In re A.C. CA4/2

Court: California Court of Appeal
Date filed: 2014-02-13
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Filed 2/13/14 In re A.C. CA4/2



                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
 California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
                                     or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.


           IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                   FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION TWO



In re A.C., a Person Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.

RIVERSIDE COUNTY DEPARTMENT
OF PUBLIC SOCIAL SERVICES,                                               E059506

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                       (Super.Ct.No. JUV-084587)

v.                                                                       OPINION

A.C.,

         Defendant and Appellant.



         APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Jacqueline C. Jackson,

Judge. Affirmed.

         Daniel G. Rooney, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and

Appellant.

         Pamela J. Walls, County Counsel, Carole A. Nunes Fong, Deputy County

Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.



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       A.C. (father), the father of A.C. (child), appeals from an order of the dependency

court terminating his parental rights. The child’s mother is not a party to the appeal.

       On appeal, father contends that there is insufficient evidence to support the court’s

finding that the beneficial parent-child relationship exception to termination of his rights

did not apply. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

                      PROCEDURAL AND HISTORICAL FACTS

       On November 18, 2011, a search warrant was served at the residence of mother

and father. Father was located in a backyard shed in possession of methamphetamine and

marijuana. Mother and the then 15-month old child were found in a bedroom along with

an aunt. A pipe used for smoking methamphetamine was found on a desk. It was still

warm and smoking. Mother and father were both arrested for being under the influence

of methamphetamine. The aunt lied and said that she was the mother of the child because

she thought that she was not going to be arrested. Presumably, she lied to avoid the child

being taken into protective custody. She was also arrested, however. Mother, father and

child were all dirty and disheveled.

       Father had previously been convicted of felony possession of controlled

substances in 2009 and admitted occasional use of methamphetamine, but he stated that

he did not have a substance abuse problem. He admitted to using methamphetamine that

morning and that he began selling drugs to make extra money. He was aware that mother

used methamphetamine but stated that he was unaware that she had smoked it that

morning in the presence of the child. Later, he admitted to a 21-year history of drug




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abuse and engaging in drug sales. He entered a substance abuse program on December

12, 2011, apparently on his own volition.

       Mother had a long history of drug abuse and a long prior history with the

dependency court. She had failed to reunite with her other children by other fathers.

Two were adopted. Two were placed in guardianship. One was returned to her father

who was given sole custody. One died but apparently not due to neglect. Mother also

had a history of criminal convictions. In 2004, she was convicted of being under the

influence of a controlled substance, a misdemeanor. In 1994, she was convicted of

felony child endangerment and received formal probation.

       The child was born three weeks early in July 2010. Mother tested positive for

methamphetamine. The child was placed in intensive care for upper respiratory distress.

Mother stated that she wanted to give the child up for adoption, but mother was married

to father and he would not consent.1

       Father reported that he asked mother to move out of their home, and father then

obtained a family law court order for sole physical and legal custody on September 29,

2010.2 Mother did not appear at the custody hearing so no visitation order for mother

was made by the family law court. Father was not named the biological father on the

birth certificate, but he admitted that he was the father.


       1 Mother and father reported they had lived together for five years before they
married on May 22, 2010, two months before the child was born.

       2 Although father had sole legal custody of the child, he allowed mother to remain
in the home with the child, and she was permitted to care for the child unsupervised.


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       Fourteen months after father was awarded sole legal and physical custody, mother

and father were arrested at the family residence. A petition was filed on behalf of the

child on November 22, 2011, pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 300,

subdivisions (b) and (g).3

       A detention hearing was held on November 23, 2011, and the child was detained

in foster care. The court found father to be the presumed father at this hearing.

       A contested jurisdictional hearing was held on March, 20, 2012, and the

allegations in the amended petition were found true.

       The dispositional hearing was held on April 23, 2012. Both mother and father

were denied reunification services. The child was ordered into foster placement. She

was placed with her prospective adoptive parents on June 20, 2012. She had been doing

well in that placement.

       Father filed a section 388 petition alleging changed circumstances on August 17,

2012. Father had sought out a number of services and programs, apparently on his own

initiative. The court ordered a hearing on the petition.

       On October 1, 2012, the court granted father’s petition and granted reunification

services and liberal visitation to include overnight visits and weekends also. Weekly

unsupervised day visits with father began approximately at the end of the year. The court

ordered that mother and father not visit the child at the same time.


       3  All further code references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. After their
release from jail, the section 300, subdivision (g), allegations were dropped in the
amended petition.


                                             4
       The weekly day visits with father were reported to have gone well. The child

would return to foster care in good spirits and did not demonstrate adverse behaviors after

visits. However, after two overnight visits, she regressed and soiled herself even though

she was potty trained. She was clingy with the foster parents. She would not go to sleep

and would cry for her foster parents when visiting father. Father had to call the foster

parents and have them talk with the child before she would go to sleep. During the

child’s supervised visits with mother, the child was uncomfortable and distant from

mother, and there was limited interaction by mother with the child. After unsupervised

visits with father began, the child began to respond more positively to her mother during

their supervised visits. Interaction with mother and the child seemed comfortable.

       On Saturday, March 30, 2013, at 7:55 a.m., the social worker made an

unannounced visit at father’s home because she suspected that mother was visiting during

the unsupervised weekend visits with father. Mother was at the home, in violation of a

court order. The child was there visiting with father. Father claimed that mother had just

arrived unannounced to drop off an Easter dress for the child and did not know that the

child was there. Easter was the next day. Father said that he cannot control mother, and

she just shows up. Father asked for the social worker to give him a break and just call it a

supervised visit. The social worker told father that she did not believe mother had just

arrived and that she believed that mother had been visiting during the father’s weekend

visitations. He replied that it was not the first time that mother had been at the home

when the child was present. The social worker reiterated that the child cannot be around

mother due to her substance abuse issues and that the department was concerned that


                                             5
despite his commendable progress in addressing his issues, he did not seem to understand

the need to keep the child safe and protected from mother.4 The child was taken by the

social worker.

       The next day, March 31, 2013, father made a 911 call to report that mother had

shown up at his house uninvited. The social worker investigated and corroborated that

such a call was made from father’s mobile phone. Two days after the unannounced visit,

father obtained a temporary restraining order to keep mother away.

       A review hearing was held on May 23, 2013. Reunification services were

terminated and a section 366.26 hearing date was set.5 Previously, before the

unannounced visit, the social worker had recommended that father regain custody of the

child with maintenance services provided in a report filed March 20, 2013, just 10 days

before the unannounced visit.

       Father filed another section 388 petition on June 28, 2013, requesting custody or

further reunification services.

       The termination hearing was held on July 8, 2013. Mother was not present. The

court summarily denied father’s new section 388 petition. The child’s current foster

parents wanted to adopt her. Father and mother’s attorneys both objected to termination




       4 From the outset of the dependency, mother stated that she did not want
reunification services, and she wanted father to regain custody of the child.

       5 Apparently, no writ review was sought of the court’s order terminating
reunification services and setting the termination hearing.


                                            6
of parental rights and requested guardianship as the permanent plan. The court found that

no exceptions to adoption applied and terminated parental rights.

                                       DISCUSSION

       Father’s sole contention on appeal is that there is no substantial evidence to

support the court’s finding that section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i), the beneficial

parent-child relationship exception to adoption, does not apply. We disagree.

       Once reunification services have been terminated, the focus shifts to the needs of

the child for permanency and stability. (In re Marilyn H. (1993) 5 Cal.4th 295, 309.)

Adoption is the legislated preferred plan for a child who cannot be returned to parental

custody because it provides the permanency which other alternatives, such as

guardianship or long-term foster care, cannot. (In re Scott B. (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th

452, 469.) The statutory exceptions to the preferred plan of adoption merely permit the

court in exceptional circumstances to choose an option other than the norm, which is

adoption. (In re Celine R. (2003) 31 Cal.4th 45, 53.)

       The parent has the burden of proving that one of the exceptions to adoption apples.

(In re Scott B., supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 469.)

       The applicable standard of review is somewhat muddled. Some courts have used

an abuse of discretion standard while others have used a substantial evidence standard.

(In re Scott B., supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 469.) Recent cases have applied a

substantial evidence standard to the court’s factual determination of whether there is a

parent-child beneficial relationship and an abuse of discretion standard to the court’s

determination that termination of rights would not be detrimental to the child. (In re K.P.


                                              7
(2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 614, 621-622, citing In re Bailey J. (2010) 189 Cal.App.4th

1308, 1314-1315.) As a practical matter, it makes no difference which iteration of the

standard we apply. Whether we apply an abuse of discretion standard of review or a

substantial evidence standard of review, or a combination of those, we find the court did

not err in finding the exception did not apply and in terminating parental rights in this

case.

        It is unquestioned that father regularly visited the child, and the visits generally

went well with the child demonstrating much affection for her father. The pertinent issue

then becomes whether the child would derive a greater benefit from continuing the

parent-child relationship with father than she would from being adopted. (In re B.D.

(2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 1218, 1234.)

        In re Autumn H. (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 567 is the seminal case regarding

exceptions to the preference for adoption. There, the court held parent-child relationships

that can prevent termination of parental rights are ones that promote “. . . the well-being

of the child to such a degree as to outweigh the well-being the child would gain in a

permanent home with new, adoptive parents. In other words, the court balances the

strength and quality of the natural parent/child relationship in a tenuous placement

against the security and the sense of belonging a new family would confer. If severing

the natural parent/child relationship would deprive the child of a substantial, positive

emotional attachment such that the child would be greatly harmed, the preference for

adoption is overcome and the natural parent’s rights are not terminated.” (Id. at p. 575.)




                                               8
        “The exception must be examined on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the

many variables which affect a parent/child bond. The age of the child, the portion of the

child’s life spent in the parent’s custody, the ‘positive’ or ‘negative’ effect of interaction

between parent and child, and the child’s particular needs are some of the variables which

logically affect a parent/child bond.” (In re Autumn H., supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at pp. 575-

576.)

        Adoption cannot be thwarted simply because a child would derive some benefit

from continuing the parent-child relationship, and adoption should be ordered when the

court finds that the relationship maintained through visitation does not benefit the child

significantly enough to outweigh the strong preference for adoption. (In re Jasmine D.

(2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 1339, 1350.)

        Neither father nor mother presented any affirmative evidence at the termination

hearing. There was no bonding study. Everyone submitted on the reports prepared for

the hearing. At the time of that hearing, the child had been out of her father’s custody for

about 20 months. She was removed from parental custody when she was 15 months old.

Her one-on-one visits with father went well and were appropriate and affectionate. She

was not upset or crying, however, when visits were over and she had to return to her

caregivers. She enjoyed a bonded parent-child relationship with her adoptive parents and

was thriving and happy in their home. The other children in the family related to her as a

sibling.




                                               9
       Father had progressed to unsupervised visits for a brief time, but that status was

revoked upon finding mother at father’s home early on a Saturday morning in violation of

a court order. The child was taken by the social worker, and visits reverted to supervised.

       There is no evidence in the record demonstrating that severing the parent-child

relationship would be detrimental to the child. On the contrary, there is evidence that the

child would be at risk if ever returned to father’s custody and the dependency terminated.

       The elephant in the room is mother. Mother has a long history of substance abuse

and involvement with the dependency system, and there is nothing in the record to

suggest that she has sought help for her drug abuse since the birth of the child. Mother

tested positive for methamphetamine at the birth of the child. Mother initially stated that

she wanted to place the child for adoption. Later, mother stated she wanted father to have

custody, and she did not want to participate in services for herself.

       Father did get sole physical and legal custody from the family law court, yet he

continued to reside with the drug abusing mother until they were both arrested while

under the influence of methamphetamine when the child was 15 months old and the

dependency petition was filed. He has admitted to allowing mother to care for the child

unsupervised after getting the family law sole custody order.

       On this record, it appears that father is either unwilling or incapable of severing

ties to mother or otherwise stop associating with her. They are married, and there is

nothing in the record to indicate that father intends to divorce mother. If father regained

custody and the dependency were to be terminated, the child would not be protected from

mother. Even with protective exit custody orders for the child, the father could simply


                                             10
ignore them to the detriment of the child, if he chose to do so, and as he has done in the

past.

        Father admitted when mother was caught at his home during the child’s

unsupervised visitation with father that it was not the first time it had occurred. Mother

admitted to going to the house when the child was there for unsupervised overnight

weekend visits. Father has demonstrated that he is willing to violate court orders and that

he is willing to subordinate the child’s safety and need for protection to his apparent need

to stay involved with mother who poses a risk to the child.

        The benefits of continuing the relationship with father do not outweigh the

benefits she would obtain in a stable and secure new adoptive family, and termination of

rights will not be detrimental to the child. The record does not show that the court abused

its discretion, and substantial evidence supports the court’s findings and orders under any

iteration of the standard of review. The court did not err.

                                      DISPOSITION

        The judgment is affirmed.

        NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS


                                                                McKINSTER
                                                                                             J.
We concur:


HOLLENHORST
          Acting P. J.

CODRINGTON
                           J.


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