Filed 4/24/15 In re L.C. CA1/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 ONE
In re L.C., et al., Persons Coming Under
the Juvenile Court Law.
CONTRA COSTA COUNTY BUREAU
OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY
SERVICES,
A142376
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (Contra Costa County
Super. Ct. Nos. J12-00992, J12-00993,
D.C., et al., J13-01010)
Defendants and Appellants.
L.J. (mother) and D.C. (father) appeal from juvenile court orders terminating their
parental rights to their daughter, four-year-old L.D.C. (sister), and their sons, three-year-
old D.C., Jr. (older brother) and one-year-old L.C. (younger brother). Mother argues that
the order terminating her parental rights to sister was improper because she was entitled
to the beneficial-relationship exception to termination. Father argues that all three orders
terminating his parental rights must be reversed because (1) the requirements of the
Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) and related state laws were not satisfied; (2) the
proceedings failed to adhere to the “statutory framework” of Welfare and Institutions
1
Code1 section 300 et sequitur, and he was given improper notice of the selection-and-
implementation hearing under section 366.26 (section 366.26 hearing); and (3) the court
had a sua sponte duty to appoint a guardian ad litem for him. He also claims his trial
counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel.2 We reject all these claims and
affirm.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL
BACKGROUND
In May 2012, the Contra Costa County Children & Family Services Bureau
(Bureau) received a report that mother, who was living in a domestic violence shelter
with the two older children, had left sister, who was then almost two years old,
unattended “in a bathtub full of water for [10 to 15 minutes] while she answered a phone
call out of the room.” In mid-June, after mother failed to attend a meeting with the social
worker, the social worker went to the motel where mother was staying and spoke to two
women who said they were friends with mother. The friends reported that mother had
retrieved sister and older brother from father and had then left them at the motel the
previous night in the care of one of the friends. At approximately 1 a.m., while mother
was still gone, father came to the room and “was banging on the door, shouting and
‘acting a fool.’ He appeared to be high on methamphetamine. He was yelling,
screaming[,] and threatening to blow up the motel . . . [and] seemed so out of
control[,] . . . like ‘a devil.’ ” Father picked up ten-month-old older brother and “was
swinging [him] from [his] legs in a swooping/swinging motion.” The friends were
unable to prevent father from taking the children, and the police stated they could not
help because father’s address and phone number were unknown.
1
All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
otherwise noted.
2
Father raised similar issues in two other appeals we recently decided, one involving a
paternal half sister (In re D.C. (Jan. 29, 2015, A141365) [nonpub. opn.]) (half sister) and
one involving a paternal half brother (In re D.C. (Mar. 27, 2015, A141989) [nonpub.
opn.]) (half brother). Much of our discussion of father’s claims is drawn from the
opinions in those cases.
2
Two days later, while the two children were still missing, the Bureau filed
juvenile dependency petitions for them, alleging jurisdiction under section 300,
subdivision (b) (failure to protect)—based on the bathtub incident, the motel incident,
father’s substance abuse, and both parents’ homelessness and inability to provide for the
children—and under subdivision (g) (no provision for support) because the parents’ and
children’s whereabouts were unknown. The children were soon located and placed in
foster care, and the juvenile court ordered them detained.
At an August 2012 jurisdictional hearing, mother admitted to an amended
allegation that she “ha[d] been unable to provide the children with adequate care,
supervision, and protection[,] . . . plac[ing] the children at risk of harm.” Jurisdiction as
to father, who had not yet been appointed counsel, remained pending. The juvenile court
found sister and older brother to be children described by section 300, subdivision (b).
At an October 2012 hearing, father was declared the presumed father of both
children. He had not requested visitation, however, and was soon arrested for violating
parole and jailed. Meanwhile, mother, who had temporarily moved to San Joaquin
County, visited the children consistently.
In December 2012, the Bureau filed subsequent petitions under section 342 for
sister and older brother alleging jurisdiction as to father under section 300,
subdivision (b) (failure to protect) based on the motel incident and father’s substance
abuse and under subdivision (j) (abuse of sibling) based on half sister’s dependency case,
which involved father’s domestic violence against that child’s mother. The next month,
the juvenile court dismissed the original petitions’ remaining allegations against father
and found the allegations in the subsequent petitions true. It also ordered reunification
services for both parents, continued visitation for mother,3 and ordered visitation for
father, to begin once he requested it.
3
The juvenile court had previously entered dispositional orders as to mother only, but it
vacated those orders after recognizing that only one dispositional order per child should
be entered.
3
Mother made progress on her case plan by, among other things, completing a
parenting education program, participating in a domestic violence program, and
beginning individual therapy. She also continued to visit with sister and older brother.
Father, who was released from prison in early June 2013, did not stay in touch with the
Bureau and did not show any progress on his case plan or request visits with the children.
An August 2013 status-review report recommended that mother’s services be continued
and father’s services be terminated. At a hearing later that month, the juvenile court
ordered mother’s services continued. After a contested hearing in September at which
father testified, the court terminated his services, although it permitted him to have
monthly supervised visits.
In June, mother had given birth to younger brother, who was “medically fragile”
and required regular medication for seizures. The social worker in the older children’s
cases repeatedly told mother not to leave the baby with father. When younger brother
was two months old, however, father brought him to a court hearing in half brother’s
case, and younger brother was detained and placed with his two siblings.
At the end of August 2013, the Bureau filed a juvenile dependency petition for
younger brother alleging jurisdiction under section 300, subdivision (b) (failure to
protect) based on father’s domestic violence and drug use, father’s failure to engage in
reunification services in half sister’s case, and mother’s placement of younger brother in
father’s care despite being told unsupervised visits should not occur. Jurisdiction was
also alleged under section 300, subdivision (j) (abuse of sibling) based on father’s failure
to engage in reunification services in half sister’s case. At a November 2013 hearing,
mother pleaded no contest to the allegation that she “placed [younger brother] at serious
risk by leaving the child in the care of the father, in that the child’s father has an ongoing
substance abuse issue.” No jurisdictional findings were ever made as to father, who
remained an alleged father throughout younger brother’s case. The next month, the
juvenile court ordered that no visitation between father and younger brother occur based
on a finding of detriment.
4
A December 2013 status-review report filed in the two older children’s cases
recounted the circumstances surrounding younger brother’s detention, highlighting
mother’s “susceptibility” to father and willingness to put younger brother at risk by
leaving him in father’s care. Mother was visiting only once a month with the two older
children and had failed to continue individual therapy. The report observed that although
mother “ha[d] completed the majority of her case plan goals, it seem[ed] that she ha[d]
only gone through the motions . . . [and] clearly ha[d] no understanding of why [the
Bureau] became involved with her family.” The report recommended terminating
mother’s reunification services and setting a section 366.26 hearing for the two older
children.
Mother opposed the termination of her services, and she and the social worker
testified at a January 2014 hearing on the issue. According to the social worker, mother
left younger brother with father many times, despite the social worker’s repeatedly
cautioning her not to do so. Mother, on the other hand, testified that she had left the baby
in father’s care only once and had done so only because of circumstances outside her
control. At the conclusion of the hearing, the juvenile court found that the social worker
was credible and mother was not. It also characterized father as “a violent, vicious, out-
of-control man . . . [who] should not have contact with the children.” As to the two older
children, the court found that reasonable services had been provided to mother,
terminated her services, and set a section 366.26 hearing. Mother was permitted to have
supervised visits with them once a month. The next month, the court adopted the
Bureau’s recommendation that no services be provided to the parents in younger
brother’s case and set a section 366.26 hearing for younger brother as well.
In May 2014, mother filed section 388 petitions seeking extension of her
reunification services for the two older children. At a hearing on the petitions, mother
testified that she was receiving individual therapy again, that she had been consistently
visiting the children, and that she had not known about father’s domestic violence or
ongoing substance abuse when she left younger brother with him and that lying to the
social worker about the number of times he took the child had been a mistake. In
5
contrast, the social worker testified that she had discussed father’s domestic violence and
drug problems with mother and had repeatedly told her to keep younger brother away
from father. The juvenile court denied the petition, finding that mother continued to be
not credible and that there had not “been a significant change of circumstances.” It
suspended her visitation and continued the section 366.26 hearing to the next month so
that father, who had recently been incarcerated again, could attend.
A section 366.26 hearing for all three children was held at the end of June 2014.
Father did not appear despite having been ordered to do so at a hearing held four days
before, and the juvenile court denied his request for a continuance based on his claim that
he did not have enough money to take public transportation to court. His trial counsel
objected to the termination of his parental rights but did not submit any evidence. Mother
appeared and argued that her parental rights to all three children should not be terminated
based on the strength of her bond with them as demonstrated in the Bureau’s reports.
The court terminated mother’s and father’s parental rights after finding that the children
were adoptable and their relationship with mother did not preclude termination.
II.
DISCUSSION
A. The Juvenile Court Correctly Determined that Mother Failed to Establish
the Beneficial-Relationship Exception to Termination of Parental Rights.
Mother argues the juvenile court erred by terminating her parental rights to sister,
relying on the statutory exception that applies when there is “a compelling reason for
determining that termination would be detrimental to the child” because “[t]he parents
have maintained regular visitation and contact with the child and the child would benefit
from continuing the relationship” (the beneficial-relationship exception). (§ 366.26,
subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).) We disagree.
Between June 2012, when sister was removed, and August 2013, mother was
permitted to have twice-monthly, supervised visits with sister. Throughout this period,
mother visited about a dozen times. She cancelled one visit because she had a doctor’s
appointment, two visits because she had court the same day, three more because of
6
younger brother’s birth and medical needs, and another one because she failed to confirm
it in advance.
At the August 2013 hearing, the juvenile court gave the Bureau authority to allow
mother to have unsupervised, overnight visitation for up to 30 days. The Bureau never
exercised that authority, however, because of the events surrounding younger brother’s
removal. From September through December 2013, mother appeared for only two visits,
and several others were cancelled due to her responsibilities for younger brother, her own
illness, and her failure to show up or confirm in advance. At the December 2013 hearing,
the court ordered supervised visits reduced to once a month. Mother visited with the
children a few more times but missed the April 2014 visit because she failed to confirm
it. The court suspended her visitation in May 2014.
During all the visits she attended, mother was affectionate, played with sister, and
otherwise behaved appropriately. She helped sister interact with older brother, helped
sister use the restroom, and brought food and gifts. At the end of some visits, sister
expressed reluctance to leave. For example, at the December 2013 visit, she “told . . .
mother on two occasions[,] ‘I want to go home with you now.’ ” At the January 2014
visit, sister told mother, “ ‘I love you mommy,’ ” and at the March 2014 visit, sister
“asked . . . mother if she could go to her house.” Summarizing the visitation history in
the section 366.26 report, the social worker concluded that sister “does have a
relationship with . . . mother, but the relationship does not outweigh the benefits of legal
permanency for the child.”
At the section 366.26 hearing, mother argued that the benefit to all three children
from an ongoing relationship with her outweighed the benefit of legal permanence,
emphasizing that visitation went well and that she had a “close bond” with them,
particularly sister. After hearing argument from the other parties, the juvenile court ruled
that mother had not established the beneficial-relationship exception. The court
explained its reasoning at length:
“I do not find the relationship with [sister] to be that strong. . . . [O]ne of
the things that struck me . . . [is that] the visit for April [2014] did not
7
occur . . . because mother did not call to confirm the visit. She had visited
them approximately once per month since July 2012. Even when she was
offered more frequent visits, she didn’t take advantage of it. And on
several occasions, . . . mother missed visits and did not see the children for
over one month.
.....
Half of [sister’s] life, she’s been in this home with these caretakers,
so I don’t know what you are all talking about, a bond.
I think . . . her mother is a very nice lady, probably, and [sister]
enjoys visiting with her, and I’ll bet she’s lovely with her, but that doesn’t
give a parental bond. That doesn’t do the day-to-day caring.
The real issue here is mother is not credible, has very poor judgment,
and I don’t feel the children are safe in her care. That is the real big issue.
I think that there [are] always . . . some incidental benefits from a visit, but
they certainly do not outweigh the benefits of [the current] home, where
[sister] has been for half of her life, and where [younger brother] has been
for all of his life and [older brother] for almost all of his life. I don’t . . .
even understand what you are all talking about, on how strong that is,
because I simply do not see it.
There is always an interaction between a natural parent and child. It
will incur some incidental benefit, but the significant attachment is
certainly the attachment that the children have with the caretakers.
And, also, I don’t find that the relationship of visitation is so very
important to the children. I think it’s nice. I think it’s been a nice little
visit, but I don’t think . . . in any way . . . that the children’s need for
permanency should be outweighed by this occasional visitation.
....
I think it’s sad. It’s always heartbreaking because I think . . . mother
is not a bad person. Sometimes we have bad people, and it’s not sad. This
mother is not a bad person and, frankly, she’s had a heck of a growing up
herself, and I think that’s even more heartbreaking, knowing how difficult
her own growing up was . . . .
But then I have to look to the safety of her children and their best
interests, and their best interests are [staying] in [their current] home with
8
the stability and love and nurturing and safety that they have, so I am going
to follow the [Bureau’s] recommendations.”
Once a juvenile court has determined a child is adoptable by clear and convincing
evidence, it “must terminate parental rights and free the child for adoption” unless a
statutory exception, such as the beneficial-relationship exception, applies. (In re Jason J.
(2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 922, 936; § 366.26, subd. (c)(1).) A parent seeking to show the
beneficial-relationship exception applies has the burden to establish two prongs: “regular
visitation” and “benefit to the minor[] . . . that outweigh[s] the benefits of adoption.” (In
re I.R. (2014) 226 Cal.App.4th 201, 212; Jason J., at p. 936.)
Courts of Appeal have reviewed determinations about the applicability of the
beneficial-relationship exception for substantial evidence, abuse of discretion, or a
combination of both. (In re G.B. (2014) 227 Cal.App.4th 1147, 1166, fn. 7 [discussing
cases].) Here, the parties do not ask us to decide which standard of review applies, and
we conclude the juvenile court’s determination was proper under either. (See In re
Jasmine D. (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 1339, 1351 [“practical differences between”
substantial-evidence standard and abuse-of-discretion standard “are not significant”].)
The visitation prong requires a showing that the parent “visit[ed] consistently and
to the extent permitted by court orders.” (In re I.R., supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at p. 212.)
The juvenile court explicitly found that mother had failed to visit the children as often as
she could have, and she does not challenge this finding. Indeed, although mother was
permitted twice-monthly visitation from June 2012 to December 2013, she averaged only
one visit per month. And although some of the visits she missed were excusable based
on her own and younger brother’s medical issues, mother missed several visits without
providing a valid excuse. Finally, in August 2013 mother was given the opportunity to
begin unsupervised and overnight visits, but she failed to take advantage of it because she
made the poor decision to leave younger brother in father’s care. In sum, the court
correctly found that mother failed to visit with the children as often as permitted, and that
finding alone is fatal to her claim. (Ibid.)
9
The juvenile court’s finding that mother’s bond with sister was not sufficiently
strong was also proper. “The ‘benefit’ prong of the [beneficial-relationship] exception
requires the parent to prove his or her relationship with the child ‘promotes 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 re K.P. (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 614,
621, quoting In re Autumn H. (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 567, 575.) “The factors to be
considered when looking for whether a relationship is important and beneficial are:
(1) the age of the child, (2) the portion of the child’s life spent in the parent’s custody,
(3) the positive or negative effect of interaction between the parent and the child, and
(4) the child’s particular needs.” (In re Angel B. (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 454, 467, fn.
omitted.)
“ ‘ “Interaction between [a] natural parent and child will always confer some
incidental benefit to the child,’ ’ ” and “[i]t is not enough to show that the parent and
child have a friendly and loving relationship.” (In re J.C. (2014) 226 Cal.App.4th 503,
529.) Instead, a parent must establish that he or she “ ‘occup[ies] “a parental role” in the
child’s life,’ ” a “ ‘relationship [that] characteristically aris[es] from day-to-day
interaction, companionship[,] and shared experiences.’ ” (In re K.P., supra,
203 Cal.App.4th at p. 621.) “ ‘[B]ecause a section 366.26 hearing occurs only after the
[juvenile] court has repeatedly found the parent unable to meet the child’s needs, it is
only in an extraordinary case that preservation of the parent’s rights will prevail over the
Legislature’s preference for adoptive placement.’ ” (Ibid.)
Initially, mother argues the statutory language has been incorrectly interpreted to
“requir[e] the benefit of the parental relationship to outweigh the benefits of adoption.”
(Underlining in original.) She states that “benefit” means “ ‘anything contributing to an
improvement or advantage,’ ” apparently arguing that the exception exists as long as a
child derives some benefit from a relationship with the parent. Her position ignores the
full provision, however, which requires termination of parental rights unless it would be
“detrimental” to the child. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B).) Termination is detrimental only if
the benefit to the child from maintaining the relationship with the parent is greater than
10
the benefit from being adopted.4 We therefore reject mother’s interpretation of the statute
and decline to depart from well-settled precedent on the issue.
In her briefing, mother recounts the details of the many positive visits she had with
sister. She argues that they demonstrate she “occupied a parental role with [sister]”
because she did things a mere “ ‘friendly visitor’ ” would not (In re Autumn H., supra,
27 Cal.App.4th at p. 573), including helping sister use the toilet and correcting her
misbehavior. But taking a parental role at visits is not enough. In the primary decision
mother relies on, In re S.B. (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 289, the Court of Appeal reversed an
order terminating parental rights where the record showed the father “continued [a]
significant parent-child relationship” with his daughter, whom he consistently visited two
to three times a week, “despite the lack of day-to-day contact with [her] after she was
removed from his care.” (Id. at pp. 293-295, 299, italics omitted.) Here, in contrast,
mother visited sister only approximately once a month throughout the case and did not
take advantage of the opportunity to have more frequent visits or to progress to
unsupervised visits. We agree with the juvenile court that occasional, pleasant visits do
not establish the requisite parent-child bond.
Mother also argues that “[t]he mother-child relationship . . ., coupled with
[sister]’s repeated desire to live with . . . mother, present[ed] a compelling reason for
finding that termination of . . . mother’s parental rights [would be] detrimental.” But the
case she cites, In re Scott B. (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 452, involved a much older,
emotionally unstable child who “had spent nearly all of his life living with [his m]other,”
had “consistent weekly visits with her,” and had “repeated[ly] insiste[d] that his
preference would be to live with [his m]other.” (Id. at p. 471.) Here, while sister
expressed a desire to stay with mother on a few occasions and sometimes had difficulty
ending visits, she adjusted well to her foster placement, which she had been in for two
4
Mother also suggests that comparing the benefit of the relationship with a parent to the
benefit of adoption “is not possible because the actual benefit[] of adoption . . . is, in the
end, unknowable,” given that adoption may be traumatic in some ways. We do not
believe juvenile courts must be prescient to assess the impact adoption is likely to have
on a child.
11
years when parental rights were terminated, and never expressed a level of wanting to
return to mother even approaching that displayed in Scott B.
In any event, as we discussed above, whatever benefit sister derived from her
relationship with mother ultimately had to be balanced against the benefit sister would
derive from adoption. Even if we accept mother’s position that sister had a “significant,
positive relationship” with mother, the record does not demonstrate that the relationship
was strong enough to prevent termination of mother’s parental rights, particularly given
sister’s young age and her bond with her prospective adoptive family. The juvenile court
did not err by concluding the beneficial-relationship exception was inapplicable.
B. The Juvenile Court’s Failure to Determine Whether ICWA Applies Was
Harmless Because Father Did Not Provide Information in These Children’s
Cases Indicating He Might Have Indian Heritage.
Father argues the orders terminating his parental rights to all three children must
be conditionally reversed because the juvenile court and the Bureau failed to comply with
ICWA-related requirements. We conclude the court erred by not making an express or
implied finding whether ICWA applies but that the error was harmless.
None of the information provided in these three children’s cases suggested that
they might be Indian children. On August 10, 2012, father completed and filed in the two
older children’s cases an ICWA-020 form, “Parental Notification of Indian Status,” in
which he checked the box indicating he is not aware of having any Indian ancestry. At a
hearing on the same date, father responded “No” when the juvenile court asked him
whether he had any Indian ancestry. Finally, the petition for younger brother filed in
August 2013 included an ICWA-010(A) form, “Indian Child Inquiry Attachment,”
stating that an ICWA inquiry had been made and that “[t]he child has no known Indian
ancestry.”5 No additional ICWA-related information about father was provided in any of
5
The October 2012 disposition report for the two older children states that the previous
month, mother had “stated to th[e] social worker that she does not have Indian Ancestry.”
Father does not rely on any potential Indian heritage of mother’s in making his claim.
12
the Bureau’s reports, and the court never made any ICWA-related findings or orders or
mentioned ICWA issues again in any of the three cases.
In December 2012, however, the Bureau filed a request for judicial notice of “[a]ll
orders and findings” in half sister’s case. At a hearing later that month, the juvenile court
took judicial notice of “the half sibling file,” which it indicated it had before it. As
discussed in our previous opinion involving half sister, father provided conflicting
information about Indian heritage in that case. Although father apparently told the social
worker on at least one occasion that half sister did not have Indian heritage, on
August 29, 2012, he completed and filed an ICWA-020 form in which he checked the
following three boxes: (1) “I am or may be a member of, or eligible for membership in, a
federally recognized Indian tribe”; (2) “I may have Indian ancestry”; and (3) “The child is
or may be a member of, or eligible for membership in, a federally recognized Indian
tribe.” In addition, the November 2012 disposition report in that case stated that father
said he “believe[d] that he has American Indian Ancestry on his father’s side,” although
father also reported that “[h]e never knew his father and only met him once.”
The purpose of ICWA is “to protect the best interests of Indian children and to
promote the stability and security of Indian tribes.” (25 U.S.C. § 1902.) “ICWA
presumes it is in the best interests of the child to retain tribal ties and cultural heritage and
in the interest of the tribe to preserve its future generations, a most important resource.”
(In re Desiree F. (2000) 83 Cal.App.4th 460, 469.) To further these goals, tribes are
entitled to take exclusive jurisdiction over or intervene in state dependency proceedings
involving Indian children. (25 U.S.C. § 1911(a) & (c).) “Because [a] tribe’s right to
assert jurisdiction over . . . or to intervene in such proceedings would be meaningless if
the tribe has no notice that the action is pending,” ICWA requires notice “where the
[juvenile] court knows or has reason to know that an Indian child is involved.”
(25 U.S.C. § 1912(a); In re B.R. (2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 773, 780; see § 224.2; Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 5.481(b).6)
6
All further rule references are to the California Rules of Court.
13
State law also imposes on both the juvenile court and the county welfare agency
“an affirmative duty to inquire whether a dependent child is or may be an Indian child.”
(In re Nikki R. (2003) 106 Cal.App.4th 844, 848; § 224.3, subd. (a); rule 5.481(a).) If the
agency or the court “knows or has reason to know that an Indian child is involved, the
social worker . . . is required to make further inquiry regarding the possible Indian status
of the child” to facilitate the provision of notice. (§ 224.3, subd. (c); see also In re
Alice M. (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 1189, 1200.) An “Indian child” is any unmarried minor
who “is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is eligible for membership in an
Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an Indian tribe.” (25 U.S.C.
§ 1903(4).) Among the circumstances that “may provide reason to know that the child is
an Indian child” is when a relative “provides information suggesting the child is a
member of a tribe or eligible for membership in a tribe or one or more of the child’s
biological parents, grandparents, or great-grandparents are or were a member of a tribe.”
(§ 224.3, subd. (b)(1); see also rule 5.481(a)(5).)
As in both half sister’s and half brother’s cases, the juvenile court failed to
determine in the first instance whether ICWA applies to any of these three children’s
cases. Although a juvenile court is not “required to make an express finding that ICWA
[does] not apply[,] . . . the record must reflect that the court considered the issue” and has
at least implicitly so found. (In re Asia L. (2003) 107 Cal.App.4th 498, 506, italics added;
In re Antoinette S. (2002) 104 Cal.App.4th 1401, 1413.) The court here made no express
finding about ICWA’s applicability, and once again we are unable to conclude that it
made an implied finding. The only distinction between this case and the half siblings’
cases regarding the consideration of ICWA’s applicability is that here the court
specifically asked father whether he had Indian heritage. We disagree with the Bureau’s
suggestion that this exchange establishes that an implied finding was made. Even
assuming it might otherwise have sufficed, the information indicating mother had no
Indian heritage, on which any determination that ICWA was inapplicable would have
depended, was not provided until later.
14
Having concluded that the juvenile court’s failure to make an express or implied
ICWA finding constituted error, we turn to consider whether the error was harmless. In
younger brother’s case, it clearly was. Father remained an alleged father throughout the
proceedings, and “an alleged father’s claims of Indian heritage” do not trigger ICWA-
related notice or inquiry requirements because “absent a biological connection, [a] child
cannot claim Indian heritage through [such a] father.” (In re E.G. (2009)
170 Cal.App.4th 1530, 1533.) Indeed, father concedes that his ICWA claim fails as to
younger brother if we reject his claim that the juvenile court erred in relation to his
paternity status, which we do in part II.C. of this opinion.
We also conclude that the juvenile court’s failure to make an express or implied
ICWA finding was harmless in the two older children’s cases, although we acknowledge
that it is a closer call. Reversal is not required when a juvenile court fails to comply with
ICWA and related state laws but a parent does not represent that he or she has Indian
heritage. (See, e.g., In re N.E. (2008) 160 Cal.App.4th 766, 769-770; In re Rebecca R.
(2006) 143 Cal.App.4th 1426, 1430-1431.) Here, father said he did not have Indian
heritage both in writing, on the ICWA-020 form filed in the two older children’s cases,
and orally, in response to the court’s questions. As a result, whether the error was
harmless depends on the effect of the record from half sister’s case, which was judicially
noticed in the older children’s cases. In half sister’s case, the ICWA-020 form and a
November 2012 report provided information that raised the possibility that father’s
children might be Indian children. (See In re Gabriel G. (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 1160,
1167-1168 [court and agency have duty to inquire further when parent provides
conflicting information about Indian heritage].)
Initially, the Bureau argues that the ICWA-020 form and the November 2012
report in half sister’s case were not encompassed in the juvenile court’s judicial-notice
ruling because the Bureau’s written request for judicial notice asked the juvenile court to
take judicial notice of the “orders and findings” in half sister’s case. But at the hearing,
the Bureau clarified it was “requesting judicial notice of . . . [¶] . . . [t]he half sibling file,”
and the court specifically granted that request. And, contrary to the Bureau’s position,
15
the court could properly take judicial notice of the documents filed in half sister’s case.
(Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d) [“[r]ecords of . . . any court of this state” proper subjects of
judicial notice]; see, e.g., In re Z.N. (2009) 181 Cal.App.4th 282, 298-299 [taking judicial
notice of tribal ICWA notices filed in half siblings’ cases].) As a result, we conclude the
two documents are part of the record in the two older children’s cases.7
But that conclusion does not end our analysis. We agree with the Bureau that
neither it nor the juvenile court was required to “page through” the entire judicially
noticed record of half sister’s case for additional ICWA-related information, especially
since the request for judicial notice had nothing to do with ICWA issues and father never
hinted that any different ICWA information existed in half sister’s file. Courts and
county welfare agencies do not have a duty to act upon information about Indian heritage
that a parent never provides to them. (See, e.g., In re X.V. (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 794,
805 [rejecting claim that order terminating parental rights should be reversed based on
information about Indian heritage that mother never shared with agency].) In these
children’s cases, father disclosed no information suggesting he had Indian heritage even
though he was given an ICWA-020 form to fill out and was specifically asked about his
heritage by the court. He argues the ICWA-020 form he filed in half sister’s case should
have sufficed, complaining that “[n]o one admonished [him] that any forms filed in court
one day for one child . . . would not be considered for his other children.” But the form
he filed in these two children’s cases tells parents, in bold face at the top, that “[i]f you
get new information that would change your answers, you must let your attorney, all the
attorneys on the case, and the social worker . . . know immediately and an updated form
must be filed with the court.” Even if father believed he was complying with his duty to
file an updated form in these cases by filing an ICWA-020 form in half sister’s case,
there is no evidence that he ever notified any of the relevant parties of the new
7
The Bureau also argues that we cannot consider the two documents because they are not
“part of the record in this appeal,” apparently referring to the fact they were not included
in the clerk’s transcript for this case. They were included in the clerk’s transcript from
half sister’s case, however, and we discussed them in our previous opinion. The Bureau
cites no authority to suggest we cannot consider them in this case as well.
16
information. As a result, he cannot now rely on information from half sister’s case to
make his claim.
We recognize and agree with the principle that appellate courts should be reluctant
to determine that “parental inaction” results in the forfeiture of ICWA-related claims,
given that ICWA “protect[s] the interests of Indian children and tribes.”8 (Dwayne P. v.
Superior Court (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 247, 251, 259-261; see, e.g., In re B.R., supra,
176 Cal.App.4th at p. 779; In re Marinna J. (2001) 90 Cal.App.4th 731, 736-739.) But
this principle has limits: a parent cannot provide specific information in one case
denying Indian heritage and expect the juvenile court and county welfare agency to ferret
out possible contrary information in other files in other cases, even those that are
judicially noticed, when there has been no suggestion that any such contrary information
exists. If father truly discovered new information about his heritage in the 19 days
between the day he gave his negative responses in these cases and the day he filed the
ICWA-020 form in half sister’s case, he was required to raise the issue. Because he
failed to do so, we conclude the information about his potential heritage provided in half
sister’s case did not give the court or Bureau reason to know the two older children might
be Indian children. As a result, the absence of an ICWA finding in their cases was also
harmless.
C. Father Forfeited His “Statutory Framework” Claims and His Claim of
Deficient Notice by Failing to File a Petition for Extraordinary Writ
Review of the January 2014 or February 2014 Orders.
Father argues the juvenile court “committed reversible error when it failed
throughout the dependency matter to adhere to the statutory framework provided in
section 300[] et seq.” (Capitalization omitted.) As to the two older children, he claims
the court erred by failing to timely order reunification services and to ensure a case plan
was provided to him and by finding that reasonable services were provided. As to
younger brother, he claims the court erred by failing to conduct a paternity inquiry or
8
A case related to this issue is currently pending before our state Supreme Court. (In re
Isaiah W., S221263.)
17
provide him with information about raising his paternity status and by bypassing
reunification services. Finally, as to all three children, he argues the court erred by
failing to consider their potential placement with relatives. He also claims he was denied
due process because the Bureau failed to give him notice of the section 366.26 hearing
(notice claim).
Father concedes that the claims would be considered forfeited if he lacked
justification for failing to file petitions for extraordinary writ review of the January 2014
or February 2014 orders setting a section 366.26 hearing. But he argues that his failure to
file these petitions was justified because the juvenile court failed to properly notify him
of the writ requirement and his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by not filing
the petitions on his behalf. We reject father’s “statutory framework” and notice claims
because we conclude that father received proper notice of the writ requirement in all three
cases and cannot establish that his failure to file the writ petitions was due to ineffective
assistance of counsel.9
An order setting a section 366.26 hearing and “any [other] order, regardless of its
nature, made at the hearing at which a setting order is entered” must be challenged by
filing a petition for extraordinary writ review. (In re Anthony B. (1999) 72 Cal.App.4th
1017, 1021, 1023-1024; § 366.26, subd. (l); see rules 8.450, 8.452.) Generally, a party
cannot challenge such orders in an appeal unless the party timely filed a petition for writ
review and “[t]he petition . . . was summarily denied or otherwise not decided on the
merits.” (§ 366.26, subd. (l)(1)(A), (C), (l)(2).)
The failure to file a writ petition may be excused for “good cause,” however, such
as where the juvenile court fails to inform the party of the need to file such a petition to
challenge the order setting the section 366.26 hearing. (In re Cathina W. (1998)
68 Cal.App.4th 716, 722-723.) After entering such an order, the court is required to
9
Father also argues his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to raise
objections related to several of these claims. We need not consider this issue because we
determine the claims are foreclosed by father’s failure to file a writ petition, not by his
failure to object below.
18
“advise all parties of the requirement of filing a petition for extraordinary writ review . . .
in order to preserve any right to appeal in these issues.” (§ 366.26, subd. (l)(3)(A).) If a
party is not in court when the order is made, notice must be made “by first-class mail by
the clerk of the court to the last known address” of that party. (§ 366.26, subd. (l)(3)(A);
see also rule 5.590(b).)
In August 2012, father filed a JV-140 form, “Notification of Mailing Address,” in
the two older children’s cases that identified a permanent mailing address in Pinole. In
September 2013, father filed a JV-140 form in younger brother’s case identifying a
permanent mailing address in San Francisco with a zip code of 94103. The next month,
he filed another JV-140 form in younger brother’s case that identified the same San
Francisco address except with a zip code of 94102. After the juvenile court set a section
366.26 hearing in the two older children’s cases, notices of the writ requirement were
mailed to father at the Pinole address. And after the court set a section 366.26 hearing in
younger brother’s case, notice of the writ requirement was mailed to father at the San
Francisco address with a zip code of 94103.
Father argues the juvenile court failed to provide proper notice in any of the three
cases because the notices should have been sent to the address on the JV-140 form filed
in younger brother’s case in October 2013, that is, the San Francisco address with a zip
code of 94102. Father never claims, however, that he actually failed to receive any of the
notices, and there is no evidence that they were returned to sender. Indeed, in his reply
brief, father states that he “does not have a declaration to submit addressing whether [he]
received the notice[s].” Nor does he claim he was unaware of the writ requirement, and
he did not attempt to appeal from the January 2014 or February 2014 orders.
As we explained in more detail in half sister’s case, under In re T.W. (2011)
197 Cal.App.4th 723, 730, such facts permit the inference that father received the notices.
As to the notice about younger brother, father attempts to distinguish T.W. on the basis
that it involved a missing zip code. (Id. at p. 729.) We fail to see how using a zip code
that is off by one number makes it any less likely that mail will be delivered than not
using a zip code at all. And as to the notices about sister and older brother, which were
19
mailed in January 2014, we note that father argued in half sister’s appeal that the notice
there, which was mailed in November 2013, should have been mailed to the same Pinole
address he says should not have been used here. In any event, given father’s failure to
claim he did not receive the notices, there is no reason to think they did not reach him,
and he therefore has not established good cause for his failure to file either writ petition.
Father’s claim that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not filing a
writ petition also fails. Although ineffective-assistance claims are normally raised by a
petition for writ of habeas corpus because they depend on evidence outside the record,
such a claim “may be reviewed on direct appeal when there is no satisfactory explanation
for trial counsel’s act or failure to act.” (In re N.M. (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 253, 270; In
re Arturo A. (1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 229, 243.) But, just as we concluded in half sister’s
and half brother’s cases, the obvious possible explanation for why father’s trial counsel
did not file a writ petition is that he did not have the required authorization from father to
do so. (Arturo A., at p. 243; In re Cathina W., supra, 68 Cal.App.4th at p. 724; see also
rule 8.450(e)(3).) Again, “[w]e cannot assume that the decision [not to file a writ
petition] was the result of negligence, when it could well have been based upon some
practical or tactical decision governed by client guidance.” (Arturo A., at p. 243.)
In sum, father cannot establish as to any of the three children that he failed to
receive proper notice of the writ requirement or that his trial counsel provided ineffective
assistance by not filing a writ petition. Therefore, his “statutory framework” and notice
claims fail because, as he concedes, he did not seek appellate review of the January 2014
or February 2014 orders or any earlier orders. (See In re Janee J. (1999) 74 Cal.App.4th
198, 207-209; In re Meranda P. (1997) 56 Cal.App.4th 1143, 1150-1151 [discussing
waiver rule preventing challenges to previous orders of which timely appellate review not
sought].)
20
D. The Juvenile Court Had No Sua Sponte Duty to Appoint a Guardian Ad
Litem for Father.
Finally, father contends the juvenile court erred by not sua sponte appointing a
guardian ad litem for him due to his mental incompetency.10 He also argues that his trial
counsel’s failure to raise the issue of competency constituted ineffective assistance of
counsel. Both claims fail because, as in half sister’s and half brother’s cases, the record
fails to disclose any evidence that father was unable to understand or participate in the
proceedings or to assist his trial counsel.
Father’s claim is premised on evidence in the case involving half sister. The
detention/jurisdiction report in that case stated that while father was a dependent child, he
“was placed in high level residential treatment programs” and was diagnosed with
“PTSD, Depressive Disorder, and Oppositional Defiant Disorder.” The six- and twelve-
month status-review report provided further details: father “had a mental health
conservator” from the time he was 14 years old until the time he emancipated in 2003,
when he was almost 19 years old. “The recommendation was that [father] continue[] to
be under the care of a conservator even after he emancipated,” but “the continued
conservatorship was not pursued” because father was living on the East Coast when he
emancipated.
“Code of Civil Procedure section 372 provides that in any proceeding in which an
incompetent person is a party, that person shall appear by a guardian ad litem appointed
by the court in which the action is pending.” (In re Sara D. (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 661,
665; Code of Civ. Proc., § 372, subd. (a).) A person may be found incompetent under
either Penal Code section 1367, which applies to criminal defendants, or Probate Code
section 1801, which applies to conservatees. In the dependency context, the key question
in determining whether an adult parent requires a guardian ad litem is “whether the parent
has the capacity to understand the nature or consequences of the proceeding and to assist
10
For the same reasons we gave in half sister’s case, father’s failure to file a writ petition
does not foreclose this claim. (See In re A.C. (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 146, 156-157; In re
M.F. (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 673, 681-682.)
21
counsel in preparing the case.” (In re James F. (2008) 42 Cal.4th 901, 910; Sara D., at
p. 667.)
“When a dependency court has knowledge of a party’s . . . incompetence under
[Code of Civil Procedure] section 372, the dependency court has an obligation to appoint
a [guardian ad litem] sua sponte.” (In re A.C., supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 155.) We
review the failure to appoint a guardian ad litem for an abuse of discretion. (In re
Ronell A. (1996) 44 Cal.App.4th 1352, 1366-1367; see also In re Christopher I. (2003)
106 Cal.App.4th 533, 568.)
Assuming, without deciding, that the information about father’s mental health
disclosed in half sister’s case could ever give rise to a duty to appoint a guardian ad litem
in these three children’s cases, we conclude, as we did in her case, that that information
did not trigger the juvenile court’s sua sponte duty to appoint a guardian ad litem.
Information about father’s mental-health issues and his earlier conservatorship did not
require appointment of a guardian ad litem absent an indication that father was unable to
understand the proceedings or assist his trial counsel. (In re Ronell A., supra,
44 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1367-1368; In re R.S. (1985) 167 Cal.App.3d 946, 979.) Here,
father appeared at multiple hearings, during which he apparently acted normally and
responded appropriately when questioned. And once again, his trial counsel (the same
attorney in all five cases) did not raise any concerns about his competency. As the
records in these children’s cases and half sister’s case fail to disclose any evidence that
father was unable to participate in or understand the proceedings, we conclude the
juvenile court did not abuse its discretion by not sua sponte appointing a guardian ad
litem for him.
Father’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel similarly fails. As mentioned
above, such claims “may be reviewed on direct appeal when there is no satisfactory
explanation for trial counsel’s act or failure to act.” (In re N.M., supra, 161 Cal.App.4th
at p. 270.) Here, given the lack of evidence that father was unable to participate in or
understand the proceedings, his trial counsel may have reasonably believed that father
22
was competent, and father therefore cannot establish he received ineffective assistance
based on counsel’s failure to raise the issue of his competence.
III.
DISPOSITION
The orders terminating parental rights to L.D.C., D.C., Jr., and L.C. are affirmed.
_________________________
Humes, P.J.
We concur:
_________________________
Margulies, J.
_________________________
Banke, J.
23