Adoption of D.L. CA2/4 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 6/24/14 Adoption of D.L. CA2/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 FOUR
    Adoption of D.L., A Minor.
    B250258
    V.G.,                                                                (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. LT000975)
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    Y.T.,
    Defendant and Appellant;
    E.L.,
    Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. John
    L. Henning, Judge. Affirmed as modified.
    Valerie N. Lankford, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Douglas R. Donnelly; Diane M. Goodman for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
    Janette Freeman Cochran, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Minor.
    Appellant Y.T. appeals the court’s finding under Family Code section 8604
    that she willfully failed to communicate with or contribute to the support of her son
    D.L. for one-year, leaving the door open for D.L. to be adopted by his stepmother,
    respondent V.G., and terminating appellant’s parental rights.1 Appellant contends
    section 8604 is unconstitutional because it permits loss of parental rights without a
    finding of unfitness, and that the court should have proceeded under an alternate
    statutory procedure requiring a finding of “abandonment” to support termination of
    parental rights. Appellant forfeited these contentions by failing to raise them in the
    trial court. Moreover, we would reject her claim on the merits. The findings under
    section 8604 do establish parental unfitness and, in any event, a specific finding of
    unfitness is not required where, as here, a mother has left her child to be raised and
    supported by others for a lengthy period without reasonable excuse or justification.
    We conclude, however, that the trial court’s inclusion in its order of language
    terminating appellant’s parental rights over D.L. was premature. A true finding
    under section 8604 permits D.L.’s adoption to go forward absent appellant’s
    consent but does not, in itself, operate to terminate parental rights. Accordingly,
    we modify the court’s order and affirm as modified.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    D.L.’s father E.L. (Father) and appellant married in March 2006. D.L. was
    born in May 2006. The couple separated in December 2006, when D.L. was seven
    months old.
    1
    Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.
    2
    A. Prior Proceedings
    After the separation, appellant had primary custody of D.L. In March 2007,
    Father asserted that appellant had prevented him from seeing his son since January
    of that year. The court issued an order granting Father evening and alternate
    weekend visitation. In October 2007, the parties entered into a settlement
    agreement, approved by court order, under which Father was to have visitation
    every Tuesday evening through Thursday morning and alternate weekends from
    Friday evening until Monday morning.2 The custody exchanges were to take place
    at a sheriff’s station.
    After the settlement agreement was signed and approved, appellant moved
    with D.L. but did not notify Father of her new address or telephone number. In
    late 2007 and early 2008, Father appeared at the sheriff’s station for the custody
    exchanges, but appellant did not.3 In February 2008, having no knowledge of
    appellant’s or D.L.’s whereabouts, Father filed a missing person’s report.
    In April 2008, the court granted Father’s application for full custody of D.L.
    and ordered the district attorney to locate and return the boy. Appellant and D.L.
    were located. Appellant was arrested and subsequently pled guilty to child
    concealment (Pen. Code, § 278.5, subd. (a)).4 The court placed D.L. in Father’s
    2
    In the fall of 2007, when the parties were attempting to settle their marital and
    custody disputes, appellant went to court seeking to change D.L.’s last name. In that
    proceeding, she falsely represented that she did not know where Father was.
    3
    Father was sending child support payments to appellant’s attorney, but the
    attorney advised Father that he did not know where to contact appellant.
    4
    After being located, appellant claimed she “did not know what to do” with respect
    to visitation because she did not have a copy of the settlement agreement, although she
    had signed it and was present in court when it was approved.
    3
    custody and for a period permitted appellant monitored visitation only.5 In early
    2009, the court ordered a psychiatric evaluation of appellant. In April 2009, at the
    recommendation of minor’s counsel and the psychiatric evaluator, the court
    changed the visitation order, permitting appellant to have daytime unmonitored
    visits. Appellant did not take advantage of the unmonitored visitation approved by
    the court, refusing to cooperate in selecting a location where D.L. could be
    dropped off and picked up.6 In July, appellant reported to the Department of
    Children and Family Services (DCFS) that D.L. was being abused, causing Father
    to be investigated by DCFS and the police. Minor’s counsel reported that
    appellant’s behavior had become “dangerously erratic,” and that she had reverted
    to her “uncooperative, somewhat paranoid positions.” Minor’s counsel
    recommended that visitation revert to monitored, and that any future claims of
    abuse be reviewed by minor’s counsel before being reported to authorities. In
    August 2009, the court adopted these recommendations. Thereafter, the court’s
    orders continued to permit appellant monitored visitation only. The orders also
    stated that all communication between the parties was to be through Our Family
    Wizard.
    In April 2010, minor’s counsel learned that appellant had not seen D.L. for
    many months and set up a Skype visitation schedule for appellant and D.L. In
    August, the court changed the visitation order, permitting appellant to have three
    10-minute Skype sessions with D.L. per week, in addition to the monitored
    5
    From August 2008 to April 2009, appellant visited D.L. at the monitoring facility.
    During these visits, she examined D.L. for marks and constantly complained that he was
    not being well cared for by Father, although the monitor warned her this behavior was
    detrimental to D.L. No one else with regular contact with the boy observed any signs of
    abuse or neglect.
    6
    Appellant and D.L. had a visit in June 2009, apparently monitored. There is no
    indication in the record of any other in person visitation after that date.
    4
    visitation. In early fall of 2010, after two brief periods of Skype communication,
    appellant ceased all contact with D.L.
    B. Underlying Proceedings
    In March 2011, Father married V.G. In October of that year, when D.L. was
    five, V.G. filed a request seeking to adopt him. The adoption request alleged that
    appellant had not contacted the child for over a year within the meaning of section
    8604.7 Appellant filed an objection. In addition, in November 2011, appellant
    sought mediation of the “dispute relating to [the] existing custody order.” She
    stated in a supporting declaration that she had not visited D.L. for over two years
    and had not had Skype contact with the boy for over a year. She claimed this was
    because “Father [was] making it very difficult for [her] to visit and maintain
    contact . . . .”8
    The court issued a citation re adoption, ordering appellant to appear and
    show cause why the adoption petition should not be granted. The court appointed
    counsel for appellant. The court notified DCFS that it had issued the
    citation/notice of hearing in connection with the petition for adoption filed under
    section 8604, seeking a report and recommendation from the agency. DCFS
    7
    Section 8604, subdivision (a) states that “[e]xcept as provided in subdivision (b), a
    child having a presumed father under Section 7611 may not be adopted without the
    consent of the child’s birth parents, if living.” Subdivision (b) provides: “If one birth
    parent has been awarded custody by judicial order, or has custody by agreement of both
    parents, and the other birth parent for a period of one year willfully fails to communicate
    with and to pay for the care, support, and education of the child when able to do so, then
    the birth parent having sole custody may consent to the adoption . . . .”
    8
    After receiving the petition, appellant was permitted to communicate with D.L.
    through Skype again for a brief period. During their conversations, she told D.L. that
    V.G. was just a “temporary babysitter,” and advised him to not call V.G. “‘Mommy’” or
    Father “‘Daddy,’” and to tell his teachers he needed to see a psychologist. She also
    called D.L.’s school, claimed he was being abused, and urged the principal to report it.
    5
    personnel interviewed the family and in September 2012, filed a report
    recommending V.G. be permitted to adopt D.L.
    In December 2012, the court appointed a psychiatric expert, Nancy Kaser-
    Boyd, Ph.D., to interview the parties, evaluate bonding issues, and determine
    whom D.L. considered to be his parents and where his best interests lay. The court
    also instructed Dr. Kaser-Boyd to include an evaluation of appellant’s ability to
    cooperate, and her ability to care for and control the minor. In her interview with
    Dr. Kaser-Boyd, appellant claimed to have been abused, manipulated, and
    threatened by Father throughout their marriage, and to have hidden her address
    from him after they separated because she was afraid of him. Dr. Kaser-Boyd
    found nothing to support appellant’s assertions of abuse. She found appellant to be
    defensive and not amenable to treatment or change. Dr. Kaser-Boyd was unable to
    give appellant a “‘clean bill of mental health’ . . . for parenting” in view of her
    defensiveness and her history of failing to follow the rules of shared custody or
    make appropriate child-centered decisions.
    During his interview, Father stated that appellant’s visits with D.L. had
    stopped in June 2009 because appellant did not want to pay her share of the
    monitoring expenses. He explained that the 2010 Skype visits lasted only two or
    three months. Because appellant had not regularly visited D.L. for some time, D.L.
    did not remember her or understand her relationship to him and considered V.G. to
    be his mother. V.G. said she accepted D.L. as her son and wanted their
    relationship to be made legal. During Dr. Kaser-Boyd’s interview with D.L., the
    boy made clear that he believed V.G. was his mother and had no understanding of
    appellant’s relationship to him. Dr. Kaser-Boyd observed the interactions between
    D.L. and V.G. They were affectionate toward each other and the two appeared to
    be bonded. The report stated that although D.L. had enjoyed his visits with
    appellant and was comfortable with her, he was not cognizant of her relationship to
    6
    him. He referred to her as “‘a girl’” who “‘brings [him] stuff . . . .’” Dr. Kaser-
    Boyd concluded that it would be in D.L.’s best interest for the adoption to go
    forward.
    The court held hearings over the course of three weeks to determine whether
    appellant had willfully failed to contact D.L. and provide support for the child over
    a period of one year or more within the meaning of section 8604. It was
    undisputed that appellant had never paid support. In addition, appellant
    acknowledged that she had had no contact with D.L. for more than a year at the
    time the petition was filed. She and her mother, who was also called as a witness,
    claimed Father was abusive and interfered with her contact.9
    Father denied abusing appellant. He testified appellant did not visit D.L.
    during the period unmonitored visits were permitted. After June 2009, she did not
    seek in person visitation of any kind. In 2010, the parties agreed appellant could
    have Skype communication with D.L. Appellant stopped the Skype contact in
    early 2010, complaining that D.L., who was only three at the time, was not
    speaking to her or sitting still in front of the camera. Appellant renewed Skype
    visits in September 2010 for approximately three weeks before stopping again.
    Father denied interfering with any of these contacts. In October 2010, at around
    the same time as the last Skype interaction, appellant informed Father that she
    would no longer communicate through Our Family Wizard, leaving no court-
    sanctioned way to set up visitation or Skype contact. Father testified that D.L.
    began calling V.G. “Mama” on his own, without any prompting from Father or
    9
    Appellant also claimed that she could not afford to pay her share of the monitoring
    expenses. However, she had been employed continuously since the dissolution.
    Moreover, the record reflected that she had spent thousands of dollars in attorney fees
    contesting visitation and other issues in the marital dissolution and child custody
    litigation and had expended funds to hire a private investigator to follow Father.
    7
    V.G. Father perceived no current relationship between appellant and D.L. and
    believed D.L. had begun to forget appellant due to the passage of time after regular
    visitation ceased.
    The court found the evidence supported a prima facie case under section
    8604: that appellant had not, in fact, communicated with or supported D.L. for
    more than one year. The issue was whether the failure had been willful and, in
    particular, whether appellant had been prevented from assuming her parental
    obligations. This presented an issue of credibility. The court found the testimony
    of appellant and her mother to be “highly unbelievable” and concluded that
    appellant was “not credible in almost any aspect of her testimony.” The court
    “question[ed] almost each and every word that [appellant] testified to in this
    matter.” The court found it “clear beyond any reasonable doubt” that the
    requirements of section 8604 had been met. With respect to D.L.’s best interest,
    the court agreed with Dr. Kaser-Boyd that the boy was “‘very bonded’” to Father
    and V.G and saw them as his parents, but had no parent/child relationship with
    appellant. It followed that “it would not be in the best interest of this child to be
    with the natural mother, that it’s in the best interest of the child to be with the
    natural father and his wife.”
    The court entered an order “find[ing] that the requirements under Section
    8604 of the Family Code have been met” and “terminat[ing] the parental rights of
    [appellant].” This appeal followed.10
    10
    D.L.’s appointed counsel filed a separate brief urging affirmance of the trial
    court’s findings under section 8604.
    8
    DISCUSSION
    A. Section 8604 Is Not Unconstitutional, and Deprivation of the Right to
    Object to an Adoption Need Not Be Supported by a Finding of “Abandonment”
    Appellant contends the court erred in proceeding under section 8604 because
    the provision did not afford her the due process protections to which she was
    entitled as a biological mother. She further contends that any termination of her
    parental rights or determination that her consent to adoption is not required must
    fail, absent a finding that she abandoned her child within the meaning of section
    7822. Appellant failed to challenge the constitutionality of section 8604 or argue
    the applicability of section 7822 below.11 She has, therefore, forfeited these
    contentions. (See City of San Diego v. Boggess (2013) 
    216 Cal.App.4th 1494
    ,
    1503 [facial challenge to constitutionality of statute may be forfeited if not
    presented to trial court]; see also In re Marriage of Falcone & Fyke (2008) 
    164 Cal.App.4th 814
    , 825-826 [appellate court declined to consider timeliness of
    service of contempt motion where appellant failed to raise issue in trial court]; In
    re Marriage of Hinman (1997) 
    55 Cal.App.4th 988
    , 1002 [mother foreclosed from
    challenging computation of child support award on appeal where she did not raise
    issue in trial court].) Moreover, for the reasons discussed, we would reject her
    claims.
    As noted, section 8604 provides that consent of a non-custodial birth parent
    to an adoption is not required where that parent “for a period of one year willfully
    fails to communicate with and to pay for the care, support and education of the
    child when able to do so.” Section 7822, subdivision (a)(3) provides: “A
    11
    Not only did appellant fail to raise the applicability of section 7822 in the court
    below, but on the first day of trial, when V.G. sought to amend her petition to add
    allegations under section 7822, appellant’s counsel objected, preventing any issues
    pertaining to section 7822 from being addressed.
    9
    proceeding under this part [governing freedom from parental custody and control]
    may be brought if . . . [¶] . . . [¶] [o]ne parent has left the child in the care and
    custody of the other parent for a period of one year without any provision for the
    child’s support, or without communication from the parent with the intent on the
    part of the parent to abandon the child.” It is clear that the provisions of section
    8604 and section 7822 create two distinct procedures, supported by different
    evidence and leading to different results. Under section 8604, “the sole issue,
    other than the child’s best interests, is whether the noncustodial parent had the
    ability to communicate with and provide for the child, but willfully failed to do
    so.” (In re Jay R. (1983) 
    150 Cal.App.3d 251
    , 258 [citing former Civil Code
    section 224, now section 8604].) A successful action under section 8604 “cause[s]
    a parent to lose his or her right to withhold consent to [an] adoption,” but does not
    terminate parental rights. (In re Jay R., supra, at p. 258; accord, In re Marriage of
    Dunmore (2000) 
    83 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 4 [successful proceeding under section 8604
    “permits an adoption to proceed without the consent of a parent who has willfully
    failed to communicate and support a child for one year,” but parental rights are not
    terminated and parental support obligations are not alleviated until adoption is
    consummated].)12
    In contrast, a petition under section 7822 requires a showing that the parent
    either failed to support or failed to communicate for one year, with the intent to
    abandon the child. (In re Jay R., supra, 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 258 [citing former
    Civil Code section 232, now section 7822].) If the moving party prevails in a
    petition brought under section 7822, the child will be “‘declared free from the
    12
    As will be discussed further below, the court erred in entering a judgment stating
    that appellant’s parental rights over D.L. were terminated based solely on its true findings
    on the allegations asserted under section 8604.
    10
    custody and control of either or both of his parents’”; in other words, parental
    rights will be immediately terminated. (In re Jay R., supra, at p. 257; see § 7820.)
    Appellant is correct that unlike section 7822, section 8604 requires no
    evidence of an intent to abandon. (In re Marriage of Dunmore, supra, 83
    Cal.App.4th at p. 5.) “The action[] which may cause a parent to lose his or her
    right to withhold consent to [an] adoption may be ‘tantamount to abandonment,’
    but ‘abandonment’ within the meaning of section [7822] is not an issue in a
    stepparent adoption . . . .” (In re Jay R., supra, 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 258, italics
    deleted, quoting Adoption of Thevenin (1961) 
    189 Cal.App.2d 245
    , 250.)
    Contrary to appellant’s belief, however, our Supreme Court’s decision in
    Adoption of Kelsey S. (1992) 
    1 Cal.4th 816
     (Kelsey S.) does not support the
    contention that an absent biological mother’s parental right to object to an adoption
    cannot be terminated without a finding of abandonment. Kelsey S. involved the
    rights of a biological father who had not established himself as a presumed father.
    The then-applicable statutes permitted a biological father’s parental rights to be
    terminated if the trial court found by a preponderance of the evidence that it was in
    the best interests of the child to be adopted, without regard to the father’s fitness or
    unfitness or any action the father had taken to assume responsibility for the child.
    (Id. at p. 823.) The pertinent statutory scheme permitted the biological father to
    become a presumed father only if he openly held out the child as his own and
    received the child into his home. (Id. at p. 825.) Noting that the father had been
    prevented from physically receiving the child into his home by the mother, the trial
    court, and the prospective adoptive parents, the court held that the statutory scheme
    governing presumed father status “violates the federal constitutional guarantees of
    equal protection and due process for unwed fathers to the extent that the statutes
    allow a mother unilaterally to preclude her child’s biological father from becoming
    a presumed father and thereby allowing the state to terminate his parental rights on
    11
    nothing more than a showing of the child’s best interest. If an unwed father
    promptly comes forward and demonstrates a full commitment to his parental
    responsibilities -- emotional, financial, and otherwise -- his federal constitutional
    right to due process prohibits the termination of his parental relationship absent a
    showing of his unfitness as a parent. . . . [W]hen the father has come forward to
    grasp his parental responsibilities, his parental rights are entitled to equal
    protection as those of the mother.” (Id. at pp. 825, 849.)
    In the context of its determination that biological fathers were not afforded
    equal treatment under the statutes governing adoption and termination of parental
    rights, the court examined the precursor to section 8604, former Civil Code section
    221.20.13 The child’s prospective adoptive parents had obtained the mother’s
    consent to the adoption, and contended that under the statute, only her consent was
    required. (Kelsey S., 
    supra,
     1 Cal.4th at p. 822.) The court explained that the
    provision provided a biological mother or presumed father “far greater rights”
    because it permitted the mother and presumed father to prevent an adoption
    “except in certain specified and narrow circumstances,” such as where the mother
    or presumed father “willfully fail[ed] for a year or more to communicate with and
    support the child . . . .” (Id. at p. 824.) According to the court, this language
    required the consent of a mother or presumed father to an adoption “absent a
    showing by clear and convincing evidence of that parent’s unfitness.” (Id. at
    p. 825.) In so stating, the court equated proof of the elements of section 8604 -- a
    noncustodial parent’s willful failure for a year or more to communicate and
    13
    As the court explained, former Civil Code section 224 was repealed effective 1991
    and its provisions set forth without material change in Civil Code section 221.20. (Kelsey
    S., 
    supra,
     1 Cal.4th at p. 825, fn. 5.) Civil Code section 221.20 was repealed effective
    1994 and replaced by section 8604. (1992 Stats., ch. 162, § 10.)
    12
    support a child -- with proof of that parent’s “unfitness.” (1 Cal.4th at pp. 824-
    825.)14
    Moreover, since deciding Kelsey S., the Supreme Court has held that “a
    showing of current unfitness is not always necessary when a court terminates
    parental rights.” (Guardianship of Ann S. (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 1110
    , 1118 (Ann S.)
    italics deleted; accord, In re Charlotte D. (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 1140
    , 1147-1150.) At
    issue in Ann S. was a provision of the Probate Code -- section 1516.5 -- which
    authorizes the termination of parental rights when children have been placed in a
    guardianship for at least two years, and the court finds that adoption by the
    guardian would be in the children’s best interest. The court explained that Kelsey
    S. stands for the proposition that “the best interest of the child cannot justify
    terminating the rights of a parent who has demonstrated a full commitment to
    parental responsibility, but whose efforts to secure custody have been thwarted.”
    (Ann. S., supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 1130, italics added.) The court rejected a facial
    challenge to section 1516.5, finding that termination of parental rights could occur
    under its provisions only where the parent had “surrendered custody to the
    guardian and exercised no parental care or control for at least two years,” which in
    the majority of cases would be antithetical to a finding of a “‘full commitment to
    . . . parental responsibilities -- emotional, financial, and otherwise.’” (Ann S.,
    supra, at pp. 1131-1132, quoting Kelsey S., supra, 1 Cal.4th at p. 849.) As the
    court explained: “[T]he procedural standards governing proceedings to terminate
    parental rights are not invariable. The nature and stage of the proceeding, and the
    14
    The court also equated a finding under section 8604 with a finding of unfitness in
    the summary of its holding: “[T]he federal constitutional guarantees of equal protection
    and due process require that the father be allowed to withhold his consent to his child’s
    adoption and therefore that his parental rights cannot be terminated absent a showing of
    his unfitness within the meaning of Civil Code section 221.20 [now section 8604].”
    (Kelsey S., supra, 1 Cal.4th at p. 822, italics added.)
    13
    passage of time without parental custody, may make a difference. [¶] After years
    of guardianship, the child has a fully developed interest in a stable, continuing, and
    permanent placement with a fully committed caregiver.” (Id. at pp. 1135-1136.)15
    The procedures applicable under section 8604 fully comply with those the
    court deemed sufficient in Ann S. The issue under the statute is whether the parent
    has “willfully fail[ed] to communicate with and to pay for the care, support, and
    education of the child . . . .” (§ 8604, subd. (b).) The statute provides that
    “[f]ailure of a birth parent to pay for the care, support, and education of the child
    for the period of one year or failure of a birth parent to communicate with child for
    the period of one year” presents “prima facie evidence that the failure was willful
    and without lawful excuse.” (Id., at subd. (c).) Howecver, the parent is given an
    opportunity to present evidence concerning the circumstances surrounding the
    failure to support and communicate, his or her efforts to maintain contact, and any
    exigencies or special circumstances that prevented communication or support in
    order to refute that his or her actions were willful. (See Adoption of Smith (1969)
    
    270 Cal.App.2d 605
    , 608-609 [“[B]efore a failure to communicate with her
    children for a period of one year may operate to deprive a mother of her right to
    15
    In Ann S. the court also addressed the contention that the provision might be
    invalid as applied. The court acknowledged that there were “imaginable scenarios” of a
    parent who “find[ing] it necessary to place a child in guardianship and, despite
    maintaining a parental commitment as full as the circumstances permit[ted],” facing a
    termination proceeding. (Ann S., supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 1132.) But because Probate
    section 1516.5 required the trial court to consider “‘all factors relating to the best interest
    of the child,’” including “the circumstances leading to guardianship, the parent’s efforts
    to maintain contact with the child, any exigencies[,] that might hamper those efforts, and
    other evidence of commitment to parental responsibilities,” it was not likely to be applied
    invalidly. (Ann S., supra, at p. 1132.) The court explained in the companion case, In re
    Charlotte D., that the statute was nonetheless “open to constitutional challenge as applied
    to an individual parent.” (In re Charlotte D., 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at p. 1143.)
    14
    object to the adoption of her children, it must be shown that during the interval in
    question she was able to communicate with them and failed to do so.”].)16
    Appellant was provided the protections discussed in Ann S. In a lengthy
    proceeding covering a period of weeks, appellant was given an opportunity to
    refute the prima facie case by establishing that she had made an effort to fulfill her
    parental obligations but had been thwarted in her ability to do so. The court took a
    broad view of relevance, permitting appellant to testify concerning the couple’s
    interactions during the marriage and the dissolution proceedings, as well as the
    more pertinent period between 2010 and 2011 when she maintained no contact
    with her child. Appellant claimed that Father had been abusive from the beginning
    and that she was afraid of him. She further claimed that she had tried to maintain
    contact with D.L. but that Father had interfered with her visitation and Skype
    communication. Father denied that he was abusive or that he interfered with
    visitation. The court, as trier of fact, was free to determine whose testimony to
    credit. Moreover, other evidence in the record refuted appellant’s claim that she
    was thwarted by the actions of others from maintaining contact with her son. Her
    initial actions in concealing D.L. from Father caused her to be limited to monitored
    visitation. She used monitored visitation as an opportunity to find a basis for
    accusing Father of abuse. When the court permitted a period of unmonitored
    visitation, she failed to avail herself of the opportunity to re-establish a normal
    parental relationship with D.L. and engaged in behavior that caused visitation to
    revert to monitored. When she was offered Skype as a supplement to monitored
    visitation, she blamed Father for three-year old D.L.’s inability to sit still and
    16
    Appellant erroneously states that the findings under section 8604 are under the
    preponderance of the evidence standard. In a section 8604 hearing, the petitioner has the
    burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence. (In re Jay R., 
    supra,
     150 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 265.)
    15
    unilaterally stopped that form of communication. Although she claims Father
    interfered with her visitation, there was no evidence that in the year preceding
    October 2011, when the adoption petition was filed, she made any effort to
    communicate with or visit D.L. On this record, the court’s findings that
    appellant’s lack of communication and support was willful and that the
    requirements of section 8604 had been met were amply supported. The court’s
    conclusion that D.L.’s adoption by V.G. could go forward without appellant’s
    consent in no way violated her right to due process.
    B. The Court Erred in Issuing an Order Terminating Parental Rights
    As noted above, a successful action under section 8604 “cause[s] a parent to
    lose his or her right to withhold consent to [an] adoption,” but does not terminate
    parental rights. (In re Jay R., 
    supra,
     150 Cal.App.3d at p. 258; accord, In re
    Marriage of Dunmore, supra, 83 Cal.App.4th at p. 4.) After finding that the
    requirements of section 8604 had been met, permitting D.L. to be adopted by V.G.
    without appellant’s consent, the court added language to its order terminating
    appellant’s parental rights. This was premature and in excess of the relief
    authorized by section 8604. Accordingly, the language in the order terminating
    appellant’s parental rights must be stricken. Appellant’s parental rights may be
    terminated only upon completion of the adoption of D.L. (See § 8617.)
    16
    DISPOSITION
    We modify the trial court’s June 11, 2013 order by striking the language
    “and terminates the parental rights of [appellant].” As modified, the order is
    affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    MANELLA, J.
    We concur:
    WILLHITE, Acting P. J.
    EDMON, J.*
    *Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B250258

Filed Date: 6/24/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021