Filed 9/27/13 A.A. v. Superior Court CA1/3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
A. M.,
Petitioner,
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CONTRA A139228
COSTA COUNTY,
(Contra Costa County
Respondent; Super. Ct. No. J13-00084, J13-00085)
CONTRA COSTA COUNTY CHILDREN
& FAMILY SERVICES BUREAU, et al.,
Real Parties in Interest.
A.M. (Mother), mother of J.M., born in January 2013, and F.F, born in December
2010, petitions under California Rules of Court, rule 8.452 to vacate an order setting a
selection and implementation hearing for the minors pursuant to Welfare and Institutions
Code section 366.26.1 F.F. and J.M. are Mother‟s sixth and seventh children. The
previous five were removed from her custody, and she failed to reunify with them.
Reunification services to Mother were terminated for the first two children in 2004, and
for the next three in 2008.
Mother was denied reunification services for J.M. and F.F. pursuant to section
361.5, subdivision (b)(10), which provides that services may be withheld if they have
previously been terminated for siblings, and the parent “has not subsequently made a
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Subsequent statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
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reasonable effort to treat the problems that led to removal” of the siblings. Mother
contends that the court erred in finding that she had made no such effort, but we conclude
the finding was supported by substantial evidence. We therefore uphold the order setting
the section 366.26 hearing.
I. BACKGROUND
Mother has had a drug problem for at least two decades. She completed inpatient
substance abuse programs in 2002, 2004, and 2010, but she admitted smoking
methamphetamine while pregnant with J.M. and tested positive for methamphetamine
when J.M. was born in January 2013. Dependency petitions were filed for J.M. and F.F.
on January 22, 2013, alleging Mother‟s failure to protect based on her serious and chronic
substance abuse problem (§ 300, subd. (b)), and her failure to reunify with the minors‟
siblings (§ 300, subd. (j)). The petitions were sustained, and J.M. and F.F. were adjudged
dependent children.
In May, the Contra Costa County Children and Family Services Bureau (the
Bureau) prepared a dispositional report stating that J.M. and F.F. were placed together in
a foster home. The foster mother likened two-year-old F.F.‟s behavior to that of a “wild
fox, always on the move.” F.F. “presented as a child who had never been disciplined and
was used to fending for herself.” The foster mother stated that “when [F.F.] gets upset,
she will „attack,‟ kicks, spits, bites, etc. . . . [F.F.] continues to have „nightmares,‟
screaming in her sleep.” F.F. followed the foster mother everywhere, and cried when she
lost sight of her. F.F. also had a “demonstrated fear of men.”
The Bureau reported that Mother successfully completed a three-month residential
drug treatment program at The Rectory on April 15. The Rectory recommended that
Mother complete a six-month outpatient treatment program at the Aurora Project, and
obtain at least one or two years of trauma therapy to address “abuse issues.” She also
“need[ed] to continue with her sponsor and attend[] meeting[s] 3-5 times per week.”
Mother got on the waiting list for the Aurora Project in mid-April and entered Rosewood
House, a sober living environment that provides transitional housing for women. Mother
had eight negative drug tests, with one “No Show,” from February 27 to April 23. She
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attended all sessions at a parenting skills program from January 22 to April 15. She had
hour-long supervised visits with the children twice a month, and missed only one visit
because she was late.
Although by mid-May Mother was “enthusiastically doing all that she could to
have her two young children returned to her custody,” the Bureau recommended against
providing her reunification services, stating: “It has been the mother‟s pattern to do very
well while [in] residential treatment, then to fail to follow through once discharged from
residential treatment. . . . The concern is the mother‟s ability to maintain her sobriety
long term. It would be unfair to these very young children to have to wait long enough to
see what the mother‟s future holds. . . . Based on the mother‟s history, it is unlikely that
the mother will maintain long term sobriety.”
The dispositional hearing was continued from May 16 to July 11. In a
supplemental report for the hearing, the Bureau stated that, after mother moved into
Rosewood House, she “started as energetic, hopeful and excited about her sobriety . . .
During the early weeks of May, the mother secured two part-time jobs . . . .”
However, “[o]n May 30, 2013, the mother was discharged from Rosewood House
for failing to return home. The mother‟s cell phone was disconnected. On June 9, 2013,
the mother‟s father passed away. The mother stopped going to both places of
employment. The mother only attended Project Aurora one time. She stopped random
drug testing due to transportation issues. In June, the mother missed several visits with
the children, either for being late or for not confirming scheduled visits. [¶] As of July 7,
2013 the mother was staying with her mother in Fairfield. The maternal grandmother,
guardian of the mother‟s middle three children, lives in subsidized housing. Also,
currently staying in the home is the mother‟s aunt and the mother‟s nineteen-year-old
son . . . . The mother still did not have a telephone number. She stated that she was still
not enrolled in the Project Aurora, that she had not sought out individual therapy, and that
she had not contacted her (twelve step) sponsor.”
At the dispositional hearing, Mother testified via an offer of proof that she was not
drug testing through the Bureau because of transportation issues, but that she had tested
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two weeks earlier through the probation department. She now had “a letter and the
necessary documentation” to start testing in Vallejo, and was willing to test on the day of
the hearing. She was going to AA meetings but forgot to bring confirming
documentation. She had a 12-step sponsor named Jodie and was looking for another one
in the area where she was currently living. She had been on the waiting list at the
Fairfield Mental Health Organization for a month and a half and had an appointment
there on July 16. She missed two visits with the children because of transportation
problems. She was looking for work.
On cross-examination, Mother stated that she was participating in the Healthy
Partnership drug treatment program in Fairfield, but she had nothing to verify her
enrollment. She did not bring any documents substantiating her recent activities because
she thought the hearing was going to be about paternity issues. She was discharged from
Rosewood House because she left the residence and did not return by the home‟s 10:00
p.m. curfew. She returned late because her father was in the hospital. She had never
completed an outpatient drug treatment program after finishing a residential one.
On redirect examination, Mother testified that she believed she could maintain her
sobriety because “I really really want it this time. This is so scary having my kids away
from me like this, people telling me I might not ever see them again. And I just I don‟t
want it any more, and I want to just do right.”
The court found that reunification services to Mother had been terminated for J.M.
and F.F.‟s siblings, and that she had not subsequently made a reasonable effort to treat the
problems that led to the siblings‟ removal. The court further found that providing Mother
with reunification services would be detrimental to J.M. and F.F. No services were
ordered, and a section 366.26 hearing was set for November 6.
II. DISCUSSION
“ „ “Once it is determined one of the situations outlined in [section 361.5,]
subdivision (b) applies, the general rule favoring reunification is replaced by a legislative
assumption that offering services would be an unwise use of governmental resources.” ‟ ”
(R.T. v. Superior Court (2012) 202 Cal.App.4th 908, 914 (R.T.), quoting Renee J. v.
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Superior Court (2001) 26 Cal.4th 735, 744.) An order denying services under the statute
is reviewed for substantial evidence. (R.T., supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at p. 914.)
“[T]he inclusion of the „no-reasonable effort‟ clause in the statute provides a
means of mitigating an otherwise harsh rule that would allow the court to deny services
simply on a finding that services had been terminated as to an earlier child when the
parent had in fact, in the meantime, worked toward correcting the underlying problems.”
(In re Harmony B. (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 831, 842.) However, the clause cannot be
read to mean that “any effort by a parent, even if clearly genuine, to address the problems
leading to removal will constitute a reasonable effort . . . .” (R.T., supra, 202 Cal.App.4th
at p. 914.) “And while the degree of progress is not the focus of the inquiry, a parent‟s
progress, or lack of progress, both in the short and long term, may be considered to the
extent it bears on the reasonableness of the effort made.” (Ibid.)
Substantial evidence supports the court‟s decision to deny Mother reunification
services. Mother completed a residential drug treatment program after services for her
other children were last terminated in 2008, but she had relapsed into drug use by the
time she was pregnant with J.M. Although she completed another residential treatment
program after J.M. and F.F. were removed, she did not substantiate her participation in
outpatient treatment, attendance at AA meetings, or submission to drug testing, at the
time of the dispositional hearing. As her counsel put it at the hearing, “she did well . . .
almost until June. And it was then that things kind of fell apart.” The record supported a
finding that Mother failed to make reasonable efforts to treat the problem that led to
removal of the siblings.
Mother argues that, even if that finding was justified under section 361.5,
subdivision (b), the court was compelled to find under subdivision (c) of the statute that
services were warranted because it was in J.M.‟s and F.F.‟s best interests to reunify with
her. However, subdivision (c) “becomes relevant only if one of the enumerated bases for
denying reunification services [under subdivision (b)] applies and the juvenile court
contemplates exercising its discretion to order services regardless. If the court
contemplates ordering services, section 361.5, subdivision (c), requires that the court first
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find that reunification is in the best interest of the child . . . . Here, the juvenile court was
not required to make a finding under subdivision (c), given its decision not to order
[such] services . . . . We shall therefore disregard the portions of mother‟s petition that
erroneously reference subdivision (c).” (R.T., supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at pp. 913–914, fn.
3)
III. DISPOSITION
The order to show cause is discharged, and the petition for extraordinary writ is
denied on the merits. (See § 366.26, subd. (l); In re Julie S. (1996) 48 Cal.App.4th 988,
990–991.) Our decision is final immediately. (Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.452(i),
8.490(b).)
_________________________
Siggins, J.
We concur:
_________________________
McGuiness, P.J.
_________________________
Pollak, J.
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