In re Camryn E. CA6 ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • Filed 4/28/22 In re Camryn E. CA6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    In re CAMRYN E., et al., Persons Coming                             H049340
    Under the Juvenile Court Law.                                      (Santa Clara County Super. Ct.
    Nos. 20JD026677, 20JD026678,
    20JD026679)
    SANTA CLARA COUNTY
    DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND
    CHILDREN’S SERVICES,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    JAIME P.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Jaime P. (mother) appeals from a juvenile court order removing three of her
    children from her custody pursuant to a petition filed by the Santa Clara County
    Department of Family and Children’s Services (department) under Welfare and
    Institutions Code section 387.1 She contends the court erred in ordering the children
    removed. In particular, she argues there was insufficient evidence the children would
    1
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
    face substantial harm if left in her custody, and the court should have ordered alternative
    measures short of removal.
    For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the order.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    These dependency proceedings involve three of mother’s children2: Five-year-old
    Camryn, four-year-old Liliana, and two-year-old Scarlet (together, children).3 The
    children’s father, David E., was incarcerated at the start of the dependency proceedings in
    October 2020 but was released from prison in March 2021. The court has since placed
    the children in father’s custody. He is not a party to this appeal.
    A. Department Involvement with Family Prior to Jurisdictional Proceedings
    Prior to the dependency, the department had investigated a number of referrals
    related to mother’s household and had provided services to her.
    Following a substantiated claim of general neglect in July 2019, mother agreed to
    participate in a voluntary family maintenance program and received informal services
    and support from the department which included child and family team meetings to
    discuss concerns and mental health services for mother. Mother engaged in mental health
    services, met with a psychiatrist, and took medication for her symptoms of anxiety and
    depression. The children also received services and entered full-time daycare. The
    department closed the case in May 2020.
    In January 2020, the department substantiated a report of general neglect and
    physical abuse that included a suspicious mark on Liliana’s wrist. Mother agreed to
    extend voluntary family maintenance services for another three months “to improve
    parenting and existing mental health symptoms.”
    2
    To protect their privacy, we refer to the children as Camryn E. (Camryn), Liliana
    E. (Liliana), and Scarlet E. (Scarlet). (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.401(a)(2).)
    3
    Mother has an older child (born in 2008) with a different father. At the time of
    the dependency proceedings she did not have physical custody of that child, and he is not
    a subject of these dependency proceedings.
    2
    In the summer of 2020, the department received and investigated a number of
    additional reports of mother’s general neglect of the children. In September 2020, the
    department held a child and family team meeting and mother agreed to participate in
    informal supervision services. Mother agreed to, inter alia, participate in parent
    education and therapy, have the children enrolled in “First Five” and receive a public
    health nurse, have the children receive counseling through First Five or another agency,
    and “not grab or squeeze the children to gain their attention.”
    Shortly thereafter, on October 16, 2020, law enforcement placed the children into
    protective custody following allegations of physical abuse and a report that Liliana (then
    three years old) had a visible handprint bruise on her buttocks. Mother later admitted that
    she had spanked the children with her hand because they would not go to sleep. Mother
    told the social worker she was remorseful for having spanked the children and was
    working with her therapist on better ways to parent the children. She also reported she
    was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and had used marijuana since
    high school to help her focus.
    Mother reported she was receiving psychiatric care, had begun psychiatric
    treatment in 2009, took medication and that, when she did not take her medication, she
    became angered more easily and would have “extreme ‘ups and downs.’ ” Mother stated
    that her mother, the children’s maternal grandmother, had moved into mother’s home for
    additional parenting support. Mother described her relationship with maternal
    grandmother as “stable and loving.”
    B. Jurisdictional and Early Dispositional Proceedings
    On October 20, 2020, the department filed juvenile dependency petitions under
    section 300, alleging that mother had neglected and failed to protect the children. After
    the initial hearing, mother participated in a child and family team meeting to discuss
    safety measures were the children to return to her care. Mother agreed to a safety plan
    that included attending therapy, completing a parenting without violence class, and
    3
    receiving as-needed respite care from her support persons, which included maternal
    grandmother. Maternal grandmother agreed to be part of the safety plan and to “co-
    parent the children” with mother and to report any child safety concerns to the
    department. In November 2020, the juvenile court authorized the department to release
    the children to mother.
    On December 15, 2020, the juvenile court conducted a jurisdictional and
    dispositional hearing on amended section 300 petitions for the three children. Mother did
    not contest jurisdiction and disposition; the juvenile court found it had jurisdiction over
    the children and declared them dependents of the court. The juvenile court adopted the
    department’s recommendation that the children remain in mother’s custody and that she
    receive family maintenance services. The court also ordered a case plan.
    Mother’s case plan required her to participate in counseling or psychotherapy
    focused on the effects of trauma and physical abuse on the children and to complete both
    a 16-week parenting without violence class and a certified 52-week child abuser’s
    treatment program.
    C. Case Plan Progress
    Mother completed several aspects of her case plan. She attended a parent
    orientation class, participated in individual therapy and a domestic violence support
    group, and completed a substance abuse assessment. However, at the time of the relevant
    evidentiary hearings in August 2021, she had not begun the 52-week children abuser’s
    treatment program.
    D. Additional Incidents and Supplemental Petition Under Section 387
    Following the jurisdiction and disposition hearing and while under family
    maintenance, mother continued to struggle with parenting the children. The department
    facilitated multiple child and family meetings to address concerns with mother’s anger,
    yelling at the children, and conflicts in her household. In April 2021, mother disclosed
    she had spanked Camryn because the kids were “ ‘acting up,’ ” and Camryn did not listen
    4
    when mother tried to redirect her. This incident resulted in a 10-day referral; the
    allegation of physical abuse was assessed to be inconclusive.
    While maternal grandmother was supposed to be a support person for mother,
    mother and maternal grandmother had conflicts that included physical violence. Mother
    reported that maternal grandmother had physically abused her in front of the children on
    at least two occasions.
    On July 1, 2021,4 an incident occurred at mother’s home that caused the police to
    take the children into protective custody. While the timeline and details of the events are
    not entirely clear, it is undisputed that mother was at home, and the children were
    agitated. Mother made attempts to cool down, which included placing the younger
    children, Liliana and Scarlet, with a next-door neighbor. Mother returned to the home
    with four-year-old Camryn. The situation escalated to the point that mother took a large
    kitchen knife and used it to stab and rip apart Camryn’s teddy bears while Camryn
    watched. There were no reports that mother had threatened to harm Camryn. Mother
    later reported Camryn had been very upset and crying and saying “ ‘no, no, my bear.’ ”
    Mother admitted to stabbing a second bear and had also ripped up “Camryn’s fancy doll.”
    Regarding whether the other two children were present when mother took out the
    knife, Camryn later told the social worker that “Lili and Scarlet were there when she
    smacked [her] mother but not when the mother stabbed the teddy bears.” Mother’s
    neighbor stated to the department that Scarlet and Liliana were in neighbor’s home
    “when the mother stabbed the bears.” Liliana reported (on July 16) to the social worker
    that “Camryn was yelling at mommy when the mother was stabbing the bears and
    Camryn was crying,” which suggests that Liliana may have been present.
    While two other persons (maternal grandmother and a friend of mother’s named
    Jason) were present in mother’s home during the stabbing of the bears, they did not
    4
    Unless otherwise indicated, all dates occurred in 2021.
    5
    intervene. According to mother, neither person thought what mother was doing was
    wrong. Maternal grandmother later explained to a social worker that mother had acted
    appropriately as she had been trying to explain consequences and accountability to
    Camryn, but “ ‘unfortunately [mother] selected a very bad example.’ ”
    Mother called father a number of times on July 1, and father testified at trial that
    mother showed him the teddy bears in a video call. He also recalled seeing Camryn
    crying and laying in a fetal position and observed that mother was distressed and
    overwhelmed. Concerned, father called the social worker, who in turn called the police.
    Law enforcement arrived at the home and noted mother appeared to have great
    difficulty in controlling her children and her emotions. The police incident report stated
    that mother admitted to having spanked the children two months earlier. According to
    the incident report as summarized by the department, the officer who spoke to mother
    became “immediately concerned with the children’s welfare.” The officer “feared that
    the mother’s violent actions might turn towards the children” and also “feared that the
    mother’s extreme emotions would play a part in her reacting violently towards [the]
    children.” Law enforcement placed the children into temporary protective custody.
    The assigned Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) for the children, who
    had a scheduled visit on the day of the incident, arrived at the home and saw “[two] big
    stuffed animals on the floor ripped apart” and observed that mother was blaming Camryn
    and pushing Camryn away when Camryn tried to hug mother.
    An emergency response social worker met with mother outside her home on July 1
    and noted that mother had difficulty controlling her emotions and went from being
    hysterical and upset to calm. Mother admitted to the emergency response social worker
    that she yelled and screamed at the children “on a daily basis” as she struggled to parent
    the children. Mother also reported she was trying to teach Camryn a “lesson” by ripping
    the stuffed animals open “in front of the children.” Mother reported she had hit the
    children in the past, but had not resorted to physical discipline “in over two months.”
    6
    At an emergency child and family team meeting the next day (July 2), mother
    blamed father and Camryn for mother’s behavior. Mother acknowledged that she
    struggled with anger management, marijuana use, and lack of accountability. While
    Mother denied spanking the children, she admitted that she “was still yelling at them
    almost on a daily basis.” The department asked mother what other supportive services
    she needed. Mother “reported that she has everything in place and has the support she
    needs also.”
    On July 2, the emergency response social worker reported that the police
    department had stated that it was “impossible” to make a safety plan due to “mother’s
    action of taking the knife out” and her changing moods.
    On July 3, the case social worker again spoke with mother. Mother told the social
    worker that she knew it was wrong to stab the teddy bears but denied her actions
    stemmed from anger. Rather, mother explained that her actions were due only to
    Camryn’s decision to hit mother and the emotional pain mother felt as a result. In a later
    conversation with the social worker, mother reported she had “ ‘snapped’ ” because she
    had not slept in two days and believed her medication had not been helping her to
    regulate her emotions. According to a later report by the social worker, mother had
    explained that she had “wanted to teach [Camryn] a lesson” for Camryn having slapped
    mother in the face.
    On July 6, the Department filed a supplemental petition under section 387 seeking
    to remove the children from mother’s custody. The petition alleged that the previous
    disposition had not been effective in protecting the children. The petition set forth two
    grounds for removal, alleging that (1) the children were at substantial risk of suffering
    serious physical and emotion harm in mother’s care “due to [] mother’s volatile
    behavior”; and (2) mother’s violent behavior and inability to regulate her emotions placed
    the children at substantial risk of serious physical and emotional harm in her care.
    7
    The juvenile court held a hearing on the section 387 petition in early July. The
    court found the department established a prima facie case that the children were
    described by section 387 and detained the children from mother and ordered visitation.
    The trial court set the jurisdiction and disposition hearing on the section 387 petitions for
    July 28.
    In anticipation of the section 387 jurisdiction and disposition hearing, the
    department submitted a report dated July 28 (July 28 report). In that report, the
    department observed that mother expressed love for the children, had been cooperative
    with department, had maintained communication with the social worker, was engaging in
    weekly therapy, and had acknowledged she had made mistakes in the July 1 incident.
    The July 28 report noted that in the previous six months there had been multiple
    child and family team meetings to develop a safety plan to deal with mother’s anger
    issues, her continual yelling at the children, the conflicts between mother and maternal
    grandmother, and the July 1 incident. However, the department had not been able to
    develop an appropriate or effective safety plan with the mother. The assigned CASA
    described that in her few visits to the home she had observed that “mother can get ‘very
    angry quickly and anything sets her up.’ ”
    The report noted that, on July 16, Liliana (then three years old) had reported that
    mother and grandmother frequently would fight and scream. She also stated that mother
    still spanked her and Camryn and that mother spanks “really hard.” Liliana stated she
    “ ‘doesn’t feel safe’ with the mother because mother ‘always yells.’ ”
    The case social worker had interviewed mother’s neighbor on July 19. The
    neighbor reported that, on July 1, she had tried to assist mother and, at one point,
    “Camryn and the mother ‘left back home and came back really quickly, [mother] had a
    butcher knife in her hand and said that she was trying to get Camryn to feel what she was
    feeling because Camryn appeared to be careless.’ ”
    8
    In the July 28 report, the department opined that mother had not made enough
    progress for the children to remain safely in her care. The report noted that “[m]ost
    recently the mother reported that she was feeling that her current medication was no
    longer working for her and she was also noticing her emotions being more difficult to
    regulate.” The social worker observed that mother “is very reactive and becomes easily
    triggered by the children and their behavior even while they spend most of their time in
    daycare during the week.” The social worker noted that the children “have continued to
    be exposed to the mother’s emotional outbursts, anger, [and] physical and verbal
    arguments between the mother and the maternal grandmother.” The social worker stated
    her concerns that mother’s inability to regulate her own emotions was “traumatiz[ing]
    and trigger[ing]” to the children, who were “showing aggressive behaviors toward others
    as a result of the conduct of the mother.”
    The social worker had ongoing concerns about mother’s parenting skills and
    anger, which manifested in physical abuse of the children (leaving marks on their
    bottoms from spanking them) and, most recently, the violent stabbing of Camryn’s
    stuffed animals. The social worker was “extremely concerned for the children’s
    emotional well-being, as it seems that they have normalized this type of parenting from
    the mother and have continued to act out.” Furthermore, the social worker was
    concerned that the children’s posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and behavioral
    challenges would “intensify” if they continued to be exposed to mother’s negative
    parenting behaviors.
    The department recommended that the juvenile court remove the children from
    mother’s care and place them with father on a plan of family maintenance. It further
    recommended mother receive family reunification services.
    E. Evidentiary Hearings and August 5, 2021 Rulings
    The juvenile court conducted a two-day contested jurisdictional and dispositional
    hearing on the section 387 supplemental petition (on August 4 and August 5), and, on
    9
    August 5, it issued the ruling that mother now challenges. The juvenile court admitted
    into evidence both the July 28 report and a letter from mother’s therapist generally
    reporting mother’s progress and positive engagement in therapy services. The court also
    heard testimony from a department social worker, mother, father, mother’s next-door
    neighbor, and maternal grandmother.
    1. Testimony
    Department social worker Daisy Reyna, the family’s case worker, testified for the
    department as an expert in the provision of services in dependency cases and risk
    assessment. Reyna confirmed that Camryn and Liliana were diagnosed with PTSD in
    December 2019. Reyna testified about the progress mother had made in her case plan,
    including that mother had been engaging and progressing in therapy for almost a year and
    had completed a domestic violence program.
    However, Reyna stated that mother had yet to begin the court-ordered 52-week
    child abuser’s treatment program, although the department had made it clear that she
    needed to complete this program.
    Reyna confirmed her assessment that mother was easily upset by the children,
    even though they were in daycare most of the day. Mother had recently reported that the
    medication she was taking for depression was not effective in helping her regulate her
    emotions.
    A few months prior to the hearing (in April), mother had disclosed that she was
    engaging in physical discipline of the children. The children consistently reported that
    mother was still spanking them. In Reyna’s opinion, the situation with mother was
    “escalating” given the continued spankings and the recent July 1 incident.
    Mother testified that she was taking medication for depression, but she had been
    taking it for several years and it might be losing efficacy. Mother had discussed her
    medication issue with the social worker (Reyna), who had urged mother to see a
    psychiatrist. Mother had an appointment to see a psychiatrist in the near future and was
    10
    open to changing her medication. Mother also admitted that she and maternal
    grandmother tended to “butt heads,” but their relationship had recently improved.
    Regarding the July 1 incident, mother stated she had made a mistake in taking a
    knife to the teddy bears. She believed that the incident might not have happened if her
    “meds were working as effectively as they once were.” Mother also noted she was sleep-
    deprived and struggling with physical pain (which she attributed to cysts) at the time of
    the incident. Mother said that Camryn had become “cold and callous” towards her
    minutes after they had spoken with father. Mother had picked up the kitchen knife
    because four-year-old Camryn was “literally feeling nothing,” and mother wanted her to
    “feel something.” On cross-examination by children’s counsel, mother blamed father for
    failing to intervene effectively (even though not physically present). Mother conceded
    she had been “stuck in [her] emotions.”
    Maternal grandmother testified that she continued to live with mother. Their
    relationship had improved, they had had significantly fewer disagreements, and no
    serious disagreement had happened in the past month. Grandmother acknowledged she
    had not intervened during the July 1 incident, even though she later admitted that mother,
    when picking up the knife, had asked grandmother what she thought. Grandmother
    stated that she did not know why she had not intervened, other than observing she
    generally disliked confrontation as she became older and was not as “feisty” as she used
    to be. Grandmother wished she had intervened and would do so next time.
    When questioned by the juvenile court about the prior safety plan, grandmother
    conceded that the purpose of the safety plan had been for her to protect the children. The
    court questioned grandmother why circumstances would be different the next time and
    asked: “What assurances can you give that things would be different the next time?”
    Grandmother responded: “I can assure you that I would not sit there and be quiet. I
    would actually speak up and do something if something needs to be done or say
    something that needs to be said.”
    11
    Mother’s next-door neighbor also testified for mother. She noted mother had
    made progress, most notably in the last three months. Neighbor also confirmed that
    mother and maternal grandmother had fought in the past when the children were present.
    Father testified that he had been out of prison for about five months and the
    children were currently in his care. He described the July 1 incident. According to
    father, mother had appeared on video chat to be “exceedingly overwhelmed,” and he had
    observed Camryn crying and lying in a fetal position. Mother had shown him what she
    had done to the teddy bears. Father hung up and called the department social worker
    (Reyna) because he was concerned about the children’s safety.
    2. Juvenile Court Orders
    On August 5, after considering the evidence and arguments of counsel, the
    juvenile court issued its ruling. The court acknowledged that the evidence showed
    mother had made “significant and substantial progress” since the start of the dependency.
    However, the court concluded that it would be detrimental for the children to remain with
    mother.
    The juvenile court found that there continued to be “incidents” that were
    “alarming and that need to be addressed with more services.” The court noted that
    mother continued to minimize the July 1 incident. The court also expressed concern that
    mother had not started the 52-week child abuser’s treatment program, which the court
    viewed as an essential part of the court-ordered case plan.
    The juvenile court found that mother and maternal grandmother’s relationship,
    though improving, included a history of conflict, and the court had not yet seen stability
    in that relationship. The court noted that the prior safety plan was premised on maternal
    grandmother stepping in to protect the children when necessary, but this plan had not
    been effective. The juvenile court found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
    allegations in the supplemental petition were true and sustained the supplemental section
    387 petition.
    12
    Turning to the children’s removal from mother’s custody, the juvenile court
    determined by clear and convincing evidence that the facts supported removal. The court
    stated its determination was based on mother’s inability to “parent the girls safely without
    resorting to emotional and physical abuse and without becoming emotionally
    disregulated, notwithstanding more than a year of voluntary services and court[-]ordered
    services, including mental health services.” The court further stated the evidence showed
    “verbal and physical altercations between the mother and the maternal grandmother
    within this most recent period of time, which have been witnessed by the children and
    which mother has minimized.” The court found that mother’s daily marijuana use, while
    not a dipositive factor, exacerbated the emotional and physical abuse.
    The juvenile court explained that it was concerned that mother continued to blame
    others, including father and Camryn, who was then only four years old. The court found
    that mother demonstrated a “lack of insight regarding what is necessary to keep the
    children safe” and a lack of understanding as to proper coparenting. The court also
    observed the children’s “acting out behaviors” that included “a lot of yelling appear to
    mirror the mother’s own behavior.” The court found the department made reasonable
    efforts to prevent or eliminate the need for the removal, noting the department’s provision
    of voluntary services as well as court-ordered family maintenance services.
    The juvenile court adopted the department’s findings and recommendations that
    the evidence supported removal of the children from mother’s custody. The court found
    there was clear and convincing evidence that the children faced a “substantial danger” to
    their “physical health, safety, protection or physical or emotional well-being” if they were
    returned to mother and that there were no reasonable means by which to protect their
    “physical and emotional health without removal.” (See § 361, subd. (c)(1).)
    Additionally, the court found by clear and convincing evidence that “one or more
    children” were “suffering severe emotional damage as indicated by anxiety, depression,
    withdrawals or untoward aggressive behavior towards themselves or others and there are
    13
    no reasonable means by which to protect that emotional health without a removal.” (See
    § 361, subd. (c)(3).)5
    Mother timely appealed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Mother contends the juvenile court’s determination that the children would face a
    substantial danger to their health and safety if returned to mother’s custody is not
    supported by substantial evidence.6 She further maintains that, even assuming there was
    a risk of danger to the children, there were reasonable means other than removal that
    could have protected the children. The department counters that substantial evidence
    supports the juvenile court’s dispositional order removing the children from mother’s
    custody.
    A. Governing Law and Standard of Review
    Section 387 provides “the general procedure for removing a minor from the
    current caregiver and placing the child in a more restrictive placement.” (In re N.B.
    (2021) 
    67 Cal.App.5th 1139
    , 1146.) When a section 387 petition seeks to remove a child
    from parental custody, the juvenile court applies the procedures and protections of
    section 361. (In re D.D. (2019) 
    32 Cal.App.5th 985
    , 990 (D.D.).)
    5
    The juvenile court also determined the children could be placed with father
    pursuant to section 361.2, subdivision (b), as no showing had been made that they would
    suffer detriment from such a placement. The court ordered that the department provide
    father with supervised family maintenance services. At the contested hearing on August
    5, mother stated to the juvenile court that she did not challenge placement with father
    should the children be removed from her custody and in this appeal raises no claim as to
    the children’s placement with him.
    6
    Mother’s notice of appeal appears to challenge two different aspects of the
    juvenile court’s orders. The notice does not indicate the dates of the orders she
    challenges but states that she is appealing from findings and orders of the juvenile court
    (1) “[d]enying [m]other the ability to present evidence at a prima facie hearing” and (2)
    “removing children from the care of their [m]other.” On appeal, mother does not raise
    any claim related to the prima facie hearings or that she was denied the ability to present
    evidence.
    14
    To remove a child from parental custody, the court must conclude that one or
    more of the several specified findings has been established by clear and convincing
    evidence. (§ 361, subd. (c); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.695(c)(1); In re V.L. (2020) 
    54 Cal.App.5th 147
    , 154 (V.L.).) In this case, the juvenile court’s order relied on two
    circumstances listed in section 361, subdivision (c). The first is that set forth in section
    361, subdivision (c)(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 parent’s . . . physical
    custody.” (§ 361, subd. (c)(1).) This provision has been understood as permitting
    removal on “broader grounds than ‘substantial danger to the physical health.’ ” (In re
    A.R. (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 1102
    , 1115.) Section 361, subdivision (c)(1), also permits
    removal where there is clear and convincing evidence of substantial danger to the
    emotional well-being of the child. (In re H.E. (2008) 
    169 Cal.App.4th 710
    , 718–722
    (H.E.).) “It is not required that the parent be dangerous or that the child have been
    harmed before removal is appropriate. [Citation.] ‘The focus of the statute is on averting
    harm to the child.’ ” (D.D., supra, 32 Cal.App.5th at p. 996.)
    The second circumstance relied upon by the juvenile court is that provided in
    section 361, subdivision (c)(3): “The minor is suffering severe emotional damage, as
    indicated by extreme anxiety, depression, withdrawal, or untoward aggressive behavior
    toward himself or herself or others, and there are no reasonable means by which the
    minor’s emotional health may be protected without removing the minor from the physical
    custody of his or her parent.” (§ 361, subd. (c)(3).)
    We review a juvenile court’s dispositional order of removal for substantial
    evidence. (V.L., supra, 54 Cal.App.5th at p. 154.) Our review of the evidence
    “account[s] for the level of confidence” demanded by the clear and convincing evidence
    standard. (Conservatorship of O.B. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 989
    , 995 (O.B.); see V.L., at p. 155
    15
    [concluding “that O.B. is controlling in dependency cases” and applying O.B. to removal
    findings].)
    “When reviewing a finding that a fact has been proved by clear and convincing
    evidence, the question before the appellate court is whether the record as a whole
    contains substantial evidence from which a reasonable fact finder could have found it
    highly probable that the fact was true. In conducting its review, the court must view the
    record in the light most favorable to the prevailing party below and give appropriate
    deference to how the trier of fact may have evaluated the credibility of witnesses,
    resolved conflicts in the evidence, and drawn reasonable inferences from the evidence.”
    (O.B., supra, 9 Cal.5th at pp. 1011–1012.) Further, “[t]he appellant has the burden of
    showing there is no evidence of a sufficiently substantial nature to support the findings or
    orders.” (In re E.E. (2020) 
    49 Cal.App.5th 195
    , 206 (E.E.).)
    With these principles in mind, we turn to mother’s contentions.
    B. Analysis
    1. Substantial Evidence for Removal
    Mother argues there was no substantial evidence to support the dispositional
    removal order because there was no “substantial danger” to the children as required under
    section 361, subdivision (c)(1). Discussing the July 1 incident when mother stabbed
    Camryn’s teddy bears, mother asserts she had been “sleep deprived and overwhelmed.”
    She maintains that this incident had not resulted in any “actual harm” to the children, was
    the first time mother had resorted to such “extreme behavior,” and was prompted by
    mother’s “noble desire” to parent Camryn. She asserts it was “unreasonable to remove
    the children from mother’s custody based on this one isolated incident that was unlikely
    to recur.”
    At the outset, we note that the juvenile court did not rely solely on the July 1
    incident, as mother appears to claim. Rather, the juvenile court based its ruling on a
    number of “incidents” that it viewed as “alarming.” This focus was appropriate, as the
    16
    juvenile court was required to consider the totality of the circumstances. (D.D., supra, 32
    Cal.App.5th at p. 995.)
    Substantial evidence in the record supports the juvenile court’s finding of
    substantial danger to the children’s physical or emotional well-being. Such evidence
    includes mother’s yelling at and spanking of the children, her inability to control her
    emotions, and the escalating nature of mother’s reactions, including the violence of the
    July 1 incident, combined with mother’s admission that her medication was no longer
    working well to keep her mood stabilized. Moreover, it is undisputed that at the time of
    the juvenile court’s ruling mother had not started an essential part of her case plan (the
    52-week child abuser’s treatment program) and that this lack of compliance with her case
    plan put the children at risk of harm.
    While it is true that there is no evidence that mother directly threatened to harm
    Camryn on July 1, and some evidence suggests the other two children were not present
    when mother stabbed the teddy bears, these circumstances are not dispositive. The
    juvenile court need not find, in order to remove a child, that the parent is dangerous and
    that the child suffered actual harm. Rather, the juvenile court’s focus must be directed to
    averting harm to the child. (In re K.B. (2021) 
    59 Cal.App.5th 593
    , 605; D.D., supra, 32
    Cal.App.5th at p. 996.)
    “ ‘The trial court is in the best position to determine the degree to which a child is
    at risk based on an assessment of all the relevant factors in each case.’ ” (E.E., supra, 49
    Cal.App.5th at p. 217.) The record reveals the juvenile court carefully considered all the
    evidence before it. Given the evidence and the totality of circumstances discussed above,
    we conclude ample evidence supports the juvenile court’s determination under section
    361, subdivision (c)(1), that the children were in substantial danger. Mother cites no
    authority that convinces us the evidence presented before the juvenile court was not
    sufficient to support its rulings.
    17
    For these reasons, we decide the record as a whole contains substantial evidence
    “from which a reasonable fact finder could have found it highly probable” (O.B., supra, 9
    Cal.5th at p. 1011) that “[t]here 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 parent’s . . . physical
    custody” (§ 361, subd. (c)(1)).7 We therefore reject mother’s contention that the juvenile
    court’s findings lacked the requisite evidentiary support.
    2. Alternatives To Removal
    Mother also contends the juvenile court erred in not selecting less drastic
    alternatives to removal. Before removing a child under either subdivision (c)(1) or
    subdivision (c)(3) of section 361, the juvenile court must find that there are no reasonable
    means by which the child’s health can be protected without removing the child from the
    physical custody of the child’s parent. (§ 361, subds. (c)(1), (c)(3).)
    Mother suggests three avenues the juvenile court should have pursued:
    (1) releasing the children to mother’s custody under an enhanced family maintenance
    plan, (2) implementing a safety plan, or (3) having the social worker visit mother’s home
    more frequently.
    Regarding family maintenance, mother contends the juvenile court could have
    released the children to mother’s custody “under a family maintenance plan with an
    enhanced focus on mother’s yelling and anger issues.” She does not explain what
    7
    The department further contends that mother fails to address the circumstance
    described in section 361, subdivision (c)(3) for removal based on “severe emotional
    damage” and protection of “the child’s physical or emotional health.” The department
    asserts this ground served as an independent basis for the juvenile court’s order. The
    department contends further that mother has forfeited any claim as to this basis by failing
    to address that ground in her opening brief. Because we conclude the juvenile court’s
    removal order is supported by the circumstance listed in section 361, subdivision (c)(1),
    we do reach the department’s alternative argument in support of affirmance.
    18
    “enhanced” services the juvenile court should have further considered. (See H.E., supra,
    169 Cal.App.4th at p. 724.) The record reflects that mother’s issues with emotional
    instability and yelling were not recent developments, and she had already received
    services, including therapy and parenting classes to address her behavior and emotional
    dysregulation. Mother offers no support for her argument that unspecified services
    would have stemmed the substantial risk to the children, at least in the near term. We
    discern no error in the court’s implied ruling that continuing to leave the children with
    mother, even with enhanced services to address yelling and anger, was not a reasonable
    means of protecting the children.
    We similarly reject mother’s argument that the juvenile court should have
    considered an alternative safety plan. She does not explain what the juvenile court could
    have done or what other safety plan might have been reasonable under the circumstances.
    To the contrary, the evidence reflects the department indeed attempted to craft a safety
    plan and, as noted in the July 28 report, there had been multiple child and family team
    meetings in the previous six months to develop a safety plan to address mother’s anger
    issues, her continual yelling at the children, the conflicts between mother and maternal
    grandmother, and the July 1 incident. However, the evidence shows that, despite the
    department’s efforts, it was not able to develop an effective safety plan with mother.
    Finally, mother’s suggestion that the juvenile court could have ordered more
    visitation by the department is unpersuasive. The department had already been doing
    monthly home visits, including unannounced home visits. Mother provides no authority
    supporting her argument that increasing the amount of department visits would have
    decreased the risk to the children. The record shows that the incidents were increasing in
    severity, mother’s medication was decreasing in efficacy, and mother was yelling at the
    children on a daily basis.
    As noted by the department, the violent July 1 incident occurred even with other
    persons present in mother’s home (albeit they chose not to intervene), yet mother was
    19
    still unable to control her behavior. We reject mother’s speculative assertion that
    ordering more visits by the department would have mitigated the substantial risk to the
    children under these circumstances.
    For these reasons, we decide substantial evidence supports the juvenile court’s
    finding that there were no reasonable means to protect the children’s physical and
    emotional health without removing them from mother’s physical custody. (§ 361, subds.
    (c)(1), (c)(3).)
    III. DISPOSITION
    The dispositional August 5, 2021 order removing the children from mother’s
    custody is affirmed.
    20
    ______________________________________
    Danner, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P.J.
    ____________________________________
    Wilson, J.
    H049340
    In re C.E., et al.; DFCS v. J.P.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H049340

Filed Date: 4/28/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/28/2022