Filed 4/8/14 In re S.A. CA2/7
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION SEVEN
In re S.A., a Person Coming Under the B248697
Juvenile Court Law.
(Los Angeles County
Super Ct. No. CK97629)
LOS ANGELES COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
FAMILY SERVICES,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
CYNTHIA A.,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
Marguerite D. Downing, Judge. Affirmed.
Lisa A. Raneri, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
John Krattli, County Counsel, James M. Owens, Assistant County Counsel, and
John C. Savittieri, Deputy County Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent.
_______________________
Cynthia A. appeals the juvenile court’s jurisdictional findings and dispositional
orders concerning her son, S.A. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Cynthia A. gave birth to S.A. in January 2013. Prior to their discharge from the
hospital, staff developed concerns about Cynthia A.’s mental health and stability.
Although she was behaving appropriately with the baby, Cynthia A. was “highly guarded
and suspicious” with others, becoming highly agitated when a doctor came to check on
S.A. A staff member had been placed outside the hospital room until Cynthia A. could
be assessed by a psychiatrist.
Cynthia A. denied any mental health history but had been hospitalized multiple
times for mental health issues. In 2003-2004, she received outpatient services with a
diagnosis of bipolar depression with psychotic features. In July 2008, she was
hospitalized for psychiatric care for 32 days due to a depressive disorder. She received
outpatient services from October of that year until July of 2009, and was prescribed
medication. In June 2009, she was hospitalized for 13 days and diagnosed with
psychosis. In August 2011, Cynthia A. was evaluated at the psychiatric facility and
transferred to a private hospital due to symptoms of depression with suicidal ideation. In
the same month, she was again evaluated and transferred to a hospital due to symptoms
of depression. In October 2011, she was evaluated once more and transferred to a private
hospital because she again had symptoms of depression. From November 2011 to
August 2012, she received outpatient services at a mental health clinic. A hospital social
worker who had been working with Cynthia A. for some time noted that she had been
prescribed psychiatric medication in the past but had not been medication-compliant.
From the maternal grandmother the Department of Children and Family Services
(DCFS) learned that Cynthia A.’s psychiatric problems began when she was a teenager.
She had made multiple suicide attempts. Although psychoactive medication had
stabilized her, Cynthia A. stopped taking her medication “[a]s soon as she would feel
better,” and then she began experiencing symptoms of mental illness again. The maternal
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grandmother could not recall all of Cynthia A.’s hospitalizations. The last time
Cynthia A. had received mental health services had been in the middle of 2012; she
believed that Cynthia A. was diagnosed with paranoia and schizophrenia. Maternal
grandmother reported that Cynthia A. continued to be paranoid, hearing voices in her
head and accusing the grandparents of trying to kill her pets.
Although Cynthia A. was living at the home of the maternal grandparents, she
refused to speak with any family member. She would only communicate through text
messages in which she would request fast food and magazines. She isolated herself in
her room and kept nonperishable food in a box with her. She failed to follow house rules.
The maternal grandmother stated that she was afraid for the baby, asking, “Is she just
going to keep the baby isolated in her room and treat him like a cat?” Although there
were a few baby items at the house, Cynthia A. did not have any diapers, wipes, or
formula at the home. The maternal grandmother told DCFS that she had offered to
purchase a crib and other items for the baby, but Cynthia A. refused her assistance.
There was a box of diapers at the house; the maternal grandmother had bought them but
Cynthia A. would not accept them.
The DCFS social worker interviewed Cynthia A. Cynthia A. denied ever having
been in therapy, having been hospitalized, or ever having attempted suicide. When
confronted with records of her hospitalization, Cynthia A. admitted having been
hospitalized once in 2011; she claimed it was because “my mother didn’t like my
boyfriend and she was trying to get me to break up with him so she had the police take
me away and I went to the psychiatric hospital but they released me right away.” The
social worker reminded her that she would have had to have been deemed to be a threat
to herself or others before she could be hospitalized, and Cynthia A. said that her mother
did it because she hates her. The social worker attempted to ask Cynthia A. about her
other hospitalizations, but Cynthia A. denied any depression, delusions, paranoia,
auditory hallucinations, or self-injury. She continued to maintain that she had been
hospitalized only once, but said that if there were any other hospitalizations, she did not
remember them and they occurred because her mother called in false reports. The social
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worker asked Cynthia A. to be more forthcoming about her mental health; Cynthia A.
denied any problems and asserted that she did not need therapy or medication.
The DCFS social worker asked Cynthia A. about the hospital’s concern that she
would not permit a nurse to perform routine checks on the baby to ensure his health.
Cynthia A. denied any such refusal. Cynthia A. claimed that a few hours after delivering
the baby, a nurse decided she was spending too long in the bathroom and attempted to
pull her off the toilet. According to Cynthia A., a second nurse intervened, but the first
nurse “yelled” at her that she was going to call “psych” on her. Ever since then, they had
posted a nurse to watch her for no reason.
In addition to the concerns about Cynthia A.’s mental health, another ground for
the referral to DCFS had been issues about Cynthia A.’s ability to care for the baby after
discharge. Cynthia A. had reported that she intended to return to her parents’ home with
the baby, but she also reported that the house was unsafe and had black mold growing on
the walls. She told a hospital social worker that the maternal grandparents were “crazy”
and “do mean things” to her. She reported that the maternal grandfather stood outside her
room with an electric saw, cutting down trees for no reason, and that he looked in her
window and spied on her. She claimed that the maternal grandmother deliberately grew
mold on her food for personal consumption. Cynthia A. also stated that she had no
privacy in the home and that there was a curtain on her bedroom door. Cynthia A. did
not have a crib or a bassinet for the baby, intended to have him sleep on a nursing pillow,
and did not know what a changing table was. The hospital social worker noted that
Cynthia A. had “lack of understanding as to a newborn’s need,” and that it was unclear
whether “the cognitive disconnect is due to depression or [if] there is some type of
cognitive impairment such as mild [mental retardation].”
The DCFS social worker interviewed Cynthia A. about her ability to care for S.A.
Cynthia A. stated that her parents were not supportive, and that she had refused to permit
them to see her and the baby at the hospital. When asked about her claim that the
maternal grandfather threatened her by cutting trees down, she stated that he knew that
she was pregnant and needed rest but would use a table saw in the garage for 12 hours
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overnight to prevent her from resting. She claimed that he was abusive and domineering,
believed he owned everything in the home, hit her as a child and as an adult, and engaged
in retaliatory behavior like turning off the power to the home. Cynthia A. repeated her
claim that the maternal grandparents’ home had black mold growing on the walls and that
the maternal grandmother grew it deliberately to eat it. The social worker, who had
visited the maternal grandparents’ home, asked where the mold was, because she had
found none when she inspected the home; Cynthia A. had no response.
Cynthia A. told DCFS that she was planning to return to her parents’ home with
the baby until she could obtain subsidized public housing. She planned to support the
child with her Supplemental Security Income, assistance she claimed to receive because
she had autism.1 Cynthia A. said that she was “looking into” getting a crib. She reported
having only one friend she could trust to help her.
During the interview with Cynthia A., the DCFS social worker observed that
although S.A. was in a crib next to Cynthia A., she never looked over or checked on him.
The psychiatrist who assessed Cynthia A. in the hospital concluded, “Though
[Cynthia A.] currently is appropriate with [the] child in a structured setting and is able to
take care of [the] child’s basic needs like feeding and changing diapers, she has not been
able to communicate a realistic plan for housing and care after hospitalization. She is
unable to provide reasons for her refusal to allow nurses to examine her baby. Patient is
guarded and denies any psychiatric history or needing any psychiatric help contrary to
available psychiatric documentation which states otherwise. The concern is that patient
has poor social support and has not established any contact with her parents and may not
be able to provide for herself or her child without assistance from her parents and in an
unstructured/independent living setting. [¶] Cynthia has an extensive psychiatric history
and is not [taking] any psychiatric medications presently or followed by a mental health
care provider. She [] has a higher risk of developing postpartum depression or psychosis
and hence will require ongoing supervision either by family members or in a professional
1 The hospital social worker confirmed that Cynthia A. was “definitely not autistic.”
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setting.” Although Cynthia A. did not meet the criteria for a psychiatric hold, the
psychiatrist believed she had a mood disorder and recommended outpatient care, possibly
including a mood stabilizer.
DCFS concluded that “there were exigent concerns about the mother’s ability to
care for the child due to the mother’s mental health history, denial of any mental health
issues, history of psychiatric medication non-compliance, and her lack of a safe and
stable living situation combined with her acrimonious relationship with her parents.”
Accordingly, DCFS determined that S.A. could not safely remain in Cynthia A.’s care
upon discharge from the hospital and would therefore be detained.
The DCFS social worker informed Cynthia A. that the baby would be detained and
repeatedly explained the reasons for the detention. Cynthia A. continued to deny any
mental health issues and stated that she should not be considered an unfit mother because
she failed to purchase a crib. She promised to purchase a crib before the detention
hearing. Both the DCFS social worker and the hospital social worker urged Cynthia A.
to obtain mental health services before the next hearing, but Cynthia A. responded that
there was no need for her to do so because she had no mental health issues. Cynthia A.
characterized the psychological evaluation performed on her that day as clearing her of
any mental health issues, but the social workers explained to her that while she was not
found to meet the criteria to be placed on a psychiatric hold, she was diagnosed with a
mood disorder and treatment had been recommended.
Cynthia A. was told that S.A. would be moved to the nursery and that the hospital
staff would wait until the following day to discharge her; during that time, she was told,
she could visit S.A. as often as she wanted in the nursery with the nurses there as
monitors. Cynthia A. said she wanted to be discharged right then because there was no
reason for her to stay. At this point, the baby began fussing and making noises, but
Cynthia A. did not check on him. The DCFS social worker waited for a few minutes to
see whether Cynthia A. would turn her attention to the child, but she did not. The social
worker then checked on the baby. She asked Cynthia A. if she would like to change the
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baby’s diaper, but Cynthia A. said that she did not want to, because she needed to get
dressed and leave.
At Cynthia A.’s first visit with S.A., the foster parent had to place S.A. in
Cynthia A.’s arms because she did not know how to pick up the baby. She was not
focused on the child, and instead used the visit to ask the foster parent about the
dependency proceedings and whether he was trying to adopt S.A. Cynthia A. told the
foster parent that she had been told not to discuss the case with him, but she intended to
do so anyway. Several times she had to be redirected to focus her attention on the child.
At the end of the visit, the foster parent offered to let her walk with him to his car so that
she could spend a few more minutes with the baby. Cynthia A. declined. During
monitored visits, the “foster parents and service providers . . . observed that mother
requires constant direction and hands-on instruction on how to appropriately hold, feed,
and change S[.A.] Although mother is able to redirect, she is unable to retain the skills
she learned in previous visits.”
DCFS filed a petition alleging that S.A. came within the jurisdiction of the
juvenile court under Welfare and Institutions Code2 section 300, subdivision (b), on the
grounds that Cynthia A.’s mental and emotional problems rendered her unable to provide
regular care for S.A. and placed him at risk of harm. DCFS further asserted that she had
failed to take prescribed medication and to obtain mental health treatment, and that she
had been repeatedly hospitalized. Cynthia A. denied the allegation, stating, “All of this is
false. Um . . . I have my mother recording threatening me with all this. She said she was
going to file allegations saying all this. I have it recorded on my phone because I refused
to get an abortion. She used specific terms, something like this; she was throwing out
terms and threw out specific terms. This was back in August.”
DCFS observed that Cynthia A. has “an extensive history of mental illness and
failure to comply with prescribed medication. Furthermore, mother is in complete denial
about her mental illness and has refused to take responsibility and address the issue.
2 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
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Mother continues to blame the maternal family for the Department’s involvement, and
appears to have no actual insight or understanding as to why the Department is involved.”
Further, DCFS noted that Cynthia A. “is so mentally ill that she believes the medical
documents [evidencing her prior hospitalizations and treatment] are ‘fake’ and that there
is not, in fact, a mental health issue. The mother clearly has delusional moments as well
as on-going paranoia. The mother believes her parents have made the allegations up and
reports major discord in that relationship.” DCFS further noted that Cynthia A. did not
appear to function appropriately for her age, making “bizarre and childish comments” to
the investigators that suggested that she might have developmental delays.
Cynthia A. submitted to the juvenile court a letter from a psychiatrist who had
interviewed her once and opined that she did not have any disorder that would interfere
with her ability to care for S.A. When a DCFS investigator spoke with the psychiatrist,
he indicated that they had spoken for 40 minutes and that he had relied on Cynthia A.’s
representation of her history, which included no reference to any history of mental
illness. When the DCFS investigator shared that information with him, the psychiatrist
responded that Cynthia A. had “put on a good act.”
The juvenile court found true the allegation of the petition and declared S.A. a
dependent child of the court. The court found by clear and convincing evidence that
substantial danger existed to S.A. and that there was no reasonable means of protecting
him without removing him from Cynthia A.’s custody. Cynthia A. appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Jurisdictional Findings
We review the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and disposition findings for substantial
evidence. (In re J.K. (2009) 174 Cal.App.4th 1426, 1433.) Substantial evidence is
“evidence which is reasonable in nature, credible, and of solid value.” (Ibid.) Under this
standard of review, we examine the whole record in a light most favorable to the findings
and conclusions of the juvenile court and defer to the lower court on issues of credibility
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of the evidence and witnesses. (In re Tania S. (1992) 5 Cal.App.4th 728, 733.) We
determine only whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted,
that supports the juvenile court’s order, resolving all conflicts in support of the
determination and indulging all legitimate inferences to uphold the lower court’s ruling.
(In re John V. (1992) 5 Cal.App.4th 1201, 1212.)
Cynthia claims that the jurisdictional findings must be reversed because there was
not sufficient evidence that her mental health problems caused S.A. to suffer or placed
him at a substantial risk of suffering serious physical harm or illness. She further
contends that there was no evidence to support the specific allegation that she was not
medication-compliant because there was no evidence that she had a present prescription
that she was not taking.
Substantial evidence supports the jurisdictional findings. Cynthia A. had been
hospitalized repeatedly for her significant and profoundly impairing mental health issues,
but she steadfastly refused to acknowledge that she was mentally ill or that she needed
treatment—even when the DCFS social worker and the hospital social worker advised
her that her untreated mental health problems were the basis for the detention of her
infant child. Cynthia A.’s behavior was erratic and paranoid, and although she had not
treated S.A. inappropriately in the hospital, she did refuse without justification to permit a
nurse to perform a regular check on him. She had no realistic plan for how to take care of
her son, including even the most basic elements of food, diapers, a living place, and
sleeping arrangements. Moreover, Cynthia A. appeared indifferent to or unaware of
S.A.’s needs, failing to check on him while he was by her side in the hospital or to
respond to him when he cried. She required constant direction and hands-on instruction
in how to hold, feed, and change the baby, and she failed to retain those skills between
visits. Cynthia A.’s mental illness very clearly impacted her ability to care for herself
and others; while her condition may not at the time have risen to the level necessary for a
psychiatric hold, it impaired her functioning and her ability to provide basic care for her
child.
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Cynthia A. argues that the jurisdictional findings cannot be upheld because there
was no connection between her mental illness and any risk to S.A. We disagree. Harm
may not be presumed to a child from the mere fact that a parent is mentally ill (In re
David M. (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th 822, 830), but the evidence here is of mental illness
combined with abject denial of any mental health needs, a direct rejection of
recommended treatment, and a lack of ability to care for the child outside a structured or
institutional setting. Accordingly, this case is not like In re David M., in which the
parents had mental problems but there was no evidence that the mental problems
negatively impacted their ability to care for their child. (Ibid.) Here, Cynthia A.’s
significant psychiatric problems and hospitalizations, combined with her failure to
consistently obtain mental health treatment, her denial of her mental health history and
present needs, her ongoing paranoid behaviors, and her inability to attend to and learn
how to meet the needs of her child, all placed S.A. at risk of harm in her care.
Nor is this case akin to the facts in In re James R. (2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 129, on
which Cynthia A. also relies. In James R., the mother had a history of mental illness, but
she also had stable income and stable housing, and she resided with the children’s father,
who shared parenting responsibilities with her. (Id. at pp. 132-133.) The children were
healthy, well cared for, and never unsupervised, and they had not been neglected in the
past. (Id. at pp. 136-137.) A psychotherapist concluded that she was not a risk to her
children. (Id. at p. 133.) Because there was no evidence of harm or a specific risk of
harm to the children, and because there was no evidence that their father could not protect
them, the jurisdictional finding was reversed. (Id. at p. 137.) Here, in contrast,
Cynthia A. did not have stable housing, a second caregiver competent to protect the child,
or any social support. She had provided little for her son and had refused all assistance
from the maternal grandparents. Moreover, the psychiatrist who examined her opined
that she “may not be able to provide for herself or her child without assistance from her
parents and in an unstructured/independent living situation,” and that she “will require
ongoing supervision either by family members or in a professional setting.” As discussed
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above, there was evidence that Cynthia A. was not able to provide regular care to her
child and that S.A. was at risk in her care.
With respect to the specific allegation that there was no evidence to support the
contention that Cynthia was noncompliant with medication regimes, the evidence
presented to the court included multiple reports that Cynthia A. had been prescribed
psychoactive medications in the past but that she had not continued to take them once she
began to improve. While Cynthia A. is correct that there was no evidence that at the time
of the jurisdictional hearing she was noncompliant with respect to a presently prescribed
medication, that was not the allegation. Instead, DCFS alleged that Cynthia A. had an
extensive history of mental illness that she had failed to treat by taking prescribed
medication and obtaining mental health treatment. As detailed above, the evidence
amply supports that allegation.
II. Dispositional Orders
Section 361, subdivision (c) provides that a dependent child may not be removed
from the custody of his or her parent unless the juvenile court finds clear and convincing
evidence of one of several circumstances, including that there would be “a substantial
danger to the physical health, safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of
the minor if the minor were returned home, and there are no reasonable means by which
the minor’s physical health can be protected without removing the minor” from the
parent’s home. (§ 361, subd. (c)(1).) The juvenile court concluded by clear and
convincing evidence that Cynthia A. presented a substantial danger to S.A. and that there
were no reasonable means to protect him without removal from her custody.
We review the juvenile court’s findings for substantial evidence. (In re J.K.,
supra, 174 Cal.App.4th at p. 1433.) Here, the evidence that supports the jurisdictional
findings also supports the removal order: Cynthia A. experienced extensive mental
health problems; she denied those problems and rejected treatment; she had failed to take
prescribed medication; her behavior was indicative of chronic mental health issues; she
was paranoid, restricted access to S.A., and was unable to provide care for him without
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assistance; she refused the assistance available to her from her parents; and she was ill-
prepared to recognize and respond to her child’s needs.
Cynthia A., however, argues that less restrictive means than removal existed to
protect S.A. Specifically, she contends that the court could have ordered family
maintenance services and ordered that Cynthia A. remain living with the maternal
grandmother and never to be alone with S.A. According to Cynthia A., the fact that she
underwent a psychological evaluation pursuant to a court order and signed consent and
release forms indicates that she would cooperate with court orders, and the fact that
sometimes her parents were able to assist her reveals that she would ultimately accept the
help that was offered by them. The record does not bear out the argument that these acts
evinced a willingness to accept help and to cooperate with the court. Cynthia A. was so
far in denial of her illness that she refused treatment even when advised that the baby was
detained because of her untreated and uncontrolled mental health issues. She refused to
speak with her parents or permit them to visit the baby in the hospital, and she claimed
that she was only going to live with them until she was able to get her own apartment.
While Cynthia A. did sit through a 40-minute assessment, she did not disclose her mental
health history, leading the resulting assessment to be of little value and the psychiatrist to
later observe that she had “put on a good act.”
The evidence in the record does not indicate that placement with Cynthia A. with
orders that she reside with the maternal grandparents and never be alone with the baby
would be sufficient to protect S.A. When at the maternal grandparents’ house,
Cynthia A. isolated herself in her room and did not follow house rules. She would not
speak to the family and only communicated through text messages in which she
conveyed her wishes for fast food and magazines. The maternal grandmother feared that
Cynthia A. would take the baby into her room and care for him in isolation as though he
were a pet. Significantly, the maternal grandmother reported that she was ineffective at
setting boundaries or enforcing rules with Cynthia A.: “I am weak, not strong with her,”
she said. She wanted to help her daughter but reported that she has to be careful about
how she interacted with her because if she said anything wrong, Cynthia A. would “shut
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down” on her. At one point the maternal grandmother, who had been cooperating with
DCFS, pretended she had not spoken with DCFS before because, she later explained, she
did not want to upset Cynthia A. and cause her to have one of her “episodes.” Because
Cynthia A. withdrew and isolated herself even in the family home, and because the
maternal grandmother was ineffective at setting limits for Cynthia A. and feared
upsetting her so much that she would engage in concealment, placing S.A. with
Cynthia A. with an order that she reside in the maternal grandparents’ home and not be
alone with the child cannot be considered a reasonable method of protecting S.A. from
the risk posed by Cynthia A.
Cynthia A. argues that the present case is analogous to Kimberly R. v. Superior
Court (2002) 96 Cal.App.4th 1067 and In re Jamie M. (1982) 134 Cal.App.3d 530, but
the cases are distinguishable. In Kimberly R., the mother “acknowledge[d] having a
mental illness” but “manage[d] it with medication and psychiatric and psychological
supervision” such that professionals believed she could adequately parent her son.
(Kimberly R., at pp. 1078-1079.) In Jamie M., the mother’s schizophrenia was treatable
by medication and the mother recognized her need for medication and for long-term
psychiatric care; by the time of the dispositional hearing, she was rational and coherent,
under psychiatric care, and on her medications. (Jamie M., at pp. 534, 537, 540, 542.) In
contrast to these cases, Cynthia A. denied any mental health problems and refused
treatment; her mental health problems resulted in an inability to attend to and provide for
her son; and she lacked the ability to care for her son without assistance, which she
refused. The court’s removal order was supported by substantial evidence.
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DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
ZELON, J.
We concur:
PERLUSS, P. J.
WOODS, J.
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