DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, DIVISION OF CHILD PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY v. E.D.-O.
DOCKET NO. A-3825-12T4
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION
January 14, 2014
RECORD IMPOUNDED; NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION; APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION January 14, 2014 APPELLATE DIVISION
Before Judges Fisher, Espinosa and Koblitz.
On appeal from the Director, Division of Child Protection and Permanency, Department of Children and Families, Agency No. AHU 09-0740.
Daniel N. Epstein argued the cause for appellant (Epstein Arlen, LLC, attorneys; Mr. Epstein, of counsel and on the brief; Carol Matula, on the brief).
Ann Avram Huber, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (John J. Hoffman, Acting Attorney General, attorney; Andrea M. Silkowitz, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Ms. Huber, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FISHER, P.J.A.D.
Appellant E.D.-O. (Eleanor, a fictitious name) acknowledges that late in the morning of May 6, 2009, she: parked her car approximately 150 feet from the front door of a Dollar Tree store in South Plainfield; left her sleeping nineteen-month-old child belted into her car seat in the vehicle; and kept the engine running and the doors locked with windows opened approximately one inch while she entered the store. Five to ten minutes later, Eleanor exited the store to find, by her car, police officers called by a mall security guard, who had observed the unattended child. Eleanor was arrested, charged with child endangerment and released on her own recognizance.1
The Division of Youth and Family Services, now known as the Division of Child Protection and Permanency (the Division), immediately investigated and a Division representative spoke with Eleanor the same afternoon. Eleanor was tearful and remorseful; she was described by her husband as a “good and
Two weeks later, the Division filed a Title Nine action, seeking care and custody of all four children. On September 3, 2009, the Division agreed the family was in no further need of intervention, and the action was consensually dismissed.
Eleanor filed an unsuccessful administrative appeal and now appeals the Director‘s final agency decision, arguing she was entitled to an evidentiary hearing and claiming the Director‘s determination was legally insufficient.
This appeal presents only a legal question: whether the material facts support a finding of abuse or neglect. That question is governed by
whose physical, mental, or emotional condition has been impaired or is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as the result of the failure of his parent or guardian . . . to exercise a minimum degree of care . . . (b) in providing the child with proper supervision or guardianship, by unreasonably inflicting or allowing to be inflicted harm, or substantial risk thereof[.]
The Legislature provided no further clarity as to the reach of the phrase “minimum degree of care,” but our Supreme Court
More recently, the Court reaffirmed that its “‘cautionary act’ language . . . is informed by” G.S.‘s “grossly negligent or reckless standard,” but further explained that “every failure to perform a cautionary act is not abuse or neglect“; that is, “[w]hen the failure to perform a cautionary act is merely negligent, it does not trigger” the statute. N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. T.B., 207 N.J. 294, 306-07 (2011); see also S.N.W., supra, 428 N.J. Super. at 254. The focus on the parent‘s level of culpability in assessing whether a minimum degree of care has been exercised
is in synchronicity with the Legislature‘s expressed purpose to safeguard children. Indeed, where a parent or guardian acts in a grossly negligent or reckless manner, that
deviation from the standard of care may support an inference that the child is subject to future danger. To the contrary, where a parent is merely negligent there is no warrant to infer that the child will be at future risk.
This standard is best appreciated by specific examples contained in our case law, as the T.B. Court instructed in expressly referring to two of our prior decisions - N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. A.R., 419 N.J. Super. 538 (App. Div. 2011) and N.J. Dep‘t of Youth & Family Servs. v. J.L., 410 N.J. Super. 159 (App. Div. 2009). The facts in T.B. further illustrate the statute‘s meaning.
In A.R., we found a parent to have been grossly negligent when he placed a ten-month-old child on a twin bed without rails next to a radiator and then closed the door behind him, concluding that “‘an ordinary reasonable person’ would understand the perilous situation in which the child was placed.” Id. at 545-46. A different outcome was warranted in J.L., where the mother of three- and five-year-old sons permitted them to “return home alone” while she remained in a nearby outdoor play area, because she had trained the boys to leave ajar the door, which was equipped with a child-proof cover, if they entered the home without her; on the occasion in question, the door accidently closed behind the boys, thereby
Such events are apparently not as uncommon as might be hoped; the parties have cited no less than six fairly recent unreported decisions of this court dealing with young children left unattended in motor vehicles. Although there may be instances in which such an act may be fairly labeled “merely negligent,” we need not describe at any length the parade of horribles that could have attended Eleanor‘s neglect in
(continued) 23 (2013); N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. V.T., 423 N.J. Super. 320, 330 (App. Div. 2011). Indeed, the abuse/neglect finding often arises because of a legitimate and reasonable inference - stemming from the act or omission in question - that “the child is subject to future danger.” T.B., supra, 207 N.J. at 307 (emphasis added). We need look no further than the statute itself to conclude that abuse or neglect has occurred when a child‘s “physical, mental, or emotional condition . . . is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as the result of the failure of his parent or guardian . . . to exercise a minimum degree of care.”
(continued) child“);
I hereby certify that the foregoing
is a true copy of the original on
file in my office.
CLERK OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
(continued) shopping centers are troubled by crime. Moreover, as we have endeavored to explain, the risk to the child is not limited to exposure to criminality; the health risks of leaving a young child in an unattended motor vehicle no doubt produce more deaths or greater injuries than those caused by criminals.
Notes
[L]eaving a child unattended in a car can too often have tragic consequences, either because the child suffers from exposure to excessive heat, is injured when the car is stolen, or releases the emergency brake, inadvertently starts the car, or puts the car in gear. On average, thirty-six children per year across the country die in hot vehicles. About forty per cent of those deaths occur when caregivers forget that children are in the car. About twenty per cent of children who die are intentionally left in vehicles by caregivers who do not know any better.
[W]ith an outside temperature of approximately eighty-five degrees, the inside air temperature in a car will reach one hundred-thirty degrees or more. Under those conditions, a small child, whose body temperature increases three to five times faster than an adult‘s, can succumb to the heat in as short a time as fifteen minutes. External temperatures as low as sixty-six degrees can be fatal. As a result, the five-minute trip to the bank that ends up taking a half-hour can be deadly.
[2008 Haw. Sess. Laws, c. 170, § 1.]
