Tina Dione Woodson v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2022 )


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  •                                           COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    PUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Huff, Lorish and Callins
    Argued by videoconference
    TINA DIONE WOODSON
    OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 0610-21-2                                       JUDGE LISA M. LORISH
    MAY 3, 2022
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HANOVER COUNTY
    Jan L. Brodie, Judge Designate
    Dennis J. McLoughlin, Jr. (McLoughlin Law PLC, on brief), for
    appellant.
    Robin M. Nagel, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Virginia, like every other state, permits parents to discipline their children with corporal
    punishment. This “parental privilege” excuses what would otherwise be battery in the ordinary
    course. To fall within this justification, discipline must be reasonable and not excessive. Our
    caselaw sets out a series of factors that help distinguish between acceptable and undue discipline.
    But in each case decided by the Supreme Court and our Court upholding a lower court’s
    conclusion that discipline was excessive, the parent or caregiver inflicted significant physical
    harm on the child. The harm was readily evident from the presence of more than transient
    physical pain or temporary marks.
    Tina Dione Woodson was convicted of assault and battery for disciplining her
    twelve-year-old twins with a belt. While each child had some transient bruise or mark afterward,
    neither was seriously injured. This case, therefore, requires us to consider for the first time
    1
    Jason S. Miyares succeeded Mark R. Herring as Attorney General on January 15, 2022.
    whether the combination of other facts was enough for criminal liability to result. For the
    reasons set forth below, we must reverse and dismiss Woodson’s convictions.
    Background2
    On the morning in question, Woodson’s twelve-year-old twins (“son” and “daughter”)
    were getting themselves and their younger siblings ready for the school day. Son had a cell
    phone, and his phone alarm went off while he was out of the room. Daughter picked up the
    phone to turn off the alarm. Woodson saw her and suspected daughter was using the phone in
    violation of Woodson’s rules about appropriate phone use. Woodson took the phone and noticed
    a message on it, which concerned her because she had forbidden the twins from giving out the
    phone number to anyone. Woodson then questioned the twins about who was sending messages
    to the phone and which one of them had given out the phone number. Daughter acknowledged
    the message was from someone at school who was friends with both twins. But both son and
    daughter denied being the one who gave out the number, each blaming the other.
    Woodson asked son to get a belt from her closet and told the twins to lay on the bed. She
    then hit them with the non-buckle end of the belt. Daughter testified that the belt hit her on the
    bottom and legs, “more than between six and ten times,” whereas son testified only that he was
    spanked without additional detail. Woodson was 5’5” tall, weighed 135 pounds, and was
    recovering from surgery. Daughter testified that she weighed about 57 to 59 pounds then, and
    photographs suggest son was also small for his age. The twins then went to school for the day.
    2
    “In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in
    the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v.
    Commonwealth, 
    295 Va. 469
    , 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 
    292 Va. 380
    , 381
    (2016)). In doing so, we discard any of appellant’s conflicting evidence, and regard as true all
    credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all inferences that may reasonably be
    drawn from that evidence. 
    Id. at 473
    .
    -2-
    Later that day, while at school, son approached the Hanover County sheriff’s deputy
    working as a school resource officer and said that he did not feel safe going home. The record is
    unclear on the full extent of what son reported that day. At a minimum, he told the school
    resource officer, as well as a later-arriving investigator from the sheriff’s office, about a
    “whipping” his father had given him with a belt over the weekend, and also that his mother had
    “spanked” him that morning with a belt. Son said he was sore from the spanking that morning.
    The school resource officer and investigator also spoke to daughter, who confirmed that she also
    did not feel safe going home. Neither child specifically identified their mother as the reason that
    they were afraid.
    Both the school resource officer and investigator testified at trial that they observed
    bruises and marks on the twins, but there was some confusion over the source of the marks. The
    investigator had originally noted red marks and discoloration on son’s thigh and face, but son
    explained that those marks had come from his father. The investigator testified that she saw
    bruises and marks consistent with a belt strap on daughter’s back and thighs when she spoke to
    daughter that day, and she identified those same marks on the photographs introduced at trial.3
    Two family services specialists from the Hanover County Department of Social Services
    also testified at trial, called by Woodson. Both had interviewed the twins after they left school
    that day. Both testified that while they observed some discoloration on the twins, they saw
    nothing that they would describe as linear marks or bruising.
    The twins testified at trial and identified bruises in photographs that the investigator had
    taken. They told the court that those bruises came from Woodson’s actions. Daughter pointed to
    marks on her back in a photograph and testified they looked like belt marks she had seen on her
    3
    The investigator also said that the bruise on daughter’s back looked like “the outline of
    a belt buckle,” but daughter specifically testified that Woodson only used the “long” part of the
    belt, not the metal portion.
    -3-
    skin when she looked in the mirror right after the incident. On cross-examination, however, she
    admitted telling the family services specialists that she had seen no red marks on her skin from
    the belt that day. Son identified a single mark on his leg in a photograph as originating from
    what he described as Woodson’s “spanking.”
    Daughter also testified that she had been the one to give out the number to her brother’s
    cell phone and that she had lied to her mother that morning. She also acknowledged that she had
    been in trouble with her mother for lying previously. Finally, daughter testified that Woodson
    messaged her after the incident telling daughter to go to the principal’s office and say that she
    had lied about the event.
    Woodson testified and denied using corporal punishment that day. She explained that
    daughter was not allowed to have a phone because of her prior behavior, but that she observed
    her using son’s phone that morning. Woodson testified that she used other forms of punishment,
    such as restricting phone use and taking away the ability to do special activities.
    Woodson moved to strike the Commonwealth’s evidence, arguing that if the court found
    she had used corporal punishment, the evidence established a permissible spanking and not
    excessive discipline. This motion was renewed after the close of all the evidence. The trial court
    denied these motions and found Woodson guilty of two counts of assault and battery. The court
    explained that the testimony of son and daughter was “very credible,” and found notable that
    they were scared to go home. The judge also observed that “[t]his was over a texting violation.
    So the question is what could have been done by a parent and what should have been done and
    what shouldn’t have been done.” The judge stated that “instead of taking the phone and
    restricting their privileges the mother had them go get a belt.” Finally, the judge acknowledged
    that the “photos may not have shown everything that they should have shown but they showed
    -4-
    enough.” For these reasons, the court found this was “excessive co for the violation considering
    the size of the children, the mother, the circumstances.”
    Woodson filed a written motion to set aside the verdict on the same grounds, which was
    also denied. By the time of the sentencing hearing, one month later, the twins were residing at
    the grandmother’s home and the Department of Social Services was providing services to the
    family. The trial court sentenced Woodson to serve six months in jail on each count, with fifteen
    days of active time for each count and the remaining time suspended. This appeal followed.
    Analysis
    A battery is the “willful or unlawful touching of the person of another by the assailant, or
    by some object set in motion by him.” Wood v. Commonwealth, 
    149 Va. 401
    , 404 (1927). An
    assault
    occurs when an assailant engages in an overt act intended to inflict
    bodily harm and has the present ability to inflict such harm or
    engages in an overt act intended to place the victim in fear or
    apprehension of bodily harm and creates such reasonable fear or
    apprehension in the victim.
    Carter v. Commonwealth, 
    269 Va. 44
    , 47 (2005).
    An intentional touching qualifies as a battery unless the actor has some legal justification
    or excuse. The presence of a justification or excuse transforms what would otherwise be a
    criminal offense into a permissible act. Common justifications for battery include consent and
    self-defense. Relevant here is another—domestic authority, which is sometimes described as the
    “parental privilege” to discipline a child with physical force.
    Woodson argues that her convictions for assault and battery should be reversed because
    her actions constituted reasonable corporal punishment, falling within this parental privilege.
    “When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, [this] Court will affirm
    the judgment unless the judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Bolden v.
    -5-
    Commonwealth, 
    275 Va. 144
    , 148 (2008). This inquiry requires us to determine whether “any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” Wilson v. Commonwealth, 
    53 Va. App. 599
    , 605 (2009). The standard is not without
    teeth, however. We must reverse a conviction when the “evidence creates only a suspicion or
    probability of guilt.” Yarborough v. Commonwealth, 
    247 Va. 215
    , 218 (1994). This assignment
    of error also requires us to define the scope of the parental privilege to discipline, which involves
    both questions of law and fact. “We review questions of law, and mixed questions of law and
    fact, utilizing a de novo standard of review.” Muhammad v. Commonwealth, 
    269 Va. 451
    , 479
    (2005).
    A. The parental privilege to use corporal punishment must serve the well-being of children.
    A parent has the privilege to discipline his or her child “within the bounds of moderation
    and reason.” Carpenter v. Commonwealth, 
    186 Va. 851
    , 861 (1947). This discipline may
    include corporal punishment. 
    Id.
     This parental privilege has existed since the common law.
    Eberhardt v. Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 23
    , 32 (2021); see also William Blackstone, 3
    Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England 120 (Oxford reprint 1992) (“[B]attery is, in
    some cases, justifiable or lawful; as where one who hath authority, a parent or master, gives
    moderate correction to his child, his scholar, or his apprentice.”).
    Because the privilege must serve the well-being of children, there are limits. “[S]tate
    interference with a parent’s right to raise his or her child must be for the purpose of protecting
    the child’s health or welfare.” Williams v. Williams, 
    24 Va. App. 778
    , 783 (1997), aff’d in part,
    modified in part, 
    256 Va. 19
     (1998). The potential for abuse cannot be taken lightly. Thus, the
    privilege cannot cloak punishment that causes, or threatens, serious harm. For this reason, we do
    not allow a parent to physically discipline a child if the discipline is “excessive” or
    -6-
    “immoderate.” Eberhardt, 74 Va. App. at 33. Such discipline inflicts, or creates a substantial
    risk of inflicting, significant harm.
    Properly viewed then, the privilege protects diverse parenting values and practices while
    limiting the significant costs on the family that accompany state intervention. In this way, the
    privilege generally serves the well-being of children—reflecting a trade-off between protecting
    children from the harm a parent may inflict and the harm that comes from unnecessary state
    interference. Criminal proceedings may lead to incarceration or invasive community
    supervision, and civil intervention initiated by the child welfare system may lead to removal of
    the child from the home. In this way, deference to parents provides a particularly important
    shield for low-income families and families of color who disproportionately experience state
    intervention.4
    Drawing this line between acceptable physical force and unlawful conduct is challenging
    because “words such as ‘due,’ ‘moderate,’ ‘necessary,’ and ‘reasonable’ as applied to
    chastisement are ever changing according to the ideas prevailing in our minds during the period
    and conditions in which we live.” Carpenter, 186 Va. at 863. As is usually the case when the
    line is murky, the result is considerable discretion for prosecutors and employees of the
    Department of Social Services. Our role is not to second-guess why this discretion is employed
    4
    See, e.g., Restatement of Children and the Law: Defenses, Parental Privilege to Use
    Reasonable Corporal Punishment § 3.24 (Am. L. Inst., Tentative Draft No. 1, 2018)
    (“Low-income families and Black families are already disproportionately represented in the child
    welfare system, and the privilege thus protects these families from additional state
    interference.”); Child Welfare Info. Gateway, U.S. Dep’t Health & Hum. Servs., Admin. For
    Child and Families, Children’s Bureau, Child Welfare Practice to Address Racial
    Disproportionality and Disparity (2021) at pp. 2-4,
    https://www.childwelfare.gov/pubpdfs/racial_disproportionality.pdf (discussing the “significant
    body of research” documenting “the overrepresentation of certain racial and ethnic groups in the
    child welfare system relative to their representation in the general population”).
    -7-
    in an individual case, but we must ensure that the result satisfies our caselaw and the
    Constitution.
    Starting at the beginning, our Supreme Court first set out factors that pertain to the
    reasonableness or excess of punishment in 1947:
    Where a question is raised as to whether punishment has been
    moderate or excessive, the fact is one for the jury to determine
    from the attending circumstances, considering the age, size and
    conduct of the child, the nature of his misconduct, the nature of the
    instrument used for punishment, and the kind of marks or wounds
    inflicted on the body of the child.
    Id. The emotional state of the parent is another factor. Harbaugh v. Commonwealth, 
    209 Va. 695
    , 698 (1969) (parental privilege to discipline “cannot be used as a cloak for the exercise of
    uncontrolled passion”).
    To date, these factors have only been applied in four published decisions. Each of these
    cases involved significant physical harm to a child that overshadowed any passing consideration
    of the other listed factors. And in each case, the Supreme Court and our Court upheld the
    conclusion that the parent’s significant physical harm to the child had crossed the line. In
    Carpenter, for example, the seven-year-old child’s legs “were cut and bruised badly,” her “arms
    were bruised,” “she had a gash across her forehead and a bad bruise on her cheek,” and her
    bottom was described as “a mass of stripes, some of which were open and bleeding, and some
    had scabs on them.” 186 Va. at 855. The Department of Social Services worker who examined
    her summed up her physical condition as “just a bleeding mass of bruises.” Id. at 856.
    Likewise, in Harbaugh, the “undisputed evidence as to the wounds and bruises on the
    body of the child showed that he had been cruelly and brutally beaten.” 
    209 Va. at 698
    . In
    particular, the five-year-old boy’s “buttocks were badly bruised and showed blood marks with
    seepage therefrom.” 
    Id. at 696
    . The school nurse observed “purple marks and welts on the back
    -8-
    of both legs, and the outer layer of skin stuck to his underpants when they were removed,” and
    the child was ultimately hospitalized for twelve days. 
    Id.
    The same was also true in a pair of child abuse cases. First, in Campbell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    12 Va. App. 476
    , 484 (1991), we described photographs depicting “an appalling
    story of a brutal beating of a three-year-old child” with marks from “his shoulder blades to his
    buttocks on his backside and from under his arm to his upper thigh on the right side of his body.”
    We catalogued “thin, long bruises, purplish-brown in color,” and other “atrocious marks” that
    were “well-defined, reddish half-ovals” near the child’s right kidney and spinal column. 
    Id.
    Finally, in Eberhardt, we affirmed a conviction in an opinion that detailed “at least ten lashes
    with a dog leash” that left “numerous linear marks and welts and significant bruising on various
    parts” of a child. 74 Va. App. at 35.
    The seriousness of the physical injuries carried the day in each of these prior cases.
    While the other factors identified in these cases are important, we can think of no combination of
    “other” factors that could make a parent’s discipline “reasonable” where it resulted in significant
    physical harm. Stated another way, once corporal punishment exceeds the significant harm
    threshold, the inquiry will typically be over.5
    It must be said, however, that because our societal understanding of reasonable corporal
    punishment is “ever changing according to the ideas prevailing in our minds during the period
    and conditions in which we live,” Carpenter, 186 Va. at 863, the significant and horrific abuse
    described in many of these old cases cannot set the threshold for when a child has experienced
    significant physical harm. Instead, significant physical harm is best understood as involving
    5
    These cases decided by the Supreme Court and our Court have also arisen in the
    criminal context. Although the parental privilege to discipline is also relevant when the
    Department of Social Services alleges that a parent or caregiver has abused or neglected a child,
    this case considers only how the privilege applies in a criminal case.
    -9-
    injuries that are evidenced by something more than mere transient pain or minor temporary
    marks.6
    A lack of significant physical harm does not end the analysis. This is where a factfinder
    must consider the totality of the circumstances and whether a parent’s actions nevertheless place
    a child at risk of serious harm. Caselaw has identified several specific factors relevant to
    determining whether a parent’s discipline placed a child at risk of serious harm, even without
    serious physical injury. See, e.g., Carpenter, 186 Va. at 860, 863 (“cannot be used as a cloak for
    the exercise of malevolence,” “age, size and conduct of the child, the nature of his misconduct,
    the nature of the instrument used for punishment”); Harbaugh, 
    209 Va. at 698
     (“uncontrolled
    passion”). These circumstances could demonstrate that a child was at risk of serious harm, even
    if spared actual harm, and this would be enough to show that the parent’s actions were
    unreasonable and fell outside the privilege.7 Mere disagreement over a parent’s decision to use
    corporal punishment in response to a child’s particular misbehavior, without more, cannot meet
    this standard because it does not evince a risk of serious harm. A contrary holding would be
    6
    Other states have likewise distinguished between significant physical harm and transient
    pain or minor temporary marks. See, e.g., State v. Wilder, 
    748 A.2d 444
    , 455 (Me. 2000)
    (requiring state to prove that corporal punishment resulted in “physical injury greater than
    transient pain and/or temporary red marks or bruises”); Commonwealth v. Dorvil, 
    32 N.E.3d 861
    ,
    870 (Mass. 2015) (adopting the privilege in a criminal case as a matter of common law
    “provided that (1) the force used against the minor child is reasonable; (2) the force is reasonably
    related to the purpose of safeguarding or promoting the welfare of the minor, including the
    prevention or punishment of the minor’s misconduct; and (3) the force used neither causes, nor
    creates a substantial risk of causing, physical harm (beyond fleeting pain or minor, transient
    marks), gross degradation, or severe mental distress”); Wash. Rev. Code § 9A.16.100 (1999)
    (presuming corporal punishment is unreasonable if it causes, or is likely to cause “bodily harm
    greater than transient pain or minor temporary marks”); see also Kandice K. Johnson, Crime or
    Punishment: The Parental Corporal Punishment Defense–Reasonable and Necessary or
    Excused Abuse?, U. Ill. L. Rev. 413, 472 (1998) (surveying states and concluding that physical
    injury falling outside the parental privilege required more than “transient red marks or temporary
    pain”).
    7
    To fit within the parental privilege in the first place, the parent’s actions must be
    undertaken with a disciplinary purpose.
    - 10 -
    tantamount to allowing every trial judge to substitute their own parenting views for that of the
    parent. And it would conflict with our clear precedent permitting reasonable corporal
    punishment and insulating routine parenting decisions from state scrutiny.
    In summary, to determine whether a parent’s discipline was excessive or immoderate, a
    trial court must consider all the circumstances. When there is evidence of significant harm,
    distinguished from transient pain or temporary minor marks, that alone shows that the parental
    privilege does not apply. Absent significant harm, a factfinder may conclude that a combination
    of factors show the child was at risk of serious harm—which still makes the discipline
    unreasonable. But the nature of the child’s misconduct, and the trial court’s view that the
    misbehavior did not warrant corporal punishment, cannot be the primary factor.
    B. Applied here, the Commonwealth failed to prove Woodson’s punishment was
    unreasonable.
    Here, the Commonwealth established at trial that Woodson found a text message on son’s
    phone. Neither he nor daughter were allowed to give out the phone number to friends, and
    Woodson questioned both twins about who had broken the rule. Both twins denied giving out
    the number to their friend, blaming the other. Woodson then instructed son to get a belt. She
    told the twins to lay on the bed and hit each of them with the non-buckled end of the belt. Son
    sustained a single bruise to his thigh and was “sore” on his back. Daughter sustained a single
    bruise on her back and some bruises on her thigh. There was no evidence that Woodson carried
    out this punishment in a state of anger or rage, or that it was done in a degrading way.
    Both children attended school after this punishment and did not require medical attention.
    While the twins reported that they did not feel safe going home after school, it is far from clear
    that it was their mother (and not their father) that was the cause of the fear—at least they never
    said they were afraid of her specifically. While the school resource officer and police
    investigator testified at trial that they observed a few bruises on the twins while at school, a
    - 11 -
    family services specialist and investigator for the Department of Social Services who interviewed
    the twins later that day noted no bruising and only some discoloration.
    In concluding that parental privilege did not apply, the trial court explained that the
    testimony of the two children was “very credible” and considered their fear in returning home.
    The court observed that “the photos may not have shown everything that they should have shown
    but they showed enough.” Then the court explained that “[t]his was over a texting violation. So
    the question is what could have been done by a parent and what should have been done and what
    shouldn’t have been done.” Finally, the court determined that
    [t]he evidence was that instead of taking the phone and restricting
    their privileges the mother had them go get a belt, the children
    were laid across a bed and they were hit with the belt. In this
    court’s opinion, that’s excessive force for the violation considering
    the size of the children, the mother, the circumstances.
    No one has argued that this case involved significant physical harm, and a reasonable
    factfinder could not conclude that the combination of other factors demonstrate that the
    discipline that morning placed the twins at risk of serious harm. While the court mentioned that
    Woodson used a belt, her use of the soft end of a belt was not so unusual, cruel, or degrading
    without the presence of significant injury or other evidence about the number or location of the
    strikes. Neither could Woodson’s size change this calculus since she was of average height and
    build. That both twins expressed fear of returning to their home is a matter of serious concern,
    but there was insufficient evidence here that this fear was linked to Woodson in particular, or
    that the fear reflected the reasonableness of the specific instance of corporal punishment
    Woodson had administered that morning and which was the basis for the battery charges.8
    8
    In contrast, the general home environment and a child’s fear would certainly be relevant
    to the circumstances that the Department of Social Services would need to consider in
    determining whether to bring a petition alleging abuse and neglect. We note that the Department
    was active in working with this family following this incident.
    - 12 -
    Instead, the primary factor the trial court relied on was the nature of the twins’
    misconduct. The court characterized what occurred as a mere texting violation and suggested
    that Woodson should have made a different parenting decision—taking the phone away from
    them or restricting their phone privileges—instead of using corporal punishment. Parenting is an
    inordinately difficult task, and a criminal prosecution cannot rest on a debatable parenting
    decision without other evidence that the conduct was excessive. Disagreement with Woodson’s
    decision to use corporal punishment, combined with evidence of only transient marks from the
    soft end of a belt, falls short of what a reasonable factfinder could conclude is excessive.
    Applying our understanding of the scope of the parental privilege to use reasonable
    corporal punishment to these circumstances, we conclude that the evidence creates only a
    suspicion or probability of guilt and falls short of what a rational trier of fact could find
    excessive beyond a reasonable doubt. As a result, we reverse and dismiss.
    Reversed and dismissed.
    - 13 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0610212

Filed Date: 5/3/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/3/2022