SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-2393-01T1
KATHRYN BUONO, by her guardian
ad litem, VINCENT BUONO and
VINCENT BUONO, individually,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
MICHAEL SCALIA,
Defendant,
and
ALPHONSE SCALIA and LISA SCALIA,
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued February 11, 2003 - Decided March 11,
2003
Before Judges Stern, Collester, and Alley.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Hudson County, HUD-446-01.
Matthew R. Pomo argued the cause for
appellants (Doyle & Brady, attorneys; Mr.
Pomo, of counsel and on the brief).
John V. Mallon argued the cause for
respondents (Chasan, Leyner, Bariso, &
Lamparello, attorneys; Mr. Mallon, of counsel
and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
ALLEY, J.A.D.
Plaintiffs appeal from a December 7, 2001 summary judgment
order dismissing their personal injury complaint. The action was
brought on behalf of a child, Kathryn Buono, who was injured when
Michael Scalia, then aged five years and nine months, struck her
with the bicycle he was riding. Plaintiffs sued Michael on a
theory of direct negligence and sued Michael's parents Alphonse and
Lisa Scalia on a theory of negligent supervision. The trial judge
determined that under Foldi v. Jeffries,
93 N.J. 533 (1983),
parental immunity exists in the instant situation, where failure to
supervise was neither willful nor wanton, even though suit was not
brought on behalf of the defendant parents' child. This appeal
raises only issues as to the liability of Michael's father,
inasmuch as it was conceded at oral argument before us that Michael
is not liable to plaintiffs and that his mother also is not liable
because she had not undertaken to supervise him at the time of the
events in suit. We affirm.
The essential facts are these. Michael Scalia, then five
years and nine months old, injured sixteen month old Kathryn Buono
when the bicycle he was riding struck her. The victim's father,
Vincent Buono, filed this lawsuit on behalf of himself and on
behalf of his daughter. Plaintiffs assert on appeal that Alphonse
Scalia was negligent in supervising and controlling his son, and
that his negligence proximately caused the accident which led to
plaintiff Kathryn's injuries.
The accident occurred around mid-day on June 17, 2000, on
Sunset Avenue in Bayonne, which was closed to traffic for a block
party. Between fifteen and twenty neighbors, including
approximately fourteen adults and six children, had gathered for
the party at the time of the accident. Michael's mother Lisa was
inside their home, preparing food to bring to the party. Vincent
Buono was inside his home exercising. Neither Lisa nor Vincent
observed the accident. Kathryn was standing on the street beside
her mother, Diane Buono, who was engaged in conversation. Diane
testified there was "a lot of activity" on the block including an
open fire hydrant and "children riding bikes."
Michael was nearby riding a two-wheel bicycle. He had been
taught to ride a bicycle by both his parents, and he had been
riding without training wheels for about two months prior to the
accident. Michael's parents allowed him to ride his bicycle
outdoors as long as he remained on the sidewalk in front of his or
in front of one or two neighboring houses in either direction.
Because of the block party, however, Michael was permitted to ride
in the street that day.
Alphonse Scalia was following his son Michael as he rode his
bicycle that day, "keeping an eye on him[.]" Alphonse watched from
five to eight feet behind, as his son came closer to Kathryn, who
Alphonse claims walked toward the path of Michael's bicycle.
Anticipating an accident, Alphonse shouted to Michael, "[W]atch
out!" Michael did not respond to his father's warning, however,
struck Kathryn with his bicycle, and both children fell to the
ground, with the bicycle landing on Kathryn.
Plaintiffs appeal from the grant of summary judgment, alleging
that the trial court erred in determining that parental immunity
barred plaintiffs' claims against Michael's parents because their
supervision had not been negligent, willful, or wanton.
In granting the motion, the trial judge relied on Foldi, and
noted that Foldi dealt with liability for injuries to an allegedly
negligent parent's own child. The judge in effect reasoned from
Foldi that the determinative consideration was not the relationship
between the allegedly negligent parent and the injured person, but
between the allegedly negligent parent and the child in need of
supervision.
We review the trial court's determination under Manalapan
Realty v. Manalapan Tp. Committee,
140 N.J. 366 (1995), pursuant to
which we need not give special deference to a trial judge's
"interpretation of the law and the legal consequences that flow
from established facts[.]" Id. at 378.
Because of the centrality of Foldi to this appeal, we refer to
it at length. The facts were that Jennifer Foldi, a two and one-
half year old child, wandered off her own property and onto her
neighbors' property, where she was bitten by their dog. Through
her guardian ad litem, Jennifer brought suit against the neighbors,
who filed a third party complaint against Jennifer's parents for
failure to exercise reasonable care in supervising their child.
Jennifer also amended her complaint to name her parents as
defendants. Jennifer's mother had been keeping an eye on her while
gardening but failed to notice for as long as five or ten minutes
that Jennifer had left the yard.
The Supreme Court affirmed "that the parental immunity
doctrine barred Jennifer's claim and the [neighbors'] third-party
claim for indemnity." Foldi, supra, at 536 (1983). The Court
addressed in detail the development of the parental immunity
doctrine and a split of authority in state courts.
As explained by the Court in Foldi, the history is as follows.
93 N.J. at 538-42. The Court of Errors and Appeals first
recognized the doctrine of parental immunity in Reingold v.
Reingold,
115 N.J.L. 532 (1935), in which the court reasoned that
parental immunity would preserve tranquility within the family.
Three decisions of the Supreme Court, Hastings v. Hastings,
33 N.J. 247 (1960), Heyman v. Gordon,
40 N.J. 52 (1963), and Franco v.
Davis,
51 N.J. 237 (1968), followed Reingold, applying the parental
immunity doctrine in cases of ordinary automobile negligence. The
Court noted that each of the three was decided by a "slim" 4-3
margin, and that Justice Jacobs had written a dissent in each,
arguing that New Jersey should follow the lead of other states to
abolish the doctrine. Id. at 538. Then, in France v. A.P.A.
Transp. Corp.,
56 N.J. 500 (1970) (allowing "an unemancipated child
to sue his or her parent for injuries that resulted from the
parent's negligent operation of a motor vehicle"), and a companion
case, Immer v. Risko,
56 N.J. 482 (1970) ("abolishing interspousal
tort immunity in automobile negligence actions"), the Court
recognized that the traditional justifications for these
immunities, "preservation of domestic harmony, the deterrence of
fraud and collusion, and the protection of the family exchequer had
little remaining validity[]" given the "widespread use of liability
insurance[.]" Id. at 539. Though the Court's holding in France
only abolished parental immunity in the motor vehicle context, the
Court referred in Foldi to the "general view that the immunity
'should be abrogated in this State[]'" despite a statement in
dictum in France that "there may be areas involving the exercise of
parental authority and care over a child which should not be
justiciable in a court of law." Id. at 539-40, citing France,
supra, at 506-507.
The Court further reduced the scope of parental immunity in a
case unrelated to parental supervision, Small v. Rockfeld,
66 N.J. 231 (1974), in which it allowed a minor child to sue his father for
the father's wanton and grossly negligent drowning of the child's
mother. In Small, the Court "clearly reaffirmed [its] general
disapproval of the parental immunity doctrine" but allowed that
parental immunity "might still remain operative in 'special areas
in the parent-child relationship, such as customary care and
discipline.'" Foldi at 540, citing Small, supra, at 244. On this
point, Small cited a Wisconsin Supreme Court decision, Goller v.
White,
122 N.W.2d 193, 198 (1963), which abolished parental
immunity subject to the following exceptions:
(1) where the alleged negligent act involves
an exercise of parental authority over the
child; and (2) where the alleged negligent act
involves an exercise of ordinary parental
discretion with respect to the provision of
food, clothing, housing, medical and dental
services and other care.
The Court in Foldi then addressed an existing split among New
Jersey courts on the question whether "a parent's negligent failure
to supervise or instruct a child on safety principles[]" fell
within the Goller exceptions. Compare Foldi v. Jeffries,
182 N.J.
Super. 90 (App. Div. 1981), and Fritz v. Anderson,
148 N.J. Super. 68, 73 (Law Div. 1977) (holding that parents' failure to prevent
their minor child from falling into an excavation site was "within
the realm of parental authority and discretion" and thus, under the
Goller exceptions protected by the doctrine of parental immunity
against a counterclaim brought by the owners of the excavated
property), with Carey v. Davison,
181 N.J. Super. 283 (Law Div.
1981) (strictly construing the Goller exceptions to the abrogation
of parental immunity so as not to cover a father who let go of his
child's hand as she crossed a street, and holding that the "only
tort cause of action sounding in negligent supervision in New
Jersey is that in favor of third parties where a parent has failed
to curb a child with known dangerous propensities, or has failed to
supervise a child using or having access to a dangerous
instrumentality[]"), and Convery v. Maczka,
163 N.J. Super. 411
(Law Div. 1978) (holding parental immunity did not bar a five year
old's negligent supervision claim against his mother when she
allowed him to play unattended in a basement where he broke his arm
by falling off a chair).
The Supreme Court in Foldi resolved the split as to "whether
suits against a parent for negligent supervision fall within or
without the Goller exceptions." 93 N.J. at 542. Weighing the
policy considerations, the Court explained that "preservation of
domestic harmony" and "deterrence of fraudulent or collusive suits
against third party insurers" no longer justified intrafamily tort
immunity. The Court held that two justificationsSee footnote 11 survived to
justify the Court's decision to retain parental immunity in
"certain areas of activities within the family sphere involving
parental discipline, care, and control that should and must remain
free from judicial intrusion." Id. at 545.
First, the Court recognized the right and duty parents have to
"determine how the physical, moral, emotional, and intellectual
growth of their children can best be promoted." Ibid. The Court
acknowledged that, given there was "no recognized correct theory"
on the right amount of freedom for a parent to accord a child:
[s]ome parents believe that a child must be
made self-reliant at an early age and
accordingly give their children a great deal
of independence. To outsiders, such
independence may look like indifference or
neglect.
[Id. at 546.]
Under Foldi, the Court aims to allow parents freedom to accord
independence to their children without fear of second-guessing by
such outsiders, unless such license rises to the level of willful
or wanton neglect or indifference.
Second, the Court notes that individual differences among
children make it impossible to articulate "one ideal 'formula' for
how much supervision a child should receive at a given age." Ibid.
In the Court's judgment, leaving parental immunity intact in cases
where a parent, as opposed to a teacher or a babysitter, is charged
with negligent supervision, takes note of the Court's conclusion
that "[t]he parent is clearly in the best position to know the
limitations and capabilities of his or her own children." Ibid.
Moreover, the Court in Foldi determined that questions of
"negligent supervision" or "the absence or inadequacy of a parent's
supervision over his or her children[]" fall within the Goller
exceptions, and thus are covered by the parental immunity doctrine.
Id. at 546-57. It went on, however, to base its holding, not upon
the relationship between the person charging negligent supervision
and the person answering that claim, but upon the degree to which
a parent had abdicated the duty to supervise the child in question.
The Court determined that "while the doctrine of parental immunity
is a bar to a suit alleging negligent supervision, it does not
protect a parent who has willfully or wantonly failed to watch over
his or her child." Id. at 546.
We are satisfied that Foldi retained the parental immunity
doctrine in the area of negligent supervision by a parent to apply
to suits whether they are brought by that parent's child or by
third parties. Throughout the opinion, the Court spoke of suits
generally, rather than about claims made in particular by or on
behalf of children against their parents.
As we read the Court's discussion in Foldi, it did not exclude
suits by third parties from the scope of immunity when it referred
in the following terms to actions in which parental immunity
existed: "suits for negligent supervision[,]" "suits against a
parent for negligent supervision[,]" "negligent supervision
actions[]" "negligent supervision cases[,]" "a suit alleging
negligent supervision," "[s]uits for mere negligent lack of
supervision could be used as a tool of harassment and retaliation
by devoiced parents[,]" "cases of negligent supervision," "tort
actions that involve a parent's willful or wanton misconduct[,]"
and "parental supervision cases[.]" Id. at 541-42, 547-50. We
believe the Court would have been more specific if it had intended
to limit immunity to cases brought against a parent by or on behalf
of that parent's child. We acknowledge that in one instance the
Court referred to "an action against a parent by a child for
substantial injuries resulting from his or her parent's willful or
wanton lack of supervision[,]" but this was not an assertion
regarding New Jersey law but rather an explanation of why the Court
was rejecting the option of "permit[ting] the doctrine of parental
immunity completely to bar" such actions. Id. at 548.
Here, we also note, Alphonse Scalia was in the best position
to determine how much monitoring and support Michael required to
ride his bicycle under the conditions of a block party. A uniquely
difficult duty is placed upon a parent in Alphonse's situation to
balance between providing close supervision and allowing a child
freedom to practice a new skill. That duty is no less difficult if
the child injures a third party rather than a family member.
In considering the scope of parental immunity as declared in
Foldi, we note that the Court stated:
In addition, the comparative fault of parents
guilty of willful or wanton misconduct should
be factored into the allocation of liability
in cases involving third-party joint
tortfeasors. Although it would perhaps be
fairest to those third parties to consider the
parent's contributory fault in all cases, we
draw a line for policy reasons--as we do in
offsetting damages in contributory negligence
cases of less than 50%--that takes into
account at least some of their interests.
Hence, we go further than the line of purely
intentional torts by also removing willful or
wanton supervisory misconduct from the
protective boundary of immunity. Thus, third-
party claims may properly be brought against
parents in appropriately severe lack-of-
supervision cases.
[Id. at 548-49 (citations omitted).]
This passage is not dispositive of the issue before us, however,
because we are not here concerned with the subject of the foregoing
passage, namely, the "allocation of liability in cases involving
third party, joint tortfeasors. Yet it is fair to view Foldi as
being concerned with the parental duty of supervision rather than
being focused on whether the victim was or was not a member of the
child's family unit.
Somewhat surprisingly, we have found no reported decision in
which Foldi has been discussed by New Jersey courts in connection
with the issue of whether it immunizes parents for negligent
supervision claims brought by or on behalf of persons other than
their own children.See footnote 22 Foldi of course acknowledges that policy
concerns may properly drive necessary modifications of common law
immunities.See footnote 33 Despite this lack of reported authority since Foldi,
the policy concerns embraced in Foldi in our view provide
determinative guidance here. The Court embraced respect for
differences in parenting philosophies and for the degree to which
parents understand the uniqueness of their own children.
Regardless of whether the person who seeks recovery for parents'
apparent failure to keep their child from causing harm is a family
member, these two policy concerns, outlined in Foldi, work to
insulate Alphonse Scalia from scrutiny by judge or jury.
One application of Foldi in the common situation of a suit by
a child against that child's parent for negligent supervision
illustrates why the holding in Foldi appropriately should be deemed
to include a bar against suits by third parties. A trial court
held in DeMarco v. DeMarco,
274 N.J. Super. 257, 261 (Law Div.
1992), that parental immunity covered a mother's decision not to
pull over while her daughter threatened to jump out of the car in
which the two were traveling. This application of the parental
immunity doctrine illustrates why the doctrine, as limited, has
been retained. In DeMarco, a mother, while driving with her
unemancipated daughter, determined by her daughter's behavior and
admissions that her daughter needed drug rehabilitation treatment,
something the daughter had required previously. Id. at 260.
As the mother drove her daughter toward the treatment
facility, her daughter's behavior caused the mother to stop for a
period to let her daughter walk, then the mother told the daughter
to return to the car. Ibid. The daughter continued behaving
irrationally by screaming and threatening to jump from the moving
car. Ibid. After the mother decided to continue driving toward
the treatment facility rather than to pull over the car, the
daughter jumped from the car, sustained injuries, and brought suit
against her mother. 274 N.J. Super. at 261. Her claim was
properly dismissed by the trial court under Foldi. Ibid.
We conclude that under Foldi the same result is appropriate if
a party other than the daughter (a pedestrian, for example, hit by
the daughter's body) brought suit for injuries allegedly
proximately caused by the mother's decision to continue driving her
daughter to drug treatment. In our view, a parental decision to
continue or not continue driving in this context is exactly the
type of parenting decision, in the absence of willful indifference
or neglect, which should be protected by the doctrine of parental
immunity. A parent contending with this level of stressful
decision-making should not have a decision subject to second-
guessing by "outsiders" unfamiliar with her daughter's past and
personality, alien to the mother's own philosophical perspective,
and guided by twenty-twenty hindsight. Of hindsight, the Court
cautioned in Foldi:
we can conceive of few accidental injuries a
child might sustain that could not have been
prevented by closer supervision by his or her
parents. Hindsight invariably will expose
some slight oversight, some failure to take
yet another precaution that somehow
contributed to the child's mishap. No parent
can do everything. If such claims were
allowed, it would be the rare parent who
conceivably could not be called to account in
the courts for his or her conduct.
[93 N.J. at 547.]
We note further that although the American Law Institute (ALI)
advocates a different position on the doctrine of parental immunity
than the New Jersey Supreme Court has approved, the ALI provides
support for the proposition that parents must be accorded greater
discretion in decisions they make regarding the supervision of
their children. Thus the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895G,
Comment j cites the Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision in Goller,
supra, approvingly as having for "all practical purposes completely
abrogated the immunity between parent and child[.]" The comment
goes on to note the Goller exceptions and to say that the "Goller
case has now been followed by a substantial minority of
jurisdictions." That comment further states that "under the better
law the immunity between parent and child is entirely abrogated."
Ibid. The Restatement describes the immunity as existing only
between the parent and child, stating in pertinent part, "A parent
or child is not immune from tort liability to the other solely by
reason of that relationship." Restatement (Second) of Torts §
895G(1).See footnote 44
We acknowledge with respect the learned views expressed in the
Restatement. We are governed, however, by the decisions of our
Supreme Court, and we are satisfied that under Foldi the trial
judge's order should be affirmed. Inasmuch as the supervision of
Michael by his father was not willfully or wantonly negligent,
Michael's father is immune even though this was not intra-family
litigation but a lawsuit brought respecting alleged injuries to a
third party.
The Foldi holding did not represent an expansion of parental
immunity, and indeed that decision was rendered in a period in
which the trend was to limit rather than expand such immunity. But
Foldi nevertheless represents a recognition of the legitimacy of
parental immunity in particular circumstances. Our decision today
represents, not an attempt to expand immunity, but simply our
determination that the immunity declared in Foldi embraces the
claims alleged by the injured third party in this case that are
said to have arisen from the negligent supervision of Michael by
his father.
Affirmed.
STERN, P.J.A.D. (concurring).
As the majority develops, plaintiffs appeal from an order of
December 7, 2001 which grants summary judgment to defendants and
dismisses their complaint with prejudice in this case involving
injuries sustained by a sixteen-month old minor. The injuries were
caused by defendants' son who was less than six years old at the
time.
Plaintiffs argue that "the trial court erred in applying the
parental immunity doctrine to the plaintiffs' action against
defendant Alfonse Scalia for the negligent supervision of his son,
Michael Scalia." Specifically, plaintiffs contend that "the
parental immunity doctrine does not . . . prevent an innocent,
unrelated, injured third party from bringing an action against the
parents for their negligence in supervising their own unemancipated
child."
Many of the policy reasons that originally supported the
concept of immunity, such as avoidance of fraud and preservation of
family harmony, do not apply in the third party setting,
irrespective of any increased use of homeowners' and similar
liability insurance coverage. Foldi v. Jeffries,
93 N.J. 533, 539
(1983); France v. A.P.A. Transp. Corp.,
56 N.J. 500, 504-06 (1970).
Yet there is no dispute that Kathryn Buono could not sue her
mother, Diane Buono, who might have been negligent in failing to
watch more carefully and to protect her sixteen-month old daughter
as the bicycle approached, and that Alphonse Scalia could not
"third party" Diane Buono in the case against him. This flows from
Foldi v. Jeffries, supra, because Diane Buono's negligent
supervision of her daughter was neither willful nor wanton,See footnote 55 and
the doctrine of parent-child immunity has not been abrogated in
"situations that involve the exercise of parental authority and
customary child care." Foldi, supra, 93 N.J. at 551.
I concur in the opinion of the court because it accurately
examines New Jersey law as it now stands, and because a
reexamination of Foldi, based on developments of the last twenty
years, can come only from the Supreme Court. Moreover, I am
satisfied that the ability of the Buonos to sue Alfonse Scalia
cannot be fully analyzed without reexamining his inability to bring
a third party action against Diane Buono, which is concededly
barred by Foldi.
Footnote: 1 1These two surviving justifications tracked the two reasons
given by the Appellate Division in affirming the grant of summary
judgment by the trial judge. Foldi v. Jeffries, 182 N.J. Super.
at 96-97. Both are discussed briefly in 1 Dan B. Dobbs, The Law
of Torts § 280 (2001) as the "need[] to prevent the subversion of
parental discipline" and to "protect parental freedom to rear
children in accordance with their own beliefs and attitudes."
Id. at 756-57. Dobbs questions the extent to which "categories
like 'supervision' or 'parental discretion' will help judges
focus on relevant policies better that the ordinary negligence
rules." Id. at 757.
Footnote: 2 2The significant discussions of Foldi are as follows: G.S.
v. Department of Human Services, Div. of Youth and Family
Services,
157 N.J. 161, 179 (1999) (noting that Foldi "reflected
a compromise between a parent's right to raise a child as he sees
fit and the child's right to receive protection from injuries
resulting from a parent's lack of supervision[]"); Fielder v.
Stonack,
141 N.J. 101, 123 (1995) (citing Foldi for its
comparison of negligent and willful misconduct in the context of
a Torts Claims Act issue); Crawn v. Campo,
136 N.J. 494, 502
(1994)(using Foldi to illustrate the principle that "New Jersey
tolerates immunities only for important reasons of public policy
and in relatively exceptional situations, and therefore strongly
endorses a standard of care based on ordinary negligence[]");
Rochinsky v. State, Dept. of Transp.,
110 N.J. 399, 422 (1988)
(deciding sovereign immunity question used Foldi to illustrate
the principle that common law immunities may be abandoned or
restricted when "they have outlived their usefulness"); Weinberg
v. Dinger,
106 N.J. 469, 485 (1987) (same); Grecco v. University
of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,
345 N.J. Super. 94, 96
(App. Div. 2001) (distinguishing Foldi where parents' behavior
was willful or wanton); Zacarias v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
330 N.J.
Super. 231, 236 (App. Div. 2000), aff'd,
168 N.J. 590 (2001)
(using Foldi to argue in dissent that a purchaser of homeowner's
insurance has a reasonable expectation that all legally
cognizable claims are covered); Horesh v. State Farm Fire & Cas.
Co.,
265 N.J. Super. 32, 35 (App. Div. 1993) (affirming decision
that an insurance policy would not cover damages incurred by a
mother charged with wilful and wanton careless supervision of her
child); Horn By and Through Kirsch v. Price,
255 N.J. Super. 350,
353 (App. Div. 1992) (affirming dismissal of a negligent
supervision action brought by child against her mother because
child could not establish more than negligence); Mancinelli v.
Crosby,
247 N.J. Super. 456, 459 (App. Div. 1991) affirming a
judge's decision not to submit claim against a mother to the jury
where judge found her conduct not to be willful and wanton); and
Murray by Olsen v. Shimalla,
231 N.J. Super. 103, 106 (App. Div.
1989) (setting forth a four step method of applying Foldi in a
suit by an injured child against his father).
Footnote: 3 3"To justify a prohibition of the enforcement of their
rights, a very substantial showing must be made that such
prohibition will help achieve an important countervailing
policy." Id. at 544. See also Rochinsky, supra, at 422
(discussing immunity for snow removal); and Weinberg, supra, at
484-85 (discussing municipality's common law duty with regard to
water supply).
Footnote: 4 4The Restatement takes the position that "the chief reason
usually advanced today for the immunity is that domestic peace
and parental discipline and control would be disturbed by
permitting an action for a personal tort." Comment c. Section
895G goes on to offer an alternative way to address the intuition
that respect should be given to parental discretion in matters of
supervision. Comment k to this section proposes a more forgiving
standard of reasonableness in determining whether parental
supervision has been negligent:
Conduct involving the exercise of parental authority or supervision is essential to the parent-child relationship. This is also true of the performance of parental duties such as the use of care to provide a safe place to live or adequate necessaries or proper instruction and training. Parental discretion is involved, and to say that the standard of a reasonable prudent parent is applied should be to recognize the existence of that discretion and thus to require that the conduct be palpably unreasonable in order to impose liability. Footnote: 5 5In Foldi, the Supreme Court concluded "that the doctrine of parental immunity will continue to preclude liability in cases of negligent supervision, but not for a parent's willful or wanton failure to supervise his or her children." 93 N.J. at 549. Mrs. Buono's lack of supervision was no more willful or wanton than that of Mrs. Foldi.