Filed 11/4/13 In re H.N. CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
In re H.N., a Person Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.
D063988
SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY,
(Super. Ct. No. SJ10796C)
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
PATRICK D.,
Defendant and Appellant.
In re C.C. et al., Persons Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.
D063990
SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY,
(Super. Ct. No. SJ12250B)
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
PATRICK D. et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.
CONSOLIDATED APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego
County, Kenneth J. Medel, Judge. Affirmed.
Kathleen Murphy Mallinger, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant Patrick D.
Monica Vogelman, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Gabriella C.
Thomas E. Montgomery, County Counsel, John E. Philips, Chief Deputy County
Counsel and Dana C. Shoffner, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Dependency Legal Group of San Diego, Tilisha Martin and Alexandra Abbey, for
minors.
Patrick D. appeals after the juvenile court denied his Welfare and Institutions
Code section 388 petitions requesting an additional period of reunification and terminated
his parental rights to his daughters, H.N. (born 2006) and C.C. (born 2012).
(Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.) C.C.'s
mother, Gabriella C., joins in Patrick's arguments pertaining to C.C. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. H.N.
H.N.'s mother died in early 2011. In late 2011, when H.N. was about five years
old, the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency (the Agency) filed a
petition under subdivisions (b) and (g) of section 300 alleging Patrick's drug use and
domestic violence toward his girlfriend, Gabriella, endangered H.N. At the detention
hearing, the juvenile court dismissed the section 300, subdivision (g) allegation and found
Patrick had presumed father status. The court later detained H.N. with a maternal cousin.
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The caretaker reported that H.N.'s visits with Patrick were unstructured, that H.N. ran
around doing what she wanted and that Patrick gave her candy, soda and ice cream.
In January 2012, the court issued a no contact order based on evidence Patrick
threatened to bring a shotgun to a visit, did not show up for drug testing, was angry with
the social worker, yelled insults in the lobby of the Agency's office and had a knife in his
pocket at a visit. Patrick was also arrested for being under the influence of a controlled
substance.
At the March 2012 jurisdiction and disposition hearing, the juvenile court made a
true finding on the petition, declared H.N. a dependent, removed her from Patrick's
custody and placed her in a relative's home. It also found the case plan appropriate and
ordered the Agency to provide Patrick with services. Patrick completed a residential
detoxification program shortly after the court assumed jurisdiction, but tested positive for
amphetamine/methamphetamine a few days later. The court continued the no contact
order based on Patrick's positive drug tests and his failure to appear at the hearing. In
June 2012, the Agency received a referral on Patrick's newborn child, C.C., after C.C.
and Gabriella tested positive for methamphetamine and marijuana.
At the six-month review hearing in October 2012, the court terminated Patrick's
reunification services, set the permanent plan hearing, lifted the no contact order and
ordered supervised visits. Patrick was arrested in November and December 2012. After
H.N.'s relative caregiver expressed she was no longer willing to provide care for H.N.,
the Agency filed a section 387 petition and moved H.N. to a foster home. The new foster
family had an approved adoptive home study and wanted to adopt H.N. In February
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2013, Patrick set the section 366.26 hearing for trial and the court suspended his visits
with H.N. pending the trial date. In March 2013, the social worker moved C.C. into the
foster home with H.N. The foster parents wished to adopt both girls.
On the day of the contested section 366.26 hearing in early April 2013, Patrick
filed a section 388 petition seeking six more months of reunification time. He claimed to
be clean and sober since his 2012 incarceration and indicated that he had entered a six-
month residential drug treatment program about a week earlier. The court set a hearing
on the petition, heard Patrick's testimony and gave the social worker discretion to allow
supervised visits with H.N.
At the end of April 2013, the court heard further testimony from Patrick, admitted
reports and heard argument on the section 388 petition. The juvenile court concluded
that Patrick had not shown a significant change of circumstances and it was not in H.N.'s
best interest to return to Patrick. Patrick timely appealed.
2. C.C.
The Agency filed a dependency petition on C.C.'s behalf under section 300,
subdivision (b). Gabriella admitted that she used methamphetamine three times a week
throughout her pregnancy and used marijuana on a daily basis. In June 2012, the juvenile
court made a prima facie finding on the petition and detained C.C. in out-of-home care.
At a contested disposition hearing in September 2012, the juvenile court declared C.C. a
dependent, placed her in foster care, and ordered no reunification services for Gabriella
based on her failure to reunify with another child in 2009.
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In February 2013, Gabriella met C.C. for the first time since her birth. Gabriella
had a second visit with C.C. while incarcerated, but she made no attempts to visit C.C.
after her release from jail in March 2013. Patrick had two visits with C.C. while
incarcerated in March 2012 and March 2013. On the day of the contested section 366.26
hearing in early April 2013, Patrick filed a section 388 petition seeking reunification
services. At a combined hearing for both daughters, Patrick admitted that he never
contested C.C.'s removal and never asked for reunification services until the date of the
contested section 366.26 hearing. The juvenile court found no significant change in
circumstances, denied the section 388 motion and terminated parental rights. After
Patrick and Gabriella timely appealed the orders as to C.C., we ordered that the appeals
be considered together and granted Patrick's request that the appeals be consolidated.
DISCUSSION
Patrick contends the juvenile court abused its discretion in denying his section 388
petition requesting an additional reunification period with his daughters. Because the
denial of his section 388 petitions must be reversed, he claims the termination of his
parental rights must also be reversed, and the cases remanded to the juvenile court. We
disagree.
Section 388 gives the juvenile court discretion to modify a previously made order
when the moving party presents evidence of changed circumstances and demonstrates
that the requested modification is in the child's best interests. (In re Stephanie M. (1994)
7 Cal.4th 295, 317.) "In determining whether the petition makes the necessary showing,
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the court may consider the entire factual and procedural history of the case." (In re
Justice P. (2004) 123 Cal.App.4th 181, 189.)
When a section 388 petition is filed after family reunification services have been
terminated, the dependency court's overriding concern is the child's best interests. (In re
Stephanie M., supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 317.) The parent's interests in the care, custody and
companionship of the child are no longer paramount, and the focus shifts to the needs of
the child for permanency and stability. (Ibid.) We may disturb the dependency court's
exercise of its discretion only in the rare case when the court has made an arbitrary,
capricious or "patently absurd" determination. (Id. at p. 318.) We do not inquire whether
substantial evidence would have supported a different order, reweigh the evidence or
substitute our judgment for that of the dependency court. (Id. at pp. 318-319.) There is
no abuse of discretion where substantial evidence supports the order. (In re Daniel C. H.
(1990) 220 Cal.App.3d 814, 839.)
Here, the juvenile court credited Patrick for his decision to enter a residential drug
treatment program for the purpose of bettering himself. It noted that Patrick's sobriety
probably resulted from his incarceration and was not a choice he had made. The court
commented that Patrick's long-standing drug use "permeated his life" and that such
individuals often come to believe that their abnormal behavior is actually normal and
acceptable. As an example of this, the court cited Patrick's belief that he was a "great
dad."
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The court noted that this was Patrick's fourth drug treatment program and that the
measure of change was how someone did when they were on their own, not when they
were compelled by the criminal justice system. It found that Patrick made an effort to
change, but the results of his efforts would not be known until Patrick was left to his own
devices for a significant amount of time. Substantial evidence supports the court's
finding that Patrick's circumstances had not changed such that reinstating reunification
services and delaying permanency were in H.N.'s or C.C.'s best interests.
Patrick has an extensive criminal history in California, New Jersey, Oregon, and
Virginia, with felony drug possession convictions in California, Oregon and Virginia.
After H.N.'s removal, Patrick suffered three arrests, twice for being under the influence.
Patrick had an almost 20-year history of drug use and considered himself an addict. At
the time of the section 388 hearing, Patrick had been sober for five months. His first date
of sobriety was November 28, 2012, when his latest arrest resulted in his incarceration.
Patrick's case plan required him to attend therapy, complete parenting classes and
participate in both drug treatment and anger management. While Patrick was currently in
therapy, he admitted that he had not completed anger management, parenting, or his
current drug treatment program. Patrick's drug program case manager relayed that
Patrick presented as "hostile" and having "a short fuse." His probation officer also
opined that Patrick would most likely receive a prison sentence at his upcoming
sentencing hearing on federal charges.
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We commend Patrick's participation in his current drug treatment program. In
light of his 20-year history of drug addiction, however, his five months of sobriety does
not establish that his addiction is under control or that he will be able to maintain his
sobriety once he completes the residential program. Moreover, Patrick's efforts came
months after reunification services had been terminated, when "the focus of the
dependency proceedings had shifted from reunification to the child's need for a stable and
permanent home." (In re Casey D. (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 38, 48.) Patrick was able to
show only that his circumstances were changing, not that they had changed within the
meaning of section 388.
The evidence also supported the juvenile court's finding that it would not be in
H.N.'s and C.C.'s best interests to reinstate reunification services. H.N.'s psychological
evaluator diagnosed her with posttraumatic stress disorder, major depressive disorder,
disruptive behavior disorder and neglect of child. The evaluator found that H.N.'s
emotional and behavioral functioning appeared to be "directly linked to her history of
neglect and witnessing domestic violence." While H.N.'s progress was slow, the
evaluator expected improvement with 6 to 12 more months of treatment and a stable
long-term placement. H.N. told the social worker that she loved her foster parents and
liked living with them. She also stated "[m]y father is a crystal meth user, he is scary."
C.C. has spent her entire life in foster home care. Since she was about nine
months old, C.C. has lived with H.N. in their prospective adoptive home. Her
prospective adoptive parents considered C.C. as part of their family and wished to adopt
her and H.N. The social worker concluded that no exceptions to adoption existed and
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that permanency was paramount for H.N. and C.C. The social worker recommended the
girls' foster home as a permanent, stable home for the girls to be adopted.
This evidence supported the juvenile court's denial of Patrick's section 388
petitions. Patrick reargues the evidence and asks us to reweigh it. That is not our role.
(In re Matthew S. (1988) 201 Cal.App.3d 315, 321.) The record does not show it was in
the girls' best interests to reinstate Patrick's reunification services based on his attempt to
become adequate at this late stage of the proceedings. On this record, juvenile court did
not abuse its discretion by refusing to prolong the proceedings.
DISPOSITION
The orders denying Patrick's section 388 petitions and terminating the parental
rights of Patrick and Gabriella are affirmed.
McINTYRE, J.
WE CONCUR:
NARES, Acting P. J.
McDONALD, J.
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