In re I.S. CA3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 5/10/21 In re I.S. CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    In re I.S. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile                                          C091050
    Court Law.
    SACRAMENTO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF                                                  (Super. Ct. Nos. JD239028,
    CHILD, FAMILY AND ADULT SERVICES,                                                        JD239029)
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    R.S.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    R.S., father of the minors (father), appeals from the juvenile court’s order
    terminating his reunification services, returning the minors to the mother under a plan of
    family maintenance, and issuing a no-contact order between him and the minors. (Welf.
    1
    & Inst. Code, §§ 366.21, 395.)1 In light of the juvenile court’s subsequent order
    terminating dependency jurisdiction, we find father’s claim is moot and will therefore
    dismiss his appeal.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
    In May 2018, the two minors, I.S. (then age seven) and D.S. (then age nine), were
    ordered detained from their parents’ care and custody pursuant to a dependency petition
    filed by the Sacramento County Department of Child, Family and Adult Services
    (Department). The petition alleged serious physical harm, failure to protect, and serious
    emotional damage due to physical abuse of the minors by father and an acrimonious
    custody battle between father and the mother resulting in allegations by both parents of
    physical abuse toward the minors by the other parent.2 (§ 300, subds. (a), (b), & (c).)
    The court ordered reunification services and visitation for both parents. The minors were
    initially detained with their wrestling coach and his wife but were eventually moved to a
    confidential foster home.
    On October 12, 2018, the juvenile court sustained the allegations in the petition, as
    amended, found the minors dependent children of the juvenile court, and ordered
    continued services and visitation for both parents.
    In March 2019, the Department reported that the mother made significant progress
    in her case plan services. Her visitation with the minors, which had progressed to
    unsupervised, was positive and consistent. On the other hand, while father completed
    most of his case plan services, he did not demonstrate having benefited from those
    services. He continued to be manipulative and punitive with the minors to the point that
    the minors had begun refusing all interaction with father, and his therapist reported he did
    1   Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
    2 The Department reported the parents had a lengthy history with Child Protective
    Services (CPS) beginning in 2010.
    2
    not take responsibility for his abuse of the minors. Following the January 2019 progress
    hearing, the minors reported to their social workers and foster mother that they no longer
    wished to visit with father due to, among other things, the fact that father attempted to
    record them saying their foster parent hit them so he could “win the case.” The minors
    stopped visiting father as of February 22, 2019, and they insisted their foster mother be
    present during telephone calls with father to “hear anything bad” and report it to the
    social worker.
    In June 2019, the Department reported a disclosure by I.S. during an interview at
    the end of April that while the family was waiting in the lobby for a child and family
    team (CFT) meeting, father showed her a picture of himself sitting on a couch naked.
    Further investigation resulted in new disclosures by I.S. of father touching both minors
    on their “private parts” while they were in the shower and sleeping naked with the
    minors. The Department recommended, and subsequently filed a motion requesting, that
    visitation be suspended until a therapeutic assessment deemed resumption of visits to be
    in the minors’ best interests.
    In July 2019, the Department reported the results of father’s psychological
    evaluation were consistent with the case history in that father continued to be unwilling to
    acknowledge any responsibility or fault regarding the sustained allegations of physical
    and emotional abuse of the minors. Due to, among other things, father’s lack of insight
    regarding his own behavior, the Department reported it was unlikely father would ever
    acknowledge his part in the trauma experienced by the minors and for which they were
    receiving intensive, trauma-informed therapy.
    At the conclusion of the August 5, 2019 contested review hearing, the court found
    the mother’s progress in alleviating or mitigating the issues that led to removal of the
    minors was significant and father’s progress was minimal. The court continued the
    minors in out-of-home placement, continued reunification services to both parents, and
    3
    temporarily suspended father’s visitation noting, “visits with the father would cause
    detriment to [the minors’] emotional well-being.”
    The September 2019 permanency review report recommended continued out-of-
    home placement of the minors, continued reunification services for the mother, and
    termination of father’s reunification services. The mother was in the process of finding
    suitable housing. She reportedly made significant progress in services, maintained
    consistent and positive visitation, and made significant progress in resolving the issues
    that led to the minors’ removal. Father completed most of his case plan but did not
    demonstrate having benefited from those services. He refused to acknowledge his
    continued abusive behavior resulted in the minors’ refusal to visit with him, and he
    refused to take responsibility for the abuse of the minors. Father had not made significant
    progress in addressing the concerns that brought the family to the attention of CPS and
    was unable to care for the physical and emotional needs of the minors. The Department’s
    October 2019 addendum report reiterated those same concerns and recommendations.
    Following a contested permanency hearing on November 13, 2019, the court
    found father had made no progress, had not done anything in terms of his case plan, and
    it appeared father had “given up on this process.” The court further found there had been
    no change in the evidence of risk of returning the minors to father. The court terminated
    father’s reunification services, returned the minors to the mother’s care and custody with
    family maintenance services to the mother but not to father, and continued dependency
    supervision.
    With regard to visitation, the court noted, “On the one hand, the Court would like
    the children to have a healthier relationship with their father. He is their father. He will
    always be their father, and while his case is before this Court to the extent that the Court
    can, the Court would like to move the needle in the direction so that they can begin to
    have a relationship which means begin to have visits.” The court further noted, “On the
    other hand, the father, as I said, has done -- the father has to make an effort in order for
    4
    visits to take place and certainly for a relationship to be reestablished, and he hasn’t made
    any efforts, as I said, since the [section 366.21, subdivision (e) hearing], and his efforts
    before that lacked like much.” (Sic.) The court continued the no-contact/no visitation
    order until further order of the court, adding “but I want to set a progress report hearing --
    I’m thinking in 90 days -- to learn how the children are doing in counseling and to
    consider whether or not conjoint counseling is possible or whether visiting with the father
    is possible.”
    Father filed a timely notice of appeal of the court’s November 13, 2019 order.
    On July 27, 2020, the juvenile court entered a custody order awarding full physical
    and legal custody of the minors to the mother, continuing the no-contact order between
    father and the minors, and terminating dependency jurisdiction. We grant the
    Department’s request to take judicial notice of this order. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (d),
    459.)
    DISCUSSION
    Father contends the juvenile court’s November 13, 2019 order prohibiting contact
    or visitation between father and the minors was an abuse of discretion. The Department
    argues father’s appeal must be dismissed as moot in light of the juvenile court’s order
    terminating dependency jurisdiction. Alternatively, the Department argues the court’s
    order prohibiting visitation between father and the minors was proper. In response, father
    asserts the court’s order terminating dependency jurisdiction is not a final order and, in
    any event, this court should reach the issue of visitation because the no-visitation order
    infected the outcome of any subsequent proceedings, including the July 27, 2020 hearing
    at which the court again denied father visitation.
    The juvenile court terminated dependency jurisdiction on July 27, 2020. At that
    point, there was no ongoing dependency proceeding. No direct relief can be granted even
    were we to find reversible error. (In re Michelle M. (1992) 
    8 Cal.App.4th 326
    , 329-330.)
    5
    Father’s remedy is to challenge the court’s July 27, 2020 order terminating dependency
    jurisdiction.
    Father argues the July 27, 2020 order is not final and, in any event, he speculates
    that the court’s no-visitation order has infected the outcome of subsequent proceedings,
    including the July 27, 2020 hearing. He cites, without any analysis, two cases in support
    of his argument: In re Dylan T. (1998) 
    65 Cal.App.4th 765
     (Dylan T.) and In re A.R.
    (2009) 
    170 Cal.App.4th 733
     (A.R.). To the extent father failed to support his argument
    with analysis, his argument must be deemed forfeited. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.204(a)(1)(B) [each point in appellate brief must be supported by citation of authority];
    Atchley v. City of Fresno (1984) 
    151 Cal.App.3d 635
    , 647 [lack of authority or analysis
    constitutes forfeiture].) In any event, the cases cited by father are inapposite.
    The Dylan T. case did not involve a termination of dependency jurisdiction.
    Rather, the incarcerated mother challenged the juvenile court’s order prohibiting contact
    with the minor solely due to the minor’s tender age (under two years old). (Dylan T.,
    supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 768-769.) The Court of Appeal held the purported error was
    not moot as a result of the mother’s release to residential treatment finding that, due to
    the minor’s young age, the lack of all opportunity for visitation during the 6-month
    reunification period was an error “which could infect the outcome of subsequent
    proceedings” by creating a possibility of future prejudice to the mother’s reunification
    rights. (Id. at p. 770.) Here, unlike Dylan T., father was no longer in the reunification
    period and, after nearly 18 months, his services were terminated due to his lack of
    progress or benefit from those services, his refusal to acknowledge his continued abusive
    behavior toward the minors, and his unrelenting denial of responsibility for the abuse of
    the minors. The no-contact/no-visitation order was based not only on father’s minimal
    progress and lack of acknowledgement of responsibility, but also on his concerning
    behaviors during visits and during telephone calls and on the minors’ clear statements of
    6
    their fear of father’s reaction to them and their desire to have no further contact with him.
    Dylan T. is distinguishable.
    In A.R., the father appealed from the juvenile court’s denial of his request to stay
    the proceedings pursuant to the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) (50 U.S.C.
    Appen. §§ 501-596) and its decision to proceed with the contested jurisdictional hearing
    where the court denied his counsel’s request for a continuance while he was on active
    duty in Iraq. (A.R., supra, 170 Cal.App.4th at pp. 736, 739.) The agency requested that
    the court find father’s appeal moot due to the court’s subsequent order awarding custody
    of the minor to the mother and terminating dependency jurisdiction. (Id. at pp. 739-740.)
    The appellate court denied the request without further comment or analysis, deciding the
    case on the merits. (Ibid.) Unlike A.R., application of the SCRA is not at issue in this
    case. More importantly, the A.R. decision provides no guidance on the mootness issue.
    A.R. is therefore inapposite.
    Father’s claim that the no-visitation order will jeopardize his interests in any
    subsequent proceedings in family court does not defeat a finding of mootness. All
    juvenile court exit orders “shall continue until modified or terminated by a subsequent
    order of the superior court.” (§ 362.4, subd. (b).) Thus, like any other party who goes to
    family court requesting that the juvenile court’s visitation orders be modified or
    terminated, father must show that the change he seeks is supported by a significant
    change of circumstances and that the new order would be in the child’s best interests.
    (§ 302, subd. (d).) The fact that the serious and difficult circumstances underlying the
    juvenile court’s issuance of the no-visitation order would likely require father to
    demonstrate a concerted and drastic change in his own behavior in order to prevail does
    not render the order prejudicial.
    7
    DISPOSITION
    The appeal is dismissed as moot.
    /s/
    RAYE, P. J.
    We concur:
    /s/
    HULL, J.
    /s/
    MAURO, J.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C091050

Filed Date: 5/10/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/10/2021