaning as set forth in 18 Pa.C.S. § 302.          23
    Pa.C.S. § 6303(a). Section 302 of the Crimes Code provides:
    § 302. General requirements of culpability.
    ...
    b) Kinds of culpability defined.
    (1) A person acts intentionally with respect to a material
    element of an offense when:
    (i) if the element involves the nature of his conduct or a
    result thereof, it is his conscious object to engage in conduct
    of that nature or to cause such a result; and
    (ii) if the element involves the attendant circumstances, he
    is aware of the existence of such circumstances or he
    believes or hopes that they exist.
    (2) A person acts knowingly with respect to a material
    element of an offense when:
    (i) if the element involves the nature of his conduct or the
    attendant circumstances, he is aware that his conduct is of
    that nature or that such circumstances exist; and
    (ii) if the element involves a result of his conduct, he is
    aware that it is practically certain that his conduct will cause
    such a result.
    (3) A person acts recklessly with respect to a material element
    of an offense when he consciously disregards 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
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    degree that, considering the nature and intent of the actor's
    conduct and the circumstances known to him, its disregard
    involves a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a
    reasonable person would observe in the actor’s situation.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 302(b)(1)-(3).
    Here, the court found that Mother recklessly caused serious mental
    injury to Child. Mother does not dispute that Child sustained serious mental
    injury; however, she argues she did not cause Child’s injury and did not act
    recklessly.
    We begin with the court’s factual findings, upon which it concluded that
    Child sustained serious mental injury. With respect to Child’s testimony, the
    court commented at length:
    At the hearing held on January 30, 2020, Child, who was then 16
    years of age,[6] bravely testified in the presence of Mother to a
    series of acts and failures to act by Mother, including physical
    harm, which occurred over a period of years. He recalled that
    when he was about 10 years old, he was hit with belts, and that
    approximately 7 months before the hearing, Mother had thrown
    hard, plastic lotion bottles and “hair stuff” at him, and then told
    him to clean it up. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 36.) In addition, when he
    was approximately 10 years old, Mother had punched him in the
    nose and made him hold a bag over it as he bled. (N.T. 1/30/20
    at p. 37.)
    Further, once during 2018, when Mother, Child, and Child’s twin
    sisters were all in the car together and Child’s sisters were
    arguing, Mother threatened to crash the car and kill all of them.
    This scared him. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 41.) In addition, Mother
    once told Child that she would have him arrested and that he
    would “not . . . be somewhere to not let it happen.” (N.T. 1/30/20
    ____________________________________________
    6   Child was in tenth grade at the time of the hearing. N.T., 1/30/20, at 70.
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    at p. 43.) In the fall of 2018, Mother attempted suicide by taking
    pills in front of Child and his sisters; she blamed Child and told
    him that it was his fault.[7] (N.T. 1/30/20 at pp. 7-9.) . . . [T]he
    Child “really didn’t go to sleep because [he] was always worried
    about what was going to happen and what was going to happen
    the next day and stuff like that.” (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 42.) As a
    result, he usually did not fall asleep until approximately 1:00 a.m.
    Id.
    . . . [Mother] did not celebrate Child’s sixteenth birthday in
    November of 2019. Id. There was no cake and there were no
    presents for Child’s sixteenth birthday, and Mother did not even
    wish him a happy birthday. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 39.) This made
    Child “feel pretty sad.” Id.[8] Mother called Child names such as
    ____________________________________________
    7 Child testified about Mother’s attempted suicide: “I think about it a lot of
    times, especially when she looked at me and told me it was my fault. I mean,
    that just messed with my head a couple of times. . . . [I]t makes me think
    I’m a terrible person because I made somebody want to kill themselves, and
    even my other family members telling me it’s not my fault, but I still feel like
    some of it is.” N.T., 1/30/20, at 66.
    8   Mother testified on cross-examination by BCCYS as follows:
    Q. Did you buy [Child] birthday presents at his last two birthdays?
    A. This past birthday, no.
    Q. Why not?
    A. Because everything that was going on.
    Q. What do you mean by that?
    A. This was in November, all the tension and stuff going on.
    Q. So you didn’t buy your son a birthday present because of
    tension and stuff going on with [BC]CYS?
    A. We weren’t talking. We weren’t getting along.
    ...
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    “dumb,” “retarded,” and “pussy”; these were the names that he
    was called repeatedly. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 45.)
    There were times when Mother and Child’s siblings would come
    home with food for themselves, and there would be nothing in the
    home for Child to eat. Child would then call his aunt, and “she
    would sneak over food for [him] a lot of the times.” (N.T. 1/30/20
    at pp. 40, 60-61.) When Child was punished, he was not allowed
    to go outside or go to a friend’s house. This once happened for
    over two months. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 40.) [The] Child testified
    that he usually did not know why he was being punished (N.T.
    1/30/20 at pp. 42, 60), and felt that he “had to serve punishment”
    for things he did not do. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 37.)
    In 2019, Child was supposed to start school, but he had no clothes
    for school that fit him because he had grown over the summer
    and Mother had not purchased new ones for him.              Child’s
    grandfather sent clothes to his aunt, and his aunt brought them
    to Child. (N.T. 1/30/20 at pp. 40, 60.) Child was excited to start
    school, but when he arrived there, he was told that his Mother had
    not registered him. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 40.) Child testified that
    he was afraid of Mother. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 40.) He wrote a
    letter to the [c]ourt saying that he did not want to live with his
    [m]other and wanted to live somewhere else, because he felt that
    things would not get any better with his [m]other. (N.T. 1/30/20
    at p. 44.)
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 3-4.
    With respect to the testimony of Allison Hill, Ph.D., the court found:
    Dr. Hill spoke with Child about school, his home situation, his
    sisters, . . ., [his] friendships, and about Mother. She had also
    been provided with a copy of the letter Child had written to the
    ____________________________________________
    Q. So is it fair to say you were punishing by not giving him a
    birthday present?
    A. No.
    N.T., 4/8/20, at 74.
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    [c]ourt. (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 7.) When asked what Child had told
    her about Mother, Dr. Hill testified as follows:
    Well, he told me a number of things. He told me that he
    was afraid of his mother, that he did not want to stay with
    her. He told me when I asked him about the relationship
    with his mother . . . he said it was not good. When I asked
    him if he thought that could be improved upon, he said no,
    he’s [sic] just given up.
    He expressed concern that his mother would harm him to
    the point that he would need to be hospitalized. He
    reported to me that she has hit him in the past with the
    belt and has punched him in the nose. He also told me
    that she threatened to drop h[im] and his sisters off at the
    police station, and when they were all in the car together
    on one occasion, she threatened to kill them all, have them
    all killed in the car. He also reported having difficulty
    sleeping and being in school because he was thinking about
    this and worrying about this, essentially, all the time.
    ...
    He is very upset and anxious about how his mother has
    treated him and some of the things that she said, and he
    believed that she would carry through on some of the
    threats she has made.
    ...
    He reported having difficulty sleeping, feeling nervous and
    anxious, essentially, all the time. He also reported that his
    mother had attempted suicide, I believe, approximately
    two years ago, in front of him and his sisters, and then had
    blamed him and told him that it was his fault that she was
    doing that.
    (N.T. 1/30/20 at p. 7-9.)
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 4-5.
    Dr. Hill diagnosed Child with adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety
    and depressed mood. N.T., 1/30/20, at 9. Dr. Hill testified: “I believed that
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    the diagnosis is a direct result of the things [Child] told me about his mother,
    and the effects that those situations and statements have had on him.” Id.
    In addition, Dr. Hill testified on direct examination:
    Q. [I]n your final assessment of [Child], did you make a statement
    that . . . the situation with his mother is emotionally abusive for
    him?
    A. Yes.
    Id. at 11.
    Citing Dr. Hill’s testimony, the court concluded that Child sustained
    serious mental injury. The court reasoned:
    Dr. Allison Hill . . . diagnosed Child with adjustment disorder with
    mixed anxiety and depressed mood. Child testified in [c]ourt and
    told Dr. Hill that he constantly worries and is anxious that Mother
    will harm him. . . . (N.T. 1/30/20, [at 11-12, 41].) Child’s
    statement to Dr. Hill, his letter to the [c]ourt, and his testimony
    are all entirely consistent, and Dr. Hill made no suggestion either
    in her testimony or in her written evaluation that Child was not
    truthful. . . . The evidence is clear and convincing that Child has
    suffered “serious mental injury” within the meaning of 23 Pa.C.S.
    § 6303(b.1).
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 6.
    Mother claims the evidence does not clearly and convincingly prove that
    she is the cause of Child’s serious mental injury, including his adjustment
    disorder. Specifically, Mother asserts evidence of “other stressors in Child’s
    life” which caused his adjustment disorder. Mother’s Brief at 32. Mother also
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    claims Child was recently diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS),9 and that
    Dr. Hill “agreed that when someone receives this type of diagnosis, it can have
    psychological effects.” Id. at 36 (citing N.T., 1/30/20, at 22).
    The following exchange occurred during cross-examination of Dr. Hill by
    Mother’s counsel:
    Q. Did [Child] discuss with you the fact that he had recently been
    diagnosed with multiple sclerosis or some version of that?
    A. Yes, he did.
    Q. And he provided information to you about his treatment and
    his state of mind regarding that diagnosis?
    A. Yes, he did.
    Q. Did you find that to be appropriate, his response to that?
    A. Well, generally, yes.
    Q. What do you mean by generally?
    A. Well, sometimes when someone gets a diagnosis, a serious
    diagnosis like with them as, they can be more upset about it at
    times, but sometimes not. He told me he was not particularly
    bothered by it at this point.
    Q. [Y]ou would agree that when someone gets that type of
    diagnosis, it can have negative psychological effects; is that right?
    A. Well, it can, yes, but, again, he is sixteen and he may
    not fully understand the ramifications of what that
    diagnosis means . . . or could mean.
    N.T., 1/30/20, at 21-22 (emphasis added).
    ____________________________________________
    9 The trial court found Child was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2018.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 4 (citing N.T., 1/30/20, at 43).
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    Mother’s counsel continued:
    Q. [A]m I correct that that diagnosis [of adjustment disorder with
    mixed anxiety and depressed mood] and those symptoms
    generally result from a stressful life event?
    A. Yes, they can. Yes, that’s exactly right.
    ...
    Q. And it could be possible that those symptoms and that
    diagnosis could have resulted from the MS diagnosis, correct?
    A. I did not have that impression based upon how [Child]
    explained his reaction to the MS diagnosis.
    Q. But that certainly could be possible?
    A. It’s a possibility.
    ...
    Id. at 23-24 (emphasis added). Our review reveals no evidence (from Dr.
    Hill, Child, or Mother), that Child suffered psychologically from his MS
    diagnosis.   Therefore, we reject Mother’s claim that the diagnosis caused
    Child’s adjustment disorder.
    Mother also asserts Child’s “stressors” — including changing schools,
    “possibly being bullied,” and “experiencing extreme discord with siblings,”
    caused his disorder. See N.T., 1/30/20, at 36. On cross-examination, Dr. Hill
    testified:
    Q. Is it a fair statement that most people who experience some
    kind of stress experience mild symptoms of this [adjustment]
    disorder?
    A. I would not agree with that, not all the time, no. It has to be
    a more severe stressor.
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    Q. Like what?
    A. Well, it could be an ongoing stressor, or could be an acute
    stressor, such as somewhat traumatic event or it could be
    something that is ongoing.
    Q. Could be changing schools?
    A. Possibly.
    Q. Could be difficulty with friends?
    A. It would depend on the difficulty. It would have to be an
    extreme level difficulty such as being continuously bullied.
    Q. So bullied could account for this diagnosis?
    A. It’s a possibility.
    Q. How about discord with siblings?
    A. Again, it would have to be very extreme.
    Q. My point is, there are other possible explanations other than
    emotional abuse that could account for this diagnosis; is that
    correct?
    A. In general, that’s correct, yes.
    ...
    Q. Discord with [M]other?
    A. Yes.
    Id. at 23-25.
    Concerning     Child’s   education,    Mother   testified,   without   further
    explanation, that Child began the 2018-2019 school year in ninth grade at a
    public high school, but in the spring of 2019, enrolled in cyber school. N.T.,
    4/8/20, at 71. The GAL stated that during the 2019-2020 school year, Child
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    began attending a different public school. N.T., 1/30/20, at 76. There is no
    evidence regarding what psychological effect, if any, the inconsistency had on
    Child.    Therefore, we reject Mother’s claim that Child’s change in schools
    caused his adjustment disorder. While Child switched schools more than once
    during 9th and 10th grade, there is no evidence he had difficulties with bullying
    at school. The only evidence of bullying pertained to Mother. Child testified
    about Mother’s repeated name-calling: “It makes me feel bad. And, actually,
    last year in health class when I was at regular school we were talking about
    bullying and about if you keep calling the person the name, that they’re
    eventually going to start feeling that way. And I actually started to feel that
    way about the names I have been called.” N.T., 1/30/20, at 45.
    Also, the discord between Child and his twin sisters is not disputed.
    However, there is no evidence that Child’s relationship with his siblings, rather
    than Mother’s emotional abuse, caused his adjustment disorder. Accordingly,
    we discern no abuse of discretion by the court in concluding that Mother’s
    chronic emotional abuse caused Child’s adjustment disorder.           See N.T.,
    1/30/20, at 9, 11 (Dr. Hill opining that Mother’s conduct was emotionally
    abusive to Child, and Child’s adjustment disorder “is a direct result of the
    things [Child] told me about his mother, and the effects that those situations
    and statements have had on him.”).
    We further conclude the evidence supports the court’s finding that
    Mother “recklessly” caused Child serious mental injury. The court explained:
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    Mother was evaluated by Dr. Ruiza Yee,[10] a psychiatric
    professional and expert in the diagnosis of major depressive
    disorder. The purpose of Dr. Yee’s evaluation was to assess
    Mother’s mental health condition and to make any
    recommendations for treatment. (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 8.) Dr. Yee
    noted in her report that Mother is a college graduate with a degree
    in chemistry, and that she works as a medical assistant at a
    children’s hospital. (N.T. 4/8/20, Exhibit 2 at p. 4.) Mother has
    all required clearances for her job. (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 57.) Mother
    had been physically and emotionally abused by her father as a
    child. (N.T. 4/8/20, Exhibit 2 at p. 4.)
    Dr. Yee concluded that Mother suffers from major depressive
    disorder, which “means that she has a mood instability that is
    characterized by a period of time where she has tearful episodes,
    she feels down, she doesn’t feel capable of doing anything. . . .
    Gets easily angered.” (N.T. 4/8/20 at 13.) Dr. Yee testified as
    follows:
    Based on the reports I have and, you know, the numerous
    instances that were cited, I did conclude that there was
    emotional abuse in the sense that [Mother] was
    displacing her anger — anger towards [her] father to her
    son.
    ...
    She was clearly emotionally abusive to her children
    in the sense that she would get angry unnecessarily [with]
    her son — or not unnecessarily, but inappropriately. The
    degree of her anger towards her son is beyond what the
    circumstances call for, and same reaction to her daughters.
    . . . Someone who is suffering from major depressive
    disorder has a mood disregulation, so they easily — like I
    said, easily irritable and their response to a situation is out
    of proportion to the situation. (Emphasis added.)
    (N.T. 4/8/20 at 16-17.)
    ____________________________________________
    10 The trial court admitted Dr. Yee’s report as Exhibit 2, but it is not included
    in the certified record.
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    Dr. Yee also testified that Mother’s emotional responses to Child
    were “not being done deliberately,” but also that Mother “is
    cognitively intact” and “has above average intelligence” (emphasis
    added). (N.T. 4/8/20 at pp. 20, 28.) Mother attempted to
    minimize her abuse of Child by saying that Child could not give
    any examples of emotional abuse (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 10-11), and
    by denying that she blamed Child for her suicide attempt. (N.T.
    4/8/20 at pp. 10-11, 20.) Dr. Yee noted in her report that Mother
    “has no interest in learning parenting skills as she does not
    consider herself to be in the wrong.” (N.T. 4/8/20, Exhibit 2, at
    p. 8.) Dr. Yee recommended individual psychotherapy for Mother
    and that Mother be placed on antidepressant medication. (N.T.
    4/8/20, Exhibit 2 at p. 9.)
    At the hearing held on April 8, 2020, Mother again denied that she
    had told Child that her suicide attempt was his fault. (N.T. 4/8/20
    at 64-65.) She flatly denied each allegation of abuse made by the
    Child in his letter to the [c]ourt and in his testimony, and claimed
    that Child was a frequent liar. (N.T. 4/8/20 at pp. 73-81.)
    Further, Mother denied that she ever intended anything she said
    to be emotionally abusive to her son, and testified that she “didn’t
    mean any harm by what she said.” (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 69.) She
    claimed that conflicts between herself and Child were caused by
    his failure to complete schoolwork, failure to do chores, playing
    video games, not coming home on time, and not wanting to go to
    school. (N.T. 4/8/20 at pp. 58, 65.)
    However, Mother also testified that shortly after being diagnosed
    with multiple sclerosis, Child was given a neuropsychological
    evaluation and was diagnosed with Adjustment Disorder with
    Mixed Anxiety and Depression, the same as Dr. Hill’s diagnosis.
    (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 68.) Mother testified that she had asked Child
    “a couple times” if [he] wanted to see a therapist, but he said no,
    and that she had tried to have him speak with a counselor at
    school about his multiple sclerosis diagnosis, but Child would not
    keep appointments with him. Id. However, Child “was not
    particularly upset about the MS diagnosis” (N.T. 1/30/20, Exhibit
    1, p. 5), and Dr. Hill testified that Child’s diagnosis with multiple
    sclerosis was not the cause of his mental condition. (N.T. 1/30/20
    at p. 23). Furthermore, there was no testimony presented that,
    despite Child’s alleged wishes not to see a therapist, Mother, as
    the parent, arranged for him to see one and ensured that he made
    it to appointments.
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    Trial Court Opinion 9/25/20, at 7-8 (emphasis added). The record supports
    the trial court.
    Mother testified that her relationship with her father was “[t]umultuous.
    It [has] always been up and down. . . .” N.T. 4/8/20, at 59. She stated that
    her father had physically abused her. Id. Mother testified:
    Growing up, we used to get . . . beat with belts, sticks. I
    remember one time I told him that I hated him, and he picked me
    up by my neck and held me up against the wall. When he let me
    down, he wouldn’t let me go upstairs. I tried to run away[.] [H]e
    grabbed me by my shirt, and he punched me in my face.
    Id. at 59-60. Mother also testified that her father had interfered with her
    parenting of Child, for example, taking Child to his home in New Jersey without
    Mother’s permission. Id. at 62-63.
    In the following exchange, Dr. Yee responded to questioning about
    Mother’s past:
    Q. Doctor, you . . . noted that [Mother] is particularly hard on
    [Child] as it is a displacement of her anger towards her father.
    She did not have a good role model growing up about how
    functional family life is and moving forward she’s constantly
    reminded of her failure and specifically her children are a constant
    reminder of the conflictual relationship she had with her father.
    [H]ow did this information play into your earlier testimony
    relative to [M]other being emotionally abusive to her children?
    A. [I]t clearly illustrates that she is unable to look at [Child]
    outside the context of her relationship with the father. So every
    time an issue was raised and it calls to light her response as a
    parent towards her child, it is always clouded by her response to
    father and what father’s response is to her son [sic]. So she can
    never make a healthy and appropriate response to her son just
    based on the situation that . . . she is faced with.
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    J-A03010-21
    Id. at 21-22. In response to further question, Dr. Yee testified:
    Q. [I]n regard to your discussions about [Mother]’s misplaced
    anger towards her father, do you consider that to be the source
    of her actions towards her son?
    A. No. Only part of that. Because like I said, she suffers from
    major depressive disorder, and so there is a lot of mood
    disregulation with that condition, and until that is under control,
    her emotional responses to situations will be overboard.
    Q. But you don’t see those emotional responses as something
    she’s doing intentionally or recklessly toward her son. There is a
    clinical reason for it. Is that what you’re saying?
    A. Are you saying that this is not being done deliberately?
    Q. I guess I am, intentionally or deliberately, yes.
    A. No. This is not being done deliberately.
    N.T., 4/8/20, at 27-28.
    Mother claims “the evidence of her mental health issues may have
    impacted her behavior in some sense. As such, [M]other did not consciously
    disregard a substantial or unjustifiable risk that her conduct would result in
    emotional abuse.” Mother’s Brief at 32–33.
    The term “deliberately” is not defined or mentioned in 18 Pa.C.S. §
    302(b). To the extent “deliberately” and “intentionally” are synonymous, the
    trial court acknowledged Dr. Yee’s testimony that Mother did not act
    deliberately.   Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 7; see also 18 Pa.C.S. §
    302(b)(1)(i) (“a person acts intentionally with respect to a material element
    of an offense when if the element involves the nature of his conduct or a result
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    J-A03010-21
    thereof, it is his conscious object to engage in conduct of that nature or to
    cause such a result.”).
    Rather, the court concluded Mother acted “recklessly” by “consciously
    disregarding a substantial and unjustifiable risk” that serious mental injury
    exists or will result from her conduct. 18 Pa.C.S. § 302(b)(3). The court
    further found that “considering the nature and intent of [Mother’s] conduct
    and the circumstances known” to her, her conduct involved a “gross deviation
    from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe.” Id.
    The court reasoned:
    Mother is a college graduate with above-average intelligence.
    (N.T. 4/8/20 at p. 20). She is cognitively intact. Id. There is
    nothing which would prevent her from understanding her actions
    and words, or from perceiving the effect those actions and words
    have had upon Child. Her denials of the allegations of abuse and
    her claim that Child was a frequent liar lack credibility. See,
    Interest of T.G., 
    208 A.3d 487
     ([Pa. Super.] 2019) (in a child
    dependency case, the trial court is free to believe all, some, or
    none of the evidence presented, and is free to make all credibility
    determinations and resolve conflicts in the evidence.)
    Furthermore, Mother has consciously disregarded a substantial
    and unjustifiable risk that serious mental abuse of Child would
    result from her actions. She was aware that Child suffered from
    Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depression long
    before he was evaluated by Dr. Hill on January 6, 2020, but did
    nothing to ensure that Child received therapy for his condition.
    Further, . . . [t]here was no evidence presented that she was
    helping to alleviate her own condition by engaging in therapy and
    obtaining medication for her major depressive disorder, as
    recommended by Dr. Yee. As a victim of physical and mental
    abuse herself, and as a medical professional who works with
    children, Mother should have been very sensitive to the effect her
    words and actions would have upon Child.               Under the
    circumstances known to Mother, her actions involve a gross
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    J-A03010-21
    deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person
    would observe in her situation.
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 9. Upon review, we discern no error.
    Mother testified Child “had a neuropsych evaluation not too long after
    his MS diagnosis        . . .   [and] the evaluator diagnosed [Child] and
    recommended treatment.” N.T., 4/8/20, at 68, 72. It appears from the record
    that Child was diagnosed at that time, and prior to Dr. Hill’s diagnosis, with
    adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood.          
    Id. at 83
    .
    Mother testified she asked Child “a couple times if he wanted to see a
    therapist. He told me no.” 
    Id. at 68
    . Mother also testified she encouraged
    Child approximately two years ago to speak to his school counselor, but Child
    “would never go to see him.” 
    Id. at 68, 72
    . As such, Mother’s testimony
    supports the court’s finding that she “consciously disregarded a substantial
    and unjustifiable risk that serious mental abuse of the child would result from
    her actions.”   Trial Court Opinion, 9/25/20, at 9.     Finally, to the extent
    Mother’s testimony contradicted Child’s testimony, see N.T., 4/8/20, at 73-
    80, we reiterate that we may not disturb the trial court’s credibility
    determinations. See In re M.G., 
    855 A.2d at 73-74
    .
    In sum, we discern no abuse of discretion by the court in determining
    that Mother recklessly caused Child serious mental injury pursuant to 23
    Pa.C.S. § 6303(b.1)(3) and 18 Pa.C.S. § 302(b)(3), and therefore affirm the
    adjudication and disposition.
    Order affirmed.
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    J-A03010-21
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 03/30/2021
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1106 MDA 2020

Filed Date: 3/30/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021