We granted the people leave to appeal from the circuit court’s order declaring MCL 722.633(2); MSA 25.248(13X2) unconstitutional and dismissing the complaint and warrant charging that defendant failed to report an instance of suspected child abuse, a misdemeanor.
Originally charged in thе 52nd District Court with failing to report as required by § 3 of the Child Protection Law, MCL 722.623; MSA 25.248(3), defendant moved to quash the complaint and warrant on the grounds that the statute was unconstitutionally vague, overbroad, and that it violated Const 1963, art 4, § 25. After the district court denied defendant’s motion, the Oakland Circuit Court grаnted defendant leave to appeal and reversed. In turn, this Court granted the people leave to appeal on February 11, 1988, and we reverse the order of the circuit court.
The victim’s mother initiated family therapy with defendant after suspecting that her husband *709 had sexually molested their nine-year-old daughter. Defendant, a psychologist and family therapist, rendered therapy and treatment to the victim, the victim’s mother and the victim’s father.
During individual therapy sessions in early 1986, the victim told defendant about recurring incidents in which her father fondled her breasts. When defendant questioned the victim’s father about these allegations at a therapy session, defendant claims that the victim’s father made it clear to defendant that if he had touched the victim, such touchings were completely accidental and not done for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification.
The victim herself later reported her father’s conduct to a school counselor, who reported the incident to Protective Services. A petition based on the victim’s allegations of sexual abuse was filed in thе probate court. Contending that defendant had reasonable cause to suspect that the victim had been molested but had failed to report the suspected child abuse as required by MCL 722.623; MSA 25.248(3) of the Child Protection Law, the county prosecuting attorney’s office brought the disрuted misdemeanor charge of failure to report, MCL 722.633(2); MSA 25.248(13)(2), against defendant.
Section 3 of the Child Protection Law, MCL 722.623; MSA 25.248(3), requires that
(1) A physician, coroner, dentist, medical examiner, nurse, a person licensed to provide emergency medical care, audiologist, psychologist, family therapist, certified social worker, social work technician, school administrator, school counselor or teacher, law enforcement officer, or duly regulated child care provider who has reasonable cause to suspect child abuse or neglect immediately, by telephone or otherwise, shall make ... [a] report *710 ... of the suspected child abuse or neglect to the department ....
(2) The . . . report shall contain the name of the child and a description of the abuse or neglect. If possible, the report shall contain the names and addresses of the child’s parents, the child’s guardian, the persons with whom the child resides, and the child’s age. The report shall contain other information available to the reporting person which might establish the cause of the abuse or neglect and the manner in which the abuse or neglect occurred.
(4) The . . . report required in this section shall be mailed or otherwise transmitted to the county department of social services of the county in which the child suspected of being abused or neglected is found.
(5) Uрon receipt of a . . . report of suspected child abuse or neglect, the department may provide copies to the prosecuting attorney and the probate court of the counties where the child suspected of being abused or neglected resides and is found.
(6) If the report indicates a violation of section . . . 750.145c of the Michigan Compiled Laws, and the department believes that the report has basis in fact, the department shall transmit a copy of the . . . report to the prosecuting attorney of the countiеs in which the child resides and is found.
Section 3 of the Child Protection Law was amended by
Section 13 of the Child Protection Law, MCL 722.633(2); MSA 25.248(13)(2), provides:
A person required to report an instance of sus *711 рected child abuse or neglect who knowingly fails to do so is guilty of a misdemeanor.
Defendant first claims, as he did below, that the Child Protection Law, MCL 722.621 et seq.; MSA 25.248(1) et seq., is unconstitutionally overbroad because it violates defendant’s First Amendment rights to associate in legal endeavors and invades the рrivacy of the family and those in association to cure private family problems. Defendant argues that there is no compelling state interest in "suspicious” behavior, whether or not the suspicion is reasonable.
Legislative enactments are cloaked with a prеsumption of constitutionality. Where a statutory provision would otherwise be unconstitutional, it is the Court’s duty to give the statute a narrow construction so as to render it constitutional if such a construction is possible without doing violence to the Legislature’s interest in enacting the statute.
People v
O’Donnell,
The doctrine of overbreadth is primarily applied to First Amendment cases where an overbroad statute prohibits constitutionally protected conduct.
People v McCumby,
However, not every First Amendment right supports an overbreadth challenge.
Woll v Attorney
General,
While §3 does not prevent a psychologist or family therapist from treating those of his patients who have engaged in child abuse, there is little doubt thаt it places such a patient at greater risk that her or his misconduct will be discovered and prosecution will follow. In the context of a family, § 3 invades its privacy to the extent that the family members’ collective desire to seek treatment for the offender and risk the continued abuse of the victim rather than initiating criminal proceedings may not be honored. However, we do not believe that this invasion constitutes a constitutionally impermissible violation of a family’s First Amendment right of privacy. A family does not have a protected First Amendment right to undertake a course of action which may do little or nothing to protect the child victim from continued abuse.
The United States Supreme Court has long recognized that a state has an interest in protecting the welfare of children and in seeing that they are safeguarded from аbuses which might prevent their growth into free and independent well-developed citizens.
Ginsberg v New York,
Wе distinguish the cases cited by defendant in support of his overbreadth argument from the issue presented here. Rather, we find this case to be analogous to
Whalen v Roe,
Further, a person generally lacks standing to challenge overbreadth where his own conduct is clearly within the contemplation of the statute. This is so even where there is some marginal aрplication which might infringe on First Amendment activities.
Parker v
Levy,
Defendant next claims that the Child Protection Law is void for vagueness because it offers no reasonably precise standard to those charged with
*714
adhering to or enforcing the law. Defendant contends that the phrase "reasonable cause to suspect” is not clearly defined and does not give him fair notice of what conduct the statute proscribes. A vagueness challenge must be examined in light of the facts at hand.
People v Harbour,
A statute whiсh either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application violates the first essential of due process of law.
People v Gilliam,
We find that the words "reasonable сause to suspect” speak for themselves and provide fair notice of the conduct expected in reporting suspected child abuse. Based upon the fact that defendant was told by his patient, the victim, that her *715 father was fondling her breasts, the § 3 reporting provisions are not vague.
In this case, the circuit court suggested that defendant, in the course of exercising professional judgment, might have concluded that the information supplied to him indicating that the victim was being abused was inaccurate or some kind of fantasy. That hardly makes the stаtute vague or overbroad. Defendant had reasonable suspicion of child abuse, but concluded that his suspicions were not factually founded. With respect to defendant’s legal obligations under § 3, it was not for him to make this determination, but for the responsible investigative agencies, such as the Department of Social Services, to make. While defendant is free to decide that the victim’s allegations are untrue for purposes of rendering professional treatment, he is not free to arrogate to himself the right to foreclose the рossibility of a legal investigation by the state. The state has different interests, and its sovereignty is offended by child abuse.
Defendant next contends that § 11 of the Child Protection Law, MCL 722.631; MSA 25.248(11), which abrogates all legally recognized privileged communication except that between attornеy and client for purposes of reports required to be made, or the admission of evidence in a civil child protection proceeding resulting from such a report, also amends by implication the psychologist-patient privilege, MCL 330.1750; MSA 14.800(750), in violation of our Michigan Constitutiоn, Const 1963, art 4, §25. This claim is without merit. Amendment by implication is not constitutionally prohibited in every instance, e.g., where, as here, an act is complete within itself.
People v Stimer,
Defendant’s last claim is that the Child Protection Law is unconstitutional because it violates his Fourth Amendment and Fifth Amendment rights, as well as those of his patients.
The first prong of this argument is that defendant and his clients have a Fourth Amendment right to privacy from unreasonable seizure of oral evidence, citing
Katz v United States,
With regard to thе second prong of the argument, we find the defendant has no standing to assert a Fifth Amendment privilege.
United States v Goldfarb,
328 F2d 280, 281-282 (CA 6, 1964), cert den
We are cоncerned with the difficulty pointed out by the circuit court of child abusers in need of psychological counseling who are dissuaded by the § 3 reporting provisions from obtaining unfettered access to psychiatric services due to the risk of prosecution for any abuse they hаve perpetrated. However, as noted by the United States Supreme Court in
Colorado v Connelly,
479 US —;
We congratulate the parties and amicus curiae on their excellent briefs.
Reversed and remanded.
