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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37


IN THE INTEREST OF: J.W., A MINOR          IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                 PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: R.W.                            No. 1079 WDA 2015


              Appeal from the Order entered June 16, 2015
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
            Family Court, at No(s): CP-02-DP-0002407-2013

IN THE INTEREST OF: J.W., A MINOR          IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                 PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: R.W.                            No. 1446 WDA 2015


             Appeal from the Order entered August 21, 2015
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
                   Family Court, at No(s): JV-13-2407

IN RE: J.W., A MINOR                       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                 PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: J.W., BIOLOGICAL FATHER         No. 1080 WDA 2015


              Appeal from the Order entered June 16, 2015
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
                 Family Court, at No(s): DP-2407-2013
                                        JV-13-2407

IN RE: J.W., A MINOR                       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                 PENNSYLVANIA

APPEAL OF: J.W., BIOLOGICAL FATHER         No. 1450 WDA 2015


             Appeal from the Order entered August 21, 2015
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
                   Family Court, at No(s): JV-13-2407
                                          No. DP-2407-2013
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BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., and PANELLA, J.

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, J.:                     FILED SEPTEMBER 02, 2016

      R.W. (“Mother”) and J.W. (“Father”) appeal from the orders entered on

June 16, 2015, and August 21, 2015, with regard to their minor child, J.W.,

(“Child”), a male born in November 2013. In the June 16, 2015 order, the

trial court adjudicated Child dependent pursuant to § 6302(1) of the Juvenile

Act, 42 Pa.C.S.A § 6301, et seq., and placed him in the care of his maternal

grandmother, N.K. (“MGG”), in his own home. That order further permitted

Mother and Father to remain in the home, with the provision that MGG

supervise all of their contact with the minor child and directed the parents to

have mental health evaluations. In the August 21, 2015 order, the trial court

found that Child continues to be dependent under the Juvenile Act and found

that, despite the parents’ substantial compliance with the permanency plan,

Child’s safety continues to be at risk because neither parent has been able to

address the circumstances that led to the June 16, 2015 dependency

adjudication. The trial court further found that the parents’ mental health

evaluation was not helpful in determining a manner in which Child will be

safe in his parents’ unsupervised care. Therefore, the trial court directed the

parents to undergo individual counseling and couples counseling, to assist

the parents in “opening up” about the circumstances of Child’s injuries.

After careful review, we affirm both orders.



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      In its August 17, 2015 opinion, the trial court set forth the following

factual background and procedural history regarding this appeal, which we

incorporate herein, as follows.1

      I. First Dependency Adjudication

            This appeal is from a second adjudication of dependency.
      However, the facts surrounding the first adjudication are
      relevant to the present case. On December 19, 2013, Mother
      took J.W. to the emergency room at Children’s Hospital of
      Pittsburgh (“Children’s Hospital”) due to unexplained marks that
      she discovered on his face and body. See Testimony of
      Transcript (“T.T.”), dated January 31 & February 4, 2014, at 12-
      13. Mother testified that she had been at home with J.W. since
      Father had left for work on the morning of December 19, 2013.
      Id. at 229. Father returned to the home around midnight, from a
      work engagement, at which time [m]other went to shower as
      she had not been able to do so while Father was at work. Id. at
      231. Following an approximate seven[-]minute shower, Mother
      noticed what she believed to be a red rash on J.W.’s face. Id. at
      233. After contacting J.W.’s pediatrician’s office, Mother
      examined the remainder of J.W.’s body and discovered “small
      irregular marks on his lower abdomen.” Id. at 235. Not knowing
      how he obtained the “marks” on his body, Mother took J.W. to
      the Children’s Hospital emergency room.

             The emergency room physician contacted Dr. Jennifer
      Wolford, an attending physician in the Children’s Hospital Child
      Advocacy Center, to further examine J.W. See [i]d. at 9. During
      her examination of J.W., Dr. Wolford discovered additional
      markings on J.W.’s back; she diagnosed the marks on J.W.’s
      back, abdomen and face as bruises that could not have been
      self-inflicted. See T.T., dated January 31 & February 4, 2014, at
      12, 19. Following Dr. Wolford's examination, J.W. had a skeletal
      survey, which initially2 did not reveal any fractures. Id. at 18.
      However, a referral was subsequently made to the Office of
      Children, Youth and Families (CYF). Id. at 139.


1
  We note that the trial court made an apparent clerical error in its opinion
when it stated that the appeal was from its February 16, 2015 order. See
Trial Court Opinion, 8/17/15 at 1.
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           CYF caseworker Nicholas Zdral was appointed to
     investigate the circumstances of J.W.’s injuries and interviewed
     Dr. Wolford as well as both parents. Id. Following Mr. Zdral’s
     interview with the parents, CYF “decided to obtain an emergency
     court order to remove” J.W. from the home. Id. at 159.
     Following a shelter hearing on January 2, 2014, J.W. was placed
     with his maternal great aunt and uncle. Id.

           J.W.’s follow-up skeletal survey at Children’s Hospital
     revealed a healing fracture in his right radius.3 See T.T., dated
     January 31 & February 4, 2014, at 20. Dr. Wolford testified that
     such an injury would have only resulted from an amount of force
     being applied to the bone and was consistent with abuse.

            At the adjudicatory hearing on January 31, 2014, I found
     J.W. dependent due to the unexplained injuries that he
     sustained, which could not have happened without an adult’s
     knowledge. J.W. was subsequently placed in the physical custody
     of his parents; however, all contact with Mother and Father was
     to be supervised. J.W.’s dependency case was ultimately closed,
     and court supervision terminated, on August 8, 2014, when
     Mother and Father completed all of their family service plan
     goals.

     Il. Current Dependency Adjudication

           On April 25, 2015, the family returned to Children’s
     Hospital due to injuries that J.W. sustained from an alleged
     accidental fall in the home. See T.T., dated June 3, 2015, at 39.
     According to Mother, while she was carrying J.W. in her arms
     that morning, she missed a step and fell down the stairs of her
     home. See T.T., dated June 16, 2015, at 57. Upon realizing that
     J.W. was favoring his left leg, Mother contacted the pediatrician
     to schedule an appointment for J.W. later that morning. Id. at
     58. After meeting with J.W.’s primary care physician, Dr. Brad
     Kramer, Mother and Father took J.W. to have x-rays conducted
     at the Cranberry Township site of UPMC Passavant. Id. at 64.
     After reviewing the x-ray results, Dr. Kramer informed Mother
     that J.W. had fractured his right tibia and would need to see a
     pediatric orthopedic surgeon at Children’s Hospital. Id. Upon
     learning that they would have to take J,W. to Children’s Hospital,
     Mother and Father demonstrated discontent with having to

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     return to Children’s Hospital by contacting their attorney, Wendy
     Williams, and their families, prior to actually taking J.W. to the
     hospital. Id. at 64, 93. After being convinced that taking J.W. to
     Children’s Hospital was in his best interest, Mother and Father
     took J.W. to meet with a pediatric orthopedic surgeon. Id.

            Prior to seeing pediatric orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Timothy
     Ward, J.W. was first examined by the emergency room
     physicians. See T.T., dated June 16, 2015, at 142. Although the
     emergency room physician assistant recommended that J.W.
     receive a skeletal survey, the parents initially refused such
     treatment. See T.T., dated June 3, 2015, at 39. Due to the
     parents’ reluctance and the nature of J.W.’s injuries[,] the
     physician assistant contacted Dr. Wolford[,] who then
     recommended that the skeletal survey be completed due to
     J.W.’s past injuries, and the fact that the 2014 skeletal survey
     revealed J.W.’s previous right radial fracture. Id. at 40. Mother
     and Father did not inform the physician assistant of J.W.’s prior
     injuries or the fact that J.W.’s previous right radial fracture, in
     connection with the prior dependency case, had been revealed
     pursuant to a skeletal survey. See T.T., dated June 16, 2015, at
     149.

            Following a great deal of back and forth between the
     parents, their attorney and the emergency room staff, Mother
     and Father ultimately agreed to the skeletal survey under the
     condition that they were permitted to observe the procedure.
     Id. at 65. Following the completion of the skeletal survey, a
     second fracture was revealed in J.W.’s left radius. See T.T.,
     dated June 3, 2015, at 40. After the emergency room physicians
     finished treating J.W. for his two fractures, the family met with
     Dr. Ward, the pediatric orthopedic surgeon to whom Dr. Kramer
     had referred them. See T.T., dated June 16, 2015, at 11.

           During their consult with Dr. Ward, the parents failed to
     accurately characterize J.W.’s prior involvement with Children’s
     Hospital and CYF. Id. at 11-12. Despite the fact that J.W. was
     previously admitted in 2013 for bruises on his face and body, the
     parents told Dr. Ward that J.W. was treated for a wrist fracture
     and implied that CYF’s involvement in the case was rather brief.
     Id. During the June 16, 2015 hearing, Dr. Ward testified that
     although he found J.W.’s contralateral fractures unusual, he
     “allowed the appearance of the family” and his short interaction

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     with the family to “considerably” affect his opinion.5 Id. at 9, 11.
     After speaking with Dr. Wolford and receiving J.W.’s complete
     medical history, Dr. Ward amended his initial medical opinion,
     that J.W.’s injuries were not due to abuse. Id. at 15-16. Due to
     J.W.’s previously unexplained bruises, the parents’ “failure to be
     forthright” regarding their involvement with CYF, the parents’
     misrepresentation regarding the discovery of J.W.’s 2013 right
     radial fracture on the skeletal survey, and their lack of candor to
     the emergency room physicians, Dr. Ward later concluded that
     J.W.’s injuries were the result of abuse. Id. at 30.

           On April 30, 2015, CYF received a child line report for J.W.
     See T.T., dated June 3, 2015, at 149. Following an interview
     with both parents and an evaluation of their home, CYF
     caseworker Robert Banks filed a petition for dependency on May
     07, 2015. A two-day adjudicatory hearing was held on June 3
     and June 16, 2015 on CYF’s dependency petition, after which
     [the trial court] entered the Order that is the subject of this
     appeal.
     ___________________________________________________
     1
       Father testified that when asked about the marks on J.W.’s
     body, he told Mother that he was unaware as to how J.W. came
     to have the marks on his face or body. See T.T., dated January
     31 & February 4, 2014, at 318.
     2
       A subsequent skeletal survey was scheduled for January 2,
     2014. Dr. Wolford testified that it is hospital protocol to conduct
     a subsequent skeletal survey as healing fractures “show up
     better” than acute fractures on the x-rays. See T.T., dated
     January 31 & February 4, 2014, at 20.
     3
       Pediatric radiologist, Dr. Stefano Bartoletti, stated that he was
     able to later identify the healing fracture on the initial skeletal x-
     rays after identifying the fracture on the subsequent skeletal
     survey x-rays. See T.T., dated January 31 & February 4, 2014,
     at 125, 127.
     4
       The parents alleged that J.W.’s injuries in connection with the
     prior adjudication were caused by hospital personnel in
     performing the skeletal survey. See T.T., dated January 31 &
     February 4, 2014, at 266-269. [The trial court] did not adopt
     this theory in connection with the past case.

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      5
        At the hearing on June 3, 2015, Dr. Wolford testified that the
      fact that J.W. had a fracture on his right leg and left arm, as a
      result of this accident, was "highly concerning" for abuse. See
      T.T., dated June 3, 2015, at 42

Trial Court Opinion, 8/17/15, at 1-6 (unpaginated; footnotes in original).

      In the June 16, 2015 order, the trial court adjudicated Child dependent

pursuant to the Juvenile Act and placed him in the care of MGG, in his own

home, permitting Mother and Father to remain in the home, with the

provision that MGG supervise all of their contact with the minor child. The

order also directed the parents to have mental health evaluations.

      The trial court continued the factual background and procedural history

of the case in its opinion entered on October 30, 2015, as follows.

             On August 21, 2015, following a permanency review
      hearing on the above-captioned matter at which all parties were
      represented by counsel, [the trial court] found that the minor
      child, J.W., continues to be a Dependent Child pursuant to the
      Pennsylvania Juvenile Act (See 42 Pa.C.S. §6302(1)). Despite
      the parents’ substantial compliance with the permanency plan,
      the [trial court] found that J.W.’s safety continues to be at risk
      because neither parent has been able to address the
      circumstances which led to the June 16, 2015 dependency
      adjudication. [The trial court] further found that the mental
      health evaluation was not helpful in determining a manner in
      which J.W. will be safe in his parents' unsupervised care. . . .

            Following the adjudicatory hearing, [the trial court]
      scheduled a permanency review hearing for August 21, 2015,
      and [the trial court] ordered the parents to attend mental health
      evaluations to determine if there were any mental health issues
      that they could address which would insure J.W.’s safety. At the
      August 21, 2015 Permanency review hearing[,] the mental
      health    evaluator,    Dr.   Patricia   Pepe,    testified that,
      notwithstanding their “faking good” scores on the child abuse

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      potential inventory, neither Mother nor Father had any mental
      health issues.2 Because the mental health evaluation was not
      helpful in determining what was necessary for J.W. to be in his
      parents’ unsupervised care, [the trial court] ordered Mother and
      Father to enter into individual therapy, followed by couples
      therapy, with the hope that either party would be more
      forthcoming once he or she is protected by confidentiality.
      Thereafter, couples therapy could perhaps be more productive.
      ________________________________________________
      2
        Dr. Pepe also indicated that the parents told her that [the trial
      court] had concluded that the injury which resulted in the
      current dependency adjudication was “accidental.” [The trial
      court] made no such finding. [The trial court] simply noted that
      the medical evidence alone (without consideration of the history
      or the parents’ conduct) would not provide clear and convincing
      evidence of dependency.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/30/15, at 1-2 (unpaginated; footnote omitted;

footnote in original).2

      On July 16, 2015, Mother and Father timely filed notices of appeal,

along with concise statements, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)(2)(i) from the

trial court’s June 16, 2015 order at Docket Nos. 1446 WDA 2015 and 1450

WDA 2015, respectively. On September 21, 2015, Mother and Father timely

filed notices of appeal, along with concise statements, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.




2
  The August 21, 2015 order permitted Child to be placed with his parents,
as long as the maternal grandparents or paternal grandparents supervised
the contact between the parents and Child. Further, the order directed that
the parents would have separate counselors.


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1925(a)(2)(i) from the trial court’s August 21, 2015 orders, at Docket Nos.

1779 and 1780, respectively.3

     Mother’s Appeals at Docket Nos. 1079 WDA 2015 and 1446 WDA 2015

     In her brief on appeal, Mother raises the following issues.

     I. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused its
     discretion by making an adjudication of dependency with regard
     to the minor child, J.W., when the adjudication was not
     supported by clear and convincing evidence, as the trial court
     based its finding upon an unspecified harm that could occur in
     the future, despite evidence showing that J.W. received proper
     care at all times?

     II. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused
     its discretion in finding that J.W. was without proper parental
     care or control when it based its dependency upon information
     from a past dependency case involving J.W., even though
     [Mother] was providing proper care for J.W. at the time the
     current action was filed?

     III. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused
     its discretion by making a dependency finding based on
     allegations that were outside of the scope of the dependency
     petition, and also where the Appellant [Mother] did not have
     advance notice of those allegations, in violation of the
     Appellant’s [Mother’s] rights to due process and fundamental
     fairness?

     IV. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused
     its discretion when, after a permanency hearing, it found that
     J.W. continued to be a dependent child solely due to its concern
     that neither parent was forthcoming about J.W.’s unexplained
     injuries in a prior dependency case, even though the parents



3
  In an order entered on October 16, 2015, this Court, acting sua sponte,
consolidated Mother’s two appeals and Father’s two appeals, and directed
that Father’s appeal be listed consecutively to Mother’s appeals. We address
both Mother’s and Father’s appeals in one Memorandum for ease of
disposition.
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      satisfactorily completed all of their requirements in the current
      case?

      V. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused
      its discretion by requiring Appellant [Mother] to participate in
      individual therapy and in couples therapy, in violation of
      Appellant [Mother’s] right to privacy?

Mother’s Brief, at 8-9.

      Mother asserts that we should reverse the dependency finding and

disposition in the June 16, 2015 adjudication and order, because CYF failed

to satisfy its burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence. She alleges

that the trial court committed an error of law and abused discretion by not

basing its decision upon current circumstances and facts of record. Rather,

the trial court relied on information from a prior closed dependency case,

speculating that Child may not receive proper medical care in the future,

which is contrary to the weight of the evidence. See Mother’s Brief, at 15-

16.

      Mother further contends that she was deprived of due process and

fundamental fairness, as she did not have sufficient notice of the allegations

that the trial court used as a basis for its decision. Mother states:

             At issue in this case were the injuries sustained by the
      child when Mother fell down the stairs, while holding the child,
      on April 25, 2015. [T]he court acknowledged that the medical
      evidence on its own does not establish dependency, and the
      parents were never provided with any notice that a hypothetical
      failure to obtain medical care in the future, or J.W.’s unexplained
      injuries in the past, would be at issue in the current proceeding.
      The medical experts agreed that the child could have sustained
      his injuries as a result of Mother’s fall. The trial court therefore

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      erred in basing a finding of dependency upon the speculation or
      possibility that the child may be denied medical care in the
      future, when the facts of record established that the child did in
      fact receive proper medical care. Such speculations cannot be
      used to justify a dependency finding, particularly when the
      finding required a state agency to intervene into the privacy of
      family life[,] and also deprived Child’s parents of their custodial
      rights.

Mother’s Brief, at 16.

      Mother also argues that there is no evidence, in the record in this

case, that shows that the parents are currently incapable of providing proper

care and control to Child, which is essential to a dependency finding. Thus,

Mother maintains that the trial court erred as a matter of law and abused its

discretion by making a dependency finding without clear and convincing

evidence of each component necessary to support the finding. Accordingly,

Mother urges that this Court should reverse the June 16, 2015 adjudication

and order.

      Additionally, with regard to the August 21, 2015 order, Mother asserts

that the trial court acknowledged that the parents had completed all of the

requirements the court and CYF had imposed, which included cooperating

with CYF and participating in a psychological evaluation. Nevertheless, the

trial court imposed a new requirement for the parents to attend individual

therapy and couples therapy, although the psychological evaluation showed

that there were no mental health concerns. Mother contends that the trial

court’s position, that it could not close the current dependency case until the



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parents acknowledged responsibility for Child’s injuries, was unsupported by

statutory and case law. Moreover, Mother argues that a requirement to

accept   responsibilities   for   past,    unexplained   injuries   should   not   be

determinative in a dependency action, particularly when the injuries in

question arose during a prior dependency case and were completely

unrelated to the injuries in the current case. Accordingly, Mother requests

this Court to vacate the permanency review order entered on August 21,

2015. See Mother’s Brief, at 17-18.

Father’s appeal at Docket Nos. 1980 WDA 2015 and 1450 WDA 2015

     Father raises the following issues.

     1. Was the [t]rial [c]ourt’s dependency finding against the
     weight of the evidence given the testimony in the case
     supporting the Appellant’s [Father’s] contention that the child’s
     injuries were accidentally sustained in a fall?

     2. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion in placing undue
     weight on the parents’ alleged failure to inform emergency
     department staff about their son’s prior wrist fracture and
     reluctance to agree to a skeletal survey?

     3. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion in giving undue
     weight to the child’s prior involvement with CYF?

     4. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt abuse its discretion in finding that the
     parents did not take responsibility for the child’s wrist fracture?

     5. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in making the inconsistent findings
     that [Child] continues to be a dependent child and, at the same
     time, finding that the Parents have completed all tasks required
     of them and substantially complied with the Permanency Plan
     put into place for their family?




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      6. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in finding that the child remains a
      dependent when it failed to set forth specific and attainable goals
      for the child’s Permanency Plan including failing to state the
      likely date on which the child’s placement goals may be
      achieved?

      7. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in ordering the Parents to enter into
      individual and couple’s therapy?

      8. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in entering a disposition contrary to
      the child’s best interests?

Father’s Brief at Docket Nos. 1080 WDA 2015 and 1450 WDA 2015, at 2-3.

      Father asserts that Child broke his wrist and then CYF became

involved and imposed a set of goals on the parents. He further alleges that

the parents met all obligations given to them, and the case was terminated.

Father states that, in April 2015, Mother fell down the stairs while holding

Child and both Mother and Child were injured. Father claims that the parents

promptly took Child to the pediatrician, then for x-rays, then to Children’s

Hospital, where staff again contacted CYF. Father argues that the trial

court’s findings, that the parents had not taken full responsibility for Child’s

previous injury, and had “nearly” prevented Child from receiving necessary

medical care, are unsupported by the record.

      Father states that the trial court did not find that one of the parents

had abused child. Nevertheless, the trial court found Child dependent and

imposed multiple conditions on the parents. Father contends that the trial

court abused its discretion in making the findings and that the second

adjudication   of   dependency   is   against   the   weight   of   the   evidence.

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Accordingly, Father requests this Court to reverse the trial court adjudication

of dependency/disposition and permanency review orders entered on June

16, 2015 and August 21, 2015. See Father’s Brief, at 6.

      Our standard of review in a dependency case as follows.

      [T]he standard of review in dependency cases requires an
      appellate court to accept 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. We review for
      abuse of discretion[.]

In re L.Z., 111 A.3d 1164, 1174 (Pa. 2015) (citation and quotation marks

mitted).

      The Juvenile Act defines a “dependent child” as

      [a] child who:

      (1) is without proper parental care or control, subsistence,
      education as required by law, or other care or control necessary
      for his physical, mental, or emotional health, or morals. A
      determination that there is a lack of proper parental care or
      control may be based upon evidence of conduct by the parent,
      guardian or other custodian that places the health, safety or
      welfare of the child at risk[.]

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302(1).

      This Court clarified the definition of “dependent child” further.

      The question of whether a child is lacking proper parental care or
      control so as to be a dependent child encompasses two discrete
      questions: whether the child presently is without proper parental
      care and control, and if so, whether such care and control are
      immediately available.




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In re G.T., 845 A.2d 870, 872 (Pa. Super. 2004) (quotation marks and

citations omitted). See also In re J.C., 5 A.3d 284, 289 (Pa. Super. 2010).

Additionally, we note that “[t]he burden of proof in a dependency proceeding

is on the petitioner to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that a

child meets that statutory definition of dependency.” G.T., 845 A.2d at 872

(citation omitted).

      This Court has explained that

      a court is empowered by 42 Pa.C.S. § 6341(a) and (c) to make
      a finding that a child is dependent if the child meets the
      statutory definition by clear and convincing evidence. If the court
      finds that the child is dependent, then the court may make an
      appropriate disposition of the child to protect the child's physical,
      mental and moral welfare, including allowing the child to remain
      with the parents subject to supervision, transferring temporary
      legal custody to a relative or public agency, or transferring
      custody to the juvenile court of another state. 42 Pa.C.S. §
      6351(a).

In re D.A., 801 A.2d 614, 617 (Pa. Super. 2002) (en banc).

      The Juvenile Act defines “Aggravated circumstances” as including the

following circumstances:

       (2) The child or another child of the parent has been the victim
      of physical abuse resulting in serious bodily injury, sexual
      violence or aggravated physical neglect by the parent.

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302(2).

      The Juvenile Act defines “serious bodily injury” as “bodily injury which

creates a substantial risk of death or which causes serious, permanent




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disfigurement or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily

member or organ.” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6302.

         The Juvenile Act, in turn, defines “aggravated physical neglect” as,

“Any omission in the care of a child which results in a life-threatening

condition or seriously impairs the child’s functioning.” Id.

         Upon a determination that aggravated circumstances exist, the

Juvenile Act states the following.

         (c.1) Aggravated circumstances.— If the county agency or
         the child’s attorney alleges the existence of aggravated
         circumstances and the court determines that the child is
         dependent, the court shall also determine if aggravated
         circumstances exist. If the court finds from clear and convincing
         evidence that aggravated circumstances exist, the court shall
         determine whether or not reasonable efforts to prevent or
         eliminate the need for removing the child from the home or to
         preserve and reunify the family shall be made or continue to be
         made and schedule a hearing as required in section 6351(e)(3)
         (relating to disposition of dependent child).

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6341(c.1).

         Regarding the disposition of a dependent child, subsections (e), (f),

(f.1), and (g) of § 6351 of the Juvenile Act provides the trial court with the

criteria for its permanency plan for the subject child. Pursuant to those

subsections, the trial court is to determine the disposition that is best suited

to the safety and protection and physical, mental, and moral welfare of the

child.

         The Juvenile Act further provides in pertinent part:

         (e) Permanency hearings.—

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         (1) [t]he court shall conduct a permanency hearing for
         the purpose of determining or reviewing the permanency
         plan of the child, the date by which the goal of
         permanency for the child might be achieved and whether
         placement continues to be best suited to the safety,
         protection and physical, mental and moral welfare of the
         child. In any permanency hearing held with respect to the
         child, the court shall consult with the child regarding the
         child’s permanency plan in a manner appropriate to the
         child's age and maturity. . . .

         (2) If the county agency or the child’s attorney alleges
         the existence of aggravated circumstances and the court
         determines that the child has been adjudicated
         dependent, the court shall then determine if aggravated
         circumstances exist. If the court finds from clear and
         convincing evidence that aggravated circumstances exist,
         the court shall determine whether or not reasonable
         efforts to prevent or eliminate the need for removing the
         child from the child's parent, guardian or custodian or to
         preserve and reunify the family shall be made or continue
         to be made and schedule a hearing as provided in
         paragraph (3).

                                   ***

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6351(e)(1)-(2).

     Section 6351(f) of the Juvenile Act prescribes the pertinent inquiry for

the reviewing court:

     (f) Matters to be determined at permanency hearing.-

           At each permanency hearing, a court shall determine all of
     the following:

         (1)      The continuing necessity for and appropriateness
         of the placement.




                                   - 17 -
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        (2)     The appropriateness, feasibility and extent of
        compliance with the permanency plan developed for the
        child.

        (3)    The extent of progress made toward alleviating
        the circumstances which necessitated the original
        placement.

        (4)    The appropriateness and feasibility of the current
        placement goal for the child.

        (5)      The likely date by which the placement goal for
        the child might be achieved.

        (5.1)   Whether reasonable efforts were made to finalize
        the permanency plan in effect.

        (6)       Whether the child is safe.

        (7)      If the child has been placed outside the
        Commonwealth, whether the placement continues to be
        best suited to the safety, protection and physical, mental
        and moral welfare of the child.

                                    ***

        (9) If the child has been in placement for at least 15 of
        the last 22 months or the court has determined that
        aggravated circumstances exist and that reasonable
        efforts to prevent or eliminate the need to remove the
        child from the child’s parent, guardian or custodian or to
        preserve and reunify the family need not be made or
        continue to be made, whether the county agency has filed
        or sought to join a petition to terminate parental rights
        and to identify, recruit, process and approve a qualified
        family to adopt the child unless:

              (i) the child is being cared for by a relative best
              suited to the physical, mental and moral welfare of
              the child;

              (ii) the county agency has documented a
              compelling reason for determining that filing a

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              petition to terminate parental rights would not
              serve the needs and welfare of the child; or

              (iii) the child’s family has not been provided with
              necessary services to achieve the safe return to
              the child’s parent, guardian or custodian within the
              time frames set forth in the permanency plan.

                                     ***

     (f.1) Additional determination. — Based upon the
     determinations made under subsection (f) and all relevant
     evidence presented at the hearing, the court shall determine one
     of the following:

        (1) If and when the child will be returned to the child’s
        parent, guardian or custodian in cases where the return
        of the child is best suited to the safety, protection and
        physical, mental and moral welfare of the child.

        (2) If and when the child will be placed for adoption, and
        the county agency will file for termination of parental
        rights in cases where return to the child’s parent,
        guardian or custodian is not best suited to the safety,
        protection and physical, mental and moral welfare of the
        child.

        (3) If and when the child will be placed with a legal
        custodian in cases where return to the child’s parent,
        guardian or custodian or being placed for adoption is not
        best suited to the safety, protection and physical, mental
        and moral welfare of the child.

        (4) If and when the child will be placed with a fit and
        willing relative in cases where return to the child’s parent,
        guardian or custodian, being placed for adoption or being
        placed with a legal custodian is not best suited to the
        safety, protection and physical, mental and moral welfare
        of the child.

        (5) If and when the child will be placed in another living
        arrangement intended to be permanent in nature which is
        approved by the court in cases where the county agency

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         has documented a compelling reason that it would not be
         best suited to the safety, protection and physical, mental
         and moral welfare of the child to be returned to the
         child’s parent, guardian or custodian, to be placed for
         adoption, to be placed with a legal custodian or to be
         placed with a fit and wiling relative.


     (f.2) Evidence. – Evidence of conduct by the parent that places
     the health, safety or welfare of the child at risk, including
     evidence of the use of alcohol or a controlled substance that
     places the health, safety or welfare of the child at risk, shall be
     presented to the court by the county agency or any other party
     at any disposition or permanency hearing whether or not the
     conduct was the basis for the determination of dependency.

     (g) Court order.— On the basis of the determination made under
     subsection (f.1), the court shall order the continuation,
     modification or termination of placement or other disposition
     which is best suited to the safety, protection and physical,
     mental and moral welfare of the child.

                                    ***

     In its August 17, 2015 opinion, the trial court provided the following

discussion of Mother’s and Father’s issues:

           Mother’s and Father’s first three issues on appeal concern
     [the trial court’s] finding that both parents have failed to
     acknowledge responsibility for the child’s previous injuries that
     led to the February, 2014 dependency finding. Therefore, it is
     necessary to address the issue of the previous dependency
     adjudication and the responses thereto.

            At the outset[,] it must be recognized that the previous
     dependency finding in 2014 was based on the fact that J.W.
     sustained injuries that could not have resulted without the
     knowledge of an adult. Thus, while [the court] did not make the
     specific finding that J.W. was the victim of inflicted abuse by an
     identified perpetrator, [the court] certainly found the parents to
     be responsible for these injuries.6 My ruling at that time
     contemplated a situation where these[ ] injuries to the child

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     were the result of some type of accident within the knowledge of
     one of the parents. This failure of the parents to take
     responsibility for the prior injuries became a significant issue in
     the current adjudication, where J.W. sustained two additional
     fractures, as noted in the adjudicatory order of June 16, 2015.

           These injuries cannot be considered in a vacuum.
     Appellate cases have upheld adjudications solely based upon
     prognostic evidence. See In re E.B., 83 A.2d 426, 433 (Pa.
     Super. 2013) (holding, “it is well-settled that ‘a finding of
     dependency can be made on the basis of prognostic evidence
     and such evidence is sufficient to meet the strict burden of proof
     necessary to declare a child dependent.” (citing In re R.W.J.,
     826 A.2d 10, 14 (Pa. Super. 2003))) [sic]. Certainly, in this
     case, where this previously dependent young child has suffered
     two additional fractures, the continued insistence of the parents
     that they are not responsible for the first incident establishes
     dependency by clear and convincing evidence.7

            Furthermore, this failure to take responsibility for the prior
     injuries has had an effect on J.W.’s medical treatment. Upon
     learning from Dr. Kramer that J.W. would need to be taken to
     Children’s Hospital to see a pediatric orthopedic surgeon, Mother
     and Father appeared to be less concerned with J.W.’s safety and
     more preoccupied with whether he would be removed from their
     care. Despite just learning that their son had suffered a tibia
     fracture, Mother and Father expressed their aversion to taking
     the child to Children’s Hospital, only choosing to do so after
     being informed that it was the only place that the minor child
     would receive the necessary treatment for a broken bone on a
     Saturday. See Testimony of Transcript, (“T.T”), dated June 16,
     2015, at 93.

            Moreover, once arriving at Children’s Hospital, Mother and
     Father demonstrated further reluctance to have J.W.
     appropriately treated by initially refusing to allow the medical
     staff to perform a skeletal survey. Although the 2014 skeletal
     survey revealed a radial fracture of which the parents were
     unaware, both Mother and Father did not want the hospital staff
     to perform a skeletal survey, as they believed it was solely based
     on the prior allegations of abuse. Id. at 122. The parents’
     objection to the skeletal survey demonstrates a lack of
     responsibility for the safety of their son[,] and shows that

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     Mother    and    Father   were    more   worried     that   they
     “were going down the same path” and that J.W. “would be taken
     from them again.” Id. at 144, 152. Yet, were it not for the most
     recent skeletal survey, J.W.’s second radial fracture would not
     have been discovered or treated.

           The testimony of the emergency room physician, Dr.
     Farrell, demonstrates that Mother and Father were not
     forthcoming with information about J.W.’s previous injuries,
     which were relevant to his most recent treatment. Although both
     the orthopedic resident and physician’s assistant questioned
     Mother and Father regarding J.W.’s previous medical history,
     Mother and Father did not disclose his previous fracture or
     bruises. Only after learning that the treating physicians wanted
     to complete a skeletal [scan] did Mother and Father disclose the
     minor child’s previous injuries. See Testimony of Transcript
     (“T.T.”), dated June 16, 2015, at 53. Were it not for the
     information provided to Dr. Farrell by Dr. Kramer and Dr.
     Wolford, the skeletal survey, which revealed the second radial
     fracture, may not have been conducted.

            Moreover, the orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Ward, testified that
     the parents’ failure to (1) provide a complete medical history for
     the minor child and (2) accurately represent CYF’s past
     involvement with the family caused him to prematurely conclude
     that J.W.’s injuries were not indicative of abuse. Dr. Ward
     testified that Mother and Father never informed him of the
     previous bruises that J.W. sustained. Additionally, Dr. Ward
     stated that Mother and Father implied that their previous
     involvement with CYF was “brief” and “quickly set,” which it
     most certainly was not. Id. at 21. Even if Mother and Father did
     not explicitly state that their involvement with CYF was brief,
     their failure to adequately characterize CYF’s involvement in
     2014 caused Dr. Ward to prematurely render a medical opinion
     that J.W.’s injuries were attributable to the accidental falling.
     Although initially believing the child’s injuries to be unusual, Dr.
     Ward’s medical opinion was swayed due to the incomplete and
     partially inaccurate medical history that Mother and Father
     provided

           Therefore, it is clear that in refusing to provide both Dr.
     Farrell, the emergency room physician, and Dr. Ward, the
     orthopedic surgeon, with a complete medical and factual history

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     regarding J.W.’s previous injuries, Mother and Father
     demonstrated not only their inability to accept responsibility for
     the his [sic] prior injuries, as discussed supra, but also, their
     current inability to provide J.W. with adequate care or control.
     The parents’ reluctance in cooperating with the medical
     professionals at Children’s Hospital would not be so alarming if
     their reluctance did not pose a danger to the child’s physical
     health. [The trial court] cannot overlook the fact that Mother and
     Father’s lack of candor could have thwarted the very treatment
     that led to the discovery of an additional fracture.

            In    the    concise   statements,     Mother     and    Father
     mischaracterize [the trial court’s] prior adjudicatory findings.
     [The court] must emphasize that the absence of a finding of
     abuse in the first dependency hearing does not in itself establish
     a finding that no abuse took place. [The trial court’s] previous
     dependency finding did not hinge on whether or not Mother or
     Father inflicted the trauma, but on the fact that the child
     sustained trauma, which the medical evidence confirmed could
     have not have [sic] resulted without an adult’s knowledge. The
     record of the February 2014 adjudicatory hearing reflects [the
     trial court’s] finding that a child of that age is not in a position to
     cause the injuries he sustained[,] and that some adult had
     knowledge of how J.W. sustained his injuries. Although [the trial
     court] did not identify a perpetrator or state that the minor child
     had been abused, [the court] did not make an alternative finding
     that the trauma was not inflicted. Therefore, the parents’
     arguments that [the court] made a finding that J.W. was not
     abused are unsupported by the record.

            The [trial court] further noted that the fact that the
     previous dependency case was closed after Mother and Father
     met all of their goals is not indicative of the parents’
     acknowledgement of responsibility for the minor child’s prior
     injuries. As stated in [the trial court’s] June 16, 2015 findings of
     fact, it is the parents’ most recent conduct with respect to the
     prior incident that demonstrates their failure to accept
     responsibility for the accuracy of the prior finding. At most,
     Mother’s and Father’s completion of their previous dependency
     goals demonstrates a propensity to cooperate with court orders;
     it does not, however, demonstrate their acceptance of the
     accuracy of the prior finding, or their willingness to accept
     responsibility for J.W.’s prior injuries.8

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             The parents’ [next] issue on appeal avers that [the trial
      court] erred and abused [its] discretion in adjudicating the child
      dependent where the medical evidence on its own does not
      establish dependency and there was no evidence that parent
      failed to obtain proper medical attention for J.W. With respect to
      the parents’ first argument, [the trial court] did not base [its]
      findings or the dependency adjudication solely on the medical
      evidence. As noted, [the medical evidence] is concerning, but
      alone does not establish clear and convincing evidence. What
      [the trial court] did find, by clear and convincing evidence, was
      that it became evident in this adjudication that the parents failed
      to acknowledge responsibility for the prior injuries, and[,]
      therefore, J.W. is at risk for medical professionals not receiving
      all of the information necessary to treat him and to assess
      whether he is in danger. There is ample evidence in the record
      that Mother and Father were not candid or forthcoming with
      information regarding the child’s previous history. Multiple
      witnesses, including Mother and Father, testified to the parents’
      reluctance to not only have the minor child treated at Children’s
      Hospital, but also to submit to the skeletal survey, without which
      the second fracture would not have been discovered. Therefore,
      the parents’ arguments with respect to [this] issue on appeal
      should be dismissed.
      ___________________________________________________
      6
        While the parents cooperated with services and did what was
      asked of them by CYF, resulting in the closure of the prior case
      closed [sic] after approximately eight months, it is clear that the
      parents never acknowledged responsibility for the injury.
      7
        As stated in [the trial court’s] adjudicatory order, [the trial
      court], as well as other professionals in this case, very well may
      have been influenced by the fact that the parents appear to be
      such nice, respectable people who have a nice home and plenty
      of resources.
      8
        In retrospect, the case should not have been closed without
      such an acknowledgement.

Trial Court Opinion, 8/17/16, at 7-12 (unpaginated; footnotes and emphasis

in original).

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     In the October 30, 2015 opinion, the trial court explained:

          Both Mother and Father appeal [the] August 21, 2015
     Order of Court.1

                                   ***

           In their concise statements, Mother and Father both assert
     9 matters complained of, which can be grouped into three basic
     issues, specifically:

        1. That [the trial court] committed an error of law and an
        abuse of discretion in finding that J.W. continues to be
        dependent because parents were not forthcoming about
        what happened to this child when he was an infant,
        despite the parents’ substantial compliance with the
        permanency plan. See Mother’s and Father’s Concise
        Statement of Matters, at paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 6 and 8.

        2. That [the trial court] committed an error of law and an
        abuse of discretion in failing to set forth appropriate goals
        for J.W.’s permanency plan or a likely date on which the
        permanency goals maybe achieved. See Mother’s and
        Father’s Concise Statement of Matters, at paragraphs 4
        and 5.

        3. That [the trial court] committed an error of law and an
        abuse of discretion in ordering the parents to attend both
        individual therapy and ultimately couples therapy, and
        requiring the parents’ contact with J.W. to continue to be
        supervised at all times by either the paternal
        grandparents or maternal grandparents. See Mother’s
        and Father’s Concise Statement of Matters, at paragraphs
        7 and 9.

           Ultimately, Mother’s and Father’s issues on appeal, (which
     are not addressed in the Opinion in support of the adjudication)
     (August, 17, 2014) stem from [the trial court’s] finding that J.W.
     continues to be a dependent child despite the fact that both
     parents have substantially complied with the permanency plan.
     However, compliance with the permanency plan does not equal
     progress. The mental health evaluations were ordered in order
     to assess whether a mental health issue was the reason why the

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      parents were unwilling to acknowledge their responsibility for the
      injuries to the child as an infant and their resulting reluctance to
      cooperate with medical providers, with respect to the recent
      fractures. Had the mental health evaluations revealed a mental
      health condition, which caused the parents to place the child at
      risk, then appropriate mental health goals could be identified so
      that this condition could be addressed.

             Both parents deny responsibility for J.W.’s injuries as an
      infant, despite [the trial court’s] finding that an adult was aware
      of the cause of the injuries. Instead, there appears to be a
      “circling of the wagons” or a “conspiracy of silence.” See In Re
      L.Z., 111 A.3d 1164 (Pa. 2015). Dr. Pepe’s testimony that the
      parents do not have mental health issues may have ruled out
      one potential explanation as to why the parents have been
      unable to address the circumstances that led to the dependency
      adjudication.

             However, without an explanation for the parents’ behavior,
      the conditions cannot be remedied[,] and J.W. cannot safely be
      placed in the parents[’] care without supervision. As a result, [the
      trial court] ordered both parents to seek individual counseling
      with the hope that either Mother or Father will be forthcoming
      with information regarding the circumstances of J.W.’s previous
      injuries, so that the parents may then work towards remedying
      the conditions that led to the most recent dependency
      adjudication.

            For the foregoing reasons, the August 21, 2015 Order of
      Court should be affirmed.
      ______________________________________________
      1
        Currently pending before the Court are Mother’s and Father’s
      appeals of the June 16, 2015 dependency adjudication at docket
      numbers at 1079 WDA 2015 and 1080 WDA 2015. As the
      present matter has been consolidated with the pending appeals,
      this opinion will only address facts and issues which were not
      addressed in the prior opinion. For more detail, see the Trial
      Court Opinion, dated August 17, 2015.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/30/15, at 2-4 (footnote in original).




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      In In re L.Z., our Supreme Court considered the question of whether

this Court, sitting en banc, improperly reversed the determination of the trial

court that the child at issue suffered child abuse, and, through the

application of the presumption of prima facie evidence of abuse set forth at

23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6381(d), that the abuse was perpetrated by his mother.

      There, a twenty-month-old male infant was brought to an emergency

room by his mother and his maternal aunt, to be treated for a deep cut

nearly halfway around the base of his penis. The physicians at the hospital

noted bruising to the child’s cheeks, severe diaper rash, and a yeast

infection on the front of his body. Both women cared for the child together.

The physicians suspected child abuse, as the women’s explanations for the

injuries to the child were consistent with abuse, and the injuries were

inconsistent with the women’s explanations. The physicians also suspected

that the injuries were non-accidental.

      The physician who treated the child at the hospital testified at the

dependency adjudication hearing as an expert in pediatric medicine. When

the doctor was asked whether the dark bruising to child’s cheeks would

“cause a child severe pain,” she responded, “I am sure it couldn’t have been

very comfortable.” 111 A.3d at 1168. The doctor testified that the injuries

(the penile laceration, cheek bruises and diaper rash/yeast infection) were

“consistent with a pattern of suspected child abuse,” and that the child was a

“victim of child abuse.” Id.

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      The trial court found that the child was a victim of child abuse as

defined at 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6303, and that the mother was the perpetrator of

the abuse. See 111 A.3d at 1168-1169. The court transferred temporary

legal custody of the child to the county agency, and placed the child in his

maternal   grandfather’s   physical   custody,   with   his   parents   receiving

supervised weekly visitation. The trial court also entered an order finding

that aggravated circumstances existed because the child was “the victim of

physical abuse resulting in serious bodily injury, sexual violence, or

aggravated neglect by the parent; proven as to Mother.” Id. at          at 1169.

The trial court concluded that the county agency did not need to make

further efforts to reunify the child with his mother.

      The mother filed an appeal to this Court. Sitting en banc, the majority

of the Court affirmed the dependency adjudication but vacated the abuse

determination. The dissent, authored by this jurist, and joined by Judge

Bender and then-Judge, now Justice, Wecht, took the position that the

majority improperly limited the evidentiary presumption of § 6381(d) to find

prima facie evidence of an abuser’s identity only when the abuser was

proven to be present at the time of the injuries. See id. at 1171.

      The guardian ad litem filed an appeal with our Supreme Court, which

held that the presumption set forth in § 6381(d) was applicable to the case,

and that the mother offered no testimony to rebut it. See id. at 1186. The

Court concluded that the trial court properly found that the mother

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perpetrated the abuse on the child either by inflicting the injuries, or by

failing to protect the child from his maternal aunt. Accordingly, the Supreme

Court reversed this Court’s en banc decision, and reinstated the trial court’s

order. See id.

      The Supreme Court stated:

             [C]hild abuse cases often involve a child presenting to a
      hospital with significant injuries that are entirely consistent with
      common types of child abuse and entirely inconsistent with the
      implausible explanations concocted by the parents and
      responsible persons to avoid allegations of child abuse. As noted,
      in cases where multiple caregivers are involved, the individuals
      frequently “circle the wagons” or alternatively point fingers at
      each other. As the children may be too young or fearful to
      describe the abuse, CYS agencies are left to prove their case
      with only the physical evidence of injuries that would not
      ordinarily be sustained but for the action of the parents or
      responsible persons and the implausible statements of the
      parents and responsible persons. Thus, while they can prove the
      existence of abuse rather easily, they have no ability to assign
      responsibility for the heinous act among the responsible adults.
      As Judge Tamilia observed in 1993, “the Legislature deemed it
      wise and necessary to establish a different evidentiary standard”
      by enacting Section 6381’s(d)’s presumption to avoid this
      evidentiary conundrum and protect children from future abuse.
      [In the Interest of J.R.W., 631 A.2d 1019, 1023 (Pa. Super.
      1993)]. . . . We emphasize that, when a child is in the care of
      multiple parents or other persons responsible for care, those
      individuals are accountable for the care and protection of the
      child whether they actually inflicted the injury or failed in their
      duty to protect the child.

             Moreover, the Legislature balanced the presumption of
      Section 6381(d) by making it rebuttable as it merely establishes
      “prima facie evidence” that the parent perpetrated the abuse.
      23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d). As commonly understood, prima facie
      evidence is “[s]uch evidence as, in the judgment of the law, is
      sufficient to establish a given fact, or the group or chain of facts
      constituting the party’s claim or defense, and which if not

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     rebutted or contradicted, will remain sufficient.” Black’s Law
     Dictionary 825 (6th ed. Abridged 1991). Accordingly, evidence
     that a child suffered injury that would not ordinarily be sustained
     but for acts or omissions of the parent or responsible person is
     sufficient to establish that the parent or responsible person
     perpetrated that abuse unless the parent or responsible person
     rebuts the presumption. The parent or responsible person may
     present evidence demonstrating that they did not inflict the
     abuse, potentially by testifying that they gave responsibility for
     the child to another person about whom they had no reason to
     fear or perhaps that the injuries were accidental rather than
     abusive. The evaluation of the validity of the presumption would
     then rest with the trial court evaluating the credibility of the
     prima facie evidence presented by the CYS agency and the
     rebuttal of the parent or responsible person.

           Applying Section 6381(d) as set forth above to the case at
     bar, we affirm the trial court’s determination that [the mother]
     perpetrated the abuse in the form of the laceration, the cheek
     bruising, and the severe diaper rash and yeast infection. First,
     because the medical evidence presented by [the agency]
     demonstrated that [the child’s] injuries were neither accidental
     nor self-inflicted and because [the child] was only in the care of
     [his mother and aunt], the injuries were shown to be “of such a
     nature as would ordinarily not be sustained or exist except by
     reason of the acts or omissions of the parent or other person
     responsible for the welfare of the child[.]” 23 Pa.C.S. § 6381(d).
     Ergo, either [the aunt or mother] or both inflicted the abuse [the
     child] suffered or failed to protect him from the other’s abuse.
     [The mother] failed to rebut the presumption by presenting
     evidence or testimony from her, [the aunt] or her boyfriend
     establishing that [the child] was not in her care when the injuries
     were suffered and that she had no reason to question her
     decision to leave [the child] in [his aunt’s] care. Likewise,
     neither [the aunt] nor anyone on her behalf testified. [The
     mother and aunt’s] self-serving claims made at the hospital were
     neither under oath nor subject to cross-examination. They were
     outside-the-record and do not constitute rebuttal evidence.25

           Instead, ample, uncontested, unrebutted evidence existed
     for the trial court to presume that [the mother] perpetrated the
     abuse on [the child]. . . .



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            Additionally, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
      discrediting [the mother’s] implausible out-of-court explanation
      and instead crediting the treating doctor’s testimonial
      determination that the cheek bruising was classic child abuse.
      The court found Dr. Silver credible given the pattern of bruises
      showing that someone squeezed [the child’s] face between her
      thumb and fingers, bruising which could have occurred during
      the window of time [the mother] acknowledged having control of
      [the child] and bruising that the doctor testified would have
      cause [the child] severe pain. Moreover, even assuming [the
      mother] did not inflict the penile laceration or the cheek bruising,
      she is still responsible for [the child’s] injuries by failing to
      protect him from [the aunt], absent rebuttal from [the mother]
      that she had no reason to fear leaving [the child] with [the
      aunt].

            We conclude that the presumption of Section 6381(d) is
      applicable to this case and that [the mother] offered no
      testimony to rebut it. Thus, the trial court properly found [the
      mother] perpetrated the abuse on [the child] either by inflicting
      the injuries or failing to protect [the child] from [the aunt].
      ____________________________________________________
      25
        Moreover, we would not fault a trial court for failing to credit
      any explanations that would have been given considering the
      implausibility of the other assertions provided at the hospital
      regarding [the child’s] injuries.

Id. at 1185-1186 (footnote in original; footnote omitted).

      Multiple caretaker child abuse situations are rife with credibility

determinations for the trial court, and call for the trial court to make

credibility determinations as to the plausible and implausible explanations

for the child’s injuries. See id. at 1186 n.25.

      After a careful review of the record in this matter, we find the trial

court’s credibility findings are supported by competent evidence in the

record. See In re R.J.T., 9 A.3d at 1190. We also find no deprivation of

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J-A10012-16
J-A10013-16

Mother’s and Father’s constitutional guarantees to due process of law, for

the reasons expressed by the trial court in its opinion, quoted above. We

find no error of law or abuse of the trial court’s discretion in ordering, in the

August 21, 2015 order, the parties to undergo individual and couples

therapy, after the psychological evaluation, in order to reach a determination

of the identity of the perpetrator of the abuse on Child. We, therefore, find

Mother’s and Father’s appeals lack merit. Accordingly, we affirm the June 16,

2015 and August 21, 2015 orders of the trial court.

      Orders affirmed.



Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 9/2/2016




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