Vonrio Hawkins v. In the Youth Court of DeSoto County, Mississippi , 223 So. 3d 187 ( 2017 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2016-CA-00622-COA
    IN THE INTEREST OF V.M.H., V.M.H., V.M.H.,
    AND V.M.H.:
    VONRIO HAWKINS                                                             APPELLANT
    v.
    THE YOUTH COURT OF DESOTO COUNTY,                                            APPELLEE
    MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         03/29/2016
    TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. CELESTE EMBREY WILSON
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                DESOTO COUNTY YOUTH COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                  JERRY WESLEY HISAW
    BENJAMIN DAVID MURPHY
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                    ELIZABETH PAIGE WILLIAMS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - CUSTODY
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                  PLACED CHILDREN IN THE CUSTODY OF
    THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
    HUMAN SERVICES
    DISPOSITION:                              AFFIRMED: 07/18/2017
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE IRVING, P.J., FAIR AND WILSON, JJ.
    FAIR, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    Vonrio Hawkins appeals a decision of the DeSoto County Youth Court adjudicating
    his four children abused and placing them in the custody of the Mississippi Department of
    Human Services. Hawkins contends that, because the DeSoto County Chancery Court had
    previously entered an order granting him custody of the children, the chancery court had
    exclusive continuing jurisdiction over custody of the children. Hawkins also argues that the
    youth court lacked substantial evidence to find that the children were abused rather than
    simply disciplined. We find no merit to either contention and affirm.
    DISCUSSION
    1.     Jurisdiction
    ¶2.    Hawkins’s challenge to the youth court’s jurisdiction is made for the first time on
    appeal, though the chancery court order giving him custody does appear in the record. It
    notes that the mother of Hawkins’s four children had three other children and did not have
    the means to support such a large family; she had surrendered Hawkins’s children to him
    voluntarily. The chancery court order granted Hawkins custody of the children and provided
    for visitation by the mother. It was filed in June 2012. The youth court proceedings
    stemmed from a complaint that the children had reported abuse to their mother during
    visitation in December 2015. At the time of the hearing, the children were nine, eleven,
    twelve, and fourteen.
    ¶3.    Hawkins contends that the youth court judgment is void because that court lacked
    jurisdiction over the subject matter – the custody of the children – and that this issue may be
    raised for the first time on appeal. See M.R.C.P. 12(h)(3).
    ¶4.    We agree that Hawkins is contesting subject matter jurisdiction and that the issue can
    be raised for the first time on appeal, but we find it to be without merit. The boundary
    between the jurisdiction of chancery courts and youth courts under our law has been
    somewhat unclear at times, and indeed may still be under certain circumstances; but for the
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    specific facts of this case, we see no difficulty finding jurisdiction in the youth court.
    Mississippi Code Annotated section 43-21-151(1)(c) (Rev. 2015) provides in relevant part:
    The youth court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction in all proceedings
    concerning . . . an abused child . . . except in the following circumstances:
    ....
    When a charge of abuse of a child first arises in the course of a custody action
    between the parents of the child already pending in the chancery court and no
    notice of such abuse was provided prior to such chancery proceedings, the
    chancery court may proceed with the investigation, hearing and determination
    of such abuse charge as a part of its hearing and determination of the custody
    issue as between the parents, notwithstanding the other provisions of the Youth
    Court Law.
    Setting aside the question of whether the abuse allegations here arose “in the course of a
    custody action between parents of the child already pending in chancery court,” the statute
    provides that the chancery court may proceed on abuse allegations. Thus, under the statutory
    scheme the chancery court’s jurisdiction over that category of abuse claims arising after its
    assumption of jurisdiction over custody is not exclusive, but is conditioned on the chancery
    court’s election to assume jurisdiction – and that did not occur here.
    ¶5.    Hawkins responds by citing the repeated pronouncement by our courts that a chancery
    court, after deciding custody, has continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over custody. See,
    e.g., Ladner v. Ladner, 
    206 So. 2d 620
    , 624-25 (Miss. 1968) (abrogated in part). While this
    is certainly true when the issue is a simple modification of the original court’s custody
    decree, or a similar issue between the same parties, the continuing jurisdiction has not been
    held to be exclusive when it comes to related but distinct actions such as habeas corpus and
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    abuse allegations in the youth court. See Wade v. Lee, 
    471 So. 2d 1213
    , 1215-17 (Miss.
    1985) (county court had jurisdiction to enter temporary habeas corpus orders even between
    the same parties to the original custody decree); In re D.L.D., 
    606 So. 2d 1125
    , 1127-30
    (Miss. 1992) (youth court had jurisdiction over custody of child based on finding of abuse,
    even after the chancery court entered a temporary custody order).
    ¶6.    The current subsection 43-21-151(1)(c) was adopted after In re D.L.D. and has been
    noted to have been a response to that decision by the Legislature. See In re D.K.L., 
    652 So. 2d
    184, 189-90 (Miss. 1995). But, as we said, the statute allows the chancery court the
    option of resolving the abuse allegations under certain circumstances. This reading of the
    statute was confirmed in the more recent case of McDonald v. McDonald, 
    39 So. 3d 868
    ,
    886-87 (¶¶61-62) (Miss. 2010), where the supreme court explained that both the chancery
    court and the youth court had jurisdiction over abuse allegations that arose after an
    adjudication of custody in chancery court. There, the chancery court actually exercised its
    option to assume jurisdiction and adjudicated the abuse allegations, and that decision was
    affirmed. 
    Id. But, in
    the instant case, the chancery court never asserted jurisdiction, and it
    was the youth court that adjudicated the abuse allegations. It had jurisdiction to do so from
    the statute. See 
    id. ¶7. We
    conclude that the youth court’s judgment is not void for want of jurisdiction.
    This issue is without merit.
    2.     Sufficiency of the Evidence
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    ¶8.    Hawkins’s remaining issue – though not exactly styled this way – is essentially a
    challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the youth court’s determination that
    his four children were abused.
    ¶9.    In relevant part, the statute defines an abused child as one “whose parent . . . has
    caused or allowed to be caused, upon the child, . . . emotional abuse, mental injury,
    nonaccidental physical injury or other maltreatment.” Miss. Code Ann. § 43-21-105(m)
    (Supp. 2016). But “physical discipline, including spanking, performed on a child by a
    parent, guardian or custodian in a reasonable manner shall not be deemed abuse under this
    section.” 
    Id. Mississippi Code
    Annotated section 43-21-561(3) (Supp. 2016) requires proof
    of abuse only by a preponderance of the evidence.
    ¶10.   The youth court judge is the finder of fact and the judge of the credibility of the
    witnesses. See In re D.O., 
    798 So. 2d 417
    , 421 (¶13) (Miss. 2001). Our review of the youth
    court’s decision is limited to the familiar substantial evidence / manifest error standard. 
    Id. On appeal,
    this Court must consider all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State. 
    Id. ¶11. Three
    of the four children testified at the hearing, and each described similar actions
    by Hawkins toward them or their siblings: they were slapped in the head with an open hand,
    punched in the head, face, or chest with a closed fist, choked, struck with a broom, “body
    slammed” onto a concrete floor, and kicked in the chest or stomach. Hawkins contends that
    the testimony of the children was not credible; that it was contradicted by his witnesses, who
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    were in a position to have seen some of the abuse alleged by the children but testified that
    they did not; that the children’s claims were uncorroborated by solid proof of injuries; and
    that the evidence showed only that he used corporal punishment. These arguments are, for
    the most part, just an attempt to relitigate factual disputes resolved by the youth court. This
    court is not in a position to reevaluate the credibility of witnesses; we can only decide
    whether any reasonable trier of fact could have found them credible – and we must answer
    that question in the affirmative. The children were generally consistent in their testimony,
    and their account was not improbable on its face or contradicted by overwhelming evidence.
    ¶12.   Likewise, while we agree with Hawkins that corporal punishment does not constitute
    abuse under Mississippi law, the statute requires that physical discipline be performed in a
    reasonable manner. See § 43-21-105(m). The Mississippi Supreme Court has elaborated:
    The Mississippi Youth Court Act was not intended to and does not prohibit the
    use of corporal punishment in disciplining a child. Injury is labeled abusive
    only when it constitutes maltreatment.
    A parent, being charged with the training and education of his
    child, has a right to adopt such disciplinary measures for the
    child as will enable him to discharge his parental duty.
    Accordingly, he has a right to correct the child by reasonable
    and timely punishment, including corporal punishment. A
    parent has a wide discretion in the performance of such
    functions. The control and proper discipline of a child by the
    parent may justify acts which would otherwise constitute assault
    and battery, but the right of parental discipline clearly has its
    limits. . . . The rule recognized by a majority of the courts is that
    a parent may, without criminal liability, inflict such punishment
    as is reasonable under the facts and the circumstances.
    59 Am. Jur. 2d Parent and Child § 22, 152-53 (1987).                 “The test of
    6
    unreasonableness is met at that point where the parent ceases to act in good
    faith and with parental affection, and acts immoderately, cruelly or mercilessly,
    with a malicious desire to inflict pain rather than a genuine effort to correct the
    child by proper means.” State v. Hunt, 
    406 P.2d 208
    , 222 (Ariz. Ct. App.
    1965).
    In re A.R., 
    579 So. 2d 1269
    , 1270-71 (Miss. 1991) (footnote omitted).
    ¶13.   The youth court judge directly addressed the reasonableness of Hawkins’s alleged
    discipline methods, and it held that they were unreasonable. In response, Hawkins cites
    Tucker v. Tucker, 
    453 So. 2d 1294
    , 1297 (Miss. 1984), for the proposition that, by itself, a
    single unwarranted striking of a child would not amount to a material change of
    circumstances. But the language he cites is dicta, and it was directed toward a different issue
    – the requirement of a material change in circumstances to support a custody modification
    in chancery court. Moreover, Hawkins’s striking of the children was alleged to be frequent
    and persistent over a long period of time, not an isolated incident as contemplated in Tucker.
    Hawkins also cites In re A.R. for the proposition that bruising is insufficient injury to sustain
    a finding of abuse. But that case involved bruising of the buttocks from spanking – a far cry
    from the outrageous conduct found to have occurred here, which included punching, “body
    slamming,” and kicking. Furthermore, Hawkins’s emphasis on injury is misplaced. The
    statute, section 43-21-105(m), provides that both nonaccidental physical injury and “other
    maltreatment” may constitute abuse. Physical discipline is excepted from the definition of
    abuse only when it is performed in a reasonable manner. See 
    id. “Discipline” of
    the sort at
    issue here presents an unreasonable danger to the child and constitutes maltreatment whether
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    or not it results in injury more severe than bruising.
    ¶14.     Finally, the youth court also adjudicated the children to be neglected as well as
    abused. Hawkins contends that this was error, but he has not provided any additional
    argument or authority. Thus, no error has been shown, and we affirm the youth court on that
    point.
    ¶15.     AFFIRMED.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON,
    WILSON, GREENLEE AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., CONCUR.
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