Filed 3/2/15 In re Eva D. CA5
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
In re EVA D., a Person Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.
FRESNO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF F069256
SOCIAL SERVICES,
(Super. Ct. No. 13CEJ300191-1)
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. OPINION
JUAN D.,
Defendant and Appellant.
THE COURT*
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Mary Dolas,
Commissioner.
Jacob I. Olson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
* Before Gomes, Acting P.J., Kane, J. and Franson, J.
Daniel C. Cederborg, County Counsel, and Amy K. Cobb, Deputy County
Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
-ooOoo-
Juan D. appeals a juvenile court order denying his request to be declared the
presumed father of Eva D, whose mother is Tiffany J. (mother). We affirm the order.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Mother and Eva came to the attention of the Department of Social Services in
September 2012, when they both tested positive for methamphetamine at Eva’s birth.
Mother had not received any prenatal care and admitted to methamphetamine and cocaine
use during her pregnancy. Mother accepted the Department’s offer of voluntary family
maintenance services, which were to include substance abuse treatment, mental health
and domestic violence assessments, parenting classes and random drug testing. By April
2013, mother had relapsed twice. At a team decision meeting that month, it was
recommended that Eva remain in mother’s care if mother entered residential treatment.
Mother entered a residential program, but was discharged in May 2013 because she
continued to use drugs and have unauthorized contact with Juan. Mother then entered the
Marjaree Mason Center. A week later, mother left the center and never returned, leaving
her personal belongings behind.
On May 28, 2013,1 the social worker spoke with Juan’s mother, Maria H., who
said she had not heard from mother, but she would immediately contact the social worker
if she should come into contact with mother or Eva. The social worker also spoke with
the maternal grandmother, who said she talked to mother on the telephone on May 26,
but mother would not disclose her or Eva’s whereabouts.
On June 26, the social worker contacted Maria, who said Eva had been in her care
as of the prior day. Social workers visited Eva, who was in the care of Juan’s sister,
1 Subsequent references to dates are to dates in 2013 unless otherwise noted.
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Michelle P. Michelle said that Eva had been in Maria’s care for nearly two weeks and
that Juan remained in Maria’s household. Family members were concerned, as Juan was
suspected of using drugs and he was allowing mother into the home when Maria was
working. The social workers attempted to place a protective hold on Eva, but police
denied the request as mother was not present to confirm the events.
On June 28, the Department filed a dependency petition alleging nine-month-old
Eva came within the provisions of Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision
(b)2 because of mother’s unresolved substance abuse problem, the whereabouts of Eva
and mother were unknown, and there was ongoing domestic violence with Juan.
The juvenile issued a protective custody warrant on July 1, and Eva was taken into
protective custody that day. Mother’s whereabouts were unknown. In a report prepared
for the detention hearing, the social worker stated that mother said Juan was Eva’s father.
He was incarcerated at the time of Eva’s birth; therefore he did not sign the declaration of
paternity and was not listed on the birth certificate. The Department considered Juan to
be an alleged father. Maria requested placement of Eva, but the Department was
concerned about Maria’s ability to protect Eva from mother and Juan, as Maria continued
to allow them into the home. Moreover, while Maria may have denied Juan resided in
the home, according to Juan’s probation officer, his listed address remained at Maria’s
home. The juvenile court detained Eva from mother on July 3 and placed her in foster
care.
At the July 24 jurisdiction hearing, Juan, who was in the custody of the Fresno
County Sheriff, and mother made their first appearances and attorneys were appointed for
them. The juvenile court explained to Juan that he was considered to be an alleged
father, and he might want to discuss his paternity status with his attorney and whether he
wanted to change it, especially since his mother was requesting placement. Father’s
2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
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attorney requested a paternity test, which the juvenile court ordered. Mother identified
Juan as Eva’s father. She stated that while she believed she put his name on the birth
certificate, Juan was not there to sign it. The court told mother to provide the Department
with a copy of any document, declaration of paternity or birth certificate that contained
Juan’s name. The juvenile court ordered reasonable, twice-monthly, supervised visits
between Eva and Juan. The hearing was continued to August 14.
Juan was present in custody at the continued hearing. Maria had been approved
for placement, but the Department was assessing her ability to provide safety and
protection for Eva due to her history of allowing the parents to visits Eva while under the
influence of drugs, her failure to report that she had Eva in her care for two weeks when
she knew the Department was looking for her, and the fact that Juan listed her address as
his permanent mailing address, which would indicate he would retrieve his mail at the
home while Eva was present. After mother submitted on the report, the juvenile court
found the allegations of the first amended petition true.
Father appeared in custody at the October 16 dispositional hearing. The paternity
test showed that Juan was excluded as Eva’s biological father. Accordingly, County
counsel stated that Juan was no longer a party as far as the Department was concerned,
unless he wanted to elevate himself to presumed non-biological father status. Juan’s
attorney asserted that biology was not determinative on the issue of presumed father
status and Juan had taken Eva into his home and held her out as his own. His attorney
further stated that he had a parent-child bond with Eva, who knew him as her father, and
they would file a “JV-505” enumerating the contacts Juan had with Eva throughout her
young life. County counsel responded that she was not sure why a JV-505 had not been
filed already, since it appeared that biology was not an issue for Juan.
The juvenile court stated it would not remove Juan from the case to allow him the
ability to provide whatever information he believed he had to elevate his paternity status.
Juan remained an alleged father. The juvenile court denied Juan’s attorney’s request to
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set the matter for a contest on father’s status or to allow him to present evidence at that
time as his status, as there had been an opportunity for his attorney to set the matter and
file the appropriate documents, and no one was prepared to proceed on the matter. The
juvenile court explained to Juan’s attorney that she would have to determine how she and
Juan wanted to proceed procedurally and file the appropriate documents. The juvenile
court ordered Eva removed from mother’s care; gave mother reunification services;
denied services to Juan pursuant to section 361.5, subdivision (a) and suspended his
visits; and set a status review hearing for November 20 and a six-month review hearing
for April 9, 2014. No appeal was taken from the dispositional orders.
Juan and his attorney were present at the November 20 hearing. A mediation had
been held, but mother did not appear. The juvenile court adopted the mediation
agreement, which stated that family reunification remained the case plan goal.
In December 2013, Ernie R. contacted the Department and requested a paternity
test. The Department asked the juvenile court to order a paternity test. At a January 7,
2014, hearing on this request, which Juan, who was still in custody, did not attend, Juan’s
attorney informed the juvenile court that a JV-505 had been prepared and she only
needed to obtain Juan’s signature. Juan’s counsel asked that a hearing be set because
Juan should have been brought from the jail. The juvenile court responded that once the
JV-505 was completed and filed, she could ask for a hearing, and even though Juan was
not present, he was not prevented from completing any necessary documents, having
them filed, and requesting a hearing before the six-month review hearing set for April 9,
2014.
On January 17, 2014, Juan filed a “Statement Regarding Parentage,” form JV-505,
in which he stated he believed he was Eva’s parent and asked the juvenile court to enter a
judgment of parentage. He asked the court to find he was Eva’s presumed parent because
she lived with him from September 2, 2012 to July 1, 2013, and he told the following
people that Eva was his: his mother, Maria; his stepmother and father; and his brother
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and his wife. Juan further stated that Eva lived with mother, Maria and himself during
the dates provided; that mother moved into the home long before Eva’s birth; and they
spoke of Eva being his child before her birth. Juan stated he usually went with mother
when she went out with Eva; read to Eva; changed her diapers; and watched Eva when
mother left the house to run errands or to take a break from caring for Eva. Juan said he
gave Eva diapers, wipes, book, toys and food, and he had multiple pictures of Eva with
him.
To convey his feelings for Eva, father attached an original JV-505 that he filled
out without the aid of an attorney; the form was dated November 7. In that document,
Juan stated that he had told numerous people, who he listed, and his family that Eva was
his daughter; he had participated in a lot of activities with Eva as her dad, including
watching television, playing with her and her toys, and taking naps with her; he had given
Eva everything he possibly could, including toys, a car seat and a crib; Eva spends time
with his family, who love and adore her, and she had been with his family since birth;
and he loved Eva. Juan further stated that his mother, Maria, had been there for him and
Eva since before Eva’s birth; that he and mother stayed with Maria since Eva was
conceived; and Maria was at the hospital when Eva was born. He explained that he and
mother would watch cartoons with Eva, they would take Eva to a park, they went for
walks with Eva in her stroller, and would take Eva to family functions.
On March 12, 2014, the juvenile court excluded Ernie from the case, as his
paternity test showed that he was not Eva’s biological father. The six-month review
hearing was continued to April 16, 2014, at which time the JV-505 would be heard. The
Department recommended termination of mother’s services and that Juan be excluded as
a party to the case because he was not a biological or presumed father.
In the social worker’s report prepared for the hearing, the Department asserted that
Juan’s actions, namely domestic violence with mother, substance abuse and
incarceration, were inconsistent with the role of a parent, and did not demonstrate
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nurturing parenting with Eva’s best interests in mind or a full commitment to his parental
responsibilities. While Juan claimed he held Eva out to be his own and participated in
raising her, he was incarcerated one day after her birth and had been incarcerated much of
her life: he was incarcerated from September 3, 2012 to February 2013; arrested again on
March 27, 2013 and released; and arrested again on July 10, 2013. Before Eva’s
removal, Juan and mother engaged in domestic violence while mother and Eva were
living in an inpatient substance abuse treatment program. Due to Juan’s incarcerations,
he had been unable to have Eva in his home. Mother and Eva lived in Maria’s home,
where Juan lived when he was not incarcerated. However, when Juan was released from
jail in February 2013, mother and Eva were residing in a residential treatment program,
not with Juan.
The social worker further pointed out that Juan did not take prompt legal action to
obtain custody of Eva or to elevate his paternity status in the juvenile court. While he
had demonstrated a persistent interest during these proceedings in remaining Eva’s father,
he failed to file a JV-505 in a timely manner. Juan was informed before the dispositional
hearing of his right to provide such a document to the court requesting elevation of his
paternity status, but he failed to provide this document until several months later, after it
was established that Juan was not Eva’s biological father. Juan’s name is not on Eva’s
birth certificate, and he and mother had not signed a declaration of paternity naming Juan
as father.
The social worker told mother that neither Juan nor Ernie was Eva’s biological
father. Mother could not provide any other names as to the possible biological father of
Eva. Therefore, the Department had no leads as to Eva’s biological father.
Eva’s counsel filed a written opposition to Juan’s JV-505 request for presumed
father status. Counsel argued that Juan had not made an adequate showing that he
received Eva into his home, since the home he lived in was his mother’s, not his, and he
was incarcerated for much of Eva’s life, or that he openly held her out as his own, as he
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did not take prompt legal action to obtain custody of Eva or to elevate his paternity status.
Eva’s counsel asked the juvenile court to deny Juan’s request and exclude him from the
case as a non-biological father.
Juan’s counsel filed a written reply to the Department’s recommendation. He
asserted the evidence showed that before Eva’s birth, mother moved into the home where
he lived, which belonged to Maria. He and mother spoke of Eva as being his child before
her birth. At Eva’s birth on September 2, 2012, mother provided Eva with Juan’s
surname. When released from the hospital, mother returned to live in Maria’s home,
where she lived until July 1, 2013. During that time, Juan also lived in the home, except
when he was in custody; the total time he lived in the home with Eva was approximately
five months. Juan was in custody on the following dates: (1) September 3, 2012 to
February 12, 2013; (2) March 27-28, 2013; (3) July 7, 2013; and (4) from July 9, 2013 to
the present. Juan and his family love Eva, and he kept photographs of her while in-
custody, copies of which were attached to the reply.
Juan contended he met the definition of presumed father because five months was
a sufficient time to establish that he had received Eva into his home, and he held her out
as his own child to multiple people. He asserted the burden then shifted to the
Department to prove by clear and convincing evidence that he had engaged in abuse of
Eva sufficiently severe to rebut the presumption of paternity, but the Department had not
offered any such evidence. Juan further asserted that unless the Department or Eva’s
attorney wanted a contested hearing, the juvenile court should grant the JV-505 petition
as a matter of law.
Juan appeared in-custody at the April 16, 2014 hearing on his JV-505. County
counsel asked the juvenile court to deny the JV-505, as Juan had not met his burden of
proving he was a presumed father. Eva’s counsel submitted on her written memorandum
and the social worker’s report. Juan’s counsel asked that the JV-505 be set for trial, as it
appeared that some of the facts were in dispute. County counsel and Eva’s counsel both
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objected to the matter being set for trial, as they believed this was the date set for trial and
Juan could have requested a trial at the last hearing.
The juvenile court found the JV-505 untimely, explaining that it gave Juan the
opportunity to present a JV-505 or any evidence regarding his paternity status prior to
disposition. It was unclear to the court why, given this opportunity, Juan made little to no
attempt to change his paternity status at that time. At disposition, the court determined
Juan was not the biological father and he had not provided any evidence to show he met
the criteria for presumed father status. The court further explained that it gave Juan an
opportunity to address the paternity status at the November 20 review hearing, where he
again failed to make any attempt or effort to address paternity. The court did not
understand the purpose of filing the JV-505 at that time, as it believed it was determined
at disposition that Juan did not meet the criteria for presumed father status. Juan’s
counsel stated that he had received a JV-505 that Juan had filled out about four weeks
before counsel filed the JV-505 in January 2014, which explained part of the delay.
The juvenile court also found Juan did not meet the legal criteria for presumed
father status, as when there is no biological connection, he must show either that there
was a “more familiar relationship” or that he attempted to marry mother. There was no
evidence, however, that Juan attempted to marry mother. Moreover, there was
insufficient evidence that Juan ever took Eva into his own home or provided for her.
Instead, while the evidence showed that he permitted mother and Eva to live with his
mother for a brief period of time, where he also lived, there was no evidence he had a
father-child relationship with Eva, or that he attempted to list his name on the birth
certificate or sign a declaration of paternity. Accordingly, the juvenile court denied the
JV-505. The juvenile court set the six-month report and recommendation for a contested
hearing, to be held in May 2014.
9.
DISCUSSION
For purposes of dependency law, only presumed fathers are entitled to
reunification services and to custody. A presumed father is a man who, whether or not he
is the biological father of the child, falls within one of the categories enumerated in
Family Code section 7611. (In re Zacharia D. (1993) 6 Cal.4th 435, 448–449, 450, fn.
18.) Family Code section 7611, subdivision (d), on which Juan relies, provides that a
man is presumed to be the natural father of the child if he “receives the child into his or
her home and openly holds out the child as his or her natural child.”
Juan contends he is entitled to a finding that he is Eva’s presumed father because
he presented unrebutted evidence which showed he took Eva into his home and held her
out as his daughter, and therefore there is insufficient evidence to support the juvenile
court’s finding that he failed to satisfy his burden of proof. The Department, on the other
hand, contends we must uphold the ruling because the juvenile court did not abuse its
discretion in denying the request.
Neither party is correct. Juan had the burden of proof as to the foundational facts,
i.e., that he took Eva into his home and openly held her out as his natural child. (In re
Spencer W. (1996) 48 Cal.App.4th 1647, 1653.) The juvenile court found that Juan failed
to meet this burden. Our review does not depend upon whether substantial evidence
supports that finding. The substantial evidence rule “is typically implicated when a
defendant contends that the plaintiff succeeded at trial in spite of insufficient evidence,”
i.e., that plaintiff/respondent failed to meet his or her burden of proof. (In re I.W. (2009)
180 Cal.App.4th 1517, 1527–1528.) In a case where the trier of fact has expressly or
implicitly concluded that the party with the burden of proof did not carry the burden and
that party appeals, however, “it is misleading to characterize the failure-of-proof issue as
whether substantial evidence supports the judgment. This follows because such a
characterization is conceptually one that allows an attack on (1) the evidence supporting
the party who had no burden of proof, and (2) the trier of fact’s unassailable conclusion
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that the party with the burden did not prove one or more elements of the case.” (Id. at
p. 1528.)
Where the issue on appeal turns on a finding that the appellant failed to meet his
or her burden of proof at trial, the question is therefore not whether substantial evidence
supports the judgment, but “whether the evidence compels a finding in favor of the
appellant as a matter of law.” (In re I.W., supra, 180 Cal.App.4th at p. 1528, italics
added, citing Roesch v. De Mota (1944) 24 Cal.2d 563, 570–571.) Accordingly, the
question in this appeal is whether the evidence was sufficient, as a matter of law, to
compel a finding that Juan qualified as a presumed father pursuant to Family Code
section 7611, subdivision (d). (In re I.W., supra, at p. 1528.) We conclude that it was
not.
Juan contends the evidence showed he lived with Eva in Maria’s home for
approximately five months, and he was the one who received Eva into the home, with
Maria’s help, and provided a place for mother and Eva to stay. The record, however,
shows that when Eva came to live with Maria following her birth on September 2, 2012,
Juan was not in the home, as he was incarcerated. According to the Department, two
months after Juan’s release from jail in February 2013, mother and Eva were living in a
residential treatment program, and Eva did not return to Maria’s home until sometime in
mid-June, when Maria took Eva into her care. Eva remained in Maria’s home, where
Juan was also living, until Eva was taken into protective custody on July 1, 2013.
Moreover, while Juan asserts that he provided for Eva by purchasing baby supplies and
toys, there is no evidence that he contributed any money to provide for a home.
Based on this record, the juvenile court could find that Juan lived with Eva at most
three months of her life, and that it was not Juan who received Eva into his home, but
rather Maria who received Eva into hers. Although a trier of fact may be able to find the
first prong of Family Code section 7611, subdivision (d) is satisfied if the putative
presumed father established a home with the child, regardless of whether it was in a home
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which was his mother’s or in a separate home which was solely his, the evidence that
Juan lived with Eva for three months in a home belonging to his mother, who was the one
providing care for Eva, certainly does not compel that conclusion. (In re I.W., supra, 180
Cal.App.4th at p. 1528.)
Nor does the fact that Juan told his immediate family that Eva is his daughter
compel the conclusion that he openly held Eva out as his natural daughter. He is not on
Eva’s birth certificate, he never signed a voluntary declaration of paternity and there is no
evidence he paid child support. He did not file an appeal after being denied reunification
services – a denial which, pursuant to section 361.5, subdivision (a), was tantamount to a
denial of presumed father status. While Juan privately acknowledged his paternity to his
immediate family, he has never publicly acknowledged Eva as his own child or taken any
legal responsibility for her. (See, e.g. In re Sarah C. (1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 964, 971-973
[court held man was not a presumed father, despite evidence he acknowledged the child
as his daughter to a few friends and had cared for the child for a few months, because he
declined to identify himself as the child’s father on the birth certificate, only briefly lived
with the child in the mother’s home, and contributed little to the child’s support].)
In dependency proceedings, “the purpose of [Family Code] section 7611 ... is to
determine whether the alleged father has demonstrated a sufficient commitment to his
parental responsibilities to be afforded rights not afforded to natural fathers....” (In re
Jerry P. (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 793, 804, italics omitted.) The essence of presumed
fatherhood is the establishment of a substantial parent-child relationship, where the
presumed father has fully embraced the responsibilities of parenthood—“emotional,
financial, and otherwise” (Adoption of Kelsey S. (1992) 1 Cal.4th 816, 849)—and has
consistently acted in a parental role toward the child. (In re Sarah C., supra,
8 Cal.App.4th at pp. 972–973.) The evidence Juan presented demonstrates that he has
not embraced his parental responsibilities toward Eva in any meaningful way.
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Accordingly, the evidence was not sufficient to compel the conclusion that he qualifies as
a presumed father.
DISPOSITION
The April 16, 2014 order denying Juan’s JV-505 petition for presumed father
status is affirmed.
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