Filed 5/29/15 In re A.S. CA2/8
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION EIGHT
In re A.S., a Person Coming Under the B260708
Juvenile Court Law.
(Los Angeles County
LOS ANGELES COUNTY Super. Ct. No. CK57998)
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
FAMILY SERVICES,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
N.M.,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles.
Marguerite D. Downing, Judge. Affirmed.
Suzanne Davidson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Mark J. Saladino, County Counsel, Dawyn R. Harrison, Assistant County Counsel,
and Navid Nakhjavani, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
_____________________________________
SUMMARY
The mother in this dependency case appeals the juvenile court’s orders denying
her petition under Welfare and Institutions Code section 3881 and terminating parental
rights to her son, A.S. We affirm the orders.
FACTS
A.S., who is now three years old, was detained by the Los Angeles County
Department of Children and Family Services (Department) on April 3, 2012, shortly after
he was born. His mother, who now has six children, has a long history of substance
abuse and a long history with the Department. She failed to reunify with four of her older
children, who are under legal guardianship.
On August 31, 2012, the juvenile court found A.S. to be a dependent child of the
court, sustaining jurisdictional allegations under section 300, subdivisions (b) and (j).
The court found mother had a history of illicit drug abuse, was a current user of
methamphetamine, and used illicit drugs during her pregnancy with A.S. Other sustained
allegations were that the four older siblings were receiving permanent services due to
mother’s drug abuse, mother and father had a history of domestic violence, and A.S.’s
father physically abused A.S.’s older siblings and mother failed to take action to protect
the siblings.
A.S. was placed with his maternal uncle and the uncle’s wife soon after he was
born, and has remained with them throughout the dependency proceedings. They are
now his prospective adoptive parents.
The dispositional hearing was not held until July 9, 2013. (Meanwhile, mother
had relapsed, testing positive for methamphetamine on February 11, 2013, and failing to
appear for tests in March and April 2013.) At that time, the court found it was in A.S.’s
best interest to set a hearing to select a permanent plan (§ 366.26), and ordered no
reunification services, based on mother’s failure to reunify with A.S.’s half siblings after
their removal (§ 361.5, subd. (b)(10)).
1 All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
2
The juvenile court continued the permanent planning hearing several times to
complete an adoptive home study for A.S.’s caregivers. The hearing was finally held on
November 24, 2014.
In the interim, on June 20, 2014, mother filed a section 388 petition asking the
court to change its July 9, 2013 dispositional order. Mother asked the court to return A.S.
to her care, or to order reunification services and unmonitored visits for mother.
Mother’s petition stated she was enrolled in a drug program “where she receives
parenting, counseling, substance abuse & 12-step meetings.” Mother explained she was
taking drug tests, had a sponsor, and in January 2014 gave birth to another child, A.Z.,
who was left in her care and was doing well. Mother’s petition stated that a new order
returning A.S. to her care or providing reunification services would be better for A.S.
because “Mother is now drug free and addressing the issues that led to [A.S.’s] being
removed from her. She is now raising the sibling [A.Z.]. She would like for these [two]
brothers to be raised together by their mother in a safe [and] stable environment.”
Along with her section 388 petition, mother submitted letters from the Los
Angeles Centers for Alcohol and Drug Abuse (L.A. CADA), showing that she was
admitted to the outpatient treatment program on March 5, 2014, and as of May 27, 2014,
had attended many group meetings, parenting classes, alcohol and drug classes. Mother
also attended individual sessions, and was “an active participant in self-help
meetings . . . .” Her counselor stated mother was “demonstrating willingness and
determination to address the issues that relate to [the Department’s] case,” was open and
honest, and showed personal growth; it appeared to her treatment team that she “is on a
road to recovery and healthy living.”
On June 27, 2014, the juvenile court ordered a hearing on mother’s section 388
petition, and set the hearing for August 11, 2014. That hearing was continued several
times, and was finally held on November 24, 2014, in conjunction with the hearing on
termination of mother’s parental rights.
During the time between A.S.’s detention in April 2012 and the hearing in
November 2014 – the entirety of which A.S. spent with his caregivers – mother’s visits
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with A.S. were sporadic. In a March 4, 2013 report, the Department stated mother and
child were not bonded with one another, and “mother has been informed of her right to
visit the child as frequent[ly] as possible or at least one time per week, and still mother
has not made efforts to visit him consistently. The caregiver has reported the mother has
visited the child [A.S.] on an average of 2 times per month, at times, only one time per
month,” and “the child seeks the caregivers rather than the mother.” The caregiver
reported that mother did not have visits with A.S. from March 2013 until September
2013. The Department’s status review report dated July 11, 2014, stated that mother “has
gone months without visiting [A.S.] in the most critical stage[s] of his life and
development, striking any chance of a mother son bond for her and this child.”
On June 3, 2014, shortly before mother filed her section 388 petition, mother’s
counsel requested the Department “to help set up a visitation schedule,” and the court
agreed. The Department set up a schedule for mother’s visits in July, setting one visit per
week at the Department’s office for two hours, and visits on Sundays through the
caregivers at a McDonald’s restaurant. (The caregiver said that a visit on July 2, 2014,
was “the first time mother had a visit with the minor for several months.”) According to
the social worker, mother missed about three visits at the office, and then stopped coming
for those visits in the middle of August 2014. According to mother, in the six months
prior to the November 24 hearing, she had “[m]aybe ten [visits] at the most,” and “missed
two visits because of my job.” As for the first two years of A.S.’s life, mother said she
was “in rehab for the first year of [A.S.’s] life,” so had visits with A.S. “on the weekend
for the first year, then after that, it was very rare.”
The Department opposed mother’s section 388 petition. In a “Last Minute
Information for the Court” dated September 17, 2014, the Department stated that in the
past four weeks, mother had missed seven scheduled visits with A.S. “To allow mother
to reunify or engage in unmonitored contact with a child that doesn’t know her and has
remained suitably placed in a home with loving relatives his entire life, with minimal
interaction with his mother would be detrimental to this child’s development and to his
emotional and physical stability.” A similar filing on the date of the hearing stated that
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the caregivers reported mother had not called to speak to A.S. or schedule a visit in more
than two months.
At the hearing on mother’s section 388 petition, mother testified, and offered as
evidence the letter from L.A. CADA, as well as a Department report recommending
termination of jurisdiction over mother’s sixth child, A.Z.
Mother testified that her “sober date” was June 30 (or June 3), 2013; A.Z. was in
her care; and she was on step four of a 12-step program. She did not have a current
visitation schedule with A.S., and said she had not been having her visits at the
Department’s office for the past six months “[b]ecause it was not being enforced.” She
said that “[a] couple” of her missed visits were her fault “because of work,” but others
were because the caregivers were “unable to make visits.” She last saw A.S. on
November 1, 2014, at a nephew’s birthday party “that they just happened to be
there . . . .” At the beginning of November, she found out the caregivers had moved to
Hysperia, and she “kind of gave up calling to set up visits because [A.S.] lives out there
and I have no way of – my car is not that reliable to get all of the way to Hysperia.”
When questioned about why she did not contact the social worker to set up visits before
July 2014, mother said that the dependency investigator told her “that [A.S.] was getting
adopted. That I had no chance of ever getting him back.” Mother said she was also told
that she “had no rights to know about [her] child’s medical appointment[s] . . . .” She
testified that A.S. “is happy” during her visits, and appears to enjoy the visits “[w]hen it’s
just me and him . . . .”
Mother also testified that she had just finished her rehabilitation program at L.A.
CADA in September 2014, and that it was her seventh program. She successfully
completed three 12-step programs in the past (the first one in 2002 or 2003), but returned
to using methamphetamine each time.
The social worker testified that A.S. was “very bonded to the caregivers,” and
“refer[s] to them as Mommy and Daddy.”
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A.S.’s counsel argued the court should grant mother’s request for “more family
reunification” and for unmonitored visits, asking “for [A.S.] to have the opportunity to be
with his mother, to be part of that whole family working toward reunification.”
The trial court denied mother’s petition. The court found there was a change in
circumstance with respect to mother’s participation in programs, and that “even though
she has fallen off the wagon,” she “gets back on there,” showing “a great deal of
commitment . . . .” But, “[w]ith respect to best interest, I don’t see it.” The court
explained: “This child has never resided in the home of his mother. The child will be
three years old in March. He does not call her Mommy, other than when she says I am
your mother. He has had one placement his entire life . . . . [I]f we were talking about
the first year, it might be a different situation, but at this point [A.S.] is differently
situated than his siblings. He has never resided with his siblings. He always resided with
his aunt and uncle. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] In this case, there is no evidence that returning him
or giving him to his mother is going to be in his best interest, because he’s thriving where
he is, and there are no issues that need to be adjusted.”
After argument on termination of parental rights, the juvenile court found A.S.
was adoptable, it would be detrimental to him to be returned to the physical custody of
the parents, and no exception to adoption applied.
Mother filed a timely notice of appeal from the juvenile court’s orders terminating
parental rights and denying her section 388 petition.
DISCUSSION
Under section 388, a juvenile court order may be changed or set aside if the
petitioner establishes that new evidence or changed circumstances exist, and the proposed
change would promote the child’s best interests. (In re Jasmon O. (1994) 8 Cal.4th 398,
415 [“At the hearing on the petition pursuant to section 388, the juvenile court’s task was
to determine whether the [petitioner] had demonstrated by a preponderance of the
evidence that there was new evidence or a change of circumstances demonstrating that it
was in [the child’s] best interests that the previous . . . order . . . be changed, modified or
set aside.”].) After reunification services have been terminated, the parent’s interest is no
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longer paramount, and the focus has shifted “ ‘to the needs of the child for permanency
and stability’ . . . .” (In re Stephanie M. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 295, 317 (Stephanie M.) [“in
fact, there is a rebuttable presumption that continued foster care is in the best interests of
the child”].) The decision on whether to modify a previous order rests within the juvenile
court’s sound discretion, and will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear
abuse of discretion. (Id. at p. 318.)
Mother contends the juvenile court abused its discretion in denying her
section 388 petition, and she should be given a chance to reunify with A.S. We
disagree.2
Certainly the progress mother has made since her last relapse in June 2013
constitutes a substantial change in her circumstances: she has been drug-free for a
substantial period and her sixth child is in her care and doing well. That speaks volumes
for mother’s commitment, but it does not demonstrate that returning A.S. to her care, or
providing services to help her reach that goal, would be in the best interests of A.S. (See
Stephanie M., supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 317 [“ ‘When custody continues over a significant
period, the child’s need for continuity and stability assumes an increasingly important
role. That need will often dictate the conclusion that maintenance of the current
arrangement would be in the best interests of that child.’ ”].)
In re J.C. (2014) 226 Cal.App.4th 503 (J.C.) is particularly pertinent. There, the
court concluded the mother’s “long-term sobriety and renewed interest in parenting
classes showed changed circumstances, but Mother did not establish that an order giving
her custody of [the child] would be in the child’s best interests.” (Id. at p. 526.) In J.C.,
the evidence showed the child “had a loving and stable placement with her maternal
aunt . . . , who had cared for [the child] since her birth.” (Ibid.) The child was two and
one-half years old, and her aunt was “the only constant and stable parent [the child] had
ever known,” and the two “were strongly bonded to each other.” (Ibid.) In J.C., as here,
2 Mother offers no argument challenging the juvenile court’s subsequent order
terminating parental rights.
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the mother “failed to present any evidence [the child’s] best interests in permanency and
stability would be furthered by the proposed modification . . . .” (Ibid.; see also In re
Angel B. (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 454, 465 [summarily denying the mother’s section 388
petition without a hearing; “there is a rebuttable presumption that, in the absence of
continuing reunification services, stability in an existing placement is in the best interest
of the child, particularly when such placement is leading to adoption by the long-term
caretakers”; to rebut that presumption, “a parent must make some factual showing that
the best interests of the child would be served by modification”].)
In this case, mother’s petition stated that her requested change in the court’s order
would be better for A.S. because mother was now drug free, addressing the issues that led
to A.S.’s removal, raising the sibling A.Z., and mother would like for the two brothers to
be raised together by their mother. This is not a factual showing that providing mother a
chance to reunify would promote A.S.’s best interests. Similarly, at the hearing mother
made no factual showing that A.S.’s best interests would be served by providing mother
with reunification services or unmonitored visitation. She produced no evidence of any
bond between mother and child; indeed the evidence was uncontradicted that A.S. is
“very bonded to the caregivers,” and “refer[s] to them as Mommy and Daddy.”
In effect, as in J.C., mother is simply claiming it is in A.S.’s best interests to
preserve the biological parent-child relationship. (J.C., supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at
p. 527.) But as in J.C., “[the child’s] best interests are not to further delay permanency
and stability in favor of rewarding Mother for her hard work and efforts to reunify.”
(Ibid.)
A.S. has lived his entire life with his prospective adoptive parents, and has never
lived with his mother or any of his siblings. A.S. has had only sporadic visits from
mother, who has offered no evidence of any bond between mother and child. As J.C.
holds, “after reunification services have terminated, a parent’s petition for either an order
returning custody or reopening reunification efforts must establish how such a change
will advance the child’s need for permanency and stability.” (J.C., supra, 226
Cal.App.4th at p. 527.) As in J.C., mother’s section 388 petition “fails to address these
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points and therefore we conclude the court did not err in denying the petition.” (J.C., at
p. 527.)
In sum, however successful mother’s efforts to change her life have been – and the
change is laudable – mother made no showing that A.S.’s best interests – his need for
permanency and stability – would be served by giving her another chance to reunify with
A.S. Plainly, the juvenile court did not abuse its discretion in denying mother’s
section 388 petition.
DISPOSITION
The orders denying mother’s section 388 petition and terminating mother’s
parental rights are affirmed.
GRIMES, J.
We concur:
BIGELOW, P. J.
FLIER, J.
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