In re I.T. CA4/1 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 3/9/23 In re I.T. CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    In re I.T., a Person Coming Under
    the Juvenile Court Law.
    D081216
    SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH
    AND HUMAN SERVICES
    AGENCY,                                                         (Super. Ct. No. J520899A)
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    D.E.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Marissa A. Bejarano, Judge. Affirmed.
    Leslie A. Barry, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Claudia G. Silva, County Counsel, Lisa M. Maldonado, Chief Deputy
    County Counsel, and Eliza Molk, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    D.E. (Mother) appeals from a juvenile court order terminating her
    parental rights to her son, I.T. (Welf. & Inst. Code,1 § 366.26.) She contends
    the juvenile court erred in finding that the parental-benefit exception to the
    statutory preference for adoption did not apply. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).)
    Because we conclude Mother has failed to affirmatively demonstrate error,
    we affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Six-year-old I.T. came to the attention of the San Diego County Health
    and Human Services Agency (Agency) in October 2021, when the Agency
    received a referral that his one-year-old sister, D.E., had suffered severe
    physical abuse.2 D.E. was admitted to the hospital and a child abuse expert,
    Dr. Nienow, opined that her injuries met the criteria for a medical diagnosis
    of torture. She sustained full thickness burns to multiple parts of her body,
    several bone fractures, severe anemia, bruising to her face, and bald spots
    indicative of forceful hair pulling. I.T. reported that he witnessed D.E. being
    burned.
    D.E.’s burns covered 14.5 percent of her total body surface area. The
    burn pattern raised significant concerns among her treatment team that she
    had been intentionally scalded. Her doctors concluded the burns would likely
    result in profound permanent scarring because of Mother’s negligence in
    promptly seeking medical treatment.
    1     All undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and
    Institutions Code.
    2     D.E. is not the subject of this appeal and we discussed her only to
    provide relevant background to the issues concerning I.T.
    2
    D.E. also underwent skeletal imaging studies that revealed seven bone
    fractures, including to the bilateral clavicle, bilateral scapular body, and tibia
    and fibula injuries. The fractures were severe and would have been
    excruciatingly painful at the time they were inflicted. A member of D.E.’s
    treatment team opined that the force required to inflict these injuries could
    have potentially been fatal. Mother claimed she was unaware that D.E. had
    broken bones and did not know how they could have occurred. However,
    Dr. Nienow stated that D.E.’s pain responses to the fractures would have
    been obvious during normal caretaking activities. According to Dr. Nienow,
    D.E.’s broken bones were likely the result of different types of force and
    highly indicative of physical abuse. The scapular fractures, in particular, are
    “highly associated with physical abuse as they require significant blunt force
    trauma” to cause.
    Further medical testing and observation revealed other traumatic
    injuries. D.E. had numerous bruises to both sides of her face, and
    Dr. Nienow opined the bruising was likely the result of physical abuse. Her
    bald spots were likely caused by forceful hair pulling and occurred before the
    infliction of the burns and broken bones. She was also significantly
    underweight and so severely anemic that she required a blood transfusion.3
    Dr. Nienow concluded that D.E. would be placed at extraordinary risk of
    ongoing severe abuse if she were returned to Mother’s care.
    Initially, Mother was not honest with D.E.’s doctors or the Agency
    when providing a history of D.E.’s injuries. She first reported the burns
    resulted accidentally during a bath at D.E.’s paternal great-grandmother’s
    3      D.E. was seen by a doctor at Rady Children’s Hospital in July 2021 for
    cold-like symptoms. At that time, she was in the 80th percentile on the
    growth chart. Less than four months later, in October 2021, she had dropped
    to the 20th percentile.
    3
    home in Tijuana, Mexico. Mother said she left D.E. unattended during a bath
    to retrieve a towel, and she believed D.E. kicked the sink’s hot water faucet
    on.4 But D.E.’s treatment team believed the location of D.E.’s burns were not
    consistent with Mother’s explanations. A detective also determined that,
    based on the record of Mother’s travel across the United States-Mexico
    border, Mother was not in Mexico on the date she alleged D.E.’s burns
    occurred.
    Mother later admitted D.E.’s burns occurred at her home in San Diego
    County, and not in Mexico. She disclosed that her boyfriend, B.R., gave D.E.
    a bath in the sink while she cooked and I.T. played a videogame in the living
    room. Mother heard D.E. crying from the sink and saw steam coming from
    the water. B.R. was sitting on the couch on his cellphone while D.E.
    remained in the hot water.
    Mother acknowledged D.E. was likely in pain following the incident,
    but she decided not to seek medical care because she was afraid of the
    Agency’s involvement. She claimed B.R. also dissuaded her from seeking
    treatment for D.E. Mother explained she lied about B.R.’s involvement
    because he had a criminal history, and she was afraid he would be blamed.
    B.R.’s criminal history included charges involving domestic violence and child
    cruelty. Although Mother initially denied that B.R. lived in her home, B.R.
    confirmed he had been living with Mother since September 2021.
    4     Mother also claimed she took D.E. to a hospital in Mexico when she
    noticed blisters beginning to form, but she could not provide the name or
    contact information for the doctor. A few days later, Mother took D.E. to a
    surgeon in Mexico. The surgeon informed Mother that she had second-degree
    burns that were bleeding abnormally, and that she was very anemic. A social
    worker spoke with the surgeon, who reported that he refused to treat D.E.
    because Mother’s account of the injuries did not make sense and he suspected
    child abuse.
    4
    I.T. reported he had been abused by B.R. He stated that B.R. hurt him
    by pulling his hair, hitting him on the head, and bending his fingers outward.
    I.T. described B.R. as “ ‘crazy and bad,’ ” and repeatedly stated that he
    burned D.E. in the bathtub. Although Mother acknowledged it was possible
    that B.R. intentionally harmed D.E., she continued to have contact with him.
    During B.R. and Mother’s relationship, neighbors reported hearing a
    man and a woman fighting and throwing things around the apartment. One
    neighbor expressed concern because Mother’s apartment was a small one-
    bedroom unit, and the children were likely exposed to the fighting.
    Neighbors heard children crying from the apartment at all hours of the day
    and night. They heard a little boy yelling, “ ‘don’t hurt me.’ ”
    Mother was eventually arrested for charges of torture, mayhem, and
    child cruelty arising from D.E.’s injuries.5 In November 2021, the Agency
    filed a dependency petition alleging I.T. fell within the jurisdiction of the
    juvenile court because his sibling had been severely abused or neglected, and
    there was a substantial risk that he would be similarly abused or neglected.
    At the detention hearing, the juvenile court made prima facie findings on the
    petition and I.T. was placed in out-of-home care.
    After I.T. and D.E. were removed from her custody, Mother completed
    both a parenting and co-parenting course. She also reported that she
    participated in an anger management course and began a 52-week child
    abuse program, although a representative from the child abuse program
    reported that Mother missed the first session of the course and left the second
    session early.
    5     According to the Agency’s reporting, at the time of the contested section
    366.26 hearing in September 2022, Mother was facing criminal charges for
    torture, mayhem and child abuse. The record on appeal does not reveal the
    disposition of the criminal case.
    5
    Based on the severity of D.E.’s injuries and Mother’s refusal to be
    truthful regarding the origins of D.E.’s injuries, and the physical abuse
    endured by I.T. and the lasting trauma he would likely experience from
    observing his sibling being tortured, the Agency recommended that the
    juvenile court bypass reunification services. The juvenile court agreed and
    denied reunification services to Mother. It made a true finding on the
    petition and declared I.T. a dependent of the juvenile court.
    At the contested section 366.26 hearing in September 2022, the juvenile
    court found that I.T. was generally and specifically adoptable. The court
    determined that Mother had failed to carry her burden of establishing that
    the parental-benefit exception to adoption applied. Accordingly, it
    terminated Mother’s parental rights to free I.T. for adoption.
    DISCUSSION
    Mother’s sole contention in appealing the juvenile court’s termination
    order is that the court erred by finding that the parental-benefit exception to
    the statutory preference for adoption did not apply. She argues the evidence
    “compelled” a finding that I.T. would suffer detriment from the loss of his
    relationship with Mother, and the court’s error at the third step of the
    analysis “infected” its finding on the parental-benefit exception’s final
    balancing test. We conclude Mother has not met her burden of affirmatively
    demonstrating error.
    I.
    Section 366.26 Hearing
    At the section 366.26 hearing in September 2022, the juvenile court
    received in evidence the Agency’s section 366.26 report and various addenda
    reports. The Agency presented the case social worker for cross-examination;
    6
    no other witnesses testified. We summarize the evidence from the Agency’s
    reports and the social worker’s testimony.
    In November 2021, after he was removed from Mother’s custody, I.T.
    was placed with his paternal aunt, P.L. (Aunt). Aunt took a twelve-week
    leave of absence from work when she assumed care of I.T. A social worker
    observed Aunt to be attentive and caring with I.T., and that I.T. appeared
    comfortable with Aunt. Aunt reported that I.T. “does very well with her, they
    do activities together, they go to places and he does well with routines in her
    home.” Aunt, who has known I.T. “all his life,” was committed to adopting
    I.T. I.T. said he wanted to stay in Aunt’s home, though he later said he
    would also like to live with Mother, his maternal grandmother, and D.E.
    Since March 2022, Mother and I.T. had supervised visits every
    Tuesdays for 90 minutes and a video call once or twice a week. By the time of
    the hearing, the social worker had supervised eleven visits. During their
    visits, Mother and I.T. played games and talked, and Mother often brought
    food and toys for I.T. I.T. was usually “happy and excited” to see Mother,
    greeting her with hugs. I.T. and Mother were affectionate with each other.
    The social worker noted that “[M]other was very loving with [I.T.]” I.T. told
    the social worker he enjoyed visits with Mother and that he wanted to
    continue them.
    During one visit, I.T. told his Mother he was sad she “ ‘left’ ” him.
    Mother explained she did not leave him. When Mother told I.T. she wanted
    him to “come home,” I.T. asked “if he would be able to go home soon.” At
    another visit, I.T. asked Mother “when they were going to be together,” and
    Mother responded they would be together “in the future.” I.T. told the social
    worker he missed Mother, and Aunt reported that he often asked when he
    7
    would be able to visit with Mother again. But on one occasion, according to
    Aunt, I.T. did not want to attend a visit with Mother.
    The social worker acknowledged “[t]here is no question that the mother
    and [I.T.] have a parent-child relationship.”6 But she observed that I.T. did
    not have any strong emotional reactions when his visits with Mother ended.
    He was “able to exit the visit with no emotional concerns,” and would leave
    Mother with hugs and kisses but without crying. I.T. also did not ask for
    additional visits outside of their visitation schedule. “Days after the visit[s]
    are held, [I.T.] continues to do well with no reported emotional concerns.”
    The social worker noted I.T. was “thriving” in his current home and that
    during the rest of the week, outside his visits with Mother, I.T. “is a happy
    and stable 6-year old who is being a kid, playing, going to school, playing on
    his tablet and going to the park.”
    The Agency also obtained information from third parties regarding
    Mother’s relationship with I.T. His paternal grandmother reported that,
    throughout I.T.’s life, he stayed with her often, including on most weekends.
    Paternal grandmother expressed concern that I.T.’s speech was delayed, and
    she was unsure if Mother had pursued an assessment to address his speech.
    D.E.’s father alleged acts of violence by Mother, including an incident in
    which Mother punched him while she was driving with I.T. in the car. He
    also saw Mother pull I.T. by the arm and spank him when he soiled himself,
    and he alleged that Mother gave I.T. sleeping pills.
    6     The social worker also observed that I.T. has on several occasions
    referred to Mother as “tia,” which is Spanish for aunt and a reference to his
    current caregiver.
    8
    Mother’s counsel conducted a very brief cross-examination of the social
    worker.7 The social worker testified Mother has never “displayed any bad
    parenting” during her visits. I.T. was generally excited to see Mother and he
    had “a couple times” expressed his desire to return to Mother’s care.
    Although I.T. was sad when his visits with Mother ended, the social worker
    believed he was sad because “he want[ed] to keep playing.” On redirect, the
    social worker explained I.T. did not express sadness because Mother was
    leaving. He had also not expressed any distress when he learned visits were
    cancelled.
    The social worker had tried to explain to I.T. “there is a potential he
    might never have visits with his mom again,” and his
    response⎯“Okay”⎯suggested to her that I.T. has a hard time understanding
    “forever” and “adoption.” The social worker expected I.T. to experience
    sadness if Mother’s parental rights were terminated, but she did not believe
    he would suffer in the long term. She explained that since his placement
    with Aunt, he has experienced stability and was doing well. She concluded
    that adoption was in I.T.’s best interest despite the sadness he may
    experience at the discontinuation of visitation with Mother.
    The Agency conceded the evidence demonstrated that Mother and I.T.
    shared a parent-child relationship with positive attributes. But it was the
    Agency’s opinion that the benefits of adoption outweighed any detriment I.T.
    would suffer if the relationship was severed. The Agency emphasized that
    I.T. did not get upset when his visits with Mother were cancelled. It also
    asserted that Mother presented no evidence that I.T. would suffer detriment
    if their relationship was terminated, or that the benefits of adoption would
    7     Cross-examination of the social worker filled five pages of the reporter’s
    transcript.
    9
    not outweigh any such detriment. In contrast, I.T. had made demonstrable
    progress in a stable home with Aunt. Counsel for I.T. joined in the Agency’s
    arguments that Mother’s parental rights should be terminated to free I.T. for
    adoption.
    Mother’s counsel argued there was “an extraordinarily strong bond”
    between Mother and I.T., and the court should not terminate her rights
    because the parental-benefit exception applied. She emphasized that I.T.,
    who had just turned 7 years old two days earlier, had spent over five years of
    his life in Mother’s care. Counsel argued I.T. was too young to understand
    “he may not see his mother ever again” and “voice a bar to adoption.” And
    although Aunt reported that I.T. was not upset when his visits with Mother
    were cancelled, under those circumstances I.T. presumably knew there would
    be another visit.
    The juvenile court found clear and convincing evidence established that
    I.T. was generally and specifically adoptable. It then turned to “the true
    issue before the court” and that is whether the parental-benefit exception
    applied, noting that it does so only in “exceptional circumstances.” It
    correctly observed the exception required Mother to prove by a preponderance
    of the evidence three elements: “First, there has been regular visitation and
    contact. Two, that there [is] a relationship with the parent, [the]
    continuation of which would benefit the child such that, three, the
    termination of parental rights would be detrimental to the child.”
    The court agreed with the parties that the first and second elements of
    the exception had been established by the evidence. It found there had been
    regular visitation and contact, and the relationship between Mother and I.T.
    was “a significant one,” which if continued would benefit the child.
    10
    The juvenile court turned to the third element to determine “whether it
    would be detrimental to the child to sever the relationship [with Mother] and
    choose adoption, when balanced against the benefits of a new adoptive home.”
    Here, the court found the only evidence Mother presented on detriment from
    termination of the parent-child relationship was that I.T. “would be sad.”
    And it agreed with the Agency that this was not a sufficient showing of
    detriment by Mother. The court found there was evidence that I.T.
    “continue[d] to move forward in his life,” in Aunt’s home and care, when
    “there are no visits” with Mother. For example, he is able to go to school and
    “do well,” he has “supports in place,” and “there is no significant distress or
    other emotional behavior” by I.T.
    The court concluded Mother failed to demonstrate termination of her
    relationship with I.T. would be detrimental to him, and even assuming
    detriment, it concluded the benefits of adoption would outweigh any
    detriment because I.T. “would benefit from the stability and permanency that
    adoption would provide to him.” The court terminated Mother’s parental
    rights to free I.T. for adoption.
    II.
    Mother Has Failed to Affirmatively Demonstrate the Juvenile Court Erred
    A section 366.26 hearing is “designed to protect children’s ‘compelling
    rights . . . to have a placement that is stable, permanent, and that allows the
    caretaker to make a full emotional commitment to the child.’ ” (In re Celine
    R. (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 45
    , 52−53.) At this stage of a dependency case, the
    juvenile court must choose one of three permanent plans: adoption,
    guardianship or long-term foster care. (§ 366.26, subd. (b).) Of these options,
    “[a]doption, where possible, is the permanent plan preferred by the
    Legislature.” (In re Autumn H. (1994) 
    27 Cal.App.4th 567
    , 573 (Autumn H.);
    11
    § 366.26, subd. (c)(1) [When the court finds by clear and convincing evidence
    the child is adoptable, “the court shall terminate parental rights and order
    the child placed for adoption” unless a statutory exception applies].) The
    parent has the burden of showing the termination of parental rights would be
    detrimental to the child under one of the exceptions to adoption. (See In re
    Fernando M. (2006) 
    138 Cal.App.4th 529
    , 534 (Fernando M.).)
    One of the statutory exceptions to the preference for adoption is the
    parental-benefit exception. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).) This exception
    applies where “[t]he court finds a compelling reason for determining that
    termination would be detrimental to the child,” including where “[t]he
    parents have maintained regular visitation and contact with the child and
    the child would benefit from continuing the relationship.” (§ 366.26, subd.
    (c)(1), (B)(i).) There are three elements a parent must prove, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, “to establish the exception: (1) regular
    visitation and contact, and (2) a relationship, the continuation of which would
    benefit the child such that (3) the termination of parental rights would be
    detrimental to the child.” (In re Caden C. (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 614
    , 631
    (Caden C.).) A “crucial aspect of the [juvenile] court’s responsibility” at the
    section 366.26 hearing is deciding “whether the harm from severing the
    child’s relationship with the parent outweighs the benefit to the child of
    placement in a new adoptive home. [Citation.] By making this decision, the
    [juvenile] court determines whether terminating parental rights serves the
    child’s best interests.” (Caden C., at pp. 631−632.)
    Here, the juvenile court found the evidence established the first two
    elements. Since the Agency does not dispute these findings, we shall focus
    our analysis on the third element, noting however that the second and third
    elements of the exception “significantly overlap.” (In re Katherine J. (2022)
    12
    
    75 Cal.App.5th 303
    , 317, fn. 7.) “For example, evidence that terminating the
    parental relation would cause harm indicates that child would lose important
    relational benefits if severed from her parent.” (Ibid.) “When the
    relationship with a parent is so important to the child that the security and
    stability of a new home wouldn’t outweigh its loss, termination would be
    ‘detrimental to the child due to’ the child’s beneficial relationship with a
    parent.” (Caden C., supra, 11 Cal.5th at pp. 633−634.)
    This third element⎯whether termination of parental rights would be
    detrimental to the child⎯is the most difficult question for the juvenile court
    to resolve. Where the court has found that regular contact and visitation
    have continued, and that this contact has created a relationship that benefits
    the child, the court must “decide whether the harm from severing the child’s
    relationship with the parent outweighs the benefit to the child of placement
    in a new adoptive home.” (Caden C., 
    supra,
     11 Cal.5th at p. 632, citing
    Autumn H., supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 575.) As our Supreme Court
    explained, determining the “harm associated with severing the relationship is
    a subtle enterprise.” (Caden C., at p. 634.) A parent-child relationship
    sometimes “involves tangled benefits and burdens” and “[i]n those cases, the
    court faces the complex task of disentangling the consequences of removing
    those burdens along with the benefits of the relationship.” (Ibid.)
    We review a juvenile court’s “ruling on the third element under a
    hybrid standard, reviewing its factual determinations concerning the
    detriment analysis for substantial evidence but its ultimate weighing of the
    relative harms and benefits of terminating parental rights for an abuse of
    discretion.” (In re Eli B. (2022) 
    73 Cal.App.5th 1061
    , 1068, italics added;
    accord Caden C., 
    supra,
     11 Cal.5th at pp. 639−640.) As our high court
    explained in Caden C., “[a]t its core, the hybrid standard . . . simply embodies
    13
    the principle that ‘[t]he statutory scheme does not authorize a reviewing
    court to substitute its own judgment as to what is in the child’s best interests
    for the trial court’s determination in that regard, reached pursuant to the
    statutory scheme’s comprehensive and controlling provisions.’ ” (Caden C., at
    p. 641.) It is well established that a court abuses its discretion “ ‘ “ ‘by
    making an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd determination.’ ” ’ ”
    (Ibid.)
    Reviewing the court’s factual determinations for substantial evidence,
    “ ‘we draw all reasonable inferences from the evidence to support the findings
    and orders of the dependency court; we review the record in the light most
    favorable to the court’s determinations; and we note that issues of fact and
    credibility are the province of the trial court.’ ” (In re R.T. (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 622
    , 633.) We uphold the judgment if it is supported by substantial evidence,
    “even though substantial evidence to the contrary also exists and the trial
    court might have reached a different result had it believed other evidence.”
    (In re Dakota H. (2005) 
    132 Cal.App.4th 212
    , 230.)
    A parent challenging the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal assumes
    a difficult burden, as it “is generally considered the most difficult standard of
    review to meet.” (In re Michael G. (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 580
    , 595.)
    Additionally, as Mother herself acknowledges in her opening brief on appeal,
    this burden is even weightier where, as here, the issue on appeal turns on a
    failure of proof by the party who bore the burden of proof. In such a case,
    under the substantial evidence standard, the question “for a reviewing court
    becomes whether the evidence compels a finding in favor of the appellant as a
    matter of law” or, put another way, “whether the appellant’s evidence was
    (1) ‘uncontradicted and unimpeached’ and (2) ‘of such a character and weight
    14
    as to leave no room for a judicial determination that it was insufficient to
    support a finding.’ ” (In re I.W. (2009) 
    180 Cal.App.4th 1517
    , 1528.)
    We agree that Mother and I.T. share a significant relationship, and
    that its continuation would benefit I.T. It is obvious that Mother and I.T.
    have a strong and loving bond, and Mother’s trial counsel was correct that
    this is not the case of an infant who has had limited interactions with a
    parent. I.T. had just turned seven years old and, although he spent
    significant time in the care of other family members all his life, his
    relationship with his Mother took root.
    However, Mother had the burden of proof to affirmatively demonstrate
    that termination of the relationship would be detrimental to I.T. (Fernando
    M., supra, 138 Cal.App.4th at p. 534.) Here, the juvenile court found the only
    evidence Mother presented to show detriment was that I.T. “would be sad”
    from the loss of the relationship, and that was not a sufficient showing.
    Mother did not present any affirmative evidence, and her cross-examination
    of the social worker was very brief, highlighting only that I.T. was generally
    excited to see Mother; he had on a few occasions expressed his desire to
    return to Mother’s care; and that he was “sad” when visits ended with
    Mother. On the facts of this case, we agree with the juvenile court this was
    an insufficient showing of detriment.
    As our sister court stated in a case involving the sibling bond exception
    under section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(E), “we do not believe that a child’s
    ‘sadness’ can never satisfy the substantial detriment test. ‘Sadness’ is often
    all a young child can express. While an adult witness might be able to
    differentiate between, ‘This will make me sad, but I can deal with it,’ and
    ‘This will devastate me; I can’t imagine life without my sibling and I don’t
    think I want to live without him or her,’ a child is likely to describe both as
    15
    making him, ‘sad.’ ” (In re Jacob S. (2002) 
    104 Cal.App.4th 1011
    , 1017, italics
    added, disapproved on other grounds in In re S.B. (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 529
    ,
    537.) But “never” does not mean always, and whether a child’s sadness is
    indicative of substantial detriment is case-specific. (Cf. Jacob S., at pp. 1015,
    1017−1018 [11- and 14- year old sisters, who lived their entire lives together,
    “confided in one another and assumed leadership roles at a very young age
    when their mother was unable to take care of them or their brothers”; under
    those circumstances, 11-year old sibling’s expression that “she missed [her
    sister] very much and would be very sad if she never saw [her] again” likely
    indicates she would suffer detriment if she never saw her older sister again].)
    In this case, although I.T. was sad when some visits ended and he
    expressed that he missed Mother, the juvenile court also found I.T.
    experienced “no significant distress or other emotional behavior” when “there
    are no visits” with Mother. The focus of the third element of the parental-
    benefit exception is on the harm to a child in severing his or her relationship
    with a parent and choosing adoption. (Caden C., supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 633.)
    Here, the juvenile court must determine “how the child would be affected by
    losing the parental relationship—in effect, what life would be like for the
    child in an adoptive home without the parent in the child’s life” (ibid., italics
    added). In that respect, the court found rather than experiencing distress
    when he was without Mother, I.T. “continue[d] to move forward in his life,” in
    Aunt’s home. Substantial evidence supported the court’s factual findings.
    The social worker testified, based on her observations of 11 supervised visits,
    that I.T. did not have any strong emotional reactions when his visits with
    Mother ended, and days after the visits are held, he “continue[d] to do well
    with no reported emotional concerns.” To the contrary, I.T. was “thriving,”
    and was a “happy and stable 6-year old” in his current home with Aunt. The
    16
    social worker testified that since the start of the dependency case, I.T. had
    adjusted to life with Aunt whom he had known for his entire life.
    On the record before us, we cannot say that the evidence compels a
    finding in favor of Mother on detriment, as a matter of law. Substantial
    evidence supported the juvenile court’s factual determinations on the third
    element of the parental-benefit exception to adoption. But even assuming
    Mother met her burden of showing detriment, we conclude the juvenile court
    was well within its discretion to find that the benefits of a stable adoptive
    home outweighed any harm from termination of the parental relationship.8
    In the last step of the analysis, the juvenile court must examine
    whether “the benefit of placement in a new, adoptive home outweigh[s] ‘the
    harm [the child] would experience from the loss of [a] significant, positive,
    emotional relationship with’ ” the parent. (Caden C., supra, 11 Cal.5th at
    p. 633.) Relevant here, I.T. was exposed to severe violence inflicted on his
    younger sister by Mother’s boyfriend. Mother had also failed to protect I.T.
    from physical abuse by the same perpetrator. The trauma he experienced
    required I.T. to attend weekly therapy. But his prospective adoptive parent
    ensured that he consistently attended therapy to address his needs, and she
    maintained a safe home environment. In that stable environment, outside of
    Mother’s care, I.T. made demonstrable progress, his speech improved, and it
    was reported that he did well in school. He was in fact said to be “thriving.”
    Our focus on Aunt’s home environment is not to compare Mother’s
    parental attributes with that of Aunt (Caden C., 
    supra,
     11 Cal.5th at p. 634
    8      Mother argues the court’s final balancing of the relative harm and
    benefits from the termination of the parental relationship was “infected” by
    its erroneous finding that I.T. would not experience detriment. Although we
    find no such error, the juvenile court assumed detriment in performing the
    final balancing. The court expressly stated it “finds that the benefits of
    adoption would outweigh any detriment.”
    17
    [“[w]hen it weighs whether termination would be detrimental, the court is not
    comparing the parent’s attributes as custodial caregiver relative to those of
    any potential adoptive parent(s)”]), but to see into what I.T.’s life looks like in
    his prospective adoptive home, without a parental relationship with Mother.
    At this step, the juvenile court is required to “determine, for the particular
    child, how a prospective adoptive placement may offset and even
    counterbalance” the harm in terminating parental rights. (Id. at p. 640.) We
    perceive no abuse of discretion in the court’s determination that for I.T., the
    permanency and stability that adoption would give him would outweigh any
    detriment he might experience from termination of his relationship with
    Mother. We conclude the determination was not arbitrary, capricious, or
    patently absurd. (See id. at p. 641.)
    In sum, we conclude Mother has not met her burden on appeal of
    affirmatively demonstrating error in the court’s order terminating parental
    rights. So we shall affirm.
    DISPOSITION
    The order terminating Mother’s parental rights is affirmed.
    DO, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    DATO, J.
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D081216

Filed Date: 3/9/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/9/2023