Orange County Social Services Agency v. M.C. , 226 Cal. App. 4th 503 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • Filed 5/6/14; pub. order 5/22/14 (see end of opn.)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    In re J.C., a Person Coming Under the
    Juvenile Court Law.
    ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES
    AGENCY,
    G049095
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Super. Ct. No. DP021151)
    v.
    OPINION
    M.C.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Jacki C.
    Brown, Judge. Affirmed.
    Boxer McLaughlin and Robert McLaughlin, under appointment by the
    Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Nicholas S. Chrisos, County Counsel, Karen L. Christensen and Aurelio
    Torre, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    No appearance for the Minor.
    *    *   *
    J.C.’s mother M.C. (Mother) appeals from the termination of her parental
    rights.1 On appeal, she maintains the court erred in denying her Welfare and Institutions
    Code section 388 modification petition (hereafter 388 petition)2 and should have applied
    the “parental benefit exception” to adoption. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).) We conclude
    both contentions lack merit and we affirm the orders.
    I
    A. Detention
    On April 25, 2011, Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) placed a
    hospital hold on J.C. following her birth based on allegations of general neglect. Several
    months earlier, in February 2011, Mother’s three other children were declared dependent
    children of the juvenile court pursuant to section 300, subdivision (b). The juvenile court
    detained J.C. based on evidence Mother had made inadequate progress in her open family
    reunification case plan with respect to J.C.’s siblings. Mother’s substance abuse was
    unresolved, she inconsistently drug tested, she received sporadic prenatal care, and she
    did not have provisions to care for her newborn.
    In its detention report, SSA provided information about several prior child
    abuse referrals. The first child abuse referral dated back to March 2007 for general
    neglect due to Mother’s drug addiction. The allegations were deemed “unfounded” after
    further investigation. However, the second child abuse referral, dated October 2008 for
    general neglect, was substantiated. Mother had missed numerous medical appointments
    1              J.C.’s father R.M. (Father) is not a party to this appeal.
    2              All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
    2
    and echocardiograms scheduled for her then two-year-old daughter, G.C., who was born
    with a hole in her heart (a condition called Patent Ductus Arteriosus). Mother received
    family maintenance collaborative services from October 22, 2008 to April 22, 2009,
    when services ended because Mother moved to San Bernardino County.
    There was a third child abuse referral, dated April 1, 2009, alleging general
    neglect due to Mother’s drug addiction and a dirty home. The allegations were deemed
    unfounded. A child abuse referral in San Bernardino County, dated June 6, 2010, was
    deemed inconclusive after the social worker was unable to locate the family to investigate
    the allegations of child abuse and Mother’s drug use.
    However, on August 18, 2010, a child abuse referral alleging general
    neglect was substantiated. This referral resulted in then two-year old A.C. and seven-
    year-old M.C. being taken into protective custody. The petition in the siblings’ case
    alleged Mother left M.C. and A.C. without provisions, emergency contact information,
    medical information, or information about when she would return. The children’s
    maternal aunt stated Mother dropped off M.C. and A.C. at the apartment she shares with
    maternal grandmother. Mother told maternal aunt she was homeless and unable to care
    for the children. Maternal aunt told the social worker she and maternal grandmother
    were also unable to care for the children and Mother has used methamphetamine for
    several years.
    The petition as to J.C.’s siblings also discussed Mother’s history of
    substance abuse and alleged she had been arrested on February 18, 2008, for possessing a
    controlled substance and paraphernalia. The petition also mentioned the June 6, 2010,
    child abuse referral, alleging Mother was living with her children in an unsafe
    environment; the home had trash, broken windows, and no running water. The petition
    alleged Father had an unresolved substance abuse problem.
    3
    The social worker reported Mother had a brief criminal history that
    included drug-related offenses. Father had an extensive criminal record that included
    robberies, burglaries, carjacking, and multiple drug-related offenses.
    The petition regarding J.C. contained allegations of general neglect based
    on Mother’s lack of adequate progress in her open family reunification case plan
    concerning her other children. Although she had participated in counseling and parenting
    classes, she had yet to address her methamphetamine addiction. She had missed many
    drug tests. She had no tests in January, two tests in February, and one test in March.
    Mother refused to take any responsibility for why the siblings had been taken into
    protective custody and instead blamed the maternal grandmother’s lack of English skills.
    The petition alleged Mother did not have any provisions to care for J.C.
    On April 28, 2011, the juvenile court ordered J.C. detained and gave
    Mother daily monitored three hour visits. J.C. was placed with her maternal aunt,
    Jessica. On June 20, 2011, Mother and Father pled no contest to, and the juvenile court
    sustained, an amended jurisdictional petition detailing Mother’s unresolved drug abuse
    issues, failure to obtain regular prenatal care, and the siblings’ open dependency case.
    The court declared J.C. a dependent and granted both parents reunification services. The
    six-month review hearing was set for December 6, 2011.
    B. J.C.’s First Six Months
    During this review period, Mother made minimal progress in addressing
    her drug addiction. After spending approximately one month in a residential drug
    program (Heritage House North), Mother admitted leaving the program and returned to
    using drugs from May 10 to June 13, 2011. She stayed with her friend, Vanessa. Mother
    then enrolled in and completed Casa Elena’s residential 90-day drug rehabilitation
    treatment program. Upon completion of this program, she again relapsed for over a
    month (September 10 to October 26, 2011), and in October she returned to the Heritage
    House North.
    4
    During this period of turmoil, Mother had sporadic monitored visits with
    J.C. In May, she had five visits, each lasting for three hours. In early June, Mother had
    three visits, each lasting three hours, and after she entered Casa Elena she could not leave
    the program for visits. Jessica brought J.C. to Mother once a week for two hours on
    Sundays in July, August, and September 2011. The caretaker reported Mother acted
    appropriately with the baby and was attentive to J.C.’s basic needs. After leaving Casa
    Elena on September 10, Mother could have visits three times a week for three hours.
    However, Mother only visited J.C. twice in October during her drug relapse. After
    Mother entered Heritage House North, visits resumed to once a week for two hours.
    The social worker recommended in her report filed December 6, 2011, that
    the court terminate reunification services and schedule a permanency hearing (hereafter
    .26 hearing). The social worker opined Mother loved J.C. but she did “not appear to be
    motivated, or willing, to care for a child, of a tender age of [six] months. When [Mother]
    was not in a residential drug treatment program, she demonstrated very little initiative in
    her willingness to want to bond with the child, as her visits with the child were minimal
    to none. More so, the undersigned recognizes [Mother] has had a long pattern of leaving
    her children with others. The undersigned does not anticipate that this pattern will
    change.”
    On December 6, 2011, the juvenile court (Commissioner Jane Shade)
    accepted the parties’ stipulation to continue the six-month review hearing to January 11,
    2012. Mother’s monitored visits were increased to three times per week, each lasting
    three hours. SSA reported Mother’s visits were consistent and “going really well.”
    On the day of the January 11, 2012 hearing, the social worker filed an
    addendum report changing her recommendation to continue reunification services.
    Mother had been sober for 45 days while staying at Heritage House North. She was
    participating in narcotics anonymous (NA) meetings, counseling, and focus groups.
    Mother spent New Year’s Day with all four of her children and Mother reported her
    5
    relationship with other family members had improved. Mother stated she was committed
    to having her children returned to her care and realized she could no longer be in a
    relationship with Father. The social worker explained she changed her recommendation
    and liberalized visits to unmonitored status because of the following: (1) Mother’s
    renewed efforts at addressing her drug addiction; (2) all the professionals spoke highly of
    Mother’s progress in the program; and (3) Mother’s visits with all the children had been
    very good.
    On January 11, 2012, the juvenile court continued reunification services
    and scheduled a 12-month review hearing for June 6, 2012. As we will explain, this
    hearing was continued multiple times and did not conclude until nearly a year later on
    April 4, 2013.
    C. 12-Month Review Hearing Continued for 12 Months (2012-2013)
    By the end of this review period, J.C. was 20 days shy of her second
    birthday. During this lengthy review period, SSA filed a total of 11 reports, each
    containing the same recommendation that the court terminate reunification services and
    schedule a .26 hearing. Over this year-long period, J.C. continued to thrive and become
    more strongly bonded to her primary caregiver, Jessica, who was her maternal aunt.
    Despite SSA’s recommendations and the undisputed evidence of a stable and loving
    parental bond with Jessica, Commissioner Shade continued the 12-month review hearing
    four times before the case was transferred to Judge Jacki C. Brown in October 2012.
    Judge Brown continued the case an additional six months from October 2012 to April 4,
    2013. At the 12-month review hearing, held during the 24th month of these dependency
    proceedings, the court terminated Mother’s services but continued funding for services
    and authorized overnight visits. The court indicated to Mother there was still a chance
    she would regain custody. This proved to be untrue.
    Below is a brief summary of only the facts relevant to the issues presented
    by Mother’s 388 petition and parental benefit exception argument. Mother did not do
    6
    well with her case plan for the first two months of this review period. On February 15,
    2011, Mother was discharged from Heritage House North for petty theft. The social
    worker learned mother was on a walking pass with another resident and they went to a
    store. The resident was arrested for shoplifting and Heritage House North’s staff
    members determined Mother stole toothpaste from the store and “was not truthful.” After
    learning of this incident, the social worker informed Mother her visits with J.C. would
    now be supervised. This meant Mother had enjoyed only one month of unmonitored
    visits during the entire first year of the dependency proceedings.
    For a few weeks in February 2012 Mother resided with her friend Vanessa.
    On February 22, 2012, Jessica reported Mother had been drinking and she was concerned
    about Mother’s coping skills. Jessica stated Mother left her visit with J.C. early to visit a
    sick cousin in the hospital. Several hours later at the hospital, Jessica noticed Mother
    smelled like alcohol and Mother admitted she “drank one” with Father. The social
    worker reduced supervised visitation to once a week.
    On March 5, 2012, Mother enrolled in the Foley House six-month
    residential treatment program. She tested positive for methamphetamines upon intake to
    the program. Mother admitted she was with Father during the prior weekend. Because
    Foley House could not support Mother’s family reunification efforts, she left the program
    on March 16, 2012, and on April 6, 2012, she enrolled in the Woodglen Recovery
    Junction (Woodglen) residential drug program. This turned out to be an excellent
    decision and marks the point in time where Mother began to turn her life around for the
    better. The same month, on April 23, 2012, J.C. celebrated her first birthday.
    After successfully completing the Woodglen program on September 17,
    2012, Mother moved to Collette’s Children’s Home Transitional Living Program for
    single women (Collette’s Home). She found full-time employment, began saving for a
    down payment for her own residence, and took multiple parenting classes. She had clean
    7
    drug tests, attended NA meetings, and developed a support system from staff and friends
    at the Woodglen program.
    SSA’s addendum reports all continued to recommended termination of
    reunification services and for the court to schedule a .26 hearing. SSA’s first report
    prepared for the 12-month review hearing in June 2012 discussed Mother’s multiple
    relapses and concluded her compliance with the case plan requirements to be moderate
    and inconsistent. The social worker reported that after the shoplifting incident Mother
    had monitored visits three times per week for three hours. This was reduced on
    February 22, 2012, after Jessica discovered Mother had been drinking. Thereafter,
    Mother was permitted supervised visits one time per week for three hours.
    The social worker opined Mother loved J.C. but showed “very little
    initiative in her willingness to want to bond” with J.C. The social worker stated Mother
    had a long historical pattern of leaving her children with other people. She stated, “The
    undersigned believes [Mother] is content in knowing that the child is being well cared for
    by the maternal aunt, Jessica . . . and has never voiced that she is opposed to this
    arrangement as a permanent plan. [Mother] acknowledges that she recognizes that the
    child is bonded to [Jessica].”
    In later reports, SSA reported Mother was making great progress with her
    drug rehabilitation efforts and had found full-time employment. The social workers also
    reported on visits between Mother and J.C. From April to the end of July 2012, Mother
    visited J.C. for one hour on Sundays at Woodglen and visits were supervised by Jessica.
    In August, visits were increased to two hours at J.C.’s home and were supervised by
    Jessica. Jessica reported Mother was appropriate during visits and attentive to J.C.’s
    needs. J.C. “goes freely to” [M]other and will hug her. In October 2012, Jessica reported
    the two hour visitation was ample time because “[Mother] appears ready to go towards
    the end of the two hour visit and [J.C.] is usually getting ready for a nap.”
    8
    By November 2012, Mother’s visits were increased to twice a week for two
    hours. Jessica monitored the visits on Fridays, and staff at the Orangewood Children’s
    Home (Orangewood) monitored the visits on Sundays. Jessica reported Mother visited
    consistently but she was sometimes late because she took the bus. Jessica stated Mother
    was attentive to J.C.’s needs but “appears ready to return the child to [Jessica] after two
    hours.” Orangewood staff reported Mother played with J.C., changed her diaper, and
    gave her snacks.
    In November 2012, Mother told the social worker that Collette’s Home
    agreed to give her family housing if her children were returned. Mother stated she would
    be overwhelmed if all four children were returned. She requested overnight visits with
    J.C. and to then have J.C. returned to her care for some time before the other children
    returned. Mother admitted she did not know how she would be able to work, take the
    children to and from school, find day care, attend 12-step meetings, and consistently drug
    test.
    The social worker authorized an additional day of supervised visitation.
    Mother visited J.C. twice a week from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Collette’s Home and
    Sunday mornings at Orangewood. For the two mid-week visits, a social worker
    transported J.C. from her day care to Mother. She reported Mother was attentive to J.C.’s
    needs, was affectionate, played with her, and changed diapers. When J.C. was tired at the
    end of visits, Mother would cuddle, talk and sing to her.
    In January 2013, a different social worker, Stacy Metcalf, was assigned to
    the case. Metcalf visited Jessica and J.C. and determined the child was being well cared
    for. Jessica reported J.C. was a happy and well adjusted toddler. J.C. enjoyed visits with
    Mother and her siblings.
    Metcalf also visited Mother who said she was surprised she had been able
    to maintain her sobriety for seven months, work full time, diligently work on her
    9
    12-steps, and go to NA meetings. Mother stated she recognized some of her triggers and
    had taken proactive steps to avoid a relapse. Metcalf asked Mother about a diluted drug
    test (considered positive by the testing facility MedTox) submitted on December 28,
    2012, and whether she had contact with Father on December 30, 2012. The social worker
    determined Mother’s explanation was not plausible and decided future visits would be
    monitored.
    Jessica stated Mother had an extended visit with J.C. on January 1, 2013,
    that raised some questions about Mother’s ability to care for J.C. on a long-term basis.
    Jessica stated Mother and J.C. went to a relative’s home for a party and to give Mother an
    additional visit. Jessica stated Mother cared for the child for two to three hours, but when
    this time period was over, she “ceased caring for the child.” Jessica said she told Mother
    she was frustrated and concerned Mother did not take advantage of the extra time she had
    with her daughter. Jessica explained that while she was cooking, Mother stopped paying
    attention to J.C. and got “more carried away with her phone.” Jessica stated that while
    she was cooking she had to ask Mother to keep J.C. occupied or get J.C. something to
    drink. Based on Mother’s conduct, Jessica was concerned Mother may not be able to
    care for J.C. for long periods of time.
    In addition, Jessica questioned if Mother had the “common sense to raise a
    child.” Jessica explained Mother left J.C. asleep on the sofa without a blanket, while
    Mother was in a separate room laying on a bed with a blanket and “‘didn’t think to cover
    the child up or take the child in with her and cuddle with her.’” Jessica concluded
    Mother was not ready to have J.C. in her care. She added, “‘I don’t think [she] can cope
    with the baby. She often gets nervous or frustrated when the child cries.’” Jessica added
    that sometimes during visits Mother becomes antsy, anxious, and nervous and gives J.C.
    back to Jessica.
    10
    In February 2013, Mother told the social worker she had investigated day
    care and discovered it cost $200 a week. Mother stated she was going to look for a less
    expensive day care.
    During this one year period, SSA’s reports also detailed J.C.’s relationship
    and strong bond to Jessica. In July 2012 the social worker reported in addendum report
    number 2 that Jessica brought J.C. to visit Mother and her siblings on Sundays at
    Woodglen. J.C. was very quiet when visiting Mother and her siblings, but was usually
    noisy when she was with Jessica. The social worker observed J.C. was comfortable and
    content with Jessica and stayed near Jessica throughout the visit. Jessica was committed
    to adopting J.C. In the September 2014 addendum report (number 3), the social worker
    stated J.C. was healthy and developing on target. She appeared attached to Jessica
    because she climbed on her lap and hugged her without prompting. The following
    month, the social worker stated in her next addendum report (number 4) that J.C. and
    Jessica “appear well attached to each other as demonstrated by their playful interactions
    with each other.” The social worker saw J.C. was easily consoled and comforted by
    Jessica and cried when Jessica left the room. She observed J.C. constantly watched
    Jessica and waited for her reaction after she played a toy piano. Jessica praised and
    clapped her hands. The social worker concluded J.C. was being very well cared for.
    D. The 12-Month Review Hearing—Part I
    On February 6, 2013, Judge Brown held a hearing and admitted nine SSA
    addendum reports. The court heard testimony from Metcalf, Mother, and Betty Medina,
    a program supervisor at Collette’s Home. Metcalf discussed Mother’s diluted drug test
    result in December 2012. Mother told Metcalf the sample was diluted because she could
    not produce a specimen and the staff told her to drink some water and return to try again.
    Metcalf called the MedTox lab and asked if this explanation was plausible. She learned
    the only way to have a dilute test was if Mother had drank two to three gallons of water
    several hours before the test. Metcalf opined Mother was not ready to have the child
    11
    returned to her care. Metcalf testified that during the dependency there had been multiple
    relapses and Mother remained in contact with Father despite knowing he was a trigger for
    her relapses. Metcalf acknowledged Mother had completed the individual counseling
    component of her case plan and was attending her 12-step program and drug testing. She
    agreed Mother was also working full time and had investigated child care options.
    Metcalf noted Mother had not followed through on finding child care and had not talked
    to anybody about this issue in several months.
    In addition, Metcalf stated Mother was not ready to have J.C. returned
    based on comments made by Jessica about Mother’s supervised visits. Specifically, “Her
    frustration level, her ability to meet the needs of the child, in addition
    . . . [Jessica] provided me information in [Mother’s] lack of common sense at times and
    her pattern of being overwhelmed and dropping the children off at different relatives;
    homes when she can’t handle the children.” Metcalf had observed a few visits between
    Mother and J.C. and concluded they were positive. She saw Mother get onto the floor to
    play with J.C., and Mother played a parental role by redirecting J.C. when the child got
    “cranky.”
    Medina testified she worked at the Collette’s Home where Mother resides
    and Mother is one of her clients. Medina stated that to stay at Collette’s Home, Mother
    was required to meet with her once a week, maintain employment, stay sober, attend life
    skills meetings, be home by an 11 p.m. curfew, and perform daily chores. She said all of
    the Mother’s random drug tests had been negative. Medina stated she has seen Mother
    visit with J.C. and stated Mother was attentive and played with J.C.
    Mother testified being with Father was a trigger that caused her to use
    drugs. Mother stated she had been sober since April 17, 2012, and she consistently
    worked on her 12-steps with her sponsor. She maintained the diluted drug test was due to
    drinking too much liquid beforehand and she noted her prior habit was to miss tests if she
    had relapsed. She now took steps to ensure she would not have another diluted test
    12
    result. Mother stated she currently visited J.C. on Mondays and Wednesdays from 3:30
    p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and on Sunday mornings. She admitted missing some visits and stated
    she had made up the time. Mother stated she did not take advantage of the extended visit
    on December 31 because Jessica left her alone with J.C. at 9:00 p.m. and Mother
    “freaked out” because she knew she was not allowed overnight visits. Mother went to
    sleep in a separate room away from J.C. to comply with her case plan. Mother
    maintained that contrary to Jessica’s recollection, she did put a blanket on J.C. as she
    slept on the couch.
    Mother described in detail her visits with J.C. She said she cooked her
    favorite foods, changed her diaper, and played with toys. She had disciplined J.C. by
    giving her time outs and J.C. was responsive to being redirected. Mother stated that
    when J.C. arrived for visits she called her “mommy” and ran to her. At the end of visits,
    Mother stated she tried to comfort J.C. when she got cranky and tired. Mother believed
    J.C. looked to her as a parent because she called her mommy and reached out to her when
    she was crying. At the end of visits they would hug and kiss. Mother stated she was
    ready to have J.C. returned to her care, she was employed full time, and she found a day
    care provider for J.C. Mother stated Busy Bee day care had been holding open a spot for
    J.C. for several months. J.C. could stay with Mother at Collette’s Home. Mother stated
    the court should return J.C. because she had achieved long term sobriety and they were
    bonded.
    After Mother testified, the hearing was continued for two weeks. The court
    stated the hearing would be a 12-month review but would include issues considered in an
    18-month review.
    E. The 12-Month Review—Part II
    On February 22, 2013, the court admitted addendum number 9. The court
    asked county counsel to summarize what had been discussed in chambers before the
    hearing. County counsel stated the most recent social worker’s report was favorable to
    13
    Mother and the parties agreed to further postpone the hearing until March 29. During this
    month, the parties anticipated Mother would take an additional parenting class and “set
    up some WRAP services with the idea being that if all is going well by the 29th, there
    may be the possibil[ity] of starting a trial return to Mother.” The court noted, “That being
    the goal of all of this and hearing what has progressed and wanting to encourage and
    commend [Mother] for the hard work she has accomplished the court is willing to do that.
    [¶] Under normal circumstances the court does not continue matters six weeks, eight
    weeks, which is how much time is going to pass before we re-meet. However, I do think
    that it is appropriate in this case. It gives [Mother] this opportunity and should she do[,]
    and should the social worker be able to put in place not only the services but to see
    everything ready, the court will be happy to grant that trial visit return. [¶] So, please
    understand, we’re going to be looking at how well you do. We want to thank you and
    commend you for the hard work you have done. It’s not easy to change your life around.
    We recognize that. But the kids are worth it. [J.C.] is worth it.”
    On March 27, 2013, the social worker submitted addendum report
    number 10. Metcalf stated the recommendation of terminating services remained the
    same. Mother had not participated in parenting classes. Metcalf stated she gave Mother
    several referrals to parenting classes. Metcalf stated she initially referred Mother to the
    FACT (Family and Communities Together) community centers closest to Mother’s
    residence. Mother stated the two FACT centers were too far away. On March 11, 2013,
    Metcalf referred Mother to KC Services parent education and on March 19, 2013 referred
    Mother to in-home parent education services provided by the Orange County Child
    Abuse Prevent Center (OCCAPC). OCCAPC initially turned Mother away, but on
    March 24 she was accepted and was scheduled to begin classes on April 1, 2013.
    Metcalf stated that on March 13 she contacted the WRAP coordinator,
    Brian Smith, about getting services for Mother. Smith stated J.C. did not meet the
    14
    qualification for WRAP services and all the family maintenance at risk expansion slots
    were unavailable. He did not anticipate any openings until June 2013.
    F. The 12-Month Review—Part III
    At the continued hearing on March 29, 2013, the court stated the parties
    had a chamber’s conference without Mother, and after she was present, they held a
    discussion on the record. The court stated, “We have been discussing the fact that
    although we’re not really ready to say [Mother] is prepared and confident about having
    [J.C.] returned to her now, we’re also not prepared to say she can’t do it. [¶] We’re
    going to order some efforts on the part of both [SSA] and the counsel to work [out] a
    possible plan.” The court ordered everyone to return on April 4, 2013, “to work out a
    plan where [Mother] can prove herself ready for this child. But were’re not going to
    order it today.” The court added, “I do want to encourage [Mother] to continue
    specifically attending [her] first parenting class on April 1st that is scheduled.”
    G. The 12-Month Review—Part IV
    The following week, on April 4, 2103, the court concluded the 12-month
    review hearing. J.C.’s second birthday was just a few weeks away.
    The court determined the following findings “presented by stipulation . . .
    are met by clear and convincing evidence; thus, I approve them.” As stated in the
    stipulation, the court (1) admitted into evidence all the SSA’s reports, (2) determined
    continued supervision of J.C. was necessary, (3) concluded return to the parents would
    create a substantial risk of detriment, (4) found reasonable services were provided, and
    (5) terminated the parents’ reunification services. Despite terminating services on the
    record, the court understood services in fact would continue. The court approved the
    parties’ stipulation to continue funding for Mother’s “parenting education class as well as
    for substance abuse testing pending the” .26 hearing. Funding would cease if Mother had
    a missed, positive or diluted test. As stipulated, the court authorized Mother to have three
    hours unmonitored visits on Sundays if Mother arranged transportation and told the social
    15
    worker about her plans 24 hours in advance. “Agency has authority to liberalize or
    restrict visitation or to lift or reinstate supervision, as deemed necessary, for [J.C.’s] best
    interest.” The court scheduled the .26 hearing for July 31, 2013.
    H. The Three Months Before the .26 hearing
    A few days before the hearing, SSA filed a report concluding J.C. was
    adoptable and recommending termination of parental rights. Metcalf reported she had
    monthly meetings with Jessica and J.C. She opined they were strongly bonded and
    affectionate with each other. J.C. appeared comfortable and content with Jessica, and she
    was often smiling or laughing in her presence. J.C. looked to Jessica for reassurance and
    nurturing. J.C. was developing normally and Jessica reported she was well behaved, fun
    and very intelligent. Metcalf stated Jessica has been J.C.’s parent since she was five days
    old. Initially Jessica stated she wanted to adopt J.C., but then extended family persuaded
    her to be J.C.’s legal guardian. However, after considering the best interests of J.C.,
    Jessica decided the preferable permanent plan for J.C. would be adoption. Jessica was
    willing and able to adopt her. Moreover, Jessica’s two daughters (ages 16 and 14) loved
    J.C. and they both encouraged Jessica to adopt J.C. Metcalf noted that in addition to
    Jessica’s two daughters, J.C. visited her three siblings and it was anticipated she would
    maintain a relationship with them because they were placed with maternal aunts as well.
    Metcalf concluded there was ample evidence Jessica and J.C. were bonded and J.C. felt
    safe and secure in her home.
    Metcalf stated she had not met with Mother but had spoken to her on the
    telephone. Mother continued to reside at Collette’s Home. Since the last hearing,
    Mother completed one in-home parent education program and a didactic parent course,
    both offered by OCCAPC. Mother continued to test negative.
    The most significant news during this three month period concerned
    Mother’s visits with J.C. Metcalf stated that since February 2013, Mother had three
    hours of unmonitored visitation. Mother complied with the court’s order to tell Metcalf
    16
    her plans. However, Metcalf stated there had been multiple changes in visitation
    arrangements after a plan had already been set, making it difficult for Metcalf to observe
    visits. Nevertheless, Metcalf was able to observe three visits. She stated visits usually
    consisted of going to the park and a fast food restaurant. Jessica reported J.C. returned
    from visits in good spirits and appeared to be well cared for.
    Metcalf stated she was hesitant to increase visitation further because she
    had not been able to observe very many visits due to Mother’s scheduling changes. Also,
    there had been an incident on April 6, 2013, during a family party. Jessica reported that
    while J.C. was in Mother’s care, Mother lost track of her and the child crossed a street by
    herself. Jessica explained Mother was also visiting with her other three children and
    taking calls from her cellular telephone at the time. Metcalf determined Mother could
    only have unsupervised visits with J.C. when the other siblings were not present.
    Metcalf admitted Mother consistently and appropriately visited with J.C.
    after her removal. Metcalf opined, “Although [J.C.] is familiar with [Mother] and has a
    relationship with [Mother], it is the undersigned’s observation [that Jessica] . . . is more
    of a parental figure to the child.” Metcalf stated Jessica’s nurturing and discipline have
    been consistent and J.C. refers to her as “mom” despite Jessica’s attempts to have J.C.
    call her “tia.” Metcalf stated J.C. would not suffer any detrimental social or emotional
    effects if parental rights were terminated, but there would be a detrimental effect if J.C.
    were removed from Jessica’s care.
    I. The .26 hearing—Part I
    On July 31, 2013, the court considered and accepted into evidence the
    parties’ stipulation to continue the .26 hearing one additional month (to August 28, 2013).
    The court ordered SSA to evaluate whether overnight visits with Mother were
    appropriate.
    The same day, Mother filed a section 388 modification request, seeking
    return of J.C. on a plan of family maintenance or a 60-day trial release. She declared she
    17
    has been sober since April 2012, she completed numerous parenting classes, and she was
    mentally healthy and able to parent J.C. for the rest of her life. Mother stated she
    received a six-month extension to stay at Collette’s Home (ending September 17, 2013).
    She had maintained full-time employment and saved nearly $3,000. She intended to use
    her savings to lease an apartment after her time at Collette’s Home ends. If J.C. were
    returned to Mother care, she would be moved to Collette’s Home’s family unit and
    receive assistance with food vouchers, clothing, bus transportation, child care, and
    personal items. Mother’s case manager had helped her develop an action plan to
    maintain full time employment, start a savings account, and become a responsible adult.
    Mother discussed her path to sobriety and how she maintained her recovery.
    Mother stated she enjoyed five hours of unmonitored visits each week with
    J.C. She described the many activities she and J.C. enjoyed doing together during their
    visits. She stated, “It is sometimes difficult to leave at the end of visits and [J.C.] often
    says she wants to come home with me.” Mother believed J.C. should come home with
    her because “no one can love her or ensure her wellbeing more than I can.” She added
    J.C. now relied on her for comfort and support. They had a mother-daughter bond and
    she loved J.C. dearly and cherished every moment they had together. She believed J.C.
    felt the same way because after visits J.C. sometimes cried and said she loved Mother.
    Often on Sunday visits, J.C. says “‘bye mommy, I love you. I’ll see you tomorrow.’”
    The court ordered it would consider the section 388 motion the same day as the continued
    .26 hearing date.
    J. The .26 hearing—Part II
    SSA prepared an addendum report on August 23, 2013. Metcalf stated she
    followed the court’s order to assess Mother’s home for overnight visits. Metcalf noted
    Mother had not moved to the family unit as represented by her counsel.
    Metcalf visited Mother’s apartment and noticed there had been no
    accommodations “to safely house a toddler.” For example, the electrical outlets were not
    18
    covered, the blind adjustment strings could be reached by a toddler, there were two large
    television sets left unsecure on a desk, and there was an unsafe decorative metal stair
    railing leading to the second floor. Metcalf told Mother these safety issues would have to
    be resolved before an overnight visit would be authorized. When Metcalf returned
    several days later she saw Mother had addressed all the safety concerns except for
    leaving one television unsecured on a desk. Metcalf stated the television should be
    strapped to a wall or placed on the floor. Mother stated she understood the safety hazard
    because she knew someone whose child was killed when a television set had fallen on the
    child. Mother put the television set on the ground until it could be strapped down.
    Metcalf approved Mother’s home for an overnight visit.
    Mother had her first overnight visit from Wednesday August 14 to
    Thursday August 15, 2103. Jessica reported the child looked fine and behaved normally
    after the visit. Jessica said Mother called her during the night because J.C. was crying for
    Jessica and wanted to go home. One week later, Jessica reported she had learned from
    the day care teachers that J.C. had started biting and pinching other children, which was a
    change from her normal behavior. On August 21, 2013, Metcalf spoke with the teacher,
    who said there had been a significant change with J.C.’s behavior for the last two weeks.
    She was bullying other children and was more aggressive.
    On August 28, 2013, the court considered and accepted the parties’
    stipulation to continue the hearing for an additional month. It scheduled the hearing for
    September 24, 2013. On that date, J.C. would be two years and five months old. It had
    been 29 months since J.C. was taken into protective custody following her birth.
    K. The .26 hearing—Part III
    On September 20, 2103, SSA filed a lengthy addendum report discussing
    several problems concerning visitation. Mother had been approved for one overnight
    visit per week and one unmonitored visit every Wednesday night. With respect to the
    19
    Wednesday night visits, Mother was required to pick up J.C. from her day care in the
    evening and bring her back to day care or to Jessica’s home.
    Metcalf reported that for the past six weeks, Mother had cancelled most
    Wednesday night visits and sometimes failed to pick up J.C. without notifying Jessica.
    Mother also changed the visitation times for overnights without fully communicating her
    plans to Jessica. Metcalf noted Mother’s failure to timely communicate the changes
    caused Jessica “a great deal of frustration.” Jessica worked full time and was a single
    mother with two other children. When Mother suddenly canceled visits, Jessica was left
    “scrambling” to find someone else to pick up J.C. from her day care. Jessica requested
    Wednesday visits be cancelled.
    Metcalf provided a detail report about Mother’s lack of responsibility,
    forethought, planning, and communication regarding the Wednesday night visits over a
    period of six weeks. She stated Mother was scheduled to pick up J.C. from day care on
    Wednesday, August 7, but failed to notify Jessica she changed her plans to meet with
    Metcalf that night. Metcalf stated she clearly told Mother she needed to notify Jessica.
    On Friday, August 16, Mother asked for a visit the following Monday,
    August 19. Jessica agreed. On August 19, Jessica texted Mother at 2 p.m. to ask if she
    was going to pick up the child. Mother stated she was ill and would not be coming.
    On August 21, Jessica received a text message at 6:40 a.m. indicating she
    could not pick up J.C. that day. Jessica reminded Mother that for her next visit on
    Saturday August 24, Mother needed to arrive between 8 and 8:30 a.m. because Jessica
    needed to be at work by 9 a.m. When Mother did not arrive on time, Jessica called her.
    Mother stated she could not pick up J.C. until 10 a.m., following her drug test and
    asserted Metcalf had approved a 10 a.m. pick up. Metcalf stated this was untrue because
    she did not approve a 10 a.m. pick up and Mother was not called to drug test that day.
    Metcalf added Mother threatened Jessica, stating she would call SSA regarding Jessica’s
    children.
    20
    The following Wednesday, August 28, 2013, Mother sent a text at
    10:31 a.m. cancelling her visit due to a dental appointment. That weekend, Mother told
    Jessica on Friday she could not pickup J.C. until 10 a.m. Saturday morning, August 31.
    Jessica objected, telling Mother she needed to pick up J.C. earlier because she had to be
    at work at 9 a.m. Mother asserted the juvenile court and Metcalf designated 10 a.m. as
    the pick up time. Metcalf stated this was untrue and she had told Mother to arrange visits
    with Jessica to accommodate both of their schedules.
    The next scheduled visit was for Wednesday, September 4. Mother texted
    Jessica at 1:45 p.m. cancelling the visit and asking for a visit the following day. Jessica
    agreed and it was arranged Mother would pick up J.C. between 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.
    Mother notified Jessica at 3:51 p.m. she was cancelling that visit. She texted “super sorry
    not going [to] get baby just got home going to sleep, be there for sure [on] Saturday . . . .”
    Wednesday, September 11 was the next scheduled mid-week visit. The day
    before, Mother said she would have to cancel the visit. However, on September 11,
    Mother notified Jessica she could pick up J.C. She was significantly late in picking up
    J.C. She arrived at 6:25 p.m., when the time to pick up J.C. was 5 p.m. and the facility’s
    final pick up time was 6 p.m. On Tuesday, September 17, Mother told Jessica she was
    too sick to pick up J.C. on Wednesday, September 18.
    Interestingly, Mother consistently took J.C. for overnight visits. Metcalf
    found it disconcerting that out of the six weeks Mother had been approved for
    Wednesday night visits, she had only been able to pick up J.C. one time. Metcalf was
    concerned Mother was not making J.C. a priority and she did not have the level of
    responsibility need to take care of J.C.
    In her report, Metcalf provided some new information about Mother.
    Collette’s Home had extended her stay until October 1, 2013. Metcalf offered Mother
    housing referrals. All drug tests in August and September were negative. Metcalf listed
    the dates of testing, noting none conflicted with Mother’s scheduled visits with J.C.
    21
    On September 24, 2014, the court considered Mother’s 388 petition in
    conjunction with the .26 hearing. The court first heard testimony from Mother, who
    stated she was currently residing at Collette’s Home and randomly drug tested twice a
    month. With respect to visits, Mother admitted she had missed a few visits. She stated
    there was initially a misunderstanding about the time Saturday visits would start. Mother
    acknowledged she missed two Wednesday night visits and explained it was because she
    had been working a graveyard shift. Mother testified she timely notified Jessica about
    the cancelled visits. Mother recalled on one occasion she gave Jessica 24 hours notice,
    and another time gave her one week’s notice. She disagreed with Metcalf’s report stating
    she neglected to notify Jessica or any suggestion Mother constantly canceled and changed
    plans last minute.
    When questioned about her graveyard shift, Mother explained she would
    work at night and go home at 7 a.m. She explained her employer required her to work
    graveyard shifts anytime she missed work due to court dates. Mother stated that
    following her graveyard shift she would sleep for a few hours, wake up for lunch or for a
    drug test if necessary, and then go back to bed. Mother said she could not pick up J.C.
    from her day care at 6 p.m. because she would be sleeping.
    Mother testified J.C. identified her as her mother and came to Mother
    whenever she got hurt looking for comfort. Mother said J.C. cried and called for her
    when she was dropped off after visits. Mother described her activities with J.C. and
    concluded they had a strong bond. She explained that when Jessica is with them, J.C.
    called Jessica “Nina” (another word for godmother) and she called Mother “mom.”
    Mother said J.C. looked to her for care and support even when Jessica was present.
    Metcalf testified consistently with the information contained in her reports.
    She surmised Mother was not responsible enough to have J.C. in her care full time. She
    stated, “There’s some concerns about her being preoccupied, not putting the child first,
    prioritizing the child. [Mother] is very involved in her recovery, in her meetings. And at
    22
    one point she even asked if it would appropriate to go back to school. I think she’s
    reoccupied with her life now, and I don’t think she would prioritize the child.” Metcalf
    noted Mother had missed visits with J.C. and each time her communication was poor.
    Mother had also reduced visits with her other three children.
    Metcalf testified the various visitation issues suggested Mother could not
    care for J.C. full time. She explained, “Mother doesn’t have any forethought with regards
    with what to do if certain instances come up. Such as if she can’t get to the day care
    center on time, she doesn’t make a contingency plan; and she cancels with the caretaker if
    she can’t make it for any reason, and that’s not something that can happen on a full-time
    basis. You have to have forethought and make arrangements for the care of the child, if
    you can’t be there. You can’t just cancel.”
    Metcalf questioned why Mother did not notice for herself the clear safety
    issues present in her apartment before Metcalf’s inspection. Mother admitted she knew a
    child died from being crushed by a television yet did nothing about her own televisions in
    anticipation of having J.C. for overnight visits. Metcalf believed J.C. saw Jessica as her
    mother and primary caregiver, and saw Mother as an aunt figure in her life.
    After considering argument from the parties’ counsel, the court denied the
    388 petition. The court determined Mother likely satisfied the first prong of the test used
    in evaluating 388 petitions because there had been changed circumstances from the
    court’s prior order. Specifically, Mother had completed several parenting classes and had
    maintained her sobriety for over a year. The court stated Mother’s sincere commitment
    to sobriety was not the sole test for a change of circumstances.
    The court concluded it would not be in J.C.’s best interests to be returned to
    Mother. The court reached this conclusion based on the information in SSA’s reports and
    Mother’s testimony. It stated, “Her general neglect of children really from all of her
    adult life has not been eliminated by her commitment now to sobriety. It takes more to
    be a mother than to give birth. [¶] And in this case[,] allowing a two-year-old to run
    23
    unsupervised when she is responsible for the life of that child and that child running
    across a street is absolute proof that she is not ready to be responsible for the child’s life
    day-by-day, 24/7. [¶] She has shown . . . she is not ready for that kind of commitment by
    choosing anything and everything else instead of her Wednesday night visits and not
    conducting them in a timely and responsible fashion. She is unable . . . to place the
    priority of [J.C.] over all of her other chosen relationships and commitments.”
    The court asked if the parties would agree to proceed to the .26 hearing
    based on the evidence already presented. Mother’s counsel stated she had a few more
    questions to ask Metcalf. The court permitted counsel to question Metcalf about the basis
    for her recommendation to terminate parental rights and her determination J.C. was
    adoptable. Mother’s counsel argued the court should apply the parental benefit exception
    to termination of Mother’s parental rights.
    The court concluded J.C. was adoptable and it terminated parental rights. It
    determined Mother had not met her burden of proving the parental benefit exception to
    termination. The court stated Mother clearly had a “new interest” in reunifying with her
    child, but failed to comply with her reunification plan in a timely fashion. The court
    concluded Mother “failed to make consistent and regular visitation with [J.C.]. And
    those choices by her have resulted in disruption for [Jessica’s] family which includes
    [J.C.’s ] disappointment and behavior changes in [J.C.].”
    The court determined there were many factual conflicts about visits and it
    found Metcalf to be a credible and sincere witness, albeit not very prepared or persuasive.
    The court concluded that after observing Mother’s demeanor during her testimony, “I
    have come to the conclusion that I cannot believe [Mother] as being either accurate in her
    recall of dates, times and orders[,] or sincere.” It added, “[Mother] for whatever reason
    . . . [is] consistently . . . in conflict with [Jessica’s] recitation of any details of these
    visitation issues. [¶] But [Mother] relies on explanations which have been shown
    specifically to be false.” For example, Mother stated she missed one visit because she
    24
    had to drug test, and Metcalf presented evidence she had not been called to test that day.
    The court mentioned another occasion when Mother stated she was sleeping following a
    graveyard shift and could not pick up J.C. but there was evidence she could have slept
    and still picked up J.C. later in the evening.
    As for the second prong of the benefit exception, the court explained it
    needed to balance the child’s interests and need for permanence against the child’s
    interests in continuing her relationship with Mother. The court concluded Jessica was the
    mother figure in J.C.’s life, not Mother. Although Mother and J.C. had a bond, it was
    that of a relative. The court found significant that on her first overnight with Mother, J.C.
    cried because she wanted to return to her home with Jessica. And it was telling that
    Mother called Jessica because she knew Jessica would know how to care for J.C.
    In addition, the court found relevant Mother’s history of leaving her
    children with other people and concluded Mother apparently forgot about J.C. the day she
    wandered alone across the street. The court found it telling Mother set dental
    appointments on the day she was scheduled to visit J.C., and she waited until after the
    pick up time to tell Jessica she was cancelling. The court reasoned that even if Mother
    had some sort of sibling rivalry issue with Jessica, her behavior was upsetting and hurtful
    to J.C., who was anticipating the visit and did not get one. The court also did not believe
    Mother’s testimony she thought the court and Metcalf initially ordered the overnight pick
    up time to begin at 10 a.m. The court said Mother’s decision to invoke the court’s
    authority when Jessica complained, knowing the court had not ordered a 10 a.m. pick up
    time, “was an act of fraudulent behavior.” Finally, the court concluded it would be
    harmful to J.C. to remove her from the only home she has ever known. The court stated
    overnight visits would no longer be approved by the court. It authorized good-bye visits
    with Mother and Father.
    25
    II
    Mother contends she made a sufficient showing to warrant an order
    granting her custody of J.C. and vacating the section .26 hearing. We disagree.
    A juvenile court dependency order may be changed, modified, or set aside
    at any time. (§ 385.) A parent may petition the court for such a modification on grounds
    of change of circumstance or new evidence. (§ 388, subd. (a).) The parent, however,
    must also show that the proposed change would promote the best interests of the child.
    (§ 388, subd. (a)(2); In re Michael B. (1992) 
    8 Cal. App. 4th 1698
    , 1703.)
    Whether the juvenile court should modify a previously made order rests
    within its discretion, and its determination may not be disturbed unless there has been a
    clear abuse of discretion. (In re Stephanie M. (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 295
    , 318 (Stephanie M.).)
    “The appropriate test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial court exceeded the
    bounds of reason. When two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the
    facts, the reviewing court has no authority to substitute its decision for that of the trial
    court.” (Id. at pp. 318-319.) In this case, the court did not abuse its discretion.
    We conclude Mother’s long term sobriety and renewed interest in parenting
    classes showed changed circumstances, but Mother did not establish that an order giving
    her custody of J.C. would be in the child’s best interests. To understand the element of
    best interests in the context of a 388 petition filed, as in this case, on the eve of the
    .26 hearing, we turn to the Supreme Court’s language in Stephanie 
    M., supra
    , 
    7 Cal. 4th 295
    : “[A]t this point ‘the focus shifts to the needs of the child for permanency and
    stability’ (In re Marilyn H. [1993] 
    5 Cal. 4th 295
    , 309) . . . . A court hearing a motion for
    change of placement at this stage of the proceedings must recognize this shift of focus in
    determining the ultimate question before it, that is, the best interests of the child.”
    (Stephanie 
    M., supra
    , 7 Cal.4th at p. 317; see also In re Edward H. (1996) 
    43 Cal. App. 4th 584
    , 594 [on eve of .26 hearing, children’s interest in stability was court’s
    foremost concern and outweighed any interest in reunification].)
    26
    In short, Mother’s evidence did not establish J.C.’s need for permanency
    and stability would be advanced by an order returning J.C. to her care. The evidence
    showed J.C. had a loving and stable placement with her maternal aunt Jessica, who had
    cared for J.C. since her birth. Jessica had assumed full parental responsibilities and care
    for J.C., and by the time of the hearing on the section 388 petition, J.C. was two and
    one half years old. Jessica was the only constant and stable parent J.C. had ever known.
    Jessica and her two daughters felt like J.C. was part of their family. Metcalf had no doubt
    J.C. and Jessica were strongly bonded to each other. Mother does not dispute Jessica and
    J.C.’s relationship, and in her petition she stated she would strive to preserve that bond if
    granted custody or a temporary release. Mother failed to present any evidence J.C.’s best
    interests in permanency and stability would be furthered by the proposed modification
    under Stephanie 
    M., supra
    , 7 Cal.4th at page 317.
    On appeal, Mother ignores the Supreme Court’s language in Stephanie M.
    and instead urges this court, in evaluating J.C.’s best interests, to apply factors delineated
    by the appellate court in In re Kimberly F. (1997) 
    56 Cal. App. 4th 519
    , 530-532. Those
    factors are: the seriousness of the problem leading to dependency and the reason that
    problem was not overcome; the strength of relative bonds between the dependent children
    to both parent and caretakers; the degree to which the problem may be easily removed or
    ameliorated; and the degree to which it actually has been. (Ibid.) She argues she
    overcame the most serious problem leading to dependency (drug addiction) and the relief
    being sought “would preserve the bond she shared with [J.C.] [J.C.] deserved an
    opportunity to know a mother who worked so hard to maintain their relationship.” She
    concludes a change of custody would not be detrimental. In essence, Mother is asserting
    it is in J.C.’s best interests to preserve the biological parent child relationship that she has
    worked diligently to achieve over the past year.
    27
    It is true a parent and a child share a fundamental interest in reuniting up to
    the point at which reunification efforts cease. (In re R.H. (2009) 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 678
    ,
    697.) However, the interests of the parent and the child have diverged by the point of a
    .26 hearing to select and implement a child’s permanent plan. (Cynthia D. v. Superior
    Court (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 242
    , 254.) “[C]hildren have a fundamental independent interest
    in belonging to a family unit [citation] and they have compelling rights to be protected
    from abuse and neglect and to have a placement that is stable, permanent, and that allows
    the caretaker to make a full emotional commitment to the child.” (Marilyn 
    H., supra
    ,
    5 Cal.4th at p. 306.) Adoption gives a child the best chance at a full emotional
    commitment from a responsible caretaker. (In re Celine R. (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 45
    , 53.)
    Consequently, after reunification efforts have terminated, the court’s focus
    shifts from family reunification toward promoting the child’s needs for permanency and
    stability. (Marilyn 
    H., supra
    , 5 Cal.4th at p. 309.) “A court hearing a motion for change
    of placement at this stage of the proceedings must recognize this shift of focus in
    determining the ultimate question before it, that is, the best interests of the child.”
    (Stephanie 
    M., supra
    , 7 Cal.4th at p. 317.) J.C.’s best interests are not to further delay
    permanency and stability in favor of rewarding Mother for her hard work and efforts to
    reunify. Mother’s best interests are simply no longer the focus.
    For the above reasons, we decline to apply the Kimberly F. factors if for no
    other reason than they do not take into account the Supreme Court’s analysis in Stephanie
    M., applicable after reunification efforts have been terminated. As stated by one treatise,
    “[I]n such circumstances, the approach of the court in the case of . . . Kimberly F. . . .
    may not be appropriate since it fails to give full consideration to this shift in focus.”
    (Seiser & Kumli, Cal. Juvenile Courts Practice and Procedure (LexisNexis 2014)
    § 2-140[5], p. 2–473.) We instead follow the direction of our Supreme Court, holding
    that after reunification services have terminated, a parent’s petition for either an order
    returning custody or reopening reunification efforts must establish how such a change
    28
    will advance the child’s need for permanency and stability. As stated above, Mother’s
    388 petition fails to address these points and therefore we conclude the court did not err
    in denying the petition.
    In closing, we wish to express our concern that the trial court deemed it
    appropriate to reward Mother with additional services (after terminating services) and
    further liberalized visits when the focus should have been entirely on J.C.’s best interests.
    As the court later came to realize, there was ample evidence J.C. would be devastated and
    suffer great detriment if she were removed from Jessica’s home after two and one-half
    years. It is the only loving, safe, and stable home she has ever known. This case brings
    into sharper focus the reasons why the statutory scheme authorizes courts to terminate
    services and schedule a .26 hearing at the six-month review date for children younger
    than three. Section 361.5 provides services will not exceed six months if the child is
    under the age of three, unless the court finds a substantial probability of return with an
    extended 12- or 18-month period. These rules were enacted to circumvent the very
    situation we see in the case before us. Based on the record, J.C.’s best interests at the age
    of six months and at twelve months were blaringly clear because Mother had relapsed
    multiple times and could not offer J.C. a stable home. The Legislature understood
    children such as J.C. have a critical need to quickly find a secure and stable placement. It
    was detrimental to this infant’s best interests, and it was ultimately unkind to Mother, to
    continue the case an additional 16 months.
    III
    At a .26 permanency planning hearing, the court may order one of three
    alternative plans: (1) adoption (necessitating the termination of parental rights);
    (2) guardianship; or (3) long-term foster care. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1), (c)(4)(A).) If the
    child is adoptable, there is a strong preference for adoption over the other alternatives.
    (In re S.B. (2008) 
    164 Cal. App. 4th 289
    , 297 (S.B.).) Once the court determines the child
    is adoptable (as J.C. indisputably was), a parent seeking a less restrictive plan has the
    29
    burden of showing that the termination of parental rights would be detrimental under one
    of the exceptions listed in section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B). 
    (S.B., supra
    ,
    164 Cal.App.4th at p. 297.)
    Section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i) provides for one such exception
    when “[t]he parents have maintained regular visitation and contact with the child and the
    child would benefit from continuing the relationship.” The “benefit” necessary to trigger
    this exception has been judicially construed to mean, “the relationship promotes the
    well-being of the child to such a degree as to outweigh the well-being the child would
    gain in a permanent home with new, adoptive parents. In other words, the court balances
    the strength and quality of the natural parent/child relationship in a tenuous placement
    against the security and the sense of belonging a new family would confer. If severing
    the natural parent/child relationship would deprive the child of a substantial, positive
    emotional attachment such that the child would be greatly harmed, the preference for
    adoption is overcome and the natural parent’s rights are not terminated.” (In re Autumn
    H. (1994) 
    27 Cal. App. 4th 567
    , 575 (Autumn H.); see also In re Jasmine D. (2000)
    
    78 Cal. App. 4th 1339
    , 1347-1348 (Jasmine D.).)
    A parent asserting the parental benefit exception has the burden of
    establishing that exception by a preponderance of the evidence. (In re Valerie A. (2007)
    
    152 Cal. App. 4th 987
    , 998.) It is not enough to show that the parent and child have a
    friendly and loving relationship. (See In re Beatrice M. (1994) 
    29 Cal. App. 4th 1411
    ,
    1418-1419 (Beatrice M.).) “‘Interaction between [a] natural parent and child will always
    confer some incidental benefit to the child . . . .’” (Beatrice 
    M., supra
    , 29 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1419.) For the exception to apply, “a parental relationship is necessary[.]” (Jasmine
    
    D., supra
    , 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 1350.) “‘While friendships are important, a child needs at
    least one parent. Where a biological parent . . . is incapable of functioning in that role,
    the child should be given every opportunity to bond with an individual who will assume
    the role of a parent.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    30
    Mother suggests the law has departed from the Autumn H. line of cases
    described above and the benefit exception no longer requires proof the child has a
    primary attachment to a parent or that the parent maintained day to day contact. (Citing
    
    S.B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 297.) Not so. Moreover, this case is nothing like the
    S.B. case.
    In the S.B. case, a three-year-old child was removed from the custody of her
    father who had been her primary caregiver. 
    (S.B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 298.) He
    had a 30-year methamphetamine addiction, was in poor health, and had been diagnosed
    with combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder following his service in the Vietnam
    War. The father immediately acknowledged his drug use was inexcusable and fully
    complied with his case plan, remained drug free, and regularly visited his daughter three
    days a week. 
    (S.B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at pp. 294-295, 298.) Even after a year apart,
    when the visits ended, the child continued to become upset and wanted to leave with her
    father. (Id. at p. 298.)
    The appellate court in S.B. reversed the termination of parental rights,
    finding substantial evidence to support application of the parental benefit exception.
    
    (S.B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 301.) The court determined that despite the lack of
    daily contact, the father continued his significant relationship with the child. Rather than
    a visitor or playmate relationship, the court found a true parental relationship that had
    developed during the child’s first three years life when she lived with her father, and
    which continued to develop while they lived apart. (Id. at pp. 298-299.) The court
    concluded, “[T]he only reasonable inference is that S.B. would be greatly harmed by the
    loss of her significant, positive relationship with [her father]. [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 301.)
    The S.B. case has been criticized by other appellate courts for its suggestion
    the exception applies if the child merely “derived some measure of benefit” from the
    parental relationship. 
    (S.B., supra
    , 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 301.) The same appellate court
    that authored the S.B. case cautioned in In re Jason J. (2009) 
    175 Cal. App. 4th 922
    , 937:
    31
    “The S.B. opinion must be viewed in light of its particular facts. It does not, of course,
    stand for the proposition that a termination order is subject to reversal whenever there is
    ‘some measure of benefit’ in continued contact between parent and child.” More
    recently, the same court emphasized in In re C.F. (2011) 
    193 Cal. App. 4th 549
    , 558-559
    that the S.B. case must be “confined to its extraordinary facts. [The S.B. case] does not
    support the proposition a parent may establish the parent-child beneficial relationship
    exception by merely showing the child derives some measure of benefit from maintaining
    parental contact.”
    A. Standard of Review
    Here, the trial court concluded that J.C. was adoptable and terminated
    parental rights. Case law is divided as to the correct standard for appellate review of an
    order determining the applicability of the parental benefit exception. Most published
    decisions have reviewed such orders for substantial evidence. (See, e.g., In re
    Christopher L. (2006) 
    143 Cal. App. 4th 1326
    , 1333; Autumn 
    H., supra
    , 27 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 576.) Others have applied an abuse of discretion standard. (See, e.g., Jasmine 
    D., supra
    , 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 1351; In re Aaliyah R. (2006) 
    136 Cal. App. 4th 437
    , 449.)
    Recently, the Sixth Appellate District has cogently expressed the view that
    the review of an adoption exception incorporates both the substantial evidence and the
    abuse of discretion standards of review. (In re Bailey J. (2010) 
    189 Cal. App. 4th 1308
    ,
    1314-1315 (Bailey J.).) The Bailey J. court observed that the juvenile court’s decision
    whether an adoption exception applies involves two component determinations. “Since
    the proponent of the exception bears the burden of producing evidence of the existence of
    a beneficial parental or sibling relationship, which is a factual issue, the substantial
    evidence standard of review is the appropriate one to apply to this component of the
    juvenile court’s determination.” (Id. at p. 1314.) The second determination in the
    exception analysis is whether the existence of that relationship or other specified statutory
    circumstance constitutes ‘“a compelling reason for determining that termination would be
    32
    detrimental to the child.’” (Id. at p. 1315.) This ‘“‘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[,]’ is
    appropriately reviewed under the deferential abuse of discretion standard.” (Ibid; see
    also In re K.P. (2010) 
    203 Cal. App. 4th 614
    , 621-622 [finding Bailey J. approach
    persuasive].) We are likewise persuaded to apply the Bailey J. approach.
    B. The First Prong—Visitation
    Turning to the first prong, the court determined Mother “failed to make
    consistent and regular visitation with [J.C.].” The court recognized the evidence with
    respect to visitation during the six weeks leading to the hearing was disputed, and it
    concluded Mother’s version of events was not credible. It accepted the social worker’s
    account of five missed Wednesday night visits, as well as the troubling manner of
    Mother’s cancellations and pattern of changing her plans last minute. We conclude
    substantial evidence supports this determination. In addition to the last six weeks of the
    dependency, there were other periods of time when she failed to regularly visit J.C.,
    particularly during Mother’s relapses in 2011.
    Mother points to Metcalf’s report prepared in July 2013 for the .26 hearing
    that contained the factual finding Mother “consistently visited” J.C. Mother argues, “A
    handful of missed visits in August and September 2013, due to [M]other’s rigorous work
    schedule, do not obviate her long-term record of regular visitation and contact.” We
    conclude this statement is belied by the record. The social worker did not excuse the
    missed visits in August and September as being due to work obligations. Mother
    scheduled a dental appointment that conflicted with one Wednesday night visit. We
    recognize Mother testified she missed a few visits because she worked the graveyard shift
    the night before. However, upon further questioning it was revealed that on those days
    33
    Mother got off work at 7 a.m. and would sleep only a short time before waking up to eat
    lunch and take care of other various matters before returning to bed for additional sleep.
    It appears Mother decided this plan of action was more important than
    picking up J.C. from her day care at 6 p.m. It is telling that Mother did not miss a single
    overnight visit during the same time period, but left for Jessica the mundane but
    important job of bringing J.C. home after a long day at day care. Mother did not take
    advantage of this important opportunity to be a parent to J.C., to ask her about her day,
    listen to her feelings, or shower her with affection. Mother shirked her parental
    responsibility to make J.C.’s diner and get her ready for bed. Despite all the
    well-documented parenting classes, it did not occur to Mother that choosing to sleep
    rather than pick up her toddler, as had been arranged, was not providing J.C. the loving
    stable relationship the child deserved.
    C. The Second Prong—Weighing the Benefits
    The case is a close call. There was significant evidence on both sides of the
    issue. However, after carefully reviewing the record it cannot be said the court abused its
    discretion in concluding the benefit of maintaining the parent-child relationship
    outweighed the benefit of adoption. (§ 366.26(c)(1)(B)(i).)
    As described in Autumn H., the beneficial relationship exception must be
    examined on a case by case basis, taking to account the many variables that can affect the
    parent-child relationship. In this case, J.C. is very young and has spent her entire life
    (29 months) living apart from Mother. For most of the dependency period, J.C. relied on
    Jessica to meet her daily needs. Although Mother appears have achieved long lasting
    sobriety, which is commendable, her limited time with J.C. was monitored for the
    majority of these proceedings. For large periods of time, Mother visited with J.C. for just
    a few hours each week and Jessica was always there to assist her with the baby. The
    record shows that the visits were always enjoyable, but many times Mother would
    become anxious and hand the child back to Jessica. Mother was described as being ready
    34
    for visits to end after just two hours. Mother was sometimes preoccupied and essentially
    forgot about J.C. This was evidenced by the times Mother left J.C. uncovered and
    sleeping on the couch as Mother lay comfortably under covers in the next room, when
    Mother left the toddler unsupervised to walk across the street alone, and more recently
    when Mother failed to make timely arrangements to pick J.C. up from day care.
    Mother contends the evidence demonstrates J.C. would benefit from
    continued contact with her given that they had positive visits and she felt they shared a
    strong bond and a significant relationship. Mother asserts she appropriately cared for
    J.C., and she appeared to enjoy their visits. But a successful parental benefit exception
    claim rests not on whether the parent/child contacts “‘confer some incidental benefit to
    the child . . . .’” (Beatrice 
    M., supra
    , 29 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1418-1419.) As SSA aptly
    observed, Mother, at best, established she had pleasant contacts with a child for whom
    she never provided primary care, and with whom she barely progressed to unmonitored
    contact.
    In re Jerome D. (2000) 
    84 Cal. App. 4th 1200
    (Jerome D.), and Amber M.
    (2002) 
    103 Cal. App. 4th 681
    (Amber M.), illustrate the compelling evidence necessary to
    establish the benefit exception. In Jerome 
    D., supra
    , 84 Cal.App.4th at page 1206, the
    child “seemed lonely, sad, and . . . ‘the odd child out’” in his placement. He wanted to
    live with his mother and had enjoyed unsupervised night visits in her home. (Id. at
    pp. 1206-1207.) A psychologist opined the child and his mother “shared a ‘strong and
    well[-]developed’ parent-child relationship and a ‘close attachment’ approaching a
    primary bond.” (Id. at p. 1207.) The court concluded keeping parental rights intact
    would prevent the child’s “position as the odd child out in [placement] from becoming
    entrenched by a cessation of visits and the loss of his mother while [his half-siblings]
    continued to enjoy visits and remained [the mother’s] children.” (Id. at p. 1208.)
    In Amber 
    M., supra
    , 103 Cal.App.4th at page 690, the court reversed
    termination of parental rights where a psychologist, therapists, and the court-appointed
    35
    special advocate uniformly concluded “a beneficial parental relationship . . . clearly
    outweigh[ed] the benefit of adoption.” Additionally, two older children had a “strong
    primary bond” with their mother, and the younger child was “very strongly attached to
    her.” (Ibid.) If the adoptions had proceeded, the children would have been adopted in
    separate groups. (Id. at pp. 690-691.)
    Here, Mother did not demonstrate harm would have ensued from
    termination of parental rights similar to that demonstrated in Amber M. or Jerome D. At
    the permanency stage, the bond the child shares with the parent and the harm that might
    arise from terminating parental rights must be balanced against what is to be gained in a
    permanent stable home, and “it is only in an extraordinary case that preservation of the
    parent’s rights will prevail over the Legislature’s preference for adoptive placement.”
    (Jasmine 
    D., supra
    , 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 1350.) The parental benefit exception will
    apply only where the parent has demonstrated the benefits to the child of continuing the
    parental relationship outweigh the benefits of permanence through adoption.
    Nothing in the record suggests the benefit J.C. might gain by continuing her
    relationship with Mother is outweighed by the well being she would gain from having a
    permanent home. While the record establishes Mother had a bond with J.C., there was
    little evidence J.C. had a similar bond with Mother. The court reasonably concluded
    J.C.’s outward affection for Mother proved loving contact on the level of a friendly
    visitor relationship and not necessarily a substantial positive attachment. Many toddlers
    are cuddly, effusively loving, and affectionate. J.C. did not display the depth of
    emotional attachment to Mother that Amber M. or Jerome D. (or S.B. as described earlier)
    displayed to their respective parents. To the contrary, the record showed J.C. easily
    separated from Mother at the conclusion of visits, and readily returned to Jessica’s home.
    There was no bonding study or evidence, other than Mother’s self-serving declaration, to
    counter the social worker’s conclusion J.C. would not suffer any detriment. In light of all
    36
    of the above, we conclude the court did not abuse its discretion by ruling the parental
    benefit exception did not apply.
    IV
    The orders denying the 388 petition and terminating parental rights are
    affirmed.
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, J.
    THOMPSON, J.
    37
    Filed 5/22/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    In re J.C., a Person Coming Under the
    Juvenile Court Law.
    ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES
    AGENCY,
    G049095
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Super. Ct. No. DP021151J)
    v.
    ORDER
    M.C.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    The County Council of Orange County has requested that our opinion filed
    May 6, 2014, be certified for publication. It appears that our opinion meets the standards
    set forth in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c). The request is GRANTED.
    The opinion is ordered published in the Official Reports.
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, J.
    THOMPSON, J.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G049095

Citation Numbers: 226 Cal. App. 4th 503

Judges: O'Leary

Filed Date: 5/22/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023