DECISION
T1 MR. (Father) appeals the juvenile court's order adjudicating his children as abused or neglected. We affirm.
12 A juvenile court's legal conclusions are reviewed for correctness; however, the juvenile court has discretion when applying the law to specific facts. See In re L.M.,
18 Father asserts that the juvenile court erred in finding that he abused J.R. because his conduct was reasonable discipline and therefore excepted under Utah law. See Utah Code Ann. § 78A-6-105(1)(b)(i) (2008) (providing that reasonable discipline does not constitute abuse). "The issue of whether discipline was reasonable is a fact-dependent analysis that must take into account the various circumstances of the particular case." K.Y. v. Division of Child and Family Serv.,
T 4 Abuse is defined under Utah statute as "nonaccidental harm of a child," or "threatened harm of a child." Utah Code Ann. § Harm includes physical or emotional injury or damage. See id. § T8A-6-105(19)(a). The juvenile court found J.R. to be both physically and emotionally abused by Father. Because emotional harm is abuse under the statute and sufficient to support an adjudication of abuse, see id., we address only the finding of emotional abuse.
15 Several witnesses testified regarding Father's course of conduct of slapping J.R., calling her, her mother, and sisters vile names, accusing J.R. of sexual activity, and threatening J.R. with an exam to prove or disprove her virginity. Based on the pattern and context of Father's conduct, the juvenile court determined that Father's conduct was not reasonable discipline. The court found that Father's pattern of slapping J.R. was not a "good faith effort to maintain discipline,
16 Because the juvenile court did not err in finding that J.R. was abused, the finding that D.R. was neglected as a sibling at risk is also supported. See Utah Code Ann. § 78A, 6-105(25)(a)(iv).
17 Affirmed.
Notes
. Indeed, it is difficult to argue that such conduct is related to discipline at all.
