In re C.M. CA2/8 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 6/3/14 In re C.M. CA2/8
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for
    publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 EIGHT
    In re C.M., a Person Coming Under the                                  B248239
    Juvenile Court Law.                                                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. CK97329)
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY
    DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
    FAMILY SERVICES,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    TAMMI A.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Terry T.
    Truong, Juvenile Court Referee. Affirmed.
    Patti L. Dikes, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    John F. Krattli, County Counsel, James M. Owens, Assistant County Counsel,
    and Jessica S. Mitchell, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    ******
    Tammi A. (mother) appeals from the juvenile court’s dispositional order issued
    pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 361, subdivision (c)(1),1 contending
    substantial evidence did not support removing her daughter C.M. from her custody.
    Mother further contends the juvenile court abused its discretion in releasing C.M. to
    her father Gene M. (father)2 on the condition that he and C.M. reside with her paternal
    grandparents and prohibiting father from monitoring mother’s visits with C.M. We
    conclude the juvenile court erred in relying on section 361, subdivision (c)(1) because
    C.M. did not reside with mother at the time the petition in this case was initiated, but
    the error was harmless because the juvenile court’s order fell well within the discretion
    granted under section 361, subdivision (a)(1), the applicable provision. We also find
    no abuse of discretion in the other conditions set by the juvenile court. We therefore
    affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    C.M. was born in March 2011. She lived with mother and her maternal
    grandmother for the first few days of her life until father and her paternal grandparents
    removed her from mother’s care. C.M. then apparently resided with mother and father
    between March and May 2011, but when father was arrested for drug offenses in May
    2011, father left C.M. with her paternal grandparents. The paternal grandparents filed
    a petition with the probate court in June 2011 for temporary legal guardianship, which
    was granted. That probate proceeding generated this dependency case based on a
    referral pursuant to Probate Code section 1513, former subdivision (c).3 On August
    1     All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code, unless
    otherwise indicated.
    2         Father is not a party to the instant appeal.
    3      At the time of the referral, Probate Code section 1513, former subdivision (c)
    required the probate court to refer the case to the relevant social services agency for
    dependency investigation if there are allegations a parent is unfit. (Prob. Code, §
    1513, former subd. (c), amended by Stats. 2012, ch. 638, § 14; see In re Kaylee H.
    (2012) 
    205 Cal.App.4th 92
    , 101.) If the social services agency files a section 300
    petition, “the juvenile court has exclusive jurisdiction of all issues regarding custody
    2
    12, 2011, the probate court terminated the paternal grandparents’ guardianship,4 but
    C.M. continued to reside with her paternal grandparents, not with mother, at least
    through the January 15, 2013 filing of the petition in this case.
    1. Original Petition, Detention Report, and Hearing
    The Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS)
    filed the instant petition on January 15, 2013, pursuant to section 300, subdivision (b)
    alleging in count b-1 that mother had a six-year history of substance abuse, currently
    used methamphetamine and marijuana, had used marijuana while pregnant with C.M.,
    had tested positive for marijuana on October 24, 2012, and had been under the
    influence of marijuana while C.M. was in her care. In count b-2, DCFS alleged
    mother had mental and emotional problems, including diagnoses of depression and
    postpartum depression, and she had failed to take her prescribed medications. DCFS
    alleged mother’s actions put C.M.’s physical health and safety at risk.
    The detention report noted mother had been the subject of a referral in March
    2011, one day after C.M. was born, alleging mother had been using marijuana and had
    been diagnosed with bipolar disorder but had been off her medication during her
    pregnancy. According to the investigation, mother admitted using marijuana and
    going off her bipolar medication when she found out she was pregnant, although she
    claimed to have restarted her medication and had an appointment with her psychiatrist
    in May 2011. She stated C.M. was with her father, and her paternal grandparents
    cared for her while father worked. Mother said father did not allow her to have
    unsupervised visits because there was a “post partum incident” after C.M. was born.
    Mother would not go into detail, but she said she had been texting father “a lot of
    crazy stuff.” When asked, mother stated she had “no plan” for C.M. Father reported
    and visitation of the child, and all issues and actions regarding paternity of the child.”
    (Kaylee H., supra, at p. 102.)
    4      We grant the parties’ joint request to take judicial notice of the docket in the
    probate case.
    3
    he had C.M. since she was two days old, and mother had sent him “mean text
    messages,” which concerned him. When he removed C.M. from mother’s home, he
    did so with the maternal grandmother’s consent. He said he was willing and able to
    care for C.M. and had arranged for his parents to watch her while he worked. He
    wanted mother in C.M.’s life, but he thought visits needed to be supervised for now.
    DCFS substantiated the allegations of neglect and that C.M. was born positive
    for marijuana, but it nevertheless closed the referral because C.M. appeared well cared
    for with father, who was protective and would not allow unsupervised visits by
    mother. Moreover, mother was living with the maternal grandmother at the time, who
    felt mother was not a threat to C.M. and did a good job caring for her.
    In the June 15, 2011 guardianship petition, C.M.’s paternal grandparents also
    claimed mother had severe mental health issues, had been diagnosed with bipolar
    disorder, and did not stay on her medications. Mother also had a drug abuse history,
    as did father, and C.M. tested positive for marijuana at birth.
    A September 20, 2012 referral based on the probate matter alleged C.M. had
    been the victim of emotional abuse and general neglect by mother, and general neglect
    by father. It noted C.M.’s paternal grandparents had initiated the guardianship action
    based on mother’s mental health issues, failure to take her medication, and sending
    father text messages when C.M. was born, stating she wished C.M. was dead and she
    was going to harm herself by driving off the road. It noted both mother and father had
    a history of methamphetamine and marijuana use.
    A social worker met with father, C.M., and the paternal grandparents on
    September 25, 2012. The social worker observed C.M. was appropriately groomed
    and dressed, she appeared happy and comfortable, and she was free of obvious marks
    or bruises. Father stated mother had mental health issues and often texted him
    inappropriate messages. Two days after C.M. was born, he and the paternal
    grandparents took C.M. from mother and the maternal grandmother. At that time,
    father and the paternal grandparents were going to visit C.M. when father received
    4
    “disturbing text messages” from mother. When they arrived to see C.M., they found
    mother was gone and C.M. was left with her maternal grandmother and a friend.
    Following that visit, father and the paternal grandparents had C.M. in their care
    until May 17, 2011, when father was arrested for drug issues. After his arrest, he
    arranged for C.M. to live with her paternal grandparents. Father said C.M.’s maternal
    grandmother agreed, telling him to “get the baby out” of the environment. Father
    admitted he had a drug problem, but he was now drug free, claiming he had stopped
    using drugs over a year prior. He reported completing a “prop 36” program and
    continued to pay for hair follicle drug tests every 60 days to provide to the probate
    court. He reported living by himself, working full time, attending Narcotics
    Anonymous meetings, and visiting C.M. daily. He expressed concerns about mother’s
    capability of caring for C.M. and believed C.M. was safer with her paternal
    grandparents. He favored the paternal grandparents being granted guardianship but
    expressed that he would eventually like to have custody of C.M.
    The paternal grandparents reported they had ongoing concerns with mother’s
    mental health status. The paternal grandmother cited an incident during which she
    invited C.M.’s maternal grandmother and mother to attend an outing to a museum,
    during which mother “had an outburst” and cornered the paternal grandmother in an
    intimidating manner. The paternal grandmother stated mother goes “back and forth”
    thanking the paternal grandparents for taking care of C.M. She was also unaware if
    mother was receiving mental health treatment or currently using drugs. The paternal
    grandfather and father reported mother continued to text father random inappropriate
    messages, such as when she wrote, “I can’t wait to stick this needle in me deep . . . .”
    The paternal grandfather stated even after mother sent those kinds of messages she
    would show up for visits appearing fine. The paternal grandmother also stated mother
    sent text messages and made statements implying the paternal grandmother and father
    had inappropriate sexual relations and that the paternal grandfather was a pedophile.
    They stated none of those claims were true.
    5
    The social worker met with mother on October 2, 2012. Mother denied the
    allegations, but admitted she used marijuana one month prior to C.M.’s birth and C.M.
    was born positive for marijuana; admitted she was bipolar and did not take her
    medication during her pregnancy; and admitted she suffered postpartum depression
    after C.M. was born. She reported she had resumed taking her medication and was
    under the care of a psychiatrist she sees every two to four months. She admitted
    texting father after C.M. was born, but denied saying she wished C.M. was dead. She
    explained she was texting father the “horrible things” he had said to her because she
    had been exhausted after giving birth and father had insulted her during labor.
    She further explained that, after she and C.M. had come home from the
    hospital, the maternal grandmother told her to get some air and leave C.M. with her,
    which mother did. However, she left at the time she was supposed to take C.M. to the
    paternal grandparents’ house for a visit. She texted father to say C.M. was not with
    her, which she believed scared father when she did not show up at the paternal
    grandparents’ house with C.M. She said she was just “venting.” The maternal
    grandmother asked the paternal family for help, so father and the paternal grandparents
    took C.M. to their home, and she stayed there for the weekend before going to live
    with father. Mother also went to live with father at that time, and the paternal
    grandparents provided daycare while mother worked.
    Mother confirmed father was arrested in May 2011 for drug-related issues, after
    which he refused to bring C.M. to mother and left her with the paternal grandparents,
    who insisted on keeping her. Mother claimed she did not have a car so C.M. remained
    with them. Mother eventually went to law enforcement for assistance in getting C.M.
    back, but they could not help her because she did not have a formal custody order for
    C.M. She then went to court to obtain a custody order on the same day the paternal
    grandparents filed the guardianship petition in probate court. She said she did not
    support the paternal grandparents getting guardianship because she wanted custody of
    C.M. and believed they were not encouraging a bond between her and C.M.
    6
    Mother admitted a history of drug use, claiming she “didn’t use drugs until
    [her] mid 20’s.” She said “it’s been months” since she used methamphetamines. She
    used marijuana “3 or 4 weeks ago” and produced what appeared to be a medical
    marijuana card set to expire in November 2012. She provided the social worker with
    the negative results of a hair follicle test on May 7, 2012, and a “parenting certificate”
    dated January 5, 2012. She indicated she wanted C.M. returned to her.
    Mother tested positive for marijuana on October 24, 2012. In an October 26,
    2012 “upfront assessment” by the Santa Anita Family Service, mother reported first
    using cocaine, cannibis, and methamphetamine at age 22 and using cannibis a week
    and a half prior to the assessment when she was given a medical marijuana card to
    help her with anxiety and depression. She denied having a substance abuse problem
    and did not see a need for alcohol or drug treatment. The report noted that although
    mother had completed an 18-month program for co-occurring disorders following a
    2006 conviction for methamphetamine possession, she was minimizing her substance
    abuse and should be subject to random drug testing.
    DCFS conducted a team decisionmaking meeting on January 10, 2013, with
    mother, father, the paternal grandparents, the maternal grandmother, and C.M.5 At the
    meeting, mother claimed she had been “sabotaged” and the paternal grandparents
    wanted to keep C.M.; similarly, the maternal grandmother claimed the paternal
    grandparents had “plotted” against mother. Mother wanted to receive DCFS services
    and the maternal grandmother believed mother should receive them. Father stated he
    did not feel able to care for C.M. on his own and was open to DCFS services. The
    paternal grandparents stated, “all we care about is [C.M.]” During the meeting,
    mother exhibited erratic behavior by speaking loudly, twisting in her chair, and
    standing up in an aggressive way, all of which resulted in security escorting her out of
    5      There was another referral on January 4, 2013, also apparently arising from the
    probate case, alleging emotional abuse and general neglect by mother and neglect by
    father. After investigation, the allegations of emotional abuse were deemed unfounded
    and the allegations of general neglect deemed inconclusive.
    7
    the meeting room. In light of these actions, DCFS remained concerned about mother’s
    mental health stability, even though mother claimed to have continued taking her
    medication.
    The meeting resulted in DCFS detaining C.M. because, although C.M. was not
    at current risk of abuse or neglect with her paternal grandparents, neither mother nor
    father was suitable to provide care for C.M. at that time. As for father, his visits were
    to remain monitored by the paternal grandparents. Even though he had completed a
    drug program, parenting course, and hair follicle drug tests, he admitted he was not
    ready to provide care for C.M. on his own. Mother’s visits also remained monitored as
    ordered by the probate court, even though she completed a parenting course and
    submitted to hair follicle tests. DCFS noted mother tested positive for marijuana in
    October 2012. Both mother and father agreed C.M. could be placed with the paternal
    grandparents while DCFS filed a petition.
    The court held the detention hearing on January 15, 2013. Mother expressed
    her desire to have “as much visitation as possible. It seems that the probate matter has
    drug on for around two years now, and mother has not always been able to arrange
    visitation with the paternal grandparents. Mother reports that they’re not very
    supportive of reunification and often changed the visitation schedule. So we’re just
    asking for specific visitation orders.” DCFS indicated it was important that the court
    order monitored visitation for mother and that father not monitor those visits.
    The court detained C.M. from mother and released her to father’s custody on
    the condition he reside with the paternal grandparents and continue to drug test
    “clean.” The court ordered mother and father to stay at least 100 yards away from one
    another; they were also to have no contact in any way, including by electronic means
    such as email and text message. Both were ordered to participate in random drug
    testing and mother would be provided with no or low cost referrals to a drug program.
    Mother was awarded no less than four hours of visitation a week and father was
    ordered not to monitor mother’s visits.
    8
    2. Amended Petition and Section 385 Application
    DCFS filed an amended petition on February 25, 2013, adding count b-3
    alleging father had a 15-year history of methamphetamine abuse, currently abused
    alcohol, and had a recent toxicology screening indicating diluted results, all of which
    put C.M.’s physical health and safety at risk. In the detention report, the investigator
    explained father initially denied any knowledge of the diluted test result, but then
    admitted he had been drinking “a few beers while working on [his] house.” He did not
    realize the toxicology screening included alcohol and he did not want to test positive
    for it. The paternal grandmother expressed willingness to care for C.M. and to
    monitor father’s visits with her. The report indicated mother continued to have
    visitation one time per week monitored by DCFS staff.
    Based on the same diluted test result, DCFS also filed a section 385 application
    to modify the existing court order releasing C.M. to father with family maintenance
    services. It recommended C.M. be removed from father’s care and placed with her
    paternal grandmother.6
    At a February 25, 2013 hearing on the amended petition and the section 385
    request, the court dismissed the original section 300 petition in favor of the amended
    petition and granted the section 385 petition, detaining C.M. from father and ordering
    her placed with the paternal grandmother. At the hearing, mother complained the
    paternal grandparents have allowed her to have “barely . . . two hours of visits per
    week.” As a result, the court ordered that parents were to have weekly monitored
    visits for a minimum of four hours.
    3. Jurisdiction/Disposition Report and Hearing
    In preparation for the combined jurisdiction/disposition hearing set for March 4,
    2013, an investigator met with C.M., who was very active, running, jumping, sitting in
    a chair independently, playing with toys, and throwing a ball. She said “hi” and “bye”
    6    Because the paternal grandfather had arrests from 1966 and 1967, he had
    moved out of the home until DCFS could obtain a criminal waiver.
    9
    and the paternal grandmother reported she could say a few other words. She did not
    display any emotional or behavioral issues.
    Mother was interviewed, during which she paced and wrung her hands to the
    point they were red, and she did not make eye contact with the investigator.
    Regarding the allegations of substance abuse, she once again admitted she tested
    positive for marijuana when C.M. was born, but she had a “card” so she believed she
    was using it legally to help with her moods. She denied smoking it daily. She
    admitted “[m]ethamphetamine is in [her] history” and she took it and other
    prescription drugs without a prescription. She had an ADHD7 diagnosis and was
    “experimenting.” She was in a two-year program for “co-occurring” diagnoses, and
    she moved to Orange County in 2006, where she completed a program through “Prop
    36.” She was in a 90-day inpatient program and a sober living program. She claimed
    to have taken Adderall “[f]rom time to time,” but denied using “street drugs.” She
    sometimes went to meetings, but not often lately because she would go for hikes or
    ride her bike to get natural adrenaline to keep her “very balanced.” She stated she and
    father used methamphetamine “from time to time” during their relationship.
    Mother further explained she had a bipolar diagnosis, which was first diagnosed
    when she was 17 years old, and again when she was 22, at which point she was given
    medication. She was also diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder stemming from
    a childhood molestation. She had psychotic episodes when she was a teenager through
    her early 20’s and she was hospitalized, but she claimed it had not happened recently.
    She got into the habit of taking her medication while she lived in Orange County, and
    identified several different medications she was taking currently. She said she had a
    couple of upcoming therapy and psychiatric appointments.
    She claimed the paternal grandparents took C.M. from her. When father was
    arrested in May 2011, the paternal grandparents lied to her and said he was away on a
    business trip, at which point they detained C.M. Mother could not do anything
    7     Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
    10
    because she did not have a custody decree. When the court released C.M. to father’s
    custody, mother did not understand why. She claimed the paternal grandmother had
    an “unhealthy attachment” to C.M. and she had made false allegations against mother
    based on text messages mother sent to father. She said father got “kind of abusive” to
    her while she was pregnant. She had not been taking medication while she was
    pregnant and experienced a “crash of emotions” after C.M. was born, prompting her to
    “vent[]” in text messages. She admitted sending text messages like “Die baby, die,”
    but claimed she was only repeating things father said to her while she was pregnant.
    She also admitted sending text messages to father and attempting to speak with him
    after the court issued the no-contact order, but father did not respond. The report
    attached approximately 25 pages of text messages and calls from mother between
    March 2011 and January 2013.
    Mother also claimed the paternal grandparents and father “did some kind of
    family abduction.” Because they would not answer the phone, mother and a friend
    named Paula drove by the paternal grandparents’ house and saw them leave with C.M.
    Mother followed them and called the police, but because father was with C.M., the
    police took no action. Mother confronted them in the lobby of a hotel at a casino and
    they would not let her see C.M.
    Father told the investigator he and mother met when they were both using
    drugs. He did not think she was using drugs much during her pregnancy, but he was
    not sure. He said she would not take the follicle tests after a while because they were
    too expensive. He stopped speaking with her when the no-contact order was issued,
    but she continued to contact him. He admitted to multiple substance abuse arrests, but
    indicated he attends alcoholics anonymous and narcotics anonymous meetings and has
    been able to abstain from using drugs by focusing on his relationship with C.M. But in
    DCFS’s view, he had not demonstrated a long period of stability or that he was willing
    and able to care for C.M., which put C.M. at risk of future abuse and neglect.
    With regard to the allegations of mother’s mental and emotional problems,
    father said, “I had never seen any of [mother’s] mental health issues because they
    11
    didn’t come out until after [C.M.] was born. Did you see the text messages? She said
    horrible things.” He said he received a phone call from a 323 area code the previous
    week and he thought it was his boss. But it was mother, and when he called the
    number back, he reached the inpatient mental health department at Kaiser Permanente.
    Even though they were supposed to have no contact in light of the court’s order,
    mother texted him four hours after court adjourned and had since sent him about 75
    text messages. One time he went to his house and she was there, but she took off
    when he called the police. He also learned at some point she had found a note on his
    front door containing the phone number of his high school friend, and she began
    calling him. Father “can’t begin to understand why.” In his opinion, mother “has
    problems.”
    The paternal grandparents were also interviewed. The paternal grandmother
    did not know much about mother’s drug history but “suspect[s] she’s using when she
    gets this dark look in her eyes. It’s a hateful, ugly look. She sweats profusely, all the
    way through her blouse. She will go a few weeks where she appears OK, but that ends
    and she’s back to having issues, again.” The paternal grandfather knew father had
    been taking hair follicle tests, but when he offered to pay for mother to take those tests,
    she shaved her head.
    The paternal grandmother explained she did not know when mother would “go
    off on these episodes.” Mother told her she has psychotic breaks and, according to the
    paternal grandmother, “[s]he’s obviously suicidal.” She mentioned the museum
    incident when mother became “belligerent” and began screaming at her. Moreover,
    earlier on the day of the interview mother was supposed to visit C.M., but she got “out
    of control” and the social worker had to cancel the visit. The paternal grandmother
    explained she went to probate court after the incident of mother following them to the
    hotel at the casino, during which mother made a “horrible scene.” She did not think
    anything would help mother.
    The paternal grandfather reported mother had told him she had been put on a
    hospital hold before. He had received phone calls from a 323 area code and when he
    12
    called the number, he reached the inpatient facility at Kaiser Permanente, which made
    him think mother was there. Mother did things that did not “make any sense,” such as
    visiting C.M. with him monitoring and then posting messages on Facebook calling him
    a “faggot, pedophile grandfather.” He said, “I’m tired of this. We went to [probate]
    [c]ourt to protect [C.M.] It’s not what I thought I would be doing at this point in my
    life.”
    Mother’s friend Paula was interviewed and said she was with mother during her
    pregnancy. She claimed father was “very abusive to her,” including calling her “old
    and decrepit” in the delivery room. Paula said mother had no postpartum depression
    and was a great mother; she was just “really stressed out.” When mother said she was
    going to pick up C.M. after the paternal grandmother took her, the paternal
    grandmother said “no.” Paula was with mother when she followed the paternal
    grandparents, father, and C.M. to the hotel at the casino; she observed the paternal
    grandparents take C.M. to the hotel room and father block mother so she could not get
    to her. According to Paula, “[i]t was really traumatic.”
    Also attached to the DCFS report were the results of psychological testing of
    mother. Most of the results were rendered invalid by her unwillingness to fully reveal
    herself and her attempts to present herself favorably, but the evaluating doctor was
    able to conclude she had average self-esteem and self-confidence, she had a low
    probability of having a substance abuse disorder, and she would not likely overreact or
    be unduly harsh with children in her care. Another test suggested mother was
    conscientious, orderly, efficient, dependable, industrious, and persistent, although
    those results could have been caused by an individual who was interested in looking
    good in a testing situation.
    DCFS reported mother had a monitored visit with C.M. on February 7, 2013,
    during which mother became very aggressive toward the paternal grandmother,
    claiming the paternal grandparents had “stolen” C.M. The social worker intervened
    and determined the visit should not proceed as planned. Mother began yelling and was
    asked to leave. The social worker escorted mother out, reminding her to have no
    13
    contact with the paternal family. Mother became increasingly upset and said she
    should just “give up the fight” because the paternal grandparents “want my baby and
    no one is listening to me.” The social worker called for an ambulance because mother
    was so upset, but mother quickly walked away before it could arrive, stating she did
    not want to go to the hospital. The social worker recommended mother receive
    immediate counseling. A week later, mother was able to visit C.M. without the
    paternal grandparents present because the social worker arranged transportation for
    C.M. to avoid contact between mother and the paternal grandparents.
    The DCFS report also included two declarations from mother, along with
    numerous attachments, which largely recounted the facts described in the DCFS
    report. In the first declaration, she explained father urged her to have an abortion and,
    if she did not, the paternal grandmother would attempt to take C.M. and otherwise
    “cause problems.” Mother’s medical records indicated her methamphetamine use was
    in remission and she stated she did not use methamphetamines during her pregnancy
    due to concern for C.M.’s welfare. She also did not take any prescribed medications
    during pregnancy because she feared possible birth defects. She claimed that, while
    she was in the delivery room, father said she was “too old and decrepit” to have a baby
    and he hoped she would become incontinent and have “zebra-stripe stretch marks” all
    over her body. The paternal grandmother was there and silently condoned father’s
    remarks. After C.M. was born, father refused to be supportive in any way.
    After mother took C.M. home, father and the paternal grandparents took C.M.
    with the maternal grandmother’s consent, assuring her they would return C.M. the next
    day. A day and a half later, mother and father agreed to take care of C.M. together at
    father’s home. When father was arrested in May 2011, the paternal grandparents lied
    to mother about what happened. When father was released from jail, he became irate
    and threatened that the paternal grandparents would take C.M. and mother would not
    see her again. Mother recounted calling the sheriff’s department, which could not
    assist her, and she described the incident when she followed father and the paternal
    grandparents to the hotel at the casino to recover C.M.
    14
    Mother’s second declaration focused on alleged failures by the probate court
    and the DCFS and her fitness as a parent based on her parenting classes, counseling,
    drug testing and treatment, and psychological evaluations. For example, she
    completed a parenting class in January 2012; completed a 30-day individual
    counseling course in December 2011; participated in a chemical dependency treatment
    program at Kaiser Permanente between March and May 2012; and completed a five-
    month alcohol prevention and treatment and group therapy program in September
    2011. As of June 2011, she was compliant with her medications and showed
    improvement. The juvenile court also received a letter indicating mother would attend
    a four-week intensive outpatient program in March 2013. She tested negative for
    drugs in July and September 2011, and May and June 2012.
    On this record, DCFS concluded mother’s erratic behavior did not appear to be
    under control. Although clearly she loved her daughter, “her mental health issues have
    not yet adequately been addressed at this time, and she had not been able to
    demonstrate she is emotionally stable at this time.” DCFS also noted she had an
    “extensive substance abuse history.” Although she did not use “street drugs,” she
    admitted illegally using prescription medication, despite having completed a full
    treatment program. She did not have an appropriate plan for sobriety and admitted to
    occasional use. She also admitted using drugs to help her balance her mental health
    issues. Her mental health issues compounded with her substance abuse issues would
    require an extensive amount of work, attention, and support, and she would need
    “extensive support and help prior to releasing [C.M.] to her care.”
    DCFS was concerned with father’s “conflicting perspectives” between his
    expressed desire to care for C.M. and his statements he was not ready to care for her
    on his own. Because father had not demonstrated a long period of stability or that he
    was willing and able to care for C.M., his “seeming ambivalence” about her care put
    her at risk of future abuse and neglect with him.
    DCFS recommended C.M. be declared a dependent of the court and detained.
    It recommended mother receive an Evidence Code section 730 evaluation and
    15
    participate in “Parents Beyond Conflict,” weekly random and on-demand drug testing,
    a substance abuse treatment program, and Narcotics Anonymous and Alcoholics
    Anonymous meetings. It recommended father receive family maintenance services
    and participate in weekly random and on-demand drug testing, an outpatient substance
    abuse treatment program, Narcotics Anonymous and Alcoholics Anonymous
    meetings, individual therapy, and Parents Beyond Conflict. It further recommended
    mother have monitored visitation.
    DCFS submitted a supplemental report for the March 4, 2013 hearing focused
    on the allegations of drug and alcohol abuse by father. The report noted father had
    regular visits with C.M. for more than four hours a week, which have been monitored
    by the paternal grandmother. Mother also had a four-hour visit with C.M. on C.M.’s
    birthday, which went well. However, on the same day the paternal grandmother
    reported that neighbors told her two women in a car took photographs of her house on
    February 26, 2013, and she believed they were mother and the maternal grandmother.
    After his diluted test results, father tested negative for drugs and alcohol. Mother
    failed to randomly drug test on February 8, 2013, but when the investigator reminded
    her to do so, she said she would. DCFS concluded that, although father reported he
    was prepared to care for C.M., C.M. remained at risk because father indicated he
    continued to consume alcohol regularly while leaving C.M. with her paternal
    grandparents and his position on caring for C.M. has “flip-flopped.” Thus, DCFS
    reiterated its recommendations in its initial report, but recommended both father and
    mother have monitored visitation. C.M. remained temporarily detained with her
    paternal grandmother.
    At the contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing on March 4, 2013, mother pled
    no contest for jurisdictional purposes to count b-1 related to her substance use. With
    certain modifications, the court found that count true as follows: “The child [C.M.]’s
    mother, Tammi A[.], has a history of methamphetamine use, and is a current user of
    marijuana, which renders the mother incapable of providing regular care for the child.
    The mother used marijuana during the mother’s pregnancy with the child. On
    16
    10/24/2012, the mother had a positive toxicology screen for marijuana. On prior
    occasions in 2012, the mother was under the influence of marijuana while the child
    was in the mother’s care and supervision. The mother’s substance use endangers the
    child’s physical health and places the child at risk of harm.”
    The court dismissed count b-2 related to mother’s mental and emotional
    problems, finding an insufficient nexus had been shown. The court dismissed count b-
    3 related to father’s alcohol and substance abuse because insufficient evidence had
    been presented.
    The court proceeded immediately to disposition, declaring C.M. a dependent of
    the court and finding clear and convincing evidence there was a substantial danger to
    C.M.’s physical and emotional health and well-being if C.M. were returned to
    mother’s physical custody, and there was no reasonable means to ensure her safety
    without removing her from mother’s custody. Despite the record indicating C.M. did
    not reside with mother, the court ordered “[C.M.] removed from [mother], a parent
    with whom she was residing at the time the petition was filed.” Over objection by the
    DCFS, the court ordered C.M. released to father on the condition he and C.M. reside
    with the paternal grandparents. The court ordered father to participate in family
    maintenance services, random drug testing, and a drug treatment program if he missed
    any tests or tested “dirty.” The court ordered that mother undergo a psychiatric
    evaluation, take prescribed medication, and participate in random weekly drug testing,
    parenting classes, and individual counseling. She was given monitored visitation with
    C.M. with DCFS discretion to liberalize. The court set the next hearing pursuant to
    section 364. Mother timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Removal Pursuant to Section 361, Subdivision (c)
    All the parties and the juvenile court assumed section 361, subdivision (c)(1)
    governed the disposition in this case. Section 361, subdivision (c)(1) provides in
    relevant part, “A dependent child may not be taken from the physical custody of his or
    her parents or guardian or guardians with whom the child resides at the time the
    17
    petition was initiated, unless the juvenile court finds clear and convincing evidence of
    any of the following circumstances . . . [¶] (1) There is or would be a substantial
    danger to the physical health, safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of
    the minor if the minor were returned home, and there are no reasonable means by
    which the minor’s physical health can be protected without removing the minor from
    the minor’s parents or guardian’s physical custody. . . .”
    We asked the parties to file supplemental briefs8 on whether the juvenile court
    erred in applying section 361, subdivision (c) because C.M. was not in mother’s
    physical custody and was not residing with her at the time the initial section 300
    petition was initiated on January 15, 2013. Both parties conceded C.M. was not living
    with mother at the time the petition was filed, but both took the position that section
    361, subdivision (c) should be interpreted to include legal custody or other custodial
    rights even in the absence of actual physical custody, and C.M.’s parents retained
    custodial rights when the probate court terminated the paternal grandparents’
    temporary legal guardianship in August 2011.
    We cannot accept this interpretation. Whatever parental rights might be
    included in the term “custody” when that term is used in the Welfare and Institutions
    Code without qualification (see, e.g., In re Austin P. (2004) 
    118 Cal.App.4th 1124
    ,
    1130 [discussing the meaning of “custody” in § 361.2, subd. (a)]), or even in the term
    “physical custody” as used in section 361, subdivision (c), that provision expressly
    governs removal of a child from the physical custody of a parent with whom the child
    resides at the time the petition was initiated. C.M. did not reside with mother on
    January 15, 2013, the date the petition was initiated, so section 361, subdivision (c) did
    not apply. Although mother contends this interpretation creates an ambiguity in the
    juvenile dependency law when parents have full legal and physical custodial rights to a
    child who does not live with them, that ambiguity was not created by law, but by
    mother herself. Assuming she had the right to have C.M. reside with her, she did not
    8      We grant mother’s request to file her supplemental brief one day late.
    18
    enforce that right, as she conceded in her supplemental brief. As a result, the juvenile
    court’s dispositional order did not meet the conditions for section 361, subdivision (c)
    to apply.
    Because the juvenile court’s dispositional order limited mother’s control of
    C.M., it was governed by section 361, subdivision (a)(1),9 which states in pertinent
    part, “In all cases in which a minor is adjudged a dependent child of the court on the
    ground that the minor is a person described by Section 300, the court may limit the
    control to be exercised over the dependent child by any parent or guardian and shall by
    its order clearly and specifically set forth all those limitations. . . . The limitations may
    not exceed those necessary to protect the child. . . .” This provision allows the court to
    “limit the control of the parent over the dependent child” (Teresa J. v. Superior Court
    (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 366
    , 375) and enables the juvenile court to make orders in the
    child’s best interest (see id. at pp. 375-376).
    Although the juvenile court erred in applying section 361, subdivision (c), that
    error was harmless because sufficient evidence would have readily supported the
    juvenile court’s order under the best interests standard in section 361, subdivision
    9       While mother suggested in a footnote in her opening brief that section 361.2,
    subdivision (a) might apply, she conceded in her supplemental brief it does not. DCFS
    agreed, as do we. Section 361.2, subdivision (a) states, “When a court orders removal
    of a child pursuant to Section 361, the court shall first determine whether there is a
    parent of the child, with whom the child was not residing at the time that the events or
    conditions arose that brought the child within the provisions of Section 300, who
    desires to assume custody of the child. If that parent requests custody, the court shall
    place the child with the parent unless it finds that placement with that parent would be
    detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of the child.”
    Section 361.2 “comes into play after a child has been removed from the physical
    custody of his or her parents under section 361, subdivision (c).” (In re A.A. (2012)
    
    203 Cal.App.4th 597
    , 608.) Here there was no such removal because, as discussed
    above, C.M. was not in mother’s physical custody, and the juvenile court dismissed
    the allegations against father and ordered C.M. to be released to him on the condition
    he reside with the paternal grandparents.
    19
    (a).10 “In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal we consider the entire
    record to determine whether substantial evidence supports the court’s findings.
    [Citation.] We do not pass on the credibility of witnesses, attempt to resolve conflicts
    in the evidence or weigh the evidence. Rather, we draw all reasonable inferences in
    support of the findings, view the record favorably to the juvenile court’s order and
    affirm the order even if other evidence supports a contrary finding. [Citations.]” (In
    re James R. (2009) 
    176 Cal.App.4th 129
    , 134-135 (James R.).)
    Mother admitted she had a history of methamphetamine use, she had taken
    other prescription drugs without a prescription, she used marijuana while pregnant
    with C.M., and C.M. tested positive for marijuana at birth. Mother also tested positive
    for marijuana in October 2012, and the October 26, 2012 upfront assessment noted
    mother denied having a substance abuse problem and suggested she was minimizing
    her substance abuse, recommending she be subject to further drug testing. In February
    2013 mother also failed to randomly drug test. While she demonstrated commendable
    progress toward addressing those drug use issues, mother’s substance use supported
    placing C.M. with father on the condition he reside with the paternal grandparents in
    order to serve her best interests.
    Further, while the juvenile court dismissed the allegations related to mother’s
    mental and emotional issues, the court could have nevertheless considered mother’s
    pattern of mental and emotional problems to determine whether limiting mother’s
    control over C.M. was in C.M.’s best interests. Mother had gone off her medication
    for bipolar disorder when she found out she was pregnant and admitted father did not
    allow her to have unsupervised visits with C.M. because there had been a “post partum
    incident” after she was born and mother had been texting father “a lot of crazy stuff,”
    which father confirmed. Those texts included mother writing “I can’t wait to stick this
    10     We reject the DCFS’s argument that mother forfeited her challenge to C.M.’s
    removal by not objecting to the sufficiency of the evidence in the juvenile court. (In re
    Javier G. (2006) 
    137 Cal.App.4th 453
    , 464; In re Brian P. (2002) 
    99 Cal.App.4th 616
    ,
    623.)
    20
    needle in me deep . . .” and “Die baby, die.” In fact, mother’s issues were serious
    enough that, two days after C.M. was born, father and the paternal grandparents took
    C.M. from her and the maternal grandmother. And when father was arrested in May
    2011, father gave C.M. to her paternal grandparents with the maternal grandmother’s
    consent, where C.M. continued to reside.
    After C.M. went to live with her paternal grandparents, mother’s pattern of
    mental and emotional issues continued. For example, at the trip to the museum,
    mother “had an outburst” and became “belligerent” toward and screamed at the
    paternal grandmother.
    During the January 2013 team decisionmaking meeting, mother exhibited
    erratic behavior by speaking loudly, twisting in her chair, and standing up in an
    aggressive way, all of which resulted in security escorting her out.
    At her interview for the jurisdiction/disposition report, mother paced, wrung her
    hands to the point they were red, and did not make eye contact with the investigator.
    She admitted having a bipolar diagnosis and posttraumatic stress disorder stemming
    from a childhood molestation and she said she had not been taking medication while
    she was pregnant. She experienced a “crash of emotions” after C.M. was born,
    prompting her to “vent[]” in text messages, which she continued to send to father after
    the juvenile court’s no-contact order.
    At one point, mother followed the paternal grandparents and confronted them in
    a hotel at a casino. The paternal grandmother described it as a “horrible scene” and
    mother’s friend Paula described it as “really traumatic.”
    Father also reported he received phone calls and text messages from mother and
    called the police once when he arrived at his house and found her there. He also
    reported mother began calling father’s high school friend after finding his number on a
    note on father’s front door. He couldn’t “begin to understand why,” and in his
    opinion, mother “has problems.”
    The paternal grandmother explained she did not know when mother would “go
    off on these episodes.” Mother told her she has psychotic breaks and, according to the
    21
    paternal grandmother, “[s]he’s obviously suicidal.” In addition to the museum
    incident, the paternal grandmother reported that, earlier on the day of her interview for
    the jurisdiction/disposition report, mother was supposed to visit C.M., but she got “out
    of control” and the social worker had to cancel the visit.
    The paternal grandfather reported mother had told him she had been put on a
    hospital hold before and mother did things that did not “make any sense,” such as
    visiting C.M. with him monitoring and then posting messages on Facebook calling him
    a “faggot, pedophile grandfather.”
    This erratic behavior continued at a monitored visit with C.M. on February 7,
    2013, when mother became very aggressive toward the paternal grandmother, so much
    so that the social worker had to intervene and end the visit. Outside, mother became
    increasingly upset, prompting the social worker to call for an ambulance, but mother
    quickly walked away before it could arrive, stating she did not want to go to the
    hospital. The social worker recommended mother receive immediate counseling.
    In light of these incidents, DCFS concluded mother’s erratic behavior did not
    appear to be under control and “her mental health issues have not yet adequately been
    addressed at this time, and she had not been able to demonstrate she is emotionally
    stable at this time.” Her mental health issues compounded with her substance abuse
    issues would require an extensive amount of work, attention, and support, and she
    would need “extensive support and help prior to releasing [C.M.] to her care.”
    In arguing the record did not support the juvenile court’s order, mother cites
    James R. and In re David M. (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 822
    , but both cases are
    distinguishable because they addressed whether substantial evidence supported the
    juvenile court’s jurisdictional finding of a risk of physical harm under section 300, not
    whether substantial evidence supported limits to a parent’s control in the best interests
    of the child under section 361, subdivision (a). (See James R., supra, 176 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 134; David M., supra, at p. 829.) They also involved different facts. In James R.,
    although the mother had a history of mental instability and substance abuse, there was
    no evidence of past abuse or neglect and the risk of future harm was speculative.
    22
    (James R., supra, at pp. 136-137.) Likewise, in David M., although the mother used
    marijuana at least once during pregnancy and delayed prenatal care, her child tested
    negative for drugs at birth and showed no signs of drug withdrawal. (David M., supra,
    at p. 829.) The mother also continued to use marijuana, but there was no evidence her
    drug use caused or would cause a risk of substantial harm to her children. (Id. at
    p. 830.) And the social services agency relied on an outdated report without
    conducting an independent investigation into the current allegations. (Id. at p. 831.)
    Here, by contrast, C.M. was born testing positive for marijuana, mother continued to
    use marijuana, and mother’s mental issues repeatedly manifested themselves,
    including while she was on a supervised visit with C.M.
    Mother also cites In re Alexis E. (2009) 
    171 Cal.App.4th 438
    , another section
    300 case, for the proposition that the “the mere use of marijuana by a parent will not
    support a finding of risk to minors.” (Id. at p. 452.) The court in Alexis E.
    nevertheless found this principle inapplicable to the facts before it because the father
    did more than simply use medical marijuana; he previously used it illegally, he used it
    while his children were home, and his use had a negative effect on his demeanor
    toward the children, all of which created a risk of harm to the children. (Id. at pp. 451-
    453.) Similarly here, there was more evidence than just mother’s alleged medical
    marijuana use to demonstrate a risk of harm to C.M., as we have discussed above.
    In sum, the record of mother’s substance use and mental and emotional issues
    sufficiently supported an order placing C.M. with father on the condition he reside
    with the paternal grandparents in order to serve C.M.’s best interests.
    2. Placement with Father on Condition He Reside with Paternal Grandparents
    Mother challenges the juvenile court’s order placing C.M. with father on the
    condition he reside with the paternal grandparents, arguing the acrimony between her
    and the paternal grandparents will undermine her visitation and reunification services.
    DCFS has taken no position on this issue on appeal. “‘The juvenile court has broad
    discretion to determine what would best serve and protect the child’s interests and to
    fashion a dispositional order in accordance with this discretion.’ [Citation.] The
    23
    reviewing court will not reverse the court’s order in the absence of a clear abuse of
    discretion. [Citation.]” (In re Gabriel L. (2009) 
    172 Cal.App.4th 644
    , 652.) We find
    no abuse of discretion here.
    Father had a history of drug use, including his drug arrest in May 2011, and
    made conflicting statements about wanting C.M. to be returned to him but doubting
    whether he could adequately care for her on his own, which supported the juvenile
    court’s decision not to simply release C.M. to his care without conditions. C.M. had
    been living with her paternal grandparents almost since she was born and thrived with
    them, appearing appropriately groomed, happy, comfortable, and free of obvious
    marks or bruises. At the interview for the jurisdiction/disposition report, she was very
    active, running, jumping, sitting in a chair independently, playing with toys, throwing
    a ball, and saying a few words. She did not display any emotional or behavioral
    issues. Whatever acrimony existed between mother and the paternal grandparents, the
    juvenile court reasonably concluded that C.M.’s placement with father on the
    condition he reside with the paternal grandparents was the best option for her. If the
    situation between mother and the grandparents becomes an actual obstacle to mother’s
    reunification with C.M., the juvenile court can address that issue in future hearings.
    (§ 364, subd. (a); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.706(a).)
    3. Prohibition of Father Monitoring Mother’s Visits
    Mother also challenges the juvenile court’s order prohibiting father from
    monitoring mother’s visits, arguing it will negatively impact her efforts “toward
    amicably co-parenting C.M. and runs contrary to the goal of resuming normal family
    relationships.” We review the juvenile court’s visitation order for abuse of discretion
    (In re Brittany C. (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1343
    , 1356), and find no abuse of discretion
    here.
    The juvenile court appropriately balanced mother’s interests in visitation with
    C.M.’s best interests and exercised its discretion to impose “conditions or
    requirements to further define the right to visitation in light of the particular
    circumstances of the case before it.” (In re Jennifer G. (1990) 
    221 Cal.App.3d 752
    ,
    24
    757.) Only a few days after C.M. was born, mother sent father text messages that were
    so concerning that he and the paternal grandparents removed C.M. from her care.
    Mother’s erratic behavior so eroded her relationship with father that, in January 2013,
    the juvenile court ordered mother and father to have no contact and to stay 100 yards
    away from each other, which mother violated four hours after court adjourned and
    violated again when she showed up at father’s house, requiring father to call the
    police. The jurisdiction/disposition report also attached pages of mother’s disturbing
    text messages. In light of this evidence, and the lack of evidence to suggest mother’s
    visitation and reunification with C.M. would be compromised in any way without
    father’s supervision at visits, the juvenile court appropriately determined father should
    not monitor mother’s visits.
    DISPOSITION
    The juvenile court’s dispositional order is affirmed.
    FLIER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    RUBIN, J.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B248239

Filed Date: 6/3/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014