In re Marcus S. CA2/7 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 1/23/14 In re Marcus S. CA2/7
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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(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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    In re MARCUS S., et al., Persons Coming                              B249893
    Under the Juvenile Court Law.
    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. CK76222)
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
    FAMILY SERVICES,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    TIERRA M.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Robert S.
    Draper, Judge. Affirmed.
    M. Elizabeth Handy, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    John F. Krattli, County Counsel, James M. Owens, Assistant County Counsel, and
    William D Thetford, Principal Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    _____________________
    INTRODUCTION
    Tierra M.’s two children, Marcus S. and T.S., were declared dependents of the
    court pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision (b).1 After
    several years, the juvenile court terminated Tierra M.’s parental rights and selected
    adoption as the children’s permanent plan. Tierra M. appeals the order, arguing that the
    court erred by failing to apply the beneficial parental relationship exception to adoption
    set forth in section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i). We affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Initial Referral and Detention
    1. Events preceding the filing of the section 300 petition
    Tierra M. (mother) and M.S. (father) are the parents of two children: Marcus S.,
    born in May of 2007, and T.S., born in March of 2008. Shortly after T.S. was born, the
    Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DFCS) received a
    referral alleging “general neglect” by mother. The caller reported mother had tested
    positive for marijuana immediately after giving birth to T.S.
    During an interview regarding the referral, mother told DCFS she had stopped
    smoking marijuana when she discovered she was pregnant with T.S. Mother admitted,
    however, that she had taken a “charge” of marijuana–which she described as “when
    someone blows smoke into another person’s mouth”–one week before T.S. was born.
    Mother also admitted that, prior to her pregnancy, she smoked marijuana whenever she
    “came across it.” Father informed DCFS he had been smoking marijuana since the age of
    16, but did not believe he was dependent on the drug. Father stated that he had never
    smoked marijuana in the presence of his children and would “quit smoking today if it
    meant him keeping [them].”
    Mother and father agreed to participate in voluntary family maintenance services
    that included substance abuse treatment, random drug testing and parenting education. In
    1       Unless otherwise noted, all further statutory citations are to the Welfare and
    Institutions Code.
    2
    June of 2008, however, mother was terminated from her substance abuse program for
    “non-compliance”; father was terminated from his substance abuse program one month
    later. Between May and August of 2008, mother failed to report for six drug tests and
    tested positive for marijuana twice; during the same time period, father failed to report
    for five drug tests and tested positive for marijuana three times.
    In August of 2008, DCFS scheduled a child safety conference to address the
    parents’ failure to comply with their voluntary case plan. Father did not attend the
    meeting; mother agreed to voluntary placement of the children and reaffirmed her
    commitment to follow the case plan. Following the safety conference, mother enrolled in
    a new substance abuse program, but tested positive for marijuana in September and
    December.
    In November of 2008, mother was hospitalized “because she attempted to commit
    suicide by putting a knife through her neck.” According to medical staff, mother stated
    that she wanted to shoot herself and appeared to be suffering from borderline personality
    disorder. During an interview at the hospital, mother told DCFS she was depressed
    because her children had been taken away and because she had been arguing with father.
    2. DCFS’s section 300 petition
    On February 10, 2009, DCFS filed a petition alleging that Marcus S., then one
    year and ten months old, and his female sibling T.S., then one year old, came within the
    jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to section 300, subdivision (b). The petition
    listed three allegations under subdivision (b): (1) mother’s marijuana abuse interfered
    with her ability to care for her children and placed them at substantial risk of harm; (2)
    father’s marijuana abuse interfered with his ability to care for the children and placed
    them at substantial risk of harm; and (3) mother suffered from mental and emotional
    problems that interfered with her ability to care for the children and placed them at
    substantial risk of harm.
    In support of the petition, DCFS filed a report summarizing its investigation of the
    initial referral and the parents’ subsequent failure to comply with their voluntary case
    plan. DCFS asserted that although it had provided the parents with voluntary services
    3
    that were intended “to eliminate the need for the children’s removal from the home,” the
    services had “not [been] effective.” DCFS further asserted that the children faced a “very
    high risk” of harm if left in the parents’ custody.
    At the detention hearing, the court ruled DCFS had provided prima facie evidence
    that both children were persons described in section 300, subdivision (b) and that there
    were no reasonable means to protect them without removal. The court set the matter for
    a contested jurisdictional and dispositional hearing on March 18, 2009.
    B. Jurisdictional and Dispositional Orders
    On March 6, 2009, DCFS filed a “Jurisdiction/Disposition Report.” On March 3,
    2009, father informed DCFS he had used marijuana for the “last five years to help with
    . . . [chronic] headaches” that began after he was shot in the head during a drive-by
    shooting. Father also told DCFS he knew mother had smoked marijuana while pregnant
    with T.S.
    Father reported that mother began living with him at his parents’ house when she
    was 16 years old. In 2008, father and mother were “kicked . . . out of [the] house” and
    began living “from motel to motel.” Father stated that although he was currently living
    with mother in a one bedroom apartment, their unstable living situation made it difficult
    to “attend . . . drug treatment classes and submit to random drug testing.” Father reported
    that he had never been employed, but received approximately $900 a month in
    “Supplemental Security Income.”
    Father also told DCFS that, in November of 2008, he had transported mother to a
    hospital after she “tried to cut her wrist.” According to father, mother had remained
    hospitalized for one week and was diagnosed with depression and borderline personality
    disorder. Although mother was given medications while in the hospital, she was unable
    to refill her prescriptions. Father stated that, since stopping the medications, mother had
    been “okay” and “had [made] no threats of suicide or homicide.”
    Mother informed DCFS she had been residing with father in various different
    motels, which made it difficult to attend her substance abuse program or appear for her
    4
    drug tests. Mother stated that she had started smoking marijuana “on and off” when she
    was 12 or 13 years old, but eventually “stopped [taking the drug] on her own.” She
    began smoking marijuana again eight days before T.S. was born, and then quit several
    months later. Mother was aware father smoked marijuana, but was not sure how
    frequently he used the drug or when he began to use it.
    When asked about her hospitalization, mother stated that she had attempted
    “suicide by trying to cut [her] wrists.” Mother said she attempted suicide because she
    was depressed about having her children taken away and being in the “system all [her]
    life.” Mother stated that hospital personnel had diagnosed her with depression and
    borderline personality disorder. Following her release from the hospital, mother started
    seeing a physician at the Long Beach Mental Health Center.
    The report stated that Marcus S. and T.S. had recently been placed with a new
    foster parent, Jacqueline Perkins. According to DCFS, the children appeared to be
    developing at an age appropriate level and adjusting well to their new placement. Perkins
    informed DCFS that the parents had visited the children at a McDonalds in early March
    and “acted appropriately” throughout the visit.
    In its assessment and evaluation, DCFS recommended that, based on the parents’
    ongoing substance abuse issues and mother’s failure to adequately address her mental
    health problems, the court should: (1) declare the children dependents of the court; (2)
    maintain the children’s placement with Perkins; and (3) provide reunification services to
    both parents.
    The court sustained the petition, declared the children dependents and approved a
    disposition plan that required both parents to attend drug rehabilitation with random drug
    testing and required mother to attend individual counseling. The court also provided both
    parents with monitored visitation. A six-month review hearing was scheduled for
    September 15, 2009. (See § 366.21, subd. (e).)
    5
    C. Interim Status Hearings
    1. Section 366.21, subdivision (e) six-month review hearing
    On September 14, 2009, DCFS provided a status report for the six-month review
    hearing. (See § 366.21, subd. (e).) Perkins informed DCFS that mother had maintained a
    regular visitation schedule with the children throughout the six-month review period.
    Perkins normally brought the children to mother’s home for two unmonitored visits per
    week, with each visit lasting up to four hours. Mother also called Perkins regularly to
    check on the children’s well-being. Perkins believed mother spent “quality time” with
    the children, who were “very happy during her visits.” Mother told DCFS the visits had
    “gone well” and that she was “happy to be bonding with her children.” Despite the
    apparent success of the visits, DCFS had elected not to permit overnight visits because
    mother had failed to enroll in mental health counseling.
    Perkins told DCFS that both children were in “good health,” had showed
    substantial “developmental progress” and remained “active and playful with other foster
    children in her home.” DCFS believed the children were continuing to “adjust[] well in
    their current placement” and that Perkins had provided them a “stable home
    environment.”
    DCFS also reported on the parents’ efforts to comply with their court-ordered
    services. Between January and April of 2009, mother had completed four months of
    substance abuse counseling and provided 10 negative drug tests. Over the next four
    months, however, she had failed to appear for eight drug tests and had provided a positive
    test for alcohol. Mother also failed to comply with her mental health counseling
    obligations. In June of 2009, mother told her therapist she “did not feel the need to attend
    court order counseling [sic]” and repeatedly failed to return DCFS’s messages regarding
    her counseling requirements. When mother finally contacted DCFS in September of
    2009, she stated that she had not enrolled in counseling because she had been searching
    for employment. Mother also said she had been unable to remain in contact with DCFS
    because she did not have a telephone and had recently been evicted from her apartment.
    6
    Father had enrolled in a drug treatment program in April of 2009, but was
    terminated for non-attendance. He had tested positive for marijuana in February, March
    and April of 2008, and had missed tests in March, June, July and September. According
    to DCFS, father appeared to be “unmotivated in . . . . attending a substance abuse
    treatment program, or submitting to drug testing as ordered by the court.”
    In its assessment and evaluation, DCFS stated that while mother’s “unmonitored
    visits with her children ha[d] gone well,” she “continue[d] to minimize the seriousness of
    her [mental] condition.” Father, on the other hand, had failed to comply with his drug
    rehabilitation requirements and had not provided a drug test in several months.
    In October of 2009, DCFS filed a supplemental report stating that mother had
    started to attend individual counseling and was not experiencing any suicidal thoughts or
    depression. Therapist Iris Leary recommended that mother attend weekly sessions to
    address “anxiety, depression and lack of coping skills.” Leary stated that although
    mother had been cooperative during her counseling sessions, she had not attended a
    session in the last three weeks. Leary believed these absences were caused, in part, by
    mother’s “housing situation.” When DCFS asked mother why she stopped attending the
    counseling sessions, she stated “there was no reason” and that she “just ha[dn]’t been
    going.’” Mother also failed to appear for a drug test on October 8, 2009. She had
    continued, however, to have unmonitored visits with her children twice a week.
    At the six-month review hearing, the court ordered DCFS to allow mother
    overnight, unmonitored visits as soon as she completed two additional individual
    counseling sessions and provided one additional clean drug test. The court left all other
    orders in place and set the 12-month permanency hearing date for March 16, 2010. (See
    § 366.21, subd. (f).)
    2. Section 366.21, subdivision (f) 12-month permanency hearing
    On March 16, 2010, DCFS provided a status review report for the 12-month
    permanency hearing. (See § 366.21, subd. (f).) The report indicated mother had
    continued to have unmonitored visits with her children twice a week and “maintain[ed]
    phone calls regularly with [the caretaker] to check for the children’s well being.” Perkins
    7
    told DCFS the children were “always happy to go with mother” and that she believed the
    children were safe in mother’s care. Father, however, had stopped visiting the children.
    DCFS reported father was also not in compliance with his case plan and had stopped
    communicating with the Department.
    Mother told DCFS she looked forward to seeing her children at every visit and
    described them as her “joy.” Although mother felt “blessed to [Perkins],” she did not
    want her children to be adopted. Mother stated that “reunifying [was] essential to her”
    and that she would “try her best” to regain custody of both children. When DCFS raised
    the possibility of unmonitored overnight visits, mother stated she did not have a
    permanent residence and was currently “sleep[ing] in different places.” DCFS reported it
    had elected not to “liberalize[] to overnight weekend visits” based, in part, on mother’s
    on-going failure to appear at her scheduled drug tests.
    According to DCFS, the children exhibited a strong attachment toward Perkins
    and were developing appropriately. Marcus S., then almost three years old, was able to
    feed himself, clothe himself and “understand[] most sentences.” T.S., then about two
    years old, was able to walk with good balance and communicate her needs.
    At the 12-month review hearing, the court terminated reunification services as to
    father, ordered continued reunification services for mother and set the matter for an 18-
    month permanency review hearing.
    3. Section 366.22 18-month permanency review hearing
    On August 9, 2010, DCFS submitted a status report for the 18-month permanency
    hearing. (See §§ 366.21, subd. (g); 366.22.) DCFS reported that it had lost contact with
    mother and was unsure of her current whereabouts. Perkins informed the Department
    that mother was not visiting or calling the children as frequently as she had in the past.
    According to Perkins, mother had not spoken to or visited the children in over a month.
    The children, however, continued to thrive and develop at an age appropriate level.
    DCFS believed that Perkins was “stimulat[ing] them educationally” and meeting all of
    their needs.
    8
    In an interim report filed on October 7, 2010, DCFS stated that mother had not
    contacted the Department in two months and had not provided a current address or phone
    number. Perkins, however, reported that mother had begun visiting the children again.
    The children continued to “thrive” in Perkins’s care.
    In another interim report filed on December 15, 2010, DCFS stated that mother
    had still not contacted the Department, nor had she provided any updated contact
    information. Perkins reported that mother continued to visit the children during the
    weekends and that the children seemed to enjoy their visits.
    DCFS recommended that, in light of mother’s failure to maintain contact with the
    Department, the court should terminate her reunification services and leave the children
    in the custody of Perkins. After holding a hearing (which mother failed to attend), the
    court terminated mother’s reunification services and scheduled a section 366.26
    permanency plan hearing.
    D. Section 366.26 Permanency Plan Hearings
    On April 13, 2011, DCFS submitted a section 366.26 report stating that the
    children were “continuing to thrive” in Perkins’s care. Perkins told DCFS that, despite
    the termination of her reunification services, mother had increased her visits. Perkins
    explained that mother and father had joined Perkins’s church in February of 2011 and
    were visiting with the children after church services. Perkins was “joyous of the parents’
    efforts to maintain a relationship” with their children and had noticed a significant change
    in their motivation. Perkins told DCFS she was interested in serving as the children’s
    legal guardian and wanted the parents to have an opportunity to reunify at a later date.
    Perkins said she did not want to adopt the children because she was worried that she
    would become “overwhelmed.”
    In a supplemental report filed in June of 2011, Perkins stated that mother still did
    not have a “stable place for the children to visit her, so mother continues to see the
    children at church.” During their visits, the children spent several hours “play[ing]” with
    their mother. Perkins stated that she had no concerns about leaving the children with
    9
    mother and that they were always “very happy to go with [her].” As with all prior
    reports, DCFS indicated that the children continued to thrive in Perkins’s care.
    In February of 2012, DCFS filed a report recommending that the court
    permanently place the children with Perkins, who had agreed to adopt them. DCFS
    stated that the children were happy in their current placement and had developed a “good
    relationship with each other and their caregiver.” Perkins continued to meet all of the
    children’s needs and informed DCFS that “caring for the children ha[d] been a joy.”
    DCFS also reported that, in the last month and a half, mother had only visited the
    children twice. Perkins stated that the visits had occurred at church, where mother played
    with the children. In a report filed in June of 2012, however, DCFS reported mother had
    resumed visiting the children twice a week after church. Mother normally took the
    children to a nearby park, played with them and braided their hair.
    E. Mother’s section 388 petition and permanency planning
    1. Section 388 petition and DCFS response
    In October of 2012, mother filed a section 388 petition requesting that the court
    terminate jurisdiction over the children and return them to her care, or, alternatively,
    renew her reunification services. In support of her request, mother presented evidence
    she had completed a substance abuse program and had addressed her depression through
    therapy. Mother acknowledged, however, that her housing situation had not improved.
    DCFS recommended that the court deny the section 388 petition. DCFS reported
    that Marcus S., then four-and-a-half years old, had told a DCFS social worker that he did
    not want to live with his mother and preferred to continue living with Perkins. T.S., then
    three-and-a-half years old, stated that although she enjoyed visiting with her mother, she
    wanted to continue living with Perkins because she was “nice” and took good care of T.S.
    and her brother.
    DCFS reported that when the children were asked why they enjoyed their visits
    with mother, they both stated that she bought them things. Perkins told DCFS she did not
    have any problem with the mother visiting the children, but did not believe mother was
    10
    ready to care for them. DCFS also noted that mother had not contacted the Department
    for almost two years.
    In May of 2013, mother withdrew her section 388 petition and the court
    proceeded with a contested section 366.26 permanency plan hearing.
    2. The contested section 366.26 permanency plan hearing
    At the section 366.26 permanency plan hearing, mother told the court she thought
    it would be “insane to take [the children] out of [Perkins’] household,” but asserted that
    she did not want to give up her parental rights. Mother explained that although her
    financial condition had made it difficult to find stable housing, she intended to get “on
    [her] feet” and find “a place to stay.”
    Perkins testified that Marcus S. and T.S. had been in her care for approximately
    four-and-a-half years and that she wanted to adopt them. Perkins stated that mother had
    been visiting the children every Sunday after church service for two to four hours; the
    visits normally occurred inside the church or at a nearby restaurant. The number and
    duration of the visits had remained consistent over the last six months. In addition to the
    visits, mother spoke with the children on the phone three times a week. Perkins believed
    that the children had a “very close” relationship with their mother; they both called her
    “mommy” and frequently gave her hugs and kisses. Perkins also testified that the
    children respected their mother and complied with her directives.
    When asked why she wanted to adopt the children, Perkins stated that she had
    been caring for the children for a significant period of time and felt that she “was a
    mother figure to them.” She further stated, however, that she did not believe it would be
    in their best interests to terminate mother’s parental rights. Perkins explained she had
    gone “back and forth” on the question of adoption because she had been “pressured” by
    all the “different attorneys.” When asked to clarify her comments, Perkins said she had
    felt pressure two years earlier after an “adoption worker” told her the children would be
    removed from her home and placed elsewhere if she refused to adopt them. Perkins
    explained that those statements had “scared” her “because [she and the children] have a
    bond.” Perkins further stated that mother “was still a part of their life, and because
    11
    [mother] was going through so much at the time . . . [Perkins had] just wanted to provide
    love and care to the kids and a home for the kids . . . .” Perkins also testified that,
    following the adoption, she intended to allow mother to continue visiting the children and
    wanted mother to have the opportunity to regain custody of her children.
    Although Marcus S. was called to testify at the hearing, the parties and the court
    agreed he was not qualified to do so. The court, however, permitted the attorneys to ask
    him a limited number of questions. When Marcus S. was asked whether he wanted
    Perkins to be his mommy, he shook his head to the right and left; when asked whether he
    wanted his “mommy to stay his mommy,” he said “yes.”
    DCFS argued that adoption by Perkins was the appropriate permanent plan, and
    that mother had failed to establish the beneficial parental relationship because “the[]
    children ha[d] been with Perkins their whole life.” DCFS also contended the evidence
    showed Perkins had “provided a caring and loving home for them and . . . would like to
    continue that.”
    Mother, however, argued that she had established the beneficial parental
    relationship exception. In support, mother relied on Perkins’s statement that she did not
    believe termination of mother’s parental rights was in the best interests of the children.
    According to mother, Perkins had also made clear that legal guardianship would be in the
    best interests of the children because it would enable mother to “get back on her feet.”
    On May 13, 2013, the court ruled that DCFS had presented clear and convincing
    evidence that the children were likely to be adopted by Perkins. The court noted that the
    “only statutory exception [to adoption] asserted by Mother” was the beneficial parental
    relationship exception set forth in section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i). The court
    found, however, that mother had failed to demonstrate the exception applied: “Here the
    evidence establishes and the Court finds that there will be no interference, substantial or
    otherwise, with the relationship between Mother and the Children. Mother initially
    sporadically and then more frequently has visited with the Children on Sundays, with
    Perkins amicably arranging and participating in those visits. The court finds based on
    Perkins’ testimony that these visits will continue uninterrupted after adoption is finalized.
    12
    In any event, the Court finds, having observed the children, Mother and Perkins, that the
    best interests of the children in finding permanency in their lives through adoption clearly
    outweighs any interest Mother might have in restricting that permanency by a plan of
    legal guardianship and that there would be no benefit to the children by adopting a plan
    of legal guardianship rather than adoption.”
    The mother appealed the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights and
    selecting adoption as the permanent plan.
    DISCUSSION
    The sole issue raised in this appeal is whether the trial court erred in ruling that
    mother failed to establish the beneficial parental relationship exception. (See § 366.26,
    subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).)
    A. Summary of Relevant Law and Standard of Review
    “‘Once reunification services are ordered terminated, the focus shifts to the needs
    of the child for permanency and stability.’ [Citation.] ‘A section 366.26 hearing . . . is a
    hearing specifically designed to select and implement a permanent plan for the child.’
    [Citation.] It is designed to protect children’s ‘compelling rights . . . to have a placement
    that is stable, permanent, and that allows the caretaker to make a full emotional
    commitment to the child.’ [Citation.]” (In re Celine R. (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 45
    , 52-53
    (Celine R.).)
    At the section 366.26 stage of a dependency proceeding, adoption is the preferred
    choice. (Celine 
    R., supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 49; § 366.26, subds. (b) & (c).) “If it is likely
    the child will be adopted, the court must choose that option – and as a result terminate the
    natural parents’ parental right – unless it ‘finds a compelling reason for determining that
    termination would be detrimental to the child due to one or more’ of [several] specified
    [statutory] circumstances.’ [Citation.]” (Celine 
    R., supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 49; § 366.26,
    subd. (c)(1)(B).) These “specified statutory circumstances – actually, exceptions to the
    general rule that the court must choose adoption where possible – ‘must be considered in
    13
    view of the legislative preference for adoption when reunification efforts have failed.’
    [Citation.].” (Celine 
    R., supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 53.)
    Section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i) provides an exception to the adoption
    preference when the court finds that “[t]he parents . . . have maintained regular visitation
    and contact with the child and the child would benefit from continuing the relationship.”
    “The ‘benefit’ prong of the exception requires the parent to . . . ‘show that they occupy “a
    parental role” in the child’s life.’ [Citations.] The relationship that gives rise to this
    exception to the statutory preference for adoption ‘characteristically aris[es] from day-to-
    day interaction, companionship and shared experiences. Day-to-day contact is not
    necessarily required, although it is typical in a parent-child relationship.’ [Citation].
    Moreover, ‘[b]ecause a section 366.26 hearing occurs only after the court has repeatedly
    found the parent unable to meet the child’s needs, it is only in an extraordinary case that
    preservation of the parent’s rights will prevail over the Legislature’s preference for
    adoptive placement.”” (In re K.P. (2012) 
    203 Cal. App. 4th 614
    , 621 (K.P.).)
    After a court has rejected a parent’s effort to establish the exception, two different
    standards of review apply on appeal. (See 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at pp. 621-622;
    In re Bailey J. (2010) 
    189 Cal. App. 4th 1308
    , 1314 (Bailey J.).) Since the parent must
    first show the existence of a beneficial parental relationship, which is a factual issue, we
    uphold a court’s express or implied finding that there is no beneficial parental
    relationship if supported by substantial evidence. (See 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 621.; Bailey 
    J., supra
    , 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 1314.) “[A] challenge to a juvenile
    court’s finding that there is no beneficial relationship amounts to a contention that the
    ‘undisputed facts lead to only one conclusion.’” [Citation.] (Bailey 
    J., supra
    , 189
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1314.) Thus, “[u]nless the undisputed facts established the existence of
    a beneficial parental or sibling relationship, a substantial evidence challenge to this
    component of the juvenile court’s determination cannot succeed.” (Ibid.)
    The second requirement for the exception is that the beneficial parental
    relationship constitute a “compelling reason for determining that termination would be
    detrimental.” (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B); 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 622.)
    14
    Although grounded in the facts, the court’s determination on this issue is a
    “‘quintessentially’ discretionary decision, which calls for the juvenile court to determine
    the importance of the relationship in terms of the detrimental impact that its severance
    can be expected to have on the child and to weigh that against the benefit to the child of
    adoption. [Citation.] Because this component of the juvenile court’s decision is
    discretionary, the abuse of discretion standard of review applies.” (Bailey 
    J., supra
    , 189
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1315; 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 622.)
    B. The Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Finding That the Benefits of
    Adoption Outweighed Any Detrimental Impacts that Might Result from
    Severance of the Parental Relationship
    The trial court’s order does not indicate whether mother established the existence
    of a beneficial parental relationship.2 We will therefore assume mother successfully
    demonstrated a parental relationship and consider only whether the court abused its
    discretion in concluding the relationship was “qualitatively insufficient to constitute a
    compelling reason for determining that termination of [her] parental rights would be
    detrimental to [the children].” (
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 622; see also Bailey 
    J., supra
    , 189 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1316-1317.) In making this determination, the court was
    required to weigh the detrimental impact the children would suffer from severing the
    parental relationship against the benefits they would enjoy through their adoption. (In re
    C.F. (2011) 
    193 Cal. App. 4th 549
    , 557 [exception applies only if “the benefits of
    continuing the parental relationship outweighed the benefits of permanent placement”].)
    Numerous factors support the court’s decision to terminate mother’s parental
    rights. First, both children were removed from mother at a very young age and remained
    in Perkins’s care for a substantial portion of their lives. (See In re Angel B. (2002) 
    97 Cal. App. 4th 454
    , 467 (Angel B.) [when assessing the parental relationship exception,
    2      The trial court’s order states only that the evidence presented at the hearing
    showed “the best interests of the children in finding permanency in their lives through
    adoption clearly outweigh[ed]” any detrimental impacts the children might suffer from
    severing the parental relationship.
    15
    courts may consider “the age of the child” and “the portion of the child’s life spent in the
    parent’s custody”]; 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 622 [denial of exception supported,
    in part, by young age of defendant at time of removal].) Marcus S. was only 15 months
    old when he was removed from mother’s custody; T.S. was only five months old. Prior
    to the termination of mother’s parental rights, the children had been in Perkins’s care for
    more than four years. Thus, Marcus. S. had spent almost 80 percent of his life outside of
    mother’s custody, while T.S. had spent almost 90 percent of her life outside mother’s
    custody.
    Second, during the four year detention period, mother did not maintain day-to-day
    interactions with her children. (See 
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 621 [although “not
    necessarily required” to establish the exception, “‘[d]ay-to-day contact is . . . typical”].)
    Mother generally visited the children once or twice per week. At times, however, her
    visits were more sporadic. During a two month period in 2010, she did not have any
    visits with the children; during a six week period in early 2012, she only visited the
    children twice. Moreover, her visits never progressed to overnight status.
    Third, although the record indicates mother shared a positive relationship with her
    children, there is no evidence that it “transcend[ed] the kind of relationship the child[ren]
    would enjoy with another relative or family friend.” (In re Jeremy S. (2001) 
    89 Cal. App. 4th 514
    , 523 [to establish the exception, “the child’s relationship must transcend
    the kind of relationship the child would enjoy with another relative or family friend”]
    [disapproved on other grounds in In re Zeth S. (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 396
    , 413].) During her
    visits, mother played with the children, bought them food and braided their hair; the
    children gave mother hugs and kisses, called her “mommy” and listened to her directives.
    However, the mere fact that mother “maintained a relationship that may [have]
    benefit[ted] the child[ren] to some degree” (In re Aaliyah R. (2006) 
    136 Cal. App. 4th 437
    ,
    449) is “simply not enough to outweigh the sense of security and belonging an adoptive
    home would provide.” (In re Helen W. (2007) 
    150 Cal. App. 4th 71
    , 81 [evidence that
    mother “loved her children . . .[], she fed and changed them during visits, and sometimes
    they would call her ‘Mom[]’ . . . [was] simply not enough to outweigh the sense of
    16
    security and belonging an adoptive home would provide”].) The record makes clear that,
    for the significant majority of the children’s lives, Perkins has served as the children’s
    “de facto parent, and she is the person who has provided for [their] ‘physical care,
    nourishment, comfort, affection and stimulation.’ [Citation.]” 
    (Bailey, supra
    , 189
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1316.)
    Fourth, mother has pointed to no evidence indicating that the child “has any
    particular needs that can be met by [m]other but not by the [adoptive parents].”
    (Angel 
    B., supra
    , 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 467 [mother’s failure to identify any needs that
    could not be met by adoptive parents supported juvenile court’s finding that the parental
    relationship exception did not apply].) During the four year detention period, DCFS
    consistently reported that Perkins was meeting all of the children’s needs and providing
    them with a “stable,” “nurturing home.” DCFS also reported that the children were
    developing appropriately, appeared healthy and exhibited a strong attachment to Perkins,
    who felt that she had become their “mother figure.”
    Finally, mother has cited no evidence suggesting that severing the children’s
    relationship with her would have a significant, detrimental impact on their well-being.
    DCFS’s reports do not indicate that the children had difficulty separating from mother at
    the end of their visits; nor do the reports show that the children experienced hardship or
    distress during the extended time periods when mother’s visits stopped or became more
    sporadic. The record also contains no bonding study or expert evidence suggesting that
    the children might suffer from a severance of the relationship.
    In sum, while it may be inferred from the record that mother and children enjoyed
    their visits together, “we cannot say the that the [juvenile] court abused its discretion
    when it concluded that any detrimental impact from severance of the [parental]
    relationship . . . was outweighed by the benefits to [the children] that would come from
    adoption.” (
    K.P., supra
    , 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 623; see also In re Autumn H. (1994) 
    27 Cal. App. 4th 567
    , 575 [exception applies only if the severance of the parent-child
    relationship would “deprive the child of a substantial, positive emotional attachment such
    that the child would be greatly harmed”].)
    17
    Mother, however, argues that we must nonetheless reverse the juvenile court’s
    ruling on the beneficial parental relationship exception because it was based on improper
    criteria. Specifically, mother asserts that the court chose not to apply the exception based
    on Perkins’s assurances that, following the adoption, she would continue to allow mother
    to visit the children.
    Two prior decisions–In re C.B. (2010) 
    190 Cal. App. 4th 102
    (C.B.) and In re S.B.
    (2008) 
    164 Cal. App. 4th 289
    (S.B.)–have held that a juvenile court may not deny the
    beneficial parental exception based solely on the “the prospective adoptive parents’
    willingness to allow the children to have continued contact with mother.” (C.
    B., supra
    ,
    190 Cal.App.4th at p. 128; S.
    B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 300 [“We do not believe a
    parent should be deprived of a legal relationship with his or her child on the basis of an
    unenforceable promise of future visitation by the child’s prospective adoptive parents”].)
    As explained in C.B.: “[I]f a juvenile court determines that a parent has [established a
    beneficial parental relationship] and that the benefit from continuing that parent-child
    relationship . . . ‘promotes the well-being of the child to such a degree as to outweigh’ the
    benefit that child would gain from the stability and permanency of adoption [citation],
    then the parent-child relationship exception is established. In those circumstances, the
    court cannot nevertheless terminate parental rights based upon an unenforceable
    expectation that the prospective adoptive parents will voluntarily permit future contact
    between the child and a biological parent, even if substantial evidence supports that
    expectation.” (C.
    B., supra
    , 190 Cal.App.4th at pp. 128-129.)
    In this case, however, the trial court never found that the benefits the children
    would derive from maintaining their relationship with mother outweighed the benefits
    they would enjoy from adoption. Indeed, the court found just the opposite. Nor did the
    court base its decision to terminate parental rights on Perkins’s assurances that she would
    permit visits in the future. Although the court’s order observed that mother’s relationship
    with her children was likely to continue given Perkins’s assurances she would allow
    visits after adoption, the very next sentence clarified that denial of the exception was not
    based on this factor: “In any event, the Court finds, having observed the children, Mother
    18
    and Perkins, that the best interests of the children in finding permanency in their lives
    through adoption clearly outweighs any interest Mother might have [in preserving her
    parental rights].” C.
    B., supra
    , 
    190 Cal. App. 4th 102
    and S.
    B., supra
    , 
    164 Cal. App. 4th 289
    are therefore inapplicable.
    DISPOSITION
    The juvenile court’s orders are affirmed.
    ZELON, J.
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    WOODS, J.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B249893

Filed Date: 1/23/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021