In re G.D. CA2/4 ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 12/8/21 In re G.D. CA2/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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(a). This
    opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115(a).
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    In re G.D., Person Coming Under                               B311108
    the Juvenile Court Law.
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY                                            Los Angeles County
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN                                        Super. Ct. No.
    AND FAMILY SERVICES,                                          18CCJP06036
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    S.D.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County, Pete R. Navarro, Commissioner. Reversed
    and remanded.
    Joseph T. Tavano, under appointment by the Court of
    Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Rodrigo A. Castro-Silva, County Counsel, Kim Nemoy,
    Assistant County Counsel, Brian Mahler, Deputy County
    Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    The juvenile court exercised jurisdiction over G.D., the
    child of D.M. (mother)1 and S.D. (father) under Welfare and
    Institutions Code section 300, subdivision (b).2 The court found
    father violated, and mother failed to enforce, a restraining order
    requiring him not to have contact with G.D. except during
    monitored visits. It therefore found the parents placed G.D. at
    substantial risk of serious physical harm, given father’s history
    of: (1) inflicting domestic violence on mother; (2) substance abuse;
    and (3) convictions for drug-related and violent crimes.
    At the dispositional hearing, the juvenile court placed G.D.
    with mother under the supervision of the Department of Children
    and Family Services (Department). It also found the Department
    had satisfied its duties of inquiry and notice under the Indian
    Child Welfare Act of 1978, 
    25 U.S.C. § 1901
     et seq. (ICWA).
    Further, while the Department had yet to receive responses to
    ICWA-030 notice forms it had sent to two tribes, the court found
    no further analysis into the Department’s compliance with ICWA
    was required because G.D. was placed with mother.
    On appeal, father contends: (1) the juvenile court
    prejudicially erred by adjudicating the section 300 petition in his
    absence, in violation of his right to be present under Penal Code
    section 2625; (2) the jurisdictional findings are unsupported by
    substantial evidence; and (3) the juvenile court erred by finding
    the Department satisfied its duties of inquiry and notice under
    ICWA, and that no further analysis into its compliance with
    1     Mother is not a party to this appeal.
    2     Unless otherwise specified, all further undesignated
    statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
    2
    ICWA was required given G.D.’s placement with mother. As
    discussed below, we agree with his first and third contentions of
    error. We therefore need not address his second contention. Thus,
    we reverse the jurisdictional and dispositional orders, vacate the
    juvenile court’s ICWA findings, and remand the case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    Mother and father have one child together, G.D., born in
    November 2014. At the time this case arose in July 2020, G.D.
    resided with mother and his three older maternal half-siblings:
    J.T., born in March 2003, E.T., born in August 2004, and M.T.,
    born in August 2009. Although the underlying dependency case
    pertained to all four of the children in mother’s care, this appeal
    relates only to G.D.
    The family was involved in a prior dependency case
    initiated in September 2018, when the Department filed a section
    300 petition on behalf of J.T., E.T., M.T., and G.D. The juvenile
    court sustained the petition on December 7, 2018, finding true its
    allegations that the children were at risk of harm due to father’s
    infliction of domestic violence on mother, his abuse of illicit
    drugs, his unresolved history of engaging in dangerous criminal
    activity, and mother’s failure to protect the children from him. On
    December 21, 2018, the juvenile court issued a permanent
    restraining order in favor of mother, which is set to expire on
    December 21, 2021. Among other things, the restraining order
    requires father to stay away from G.D. except during monitored
    visits.
    The juvenile court terminated jurisdiction over the children
    in June 2019 and issued an order granting mother sole legal and
    physical custody of G.D. The court also granted father monitored
    3
    visitation and ordered the parents to abide by the restraining
    order issued in December 2018.
    As noted above, this case arose in July 2020, when the
    Department received a referral alleging the children were being
    emotionally abused by father and neglected by mother. The
    reporting party stated that even though mother has an active
    restraining order against father, she has allowed him to frequent
    her home. Further, two days before, the reporting party saw
    father “throwing ‘stuff’ at mother’s front door” while “mother was
    yelling at him through the window.” According to the reporting
    party, “[t]he children cry because mother and father are arguing.”
    During its initial investigation, the Department was unable
    to contact father. Nonetheless, on September 8, 2020, the juvenile
    court authorized a warrant for the children’s detention. They
    were placed with their maternal grandmother on that date.
    Two days later, the Department filed a petition on the
    children’s behalf under section 300, subdivisions (a), (b), and (j).
    The petition alleged that “[o]n prior occasions,” mother “failed to
    enforce,” and father “failed to comply with,” the December 2018
    restraining order “by having contact with one another.” It also
    alleged mother “allowed . . . father to reside in the children’s
    home and have unlimited access to [them]” in violation of the
    restraining order. Thus, the petition alleged that by failing to
    abide by the restraining order, the parents placed the children at
    risk of harm, given father’s: (1) history of inflicting domestic
    violence on mother (counts a-1, b-1, and j-1); (2) history of
    substance abuse and current use of methamphetamine (counts b-
    2 and j-2); and (3) history of dangerous criminal activity (counts
    b-3 and j-3).
    4
    Sometime after the petition was filed, the Department
    conducted a due diligence search to ascertain father’s
    whereabouts. The search revealed he was arrested in September
    2020 for violating the terms of his post-release community
    supervision. As of October 2020, he was still incarcerated.
    The adjudication hearing was initially set for November 3,
    2020. At that hearing, however, the juvenile court granted the
    request by father’s recently-appointed counsel to continue the
    petition’s adjudication so father could speak to counsel about the
    allegations against him. Accordingly, the juvenile court continued
    the adjudication hearing to December 14, 2020. Further, after
    being informed that father indicated he may have Native
    American ancestry, and that ICWA-related issues had arisen in a
    pending dependency case pertaining to G.D.’s paternal half-
    brother, the juvenile court instructed the Department to
    ascertain whether those issues had any “possible connection” to
    the proceedings in the present case.
    At the December 14, 2020 hearing, father’s counsel again
    asked the juvenile court to continue the adjudication hearing
    because the Department had yet to interview father regarding
    the petition’s allegations,3 and “there [were] still issues related to
    [ICWA] that . . . need[ed] to [be] sort[ed] out[.]” The court granted
    the request and continued the adjudication hearing to January
    12, 2021. It also ordered the Department to send out ICWA
    notices regarding G.D., and to prepare and submit an order
    authorizing father’s appearance at the next hearing.
    3      On December 8, 2020, a Department social worker went to
    father’s place of incarceration to speak with him, but was unable
    to do so because his unit had been placed on a two-week
    quarantine, presumably due to COVID-19.
    5
    On January 6, 2021, a Department social worker spoke
    with G.D.’s paternal great-uncle, whom father indicated may
    have more information about his Native American heritage.
    Paternal great-uncle stated the family “possibly ha[d] some
    Apache native ancestry” and “may have Navajo native
    ancestry[.]” Subsequently, on January 8, 2021, the Department
    sent ICWA-030 notices regarding G.D.’s dependency case to his
    parents, the Sacramento Area Director of the Bureau of Indian
    Affairs, the Secretary of Interior, and the following tribes: Apache
    Tribe of Oklahoma; Fort Sill Apache Tribe; Jicarilla Apache
    Nation; Mescalero Apache Tribe; San Carlos Apache Tribe; Tonto
    Apache Tribe of Arizona; White Mountain Apache Tribe;
    Yavapai-Apache Nation; Colorado River Indian Tribes; and
    Navajo Nation.
    Father was not present at the January 12, 2021 hearing.4
    Consequently, at the outset of the hearing, his counsel asserted
    she knew he wanted to be present, objected to the court
    proceeding with the petition’s adjudication in his absence, and
    “request[ed] a brief continuance for him to be present.” She noted
    father was set to be released from custody later that month. The
    court denied the request and sustained counts b-1,5 b-2, and b-3.
    Counts a-1, j-1, j-2, and j-3 were stricken.
    4      The parties do not dispute that although the Department
    prepared an order for father’s removal from custody for purposes
    of attending the hearing, the order apparently was never signed
    by the bench officer.
    5      The juvenile court amended count b-1 by interlineation to
    read as follows: “The mother failed to protect the children in that
    [she] allowed . . . father to frequent the children’s home and have
    unrestricted access to [them.]” (Italics added.) While counts b-2
    6
    With respect to disposition, the Department requested the
    proceedings be continued because it was still waiting for several
    tribes to respond to the ICWA-030 notice forms it had sent. The
    juvenile court granted the request and continued the
    dispositional hearing to March 9, 2021. It also ordered the
    Department to “supply follow-up information on ICWA.”
    Father was released from custody on January 29, 2021.
    Five days later, on February 4, 2021, a Department social worker
    interviewed father for the first time regarding the petition’s
    allegations. Shortly thereafter, on February 8, 2021, the social
    worker was informed by father’s girlfriend that he had been
    arrested again.
    Before the dispositional hearing, the Department received
    responses to the ICWA-030 notice forms from the following tribes:
    Fort Sill Apache Tribe; Mescalero Apache Tribe; Tonto Apache
    Tribe; San Carlos Apache Tribe; and Yavapai-Apache Nation. In
    each response, the tribe stated G.D. was not enrolled in the tribe
    or eligible for enrollment therein.
    The ICWA-030 notice forms sent to Navajo Nation and
    Jicarilla Apache Nation were returned to the Department, as the
    packages had gone unclaimed and could not be forwarded.
    Therefore, on March 3, 2021, a Department social worker
    contacted both tribes by phone. The representative from Navajo
    Nation provided an updated address and instructed the social
    worker to email the notice form to her for an expedited response.
    The representative from Jicarilla Apache Nation informed the
    social worker that notice forms are only accepted by mail, and
    and b-3 contained identical language regarding mother’s failure
    to protect, the court did not amend those counts.
    7
    provided a new address. Per this new information, the social
    worker sent the ICWA-030 form to the email address provided by
    the Navajo Nation representative, and mailed another copy of the
    form to the updated address for Jicarilla Apache Nation.
    At the dispositional hearing held on March 9, 2021, counsel
    for the children and father informed the juvenile court that
    Navajo Nation and Jicarilla Apache Nation had yet to respond to
    the ICWA-030 notices, which had been recently resent.
    Nonetheless, the juvenile court found “ICWA notice has been
    given as required by law.” Subsequently, the court declared G.D.
    a dependent of the court and placed him with mother under the
    Department’s supervision. Father’s counsel “object[ed] to . . . [the
    court’s finding of] ICWA being . . . proper unless the court is
    continuing or setting [a] progress [hearing] on results from . . .
    Jicarilla [Apache Nation] and Navajo Nation.” The juvenile court
    responded it was “not going to consider a progress report[ ]”
    because it had issued a “home of parent order.”
    Father timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.    Violation of Father’s Right to Be Present for
    Adjudication under Penal Code Section 2625
    A.     Governing Legal Principles
    Penal Code, section 2625, subdivision (d) provides: “Upon
    receipt by the court of a statement from the prisoner or the
    prisoner’s attorney indicating the prisoner’s desire to be present
    during the court’s proceedings, the court shall issue an order for
    the temporary removal of the prisoner from the institution, and
    for the prisoner’s production before the court. . . . [A] petition to
    adjudge the child of a prisoner a dependent child of the court
    8
    pursuant to subdivision (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (i), or (j) of Section
    300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code may not be adjudicated
    without the physical presence of the prisoner or the prisoner’s
    attorney, unless the court has before it a knowing waiver of the
    right of physical presence signed by the prisoner or an affidavit
    signed by the warden, superintendent, or other person in charge
    of the institution, or a designated representative stating that the
    prisoner has, by express statement or action, indicated an intent
    not to appear at the proceeding.” “[T]he statute requires both the
    prisoner and the prisoner’s attorney to be present.” (In re Jesusa
    V. (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 588
    , 622, italics in original.)
    The violation of a prisoner’s right to be present under Penal
    Code section 2625 is not jurisdictional, and therefore is not
    reversible per se. (See In re Jesusa V., supra, 32 Cal.4th at pp.
    624-625.) In evaluating whether violation of this statutory right
    requires reversal, we “apply[ ] [the] familiar harmless-error test”
    set forth in People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    . (In re Jesusa
    V., supra, at p. 625.) Under that test, reversal is required where
    “it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the
    appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the
    error.” (People v. Watson, supra, at p. 836.)
    B.     Analysis
    The parties do not dispute that the juvenile court ran afoul
    of Penal Code section 2625, subdivision (d) by adjudicating the
    section 300 petition in father’s absence. Consequently, resolution
    of this issue turns on whether “it is reasonably probable that a
    result more favorable to [father] would have been reached in the
    absence of the error.” (People v. Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p.
    836.)
    9
    Analogizing this case to In re M.M. (2015) 
    236 Cal.App.4th 955
     (M.M.), father contends the violation of his statutory right to
    be present was not harmless because, had he been present at the
    hearing, he could have provided live testimony refuting the
    Department’s evidence in support of the allegations against him.
    The Department counters father’s reliance on M.M. “is
    misplaced[,]” and asserts that on the record in this case, “there is
    no reasonable probability that [f]ather’s appearance . . . would
    have resulted in the juvenile court dismissing the section 300
    petition in its entirety[.]” As discussed below, we agree with
    father’s argument.
    In M.M., the mother’s arrest for prostitution in May 2014
    prompted the Department to file a petition on behalf of her child
    under section 300, subdivisions (b) and (g). (See M.M., supra, 236
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 957-958.) The petition alleged the mother took
    the child with her when she went to solicit sex as a prostitute and
    failed to make an appropriate plan for the child’s ongoing care
    and supervision while she was incarcerated. (Ibid.)
    During an interview with the Department, mother
    admitted she had a history of prostitution but denied soliciting
    sex on the night she was arrested. (M.M., supra, 236 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 960.) She related that she had gone to a strip club to seek
    employment, and had left her child in the care of her boyfriend at
    the time, who was not her pimp. (Id. at pp. 959-960.) The mother
    stated the police officers who reported that her boyfriend had
    admitted to being her pimp “must have lied[.]” (Id. at p. 960.)
    At the adjudication hearing, the mother’s counsel informed
    the juvenile court that the mother was not present because she
    was incarcerated, and objected to the court proceeding in her
    absence. (M.M., supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 960.) The juvenile
    10
    court overruled the objection, sustained the petition based solely
    on the evidence submitted by the Department, and removed the
    child from the mother. (See id. at pp. 960-961.)
    The Court of Appeal reversed the jurisdictional findings
    and dispositional order, holding the juvenile court had violated
    the mother’s right to be present for the petition’s adjudication
    under Penal Code section 2625, subdivision (d), and that the
    error was not harmless. (M.M., supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    961, 964-965.) With respect to latter point, the Court of Appeal
    rejected the Department’s contention that the mother was not
    prejudiced because her “theory of the case . . . was documented in
    the Department’s reports and argued to the juvenile court by her
    counsel[,]” and she “d[id] not suggest she could have presented
    any additional evidence had she been present at the hearing[.]”
    (Id. at p. 963.) In so doing, it explained: “The Department’s
    position ignores the vital role that live testimony plays in a
    court’s assessment of credibility and its evaluation of conflicting
    evidence: ‘Oral testimony of witnesses given in the presence of
    the trier of fact is valued for its probative worth on the issue of
    credibility, because such testimony affords the trier of fact an
    opportunity to observe the demeanor of witnesses. [Citation.] A
    witness’s demeanor is “‘part of the evidence’” and is “of
    considerable legal consequence.”’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 964.)
    The Court of Appeal emphasized that, “[w]ithout hearing
    directly from [the mother] and assessing her demeanor, the
    juvenile court rejected her account of the events” leading up to
    her arrest and found she had placed the child at substantial risk
    of physical harm by leaving him with her pimp while she solicited
    for prostitution. (M.M., supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 964.) Under
    those circumstances, the Court of Appeal determined that “if [the
    11
    mother’s] oral testimony were believed, there is no doubt the
    result of the challenged proceedings would have been more
    favorable to her.” (Ibid.) Accordingly, the Court of Appeal stated
    it “c[ould] not conclude the juvenile court’s error in proceeding in
    violation of [the mother’s] right to be present at the hearing was
    harmless.” (Ibid.)
    Here, as in M.M., the record contains conflicting evidence
    regarding whether father engaged in conduct placing G.D. at
    substantial risk of serious physical harm. During an interview
    with the Department in October 2020, mother stated she and
    father had been in an on-and-off relationship, and that early on
    in 2020, she and father “were trying to work things out[ ]” even
    though she had obtained a restraining order against him several
    years prior. She reported that in April or May 2020, father spent
    time with her and G.D. by going to her home, going out to eat
    together, going to the park, and attending G.D.’s speech therapy
    services. While mother stated there was no domestic violence
    during that time, she related father began harassing her in June
    or July 2020, “when [she] decided to end things with him again”
    and “get rid of his things that were stored in [her] garage.”
    According to mother, father “started to come around the house
    and started throwing stuff at the house[.]” She also stated father
    “broke [a] window” at her home, and that she called the police
    four times because she “felt threatened” and was “fear[ful] he
    might do something.”
    In contrast with mother’s statements, during his interview
    with the Department, father stated he ended his relationship
    with mother in May 2020 and has not been to her home or visited
    G.D. since. He reported that prior to his release, his last visit
    with G.D. was in February 2020. Consistent with these
    12
    statements, at the jurisdictional hearing, his counsel asserted
    “father adamantly maintains that . . . [the] current allegations of
    domestic violence are not true.”
    As in M.M., had father been permitted to attend the
    jurisdictional hearing, he could have testified in person to his
    version of the events leading up to the referral giving rise to the
    underlying dependency case. His testimony, if believed, could
    have influenced the juvenile court’s determination whether he
    had recently engaged in any violent conduct toward mother
    threatening G.D.’s safety, and therefore whether G.D. was at
    substantial risk of serious physical harm, given his failure to
    abide by the restraining order and his history of violence with
    mother.
    Moreover, as father’s counsel pointed out at the
    jurisdictional hearing, the evidence before the juvenile court did
    not address whether he continued to abuse methamphetamine or
    any other illicit substances since the prior dependency case was
    terminated. Nor did the evidence address whether father had
    been convicted of any drug-related or violent crimes since 2017.
    Had he attended the jurisdictional hearing, father also could
    have testified to these issues. His testimony certainly would have
    been material to the juvenile court’s analysis whether his failure
    to abide by the restraining order exposed G.D. to a substantial
    risk of serious physical harm due to his substance abuse issues
    and history of criminal activity.
    In determining whether jurisdiction is warranted under
    section 300, subdivision (b), the question is whether, at the time
    of the adjudication hearing, a parent’s conduct has “‘“exposed [the
    child] to a substantial risk of serious physical harm or illness.”’
    [Citations.]” (In re Jesus M. (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 104
    , 111-112,
    13
    italics in original.) Accordingly, based on the record in this case
    and “the vital role that live testimony plays in a court’s
    assessment of credibility and its evaluation of conflicting
    evidence[ ]” (M.M., supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 964), we conclude
    “it is reasonably probable” father’s presence at the jurisdictional
    hearing would have resulted an outcome “more favorable” to him.
    (People v. Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)
    We also reject the Department’s contention that father
    failed to demonstrate the juvenile court’s error was harmless. In
    support of its position, the Department emphasizes “[f]ather’s
    counsel did not inform the juvenile court that [he] sought to
    testify at the jurisdictional hearing or indicate what actual
    testimony [he] sought to provide.” Further, the Department
    argues that father’s testimony “was not crucial” to the juvenile
    court’s decision to sustain the petition because, regardless of his
    testimony, father does not dispute: (1) the juvenile court
    previously exercised jurisdiction over G.D. under section 300,
    subdivision (b) based on father’s infliction of domestic violence
    against mother; and (2) father violated the restraining order by
    going to mother’s home and having unrestricted contact with
    G.D. in 2020.
    Both the Department’s arguments are without merit. With
    respect to its first point, the Department does not cite, and we
    have not located, any authority requiring counsel for an
    incarcerated parent to represent that the parent seeks to testify
    at the jurisdictional hearing, or make an offer of proof regarding
    his or her testimony. Indeed, in M.M., the Court of Appeal held
    the juvenile court’s violation of Penal Code, section 2625,
    subdivision (d) was not harmless even though, at the adjudication
    hearing, the mother’s counsel did not state the mother wished to
    14
    testify or provide an offer of proof. (See M.M., supra, 236
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 960-961, 963-964.)
    The Department’s second contention is unavailing because
    it effectively assumes the evidence demonstrating father violated
    the restraining order by having contact with G.D. outside
    monitored visitation, coupled with the sustained jurisdictional
    findings in the prior dependency case that he inflicted domestic
    violence on mother in 2018, was sufficient to support jurisdiction
    under section 300, subdivision (b). However, absent evidence
    suggesting the potential recurrence of a parent’s prior harmful
    behavior, or evidence of recent conduct presenting a risk of
    physical harm to the child, a parent’s violation of a restraining
    order alone does not justify the assertion of jurisdiction under
    section 300, subdivision (b). (See In re Jesus M., supra, 235
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 106, 111-114 [reversing jurisdictional findings
    under section 300, subdivision (b) where, although father violated
    a restraining order entered in mother’s favor, the record did not
    reflect any recent incidents of domestic violence or suggest past
    violence was likely to recur].) This is so because “[d]ependency
    proceedings are designed not to prosecute a parent or ‘for the
    reproof and improvement of erring parents,’ but to protect
    children. [Citations.]” (Id. at p. 113.)
    In sum, for the reasons discussed above, we cannot
    conclude the juvenile court’s violation of father’s right to be
    present under Penal Code section 2625, subdivision (d) was
    harmless. Accordingly, we reverse the jurisdictional and
    dispositional orders and remand the case to the juvenile court to
    hold a new adjudication hearing at which father has the
    opportunity to be present and testify.
    15
    II.    Sufficiency of Evidence Supporting Jurisdiction
    In addition to arguing the jurisdictional and dispositional
    orders should be reversed because the juvenile court violated his
    right to be present under Penal Code section 2625, subdivision
    (d), father also argues those orders must be reversed because the
    jurisdictional findings are unsupported by substantial evidence.
    Having concluded reversal is required based on his first
    argument (see section I.B, ante), we need not address his
    arguments challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting
    the jurisdictional findings, and therefore decline to do so.
    III.   ICWA
    A.    Governing Legal Principles
    “ICWA reflects ‘a congressional determination to protect
    Indian children and to promote the stability and security of
    Indian tribes and families by establishing minimal federal
    standards that a state court . . . must follow before removing an
    Indian child from his or her family.’ [Citation.] Both ICWA and
    the Welfare and Institutions Code define an ‘Indian child’ as ‘any
    unmarried person who is under age eighteen and is either (a) a
    member of an Indian tribe, or (b) is eligible for membership in an
    Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an Indian
    tribe.’ (
    25 U.S.C. § 1903
    (4); § 224.1, subds. (a) and (b)
    [incorporating federal definitions].)” (In re D.F. (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 558
    , 565, fn. omitted (D.F.).) ICWA applies “[i]n any
    involuntary proceeding in a State court, where the court knows or
    has reason to know that an Indian child is involved, [and a] party
    [is] seeking foster care placement of, or termination of parental
    rights to, an Indian child . . . .” (
    25 U.S.C. § 1912
    (a).)
    16
    “The juvenile court and [the Department] have an
    ‘affirmative and continuing duty to inquire whether a child for
    whom a Section 300 petition . . . may be or has been filed, is or
    may be an Indian child.’ [Citations.] This continuing duty can be
    divided into three phases: the initial duty to inquire, the duty of
    further inquiry, and the duty to provide formal ICWA notice.”
    (D.F., supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at p. 566.) Only the second and third
    phases are relevant to this appeal.
    The duty of further inquiry “is imposed when [the
    Department] or the juvenile court has ‘reason to believe that an
    Indian child is involved’ in the proceedings. [Citation.]” (D.F.,
    supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at p. 566.) “Further inquiry as to the
    possible Indian status of the child includes: (1) interviewing the
    parents and extended family members to gather required
    information; (2) contacting the Bureau of Indian Affairs and
    State Department of Social Services for assistance in identifying
    the tribes in which the child may be a member or eligible for
    membership in; and (3) contacting the tribes and any other
    person that may reasonably be expected to have information
    regarding the child’s membership or eligibility. [Citations.]
    Contact with a tribe must include, at a minimum, ‘telephone,
    facsimile, or electronic mail contact to each tribe’s designated
    agent’ and include information ‘necessary for the tribe to make a
    membership or eligibility determination.’ [Citation.]” (D.F.,
    supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at pp. 566-567, fn. and italics omitted.)
    The third phase is triggered “once [the Department] or the
    juvenile court has a reason to know an Indian child is involved[ ]”
    in the dependency proceedings. (D.F., supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at p.
    568.) “[N]otice pursuant to ICWA must be sent to the pertinent
    tribe(s) via registered or certified mail. [Citation.] The notice
    17
    must contain sufficient information to enable the tribe to ‘conduct
    a meaningful review of its records to determine the child’s
    eligibility for membership.’ [Citation.] The required information
    includes the names, birth dates, birthplaces, and tribal
    enrollment information of the parents and other direct lineal
    ancestors of the child, such as grandparents. [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    “On appeal, we review the juvenile court’s ICWA findings
    for substantial evidence. [Citations.] But where the facts are
    undisputed, we independently determine whether ICWA’s
    requirements have been satisfied. [Citation.]” (In re D.S. (2020)
    
    46 Cal.App.5th 1041
    , 1051, fn. omitted.)
    B.     Analysis
    The parties do not dispute that the Department and the
    juvenile court satisfied their duty of initial inquiry under ICWA,
    or that their duty of further inquiry was triggered in this case.
    Instead, father contends the juvenile court erred by finding the
    Department satisfied its duties of further inquiry and notice,
    even though it had yet to receive responses to the ICWA-030
    forms from two tribes when the dispositional hearing was held.
    He also argues the juvenile court erred by “foreclos[ing]” further
    analysis into whether ICWA applied because G.D. was placed
    with mother.
    As an initial matter, we note the juvenile court’s findings
    regarding ICWA are not entirely clear. At no point in the
    underlying proceedings did the court expressly find ICWA
    inapplicable. So far as we can tell, however, the record reflects
    that at the dispositional hearing: (1) the court found the
    Department satisfied its duties of further inquiry and notice
    under ICWA and, based thereon, apparently inferred ICWA did
    18
    not apply; and (2) by declining to hold a status review hearing or
    order a progress report on pending responses to the ICWA-030
    notices sent to Jicarilla Apache Tribe and Navajo Nation, the
    court effectively found further analysis into ICWA’s applicability
    was unnecessary because G.D. had been placed with a parent. As
    discussed below, we agree with father and conclude the juvenile
    court erred by making these findings.
    With respect to father’s first contention, as noted above, the
    Department initially sent ICWA-030 notice forms to ten tribes,
    including Navajo Nation and Jicarilla Apache Nation, on January
    8, 2021. After the forms sent to Navajo Nation and Jicarilla
    Apache Nation were returned to the Department, a social worker
    contacted representatives from each tribe by phone on March 3,
    2021. Subsequently, the social worker emailed a copy of the form
    to Navajo Nation and resent a physical copy of the form to
    Jicarilla Apache Nation via mail. Assuming those forms were
    resent on the same date the social worker spoke to the tribes’
    representatives by phone,6 only six days had passed between that
    date and the date of the dispositional hearing. At that point, the
    Department had not received confirmation of either forms’
    receipt, let alone a determinative response from either tribe. On
    this record, we conclude the juvenile court’s finding that the
    6      The evidence does not demonstrate when specifically the
    social worker resent the forms to Navajo Nation and Jicarilla
    Apache Nation. In the Last Minute Information filed on March 4,
    2021, the social worker did not specify the date on which the
    forms were resent. Moreover, the record does not contain a copy
    of the e-mail sent to the Navajo Nation representative, nor does it
    contain any copy of the Certified Mail Receipt for the form resent
    to Jicarilla Apache Nation.
    19
    Department satisfied its duties of inquiry and notice, and its
    finding that ICWA did not apply based on thereon, were
    premature. (Cf. In re M.W. (2020) 
    49 Cal.App.5th 1034
    , 1047
    [affirming findings that the Department satisfied its duty of
    inquiry and that ICWA did not apply where “two tribes were
    given nearly two months within which to provide a determinative
    response to the Department’s ICWA inquiry, a time period [the
    appellate court] f[ound] reasonable in the context of a dependency
    proceeding.”].)
    In considering father’s second argument, we find In re
    Jennifer A. (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 692
     instructive. There, the
    child was living with her mother when a section 300 petition was
    filed on behalf. (Id. at p. 697.) She was detained and placed in an
    emergency shelter home. (Id. at p. 698.) Prior to the dispositional
    hearing, the social services agency filed a report recommending
    the child remain in foster home care, with visits by both parents.
    (Ibid.) At the hearing, the juvenile court sustained the petition
    and placed the child with her father. (Ibid.)
    On appeal, the mother argued the juvenile court “erred in
    failing to apply the notice and other procedural requirements of
    the ICWA.” (In re Jennifer A., supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 698.)
    In response, the social services agency argued its failure to
    comply with ICWA’s notice requirements was harmless. (Id. at p.
    699.) Specifically, it argued ICWA did not apply because, among
    other reasons, the juvenile court ultimately did not place the
    child in foster care, and instead placed her with her father. (Ibid.)
    The Court of Appeal disagreed with the agency, explaining
    that its “argument ignores the fact that the issue of possible
    foster placement was squarely before the juvenile court[,]” and
    improperly “fixate[d] on the result of the proceedings, i.e., the
    20
    order that [the child] be placed in the custody of her father,
    rather than on the possibility that the [juvenile] court could have
    ordered continued foster home care.” (In re Jennifer A., supra,
    103 Cal.App.4th at p. 700.) Because the child “was temporarily
    placed in a foster home and [the agency] was seeking to have the
    temporary placement continue[,]” and the child “had been
    removed from her custodial parent . . . who could not have [the
    child] returned to her upon demand[,]” the Court of Appeal
    concluded the dispositional hearing was an “involuntary
    proceeding[ ]” within the meaning of Title 25 United States Code
    section 1912(a), to which ICWA applied. (Id. at pp. 700-701.)
    Here, as in In re Jennifer A., G.D. was detained from
    mother, his custodial parent, and placed in foster care with his
    maternal grandmother pending the petition’s adjudication.
    Mother could not have G.D. returned to her on demand.
    Subsequently, in each of its reports leading up to the
    dispositional hearing, the Department consistently recommended
    that G.D. remain in his foster care placement. At the
    dispositional hearing, the juvenile court found that although the
    Department had yet to receive responses to the ICWA-030 forms
    sent to Navajo Nation and Jicarilla Apache Nation, no further
    analysis into its compliance with ICWA was needed because G.D.
    had been placed with mother. In so doing, the court “fixat[ed] on
    the result of the proceedings, i.e., the order that [G.D.] be placed
    in the custody of [mother], rather than on the possibility that [it]
    could have ordered continued foster home care[ ]” to, in effect,
    conclude ICWA did not apply. (In re Jennifer A., supra, 103
    Cal.App.4th at p. 700.) This was error. (See id. at pp. 700-701.)
    In sum, we conclude the juvenile court erred to the extent it
    found: (1) the Department satisfied its duties of inquiry and
    21
    notice and, based thereon, concluded ICWA did not apply; and (2)
    no further analysis into ICWA’s applicability was necessary
    because G.D. was placed in the home of a parent. Accordingly,
    those findings are vacated. On remand, the juvenile court should
    conduct further proceedings as needed to ensure ICWA
    compliance and ascertain the statute’s applicability in this case.
    DISPOSITION
    The jurisdictional and dispositional orders are reversed.
    The juvenile court’s ICWA findings are vacated. The case is
    remanded to the juvenile court for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    CURREY, J.
    We concur:
    MANELLA, P.J.
    COLLINS, J.
    22
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B311108

Filed Date: 12/8/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/8/2021