Adoption of S.L. CA4/1 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 5/2/14 Adoption of S.L. CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    Adoption of S.L., a Minor.
    MIGUEL L.,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                         G048929
    v.                                                            (Super. Ct. No. AD78598)
    DANIEL C.,                                                             OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Ronald
    P. Kreber, Judge. Affirmed.
    Matthew I. Thue, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    William D. Caldwell, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Plaintiff and Respondent.
    *                  *                  *
    Appellant Daniel C. (Father) is the natural father of S.L. (Child). He
    challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the orders terminating his parental
    rights under Family Code sections 7822 (parental abandonment) and 7825 (parent
    convicted of a felony). (All statutory references are to this code.) Respondent Miguel L.
    (Stepfather) is the stepfather of Child, and the husband of Child’s mother (Mother). We
    conclude substantial evidence supports the section 7822 order and affirm. Therefore, we
    do not address the sufficiency of the evidence to support the section 7825 order.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Father’s opening brief contains an integrated statement of the case and
    facts, which Stepfather adopts and joins in with certain small exceptions. We agree
    Father’s integrated statement of the case and facts provides a sufficient factual and
    procedural background for the issues presented in this appeal. Hence, we recite it in full
    below, with a few nonsubstantive changes such as omitting the record references and
    referring to the parties as Father, Stepfather, Child and Mother, rather than using their
    names or initials.
    Foundational History
    When this case came to the attention of the trial court, Mother and
    Stepfather were living together in Orange County and caring for then six-year-old Child.
    Father was incarcerated serving a three-year sentence on convictions for assault with a
    firearm, felony kidnapping, and burglary. The assault with a firearm and kidnapping
    convictions were based on an incident in 2009, and involved Child. Mother and Father’s
    respective recollections of that incident differ slightly.
    According to Mother, Father came to Mother’s home in July 2009 to drop
    off Child after a visit. He asked Mother for money, engaged her in a verbal dispute, and
    then went into her bathroom and loaded a gun. While Father was in the bathroom,
    Mother and a male neighbor who was visiting the home went into Mother’s bedroom for
    protection. Father then exited the bathroom, saw the neighbor in Mother’s bedroom,
    2
    became enraged, and hit the neighbor with the gun. Father subsequently went outside to
    talk to the neighbor, but then reentered Mother’s home through a window, grabbed Child,
    and sped off at high speed with Child in a car. Mother called 911. The incident ended
    approximately two hours later, when Father agreed to drop Child off at his parents’
    restaurant.
    Mother reported that Child witnessed the altercation between Father and the
    neighbor, and that Child was crying and distraught during the incident. She further
    claimed that Father called her after absconding with Child, put Child on the telephone,
    and told Child to tell Mother to call off the police. According to Mother, Child was
    shaking and looked worried when she picked Child up from Father’s parents. Child
    continued to shake and threw up twice after getting home, and Child was scared of the
    police for months following the incident.
    Father agreed that he got into an altercation with a man in Mother’s home,
    and that he hit the man with a gun and then absconded with Child. However, according
    to Father, he and Mother were still seeing each other at the time, and he walked in on
    Mother and the man in bed immediately after arriving at Mother’s home. Father claimed
    that he absconded with Child because: (1) he was in love with Mother at the time and
    was upset to find her with another man; and (2) he worried about leaving Child in the
    home with a strange man. Father claimed that he immediately dropped Child off at his
    parents’ restaurant. He denied that Child was screaming when he took her from Mother’s
    house, but admitted Child was crying.
    After Father was incarcerated for kidnapping Child, Mother secured a
    restraining order in family court that prohibited Father from contacting Child until
    January 2016.
    Father’s criminal history also includes convictions for reckless driving,
    possession of a controlled substance, and possession of a controlled substance with intent
    to sell.
    3
    Stepfather’s Adoption Request and Nancy Ward’s Investigation
    On September 15, 2011, Stepfather filed a request to adopt Child.
    During a subsequent adoption investigation, Mother informed Court
    Investigator Nancy Ward (Investigator Ward) of Father’s incarceration and the
    restraining order preventing Father from contacting Child. Mother reported that Father
    had visited Child every other week for a brief period of time when Child was two, but
    had never paid child support, and had not seen Child since his incarceration in July 2009.
    Stepfather and Mother both reported that Stepfather had been involved in
    parenting Child since Child was one year old. The couple further reported that they had
    recently been married, that Child knew Stepfather as her father and called him “daddy,”
    and that Stepfather considered Child to be his child.
    On April 14, 2012, Father wrote Investigator Ward a letter expressing his
    opposition to Stepfather’s adoption request. Father confirmed that he was incarcerated
    and unable to see Child. However, he expressed love for his daughter, and reported he
    hoped to see Child as soon as possible.
    Investigator Ward ultimately advised the court to grant Stepfather’s
    adoption request.
    Stepfather’s Petition to Declare Child Free from Parental Custody and Control, and
    Silvia Vasquez’s Investigation
    On December 5, 2012, Stepfather filed a petition to declare Child free from
    Father’s custody and control. The petition claimed that Father had: (1) intentionally
    abandoned Child under section 7822; and (2) been convicted of felonies that made it
    detrimental for him to maintain parental rights to Child under section 7825.
    A hearing on Stepfather’s petition was initially scheduled for February 1,
    2013. But Father filed a motion asking the court to continue the hearing so that he could
    seek legal counsel. The court appointed an attorney to represent Father and continued the
    hearing several times.
    4
    Meanwhile, during an initial investigation by Court Investigator Silvia
    Vasquez (Investigator Vasquez), Mother and Stepfather repeated the reports they had
    made to Investigator Ward. They further claimed that Child had no memory of Father
    and believed Stepfather was her biological father.
    Father was released from jail on June 18, 2012, and he met with
    Investigator Velazquez soon thereafter. During that meeting, Father reported that he and
    Mother were a couple when Mother was pregnant with Child, and that they remained
    together until Child was one year old. He further claimed that he and Mother shared
    custody of Child after their separation, and that he maintained consistent and regular
    contact with Child until July 2009, when Child was three-and-one-half years old.
    Father reported that he had lost contact with Child only because he was
    incarcerated and because Mother’s restraining order prevented him from contacting
    Child. He reported that the judge who issued the restraining order had told him that he
    could modify the order after he was released from jail. Nevertheless, Father provided the
    investigator with paperwork showing that he had attempted to modify Mother’s
    restraining order five times between May and August 2012, while he remained
    incarcerated.
    Father reported that he had obtained a full-time job. He expressed a desire
    to resume father-daughter visits and to provide child support for Child. He claimed he
    had been paying Mother $500 a month in child support until he was incarcerated in 2009.
    According to Investigator Vasquez, Father presented as genuinely upset
    about the effort to terminate his parental rights, and honest and remorseful about his
    criminal history, including the kidnapping incident. Investigator Vasquez opined that
    Father “presented as a man who want[ed] to change his life.”
    After interviewing Father, Investigator Vasquez interviewed Father’s parole
    officer, who confirmed that Father was employed. The parole officer also informed the
    5
    investigator that Father had been drug testing clean since his release from jail, and that
    the terms of Father’s parole prevented him from contacting Child.
    Investigator Vasquez then interviewed Mother again. Mother contradicted
    her prior reports by agreeing that Father had seen Child “frequently” after Child was
    born, and “on a regular basis” after Mother and Father separated. According to Mother,
    Child asked about Father after he was incarcerated but eventually stopped asking.
    Mother continued to deny ever receiving child support from Father, although she
    admitted that he sometimes helped her with supplies.
    After this additional investigation, Investigator Vasquez opined that
    Father’s criminal convictions did not “fit” section 7825. Specifically, the investigator did
    not believe that Father’s kidnapping conviction showed that he had engaged in a pattern
    of behavior that could be detrimental to Child. The investigator further opined that
    section 7822 did not apply because Father had regular contact with Child until July 2009
    and did not intentionally abandon Child. Investigator Vasquez ultimately advised the
    court to: (1) deny Stepfather’s petition to free Child from Father’s custody; and (2)
    provide Father with supervised father-daughter visits.
    The Hearing on Stepfather’s Petition to Declare Child Free From Parental Custody
    A hearing on Stepfather’s petition took place on August 16, and 22, 2013.
    During the hearing, Father testified and continued to express remorse for his past criminal
    activity, including the kidnapping incident. He also acknowledged and expressed
    remorse for a history of substance abuse. Father explained that he had participated
    unsuccessfully in substance abuse treatment programs on two separate occasions, first in
    2000, and later in 2005, during the first six months of Child’s life. However, he testified
    that he had stopped using drugs when he went to jail in 2009, that he was now living with
    his parents, and that he had remained drug free since his release. He also confirmed that
    he was employed and informed the court that he had obtained his GED and completed a
    102-hour parenting course while in jail.
    6
    Father confirmed that he had repeatedly attempted to modify the restraining
    order preventing him from contacting Child. He explained that he did not attempt to
    modify it earlier because he was being moved around and was therefore unable to
    immediately locate a law library and figure out what needed to be done. Father also
    testified that he had attempted to modify the restraining order after being released from
    prison, but was told that he had to wait until the petition to free Child from his custody
    and control was resolved.
    Father maintained a desire to transition into visits with Child and expressed
    a desire to pay child support. He testified that the conditions of his parole preventing him
    from contacting Child were dependent on Mother’s restraining order.
    After hearing testimony, the court recognized that Father had remained
    sober since his release from prison. Nevertheless, it found that sections 7822 and 7825
    applied and terminated Father’s parental rights to Child.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “An appellate court applies a substantial evidence standard of review to a
    trial court’s findings under section 7822. [Citation.] Although a trial court must make
    such findings based on clear and convincing evidence (§ 7821), this standard of proof
    “‘is for the guidance of the trial court only; on review, our function is limited to a
    determination whether substantial evidence exists to support the conclusions reached by
    the trial court in utilizing the appropriate standard.’” [Citation.] Under the substantial
    evidence standard of review, “‘[a]ll conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in favor of
    the respondents and all legitimate and reasonable inferences must be indulged in to
    uphold the judgment.’” [Citation.] Abandonment and intent “‘are questions of fact for
    the trial judge . . . . His [or her] decision, when supported by substantial evidence, is
    binding upon the reviewing court. . . . ‘The appellant has the burden of showing the
    finding or order is not supported by substantial evidence.’ [Citation.].” (Adoption of
    Allison C. (2008) 
    164 Cal. App. 4th 1004
    , 1010, fns. omitted (Allison C.).)
    7
    DISCUSSION
    Section 7800 et seq. governs proceedings to have a child declared free from
    a parent’s custody and control. The purpose of these types of proceedings is to promote
    the child’s best interest “by providing the stability and security of an adoptive home.”
    (§ 7800.) The statutes are to “be liberally construed to serve and protect the interests and
    welfare of the child.” (§ 7801.)
    Under section 7822, a court may declare a child free from a parent’s
    custody and control if the parent has abandoned the child. Abandonment occurs when a
    “parent has left the child in the care and custody of the other parent for a period of one
    year without any provision for the child’s support, or without communication from the
    parent, with the intent on the part of the parent to abandon the child.” (§ 7822, subd.
    (a)(3), italics added.)
    “Thus, a section 7822 proceeding is appropriate where ‘three main
    elements’ are met: ‘(1) the child must have been left with another; (2) without provision
    for support or without communication from . . . his parent[] for a period of one year; and
    (3) all of such acts are subject to the qualification that they must have been done “with
    the intent on the part of such parent . . . to abandon [the child].’” [Citation.]
    ‘The . . . failure to provide support, or failure to communicate is presumptive evidence of
    the intent to abandon. If the parent . . . ha[s] made only token efforts to support or
    communicate with the child, the court may declare the child abandoned by the
    parent . . . .’ (§ 7822, subd. (b).)” (Allison 
    C., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 1010.)
    In this case, the trial court found by clear and convincing evidence (1)
    Father left Child with Mother, (2) Father did not provide support for or communicate
    with Child for in excess of one year, except for token attempts to communicate, and (3)
    all of these acts were done with “an intent to abandon” Child within the meaning of
    section 7822. Father challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support these findings.
    While Father concedes he did not provide support for or communicate with Child for
    8
    more than a year, he contends he was prevented from contacting Child as a result of his
    incarceration, Mother’s restraining order, and the terms of his parole. Thus, Father
    concludes the evidence did not show he left Child with Mother, or intended to abandon
    Child. We are not persuaded.
    1. Substantial Evidence Supports the Finding Father Left Child With Mother.
    Father first contests the trial court’s finding he left Child with Mother for
    more than a year. He argues the term “left” connotes voluntary action, and asserts his
    incarceration for almost three years was involuntary. So, Father concludes Child “was
    effectively taken” from him, and no substantial evidence supported a finding that he
    “voluntarily left” Child within the meaning of section 7822. We disagree.
    Father’s argument is remarkably similar to the claims rejected in Allison C.
    In that case, the father contended insufficient evidence supported the court’s finding he
    left the child in the mother’s care and custody for at least one year. The father argued the
    term “left” connotes voluntary action and therefore abandonment does not occur when
    the child is taken from parental custody against the parent’s wishes. While
    acknowledging he was incarcerated at different time periods, the father argued his
    incarceration was involuntary. He further asserted the mother tried at every turn to cut
    off any contact between the father and the child, including by obtaining a restraining
    order against the father, and persuading the father’s parole officer to disallow visitation.
    He concluded the petitioners failed to prove that “‘[f]ather voluntarily allowed [m]other
    to assume custody.’” (Allison 
    C., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 1011.)
    The Court of Appeal disagreed, explaining, ‘“Case law consistently focuses
    on the voluntary nature of a parent’s abandonment of the parental role rather than on
    physical desertion by the parent.’ [Citation.] [¶] We thus consider whether father
    voluntarily surrendered Allison’s custody and care to mother. We conclude substantial
    evidence supports the court’s finding he did just that. In the summer of 2001 father, by
    his voluntary act of domestic violence, left Allison in mother’s care and custody.
    9
    Thereafter, he never sought to take parental responsibility for Allison’s care, and instead
    chose to let the child stay with mother. . . . His actions underlying his incarcerations for
    domestic violence, burglary, and driving under the influence were voluntary, and in any
    case, ‘being incarcerated does not, in and of itself, provide a legal defense to
    abandonment of children.’ [Citation.] . . . Mother’s efforts to curtail father’s
    communication with Allison, while relevant to an assessment of whether father intended
    to abandon the child by noncommunication . . . do not negate the reality he never sought
    to take custody or care of the child after mid-2001. In sum, he voluntarily abdicated the
    parental role. Thus, the court did not err by finding father left Allison in mother’s care.”
    (Allison 
    C., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 1011.)
    All of the same can be said in this case. By his voluntary acts of residential
    burglary, kidnapping, and assault with a firearm, Father left Child with Mother in the
    summer of 2009. Thereafter, Father never sought to take parental responsibility for
    Child’s care, and instead chose to let Child stay with Mother. Father’s voluntary actions
    caused him to be incarcerated, and his incarceration, in and of itself, is not a legal defense
    to abandonment. (In re Rose G. (1976) 
    57 Cal. App. 3d 406
    , 424.) And Mother’s efforts
    to curtail Father’s communication with Child, while relevant to an assessment of whether
    Father intended to abandon Child by noncommunication and nonsupport (issues we
    discuss below), do not negate the reality he never sought to take custody or care of Child.
    In sum, Father voluntarily abdicated the parental role. Accordingly, the trial court did not
    err by finding Father left Child with Mother.
    2. Substantial Evidence Supports the Finding Father Intended to Abandon Child.
    Father next disputes the trial court’s finding he intended to abandon Child.
    He acknowledges his failure to provide support and to communicate, except for token
    attempts, constitute presumptive evidence of intent to abandon under section 7822,
    subdivision (b), but he argues that presumption was rebutted. Father contends his
    incarceration, Mother’s restraining order, and the terms of his parole prevented him from
    10
    supporting or communicating with Child. And Father insists he maintained a constant
    interest in parenting Child, even while he was incarcerated. Hence, Father concludes no
    substantial evidence showed he intended to abandon Child. Again we disagree.
    Once more, Father’s argument closely resembles the claims rejected in
    Allison C. In that case, the father left his daughter with her mother after he was
    incarcerated; the father provided only token support for his daughter for more than three
    years; the father failed to communicate with her for the same period; and the father
    argued communication was restricted first by the his incarceration, then by the mother’s
    restraining order, and later by the terms of the father’s parole. We held the trial court
    finding father failed to communicate for more than three years, “coupled with its finding
    of nonsupport for the same period, are sufficient to show father intended to abandon her
    for that period.” (Allison 
    C., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 1013.)
    The circumstances in this case are so similar the same result must obtain.
    Here, Father left Child with Mother after he was incarcerated. Father did not contest the
    finding he provided no support for Child for more than one year, and the evidence
    showed he actually provided no support for more than three years. Father also did not
    contest the finding he made only token attempts to communicate with Child for more
    than one year, and the evidence showed he actually failed to communicate for more than
    1
    three years. And finally, just as in Allison C., Father argued communication was
    restricted first by his incarceration, then by Mother’s restraining order, and later by the
    terms of his parole. Consequently, we conclude Father failed to rebut the presumption,
    and there is substantial evidence to support the trial court finding he intended to abandon
    Child.
    1
    Father did testify he tried to modify the restraining order multiple times between
    May and August 2012, but we think that was too little too late. As of May 2012 Father
    had already failed to communicate with Child for more than two years, and section 7822
    requires only a one-year period of noncommunication.
    11
    DISPOSITION
    For all of these reasons we hold the trial court’s order terminating Father’s
    parental rights under section 7822 is supported by substantial evidence. Having done so,
    we need not address the sufficiency of the evidence to support the alternative order
    terminating Father’s parental rights under section 7825. The judgment is affirmed.
    THOMPSON, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    RYLAARSDAM, ACTING P. J.
    BEDSWORTH, J.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G048929

Filed Date: 5/2/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021