Filed 3/16/21 In re A.C.C. CA1/3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
In re A.C.C., et al.,
Persons Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.
SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN
SERVICES AGENCY,
A160632
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (City & County of San Francisco
J.C.N, Super. Ct. Nos. JD19-3200,
JD19-3200A, and JD19-3200B)
Defendant and Appellant.
J.C.N. (Mother) appeals the juvenile court’s orders granting her ex-
husband J.C. (Father) sole physical custody over their three children and
terminating dependency jurisdiction. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
This dependency case involves Mother and Father’s three minor
children, A.C.C., C.C.C., and J.C.C., born in 2011, 2012, and 2014,
respectively. After Mother and Father divorced in 2017 following four years
of marriage, they shared equal physical custody of the three children.
In July 2019, Father noticed bruises on J.C.C.’s ears when the children
returned from a weekend visit with Mother. J.C.C. said that Mother’s
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boyfriend, Jorge C., had picked him up by his ears after he wet himself.
J.C.C.’s siblings said Jorge also pulled their ears when they behaved badly.
Father brought J.C.C. to the hospital, where the doctor expressed
concern for “non-accidental trauma” due to the pattern of bruises on the ears.
Father obtained an emergency protective order to protect the children from
Jorge and referred the matter to the San Francisco Human Services Agency
(Agency), which began an investigation.
Shortly after receiving the referral, an Agency social worker met with
Mother. Mother explained that she worked full time at a child development
center, and neither she nor Jorge, her live-in boyfriend who is a police officer,
hit the children. She said she did not see any bruises on her son that day,
and the children had not been left alone with Jorge. She refused to have
Jorge move out because she did not believe he had anything to do with the
incident.
On August 6, 2019, Agency staff interviewed all three children. All
three disclosed that Jorge pulled their ears. J.C.C. said that when he visited
Mother over the weekend, Mother told him he had lied about Jorge pulling
his ears. J.C.C. told Mother he did not lie about the incident.
On August 8, 2019, the Agency filed a Welfare and Institutions Code1
section 300 dependency petition. At the detention hearing the next day, the
court found the Agency had established a prima facie case that the children
came within section 300 and that there was a substantial danger to their
physical health and no reasonable means to protect them without removing
them from Mother. The court approved placement with Father and ordered
supervised visits between Mother and the children. Days later, Father
1
All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
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requested and received a temporary restraining order protecting the children
from Jorge.
On September 26, 2019, the Agency filed an amended dependency
petition with a single section 300, subdivision (b)(1) allegation that Mother
“failed to protect the children from physical abuse by her live-in boyfriend . . .
in that on 7/29/2019, the child, [J.C.C.] reported that the mother’s [b]oyfriend,
pulled his ears because he did not listen to him.” The amended petition
further alleged that J.C.C. sustained bruising on both sides of his ears, and
that the doctor treating him ruled it as non-accidental trauma.
The Agency’s amended disposition report, filed September 26, 2019,
recommended the section 300 petition be sustained and that the children
reside with Father with family maintenance services and that supportive
services be provided to Mother.
According to the report, since detention, the children lived full-time
with Father, as well as their paternal grandparents and an aunt. While the
children experienced some difficulties with family circumstances and J.C.C.
in particular faced challenges with his first year in school, all children were
doing well in school and in good health. Father had refused to consent to any
health assessments for the children, so the Agency requested the court grant
it permission for such tests.
The report summarized meetings Agency case workers had separately
with each parent. Mother said that when her children were detained, she did
not understand Jorge’s actions constituted inappropriate discipline and had a
difficult time accepting the disclosures made by her children. She did not
realize the children were being abused while she left them with Jorge when
she worked. After reflecting on the situation, she was prepared to do a better
job protecting her children in the future. While she felt her parenting skills
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were good and that she was able to meet the children’s needs, she also
recognized that she could use additional skills and support in order to have a
better understanding of physical abuse. She was attending a parenting class
and invited constructive criticism on her parenting. Since August 2019, she
had been seeing the children at least twice weekly in supervised visits at an
agency in the community.
Father explained that he would do anything to protect his children. He
stated he could improve on his parenting skills but felt he was doing a great
job. He did not physically discipline the children.
Both parents felt that co-parenting with the other was not easy. Before
the dependency case began, the parents were in family court attempting to
work out how to best care for the children medically, financially, and
emotionally. On several occasions, the social worker witnessed how difficult
it was for the two to work together as civil adults with children in common.
The disposition report also observed that Father “appear[ed] not to
fully understand the trauma that his children [have] experienced over the
years,” and he needed support for this. Mother needed help to understand
how to be open and honest about what happened in order for her to be fully
able to advocate for her children in a more effective manner. The Agency
concluded that the parents needed to address their mistrust towards each
other and to work together respectfully.
The juvenile court found the section 300, subdivision (b)(1) allegation
true. It declared dependency and ordered the children to reside with Father
and supervised visits with Mother. It also ordered family maintenance
services for Father and supportive services for Mother.
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In December 2019, the parties agreed to a stay away order which was
adopted by the juvenile court. Jorge was ordered to stay away from the
children, even if he was in a relationship with Mother.
The Agency’s six-month status review report, filed in late February
2020, recommended the dependency case be dismissed and jurisdiction of the
juvenile court terminated. It also recommended that Father be granted sole
legal and physical custody of the children.
According to the report, the children continued to live with Father and
their paternal grandparents. Father continued to provide the children
suitable care. Working multiple jobs, he managed the children’s schedules,
schoolwork, meals, and bedtimes, sometimes with the help of their
grandparents. When necessary, he disciplined the children appropriately.
Father and all three children “show[ed] a strong bond.”
None of the children were in therapy because Father believed they did
not need it, and the children did not show they wanted to discuss what
occurred while in their Mother’s care. Father declined individual therapy,
finding his own personal workout routine and spending time with the
children sufficient for self-care. While the Agency would have liked to see the
family engage in therapeutic services, the social worker never witnessed any
of the children display behaviors indicating their emotional needs were not
met.
In the social worker’s view, the children “consistently presented as
happy and [were] reported by the school as showing improvement in their
education as well as their socialization. [Father] . . . maintained a consistent
schedule around picking them up from school on time and ensuring they
[were] on a daily homework routine. The three children . . . [were] not
currently exposed to any observed harm or danger . . . [and] [were] not
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showing any concerning behaviors that should indicate a change in
placement.” Teachers reported that the children were doing well in class and
had no major concerns about them. The social worker added that Father
“consistently maintained a safe and sober environment for the children and
ha[d] not exposed them to any risk or danger.”
The six-month report also discussed Mother’s visits with the children.
By early January 2020, her visits became unsupervised. At the time of the
report, the visitation plan consisted of two three-hour visits per week at a
nearby shopping mall, which the parents were able to handle without the
Agency’s involvement. All three children reported a positive relationship
with Mother and feeling happy and excited when they get to spend time with
her, and sad when a visit was missed. The social worker observed that all
children showed a positive connection with Mother and that Mother
“demonstrated a loving relationship between herself and the children.”
In July 2020, the Agency submitted an Addendum Report before the
contested review hearing, which was delayed multiple times due to the
pandemic and later due to protests near the courthouse. The Agency
maintained its recommendation that the court dismiss the dependency and
terminate jurisdiction, since there were no apparent safety threats, risks or
dangers facing the children while in the care of either Father or Mother. It
also maintained its recommendation for sole physical custody with Father,
but changed its recommendation for legal custody to be jointly held by
Mother and Father.
The report discussed positive recent developments regarding Mother’s
visitation with the children. Beginning in May 2020, she was allowed
unsupervised visits with the children, which still needed to occur in a public
setting due to ongoing concerns that she remained in contact with Jorge. In
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June 2020, however, the social worker received a copy of a lease that
indicated Jorge no longer lived with Mother. Later, the social worker visited
Mother’s house and saw no evidence indicating Jorge lived there nor any
other safety issues. The children also reported that they never saw Jorge
during any of their visits with Mother. The Agency concluded Mother and
Jorge no longer lived together. In July 2020, the Agency approved
unsupervised home visits that could expand to overnight ones if the day visits
went well.
On July 23, 2020, the juvenile court held the contested hearing, and
heard testimony from the social worker, Father, and Mother.
The social worker, who had been managing the family’s case for nearly
10 months, testified that the Agency maintained its recommendation for sole
physical custody to Father because the children were safe in their Father’s
care. They were well-taken care of by Father and generally happy in his
care. He explained that the Agency changed its recommendation to joint
legal custody to ensure Mother retained parental rights, preserved her ability
to visit and spend time with the children, and could participate in decision-
making around their lives.
The social worker also reported that the children’s teachers had very
positive comments about them. Their teachers had noticed improvements in
the children around the time they began living with Father full-time. Their
homework was completed more frequently. They were better able to socialize
with other children. They were consistently picked up on time.
The social worker discussed Mother’s visits. Once a week, Mother had
day-long unsupervised visits with them in her home, and the first one had
gone well. Based on observing Mother’s home on multiple occasions and
verifying that Jorge no longer lived there, the Agency’s safety concerns
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subsided. The social worker added that Mother had tended to miss visits
during periods when the visitation schedule transitioned.
As to Father, the social worker acknowledged that he had not engaged
in any individual or family therapy, which had been part of the case plan. He
did, however, eventually take the children to be assessed, and none met
medical necessity for mental health services.
The social worker explained that communication between the parents
was difficult, but he believed they could communicate around decision
making for the children’s education and health. In his view, the parents
ultimately made reasonable decisions when it came to the care of the
children, and both tried to ensure the children were safe.
Father testified that he wanted full physical and legal custody of the
children. He said Mother missed over 15 visits since the dependency case
began. He faulted her communication. He expressed frustration with her
failures to confirm visits in advance. If the court ordered joint legal custody,
he did not think he would be able to communicate with her.
While comfortable with Mother visiting the children in public settings,
he opposed overnight visits because he feared for the children’s safety. He
claimed Mother was verbally abusive to them, referring to an incident where
Mother had purportedly told C.C. that she did not want her to visit again if
she misbehaved. Father also said he saw Mother and Jorge together a few
weeks earlier despite Mother’s claims they had separated. He acknowledged,
however, that the children had not seen Jorge for months.
In Mother’s testimony, she expressed her desire for joint physical
custody. She asserted that it was in the children’s best interest to live with
both parents. She believed she needed a court order for joint physical custody
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because Father was “going to use any opportunity to keep the children away
from [her] whenever he [could].”
Mother believed the children had been safe with Jorge. None of the
children ever told her Jorge hurt them, and she never saw “bruises or
anything physical on the children.” She was no longer in a relationship with
Jorge, nor was she considering reuniting with him. Since January 2020, she
had not seen or communicated with him.
Addressing her missed visits, she explained she was job training when
she missed visits in October 2019 and then missed two weeks in November
and December 2019 due to jury duty. Unsupervised visits began in January
2020 but were suspended due to the pandemic. For several months, she had
virtual visits with the children, but they were not in appropriate places, such
as the car or Father’s living room while his other family members were
present. During one virtual visit, Father’s sister started to argue with
Mother and “made accusations and spoke about the whole case in front of the
kids.” In May 2020, unsupervised in-person visits resumed. At this point, it
was her belief that she no longer needed to confirm visits in advance, which
led to confusion and a missed visit.
For 12 weeks, Mother took a parenting workshop she found on her own,
and noted the Agency had not referred her to any services to help her with
her parenting. From these classes, she learned that she could stop the
trauma from her own childhood continuing to her children.
The juvenile court found the children were doing “very well” in Father’s
care with regular visits to Mother. It accepted the Agency’s custody
recommendation and ordered joint legal custody and sole physical custody to
Father. It further ordered overnight visits with Mother, which would begin
after one month of unsupervised day visits. The court also observed that the
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“intense atmosphere caused between the parents” was not a sufficient basis
for it to continue to exercise jurisdiction over the children. The court
dismissed the petition and terminated jurisdiction.
Mother now appeals. She did not file a reply brief as part of her appeal.
DISCUSSION
A. Order Terminating Dependency Jurisdiction
Mother contends the court erred when it terminated dependency
jurisdiction. We disagree.
When a child is adjudged a dependent and remains in a parent’s home,
the court reviews the status of the case every six months under section 364.
Under that provision, the juvenile court “shall determine whether continued
supervision is necessary. The court shall terminate its jurisdiction [absent] a
preponderance of evidence that the conditions still exist which would justify
initial assumption of jurisdiction under Section 300, or that those conditions
are likely to exist if supervision is withdrawn.” (§ 364, subd. (c).)
In this review, “the court is not concerned with reunification, but in
determining ‘whether the dependency should be terminated or whether
further supervision is necessary.’ [Citations.] This is so because the focus of
dependency proceedings ‘is to reunify the child with a parent, when safe to do
so for the child.’ ” (In re Pedro Z. (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 12, 20.) Section
364, subdivision (c) establishes a “statutory presumption in favor of
terminating jurisdiction and returning the children to the parents’ care
without court supervision.” (In re Shannon M. (2013) 221 Cal.App.4th 282,
290.)
We review a court’s decision under section 364 for substantial evidence
and will reverse only if the evidence compels continuation of jurisdiction as a
matter of law. (In re Aurora P. (2015) 241 Cal.App.4th 1142, 1156 [listing
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cases applying substantial evidence standard for appellate review of orders
made under section 364]; In re N.S. (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 167, 172 [“In
reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal, we look to the entire
record for substantial evidence to support the findings of the juvenile
court.”].)2
Here, the conditions that led to the dependency no longer existed, nor
was there any indication such conditions were likely to exist upon
termination of jurisdiction. The court assumed jurisdiction because Mother
had been unable to protect the children from the physical abuse of her live-in
boyfriend Jorge, who had pulled the children’s ears to discipline them,
causing bruising and non-accidental trauma. In the months since the court
took jurisdiction, the Agency verified that Jorge no longer lived with Mother,
and Mother herself testified she had not seen or contacted him for months
and had no intention of reuniting with him. In light of these changes, the
Agency no longer had concerns about the children’s safety with Mother
during visits. Nor was there any concern about the children’s safety with
Father whose care they had been under for the nearly yearlong dependency
without incident. At the review hearing, the social worker testified that both
parents were able to ensure that the children were not in any danger.
Accordingly, the court did not err in concluding court supervision was no
longer necessary, and termination of jurisdiction was proper.
Mother asserts the court erred because “even though the children were
doing well in father’s care, several important factors—which posed a
continuing risk to the children—remain unresolved.” These included
2
Mother asserts we review a juvenile court’s decision to terminate
dependency jurisdiction under the abuse of discretion standard. Even under
this standard, we would not reach a different conclusion on the propriety of
the court’s order terminating jurisdiction.
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Father’s refusal to consent to have the children assessed for mental health or
emotional issues and his failure to understand the trauma the children have
experienced and to engage in individual or family therapy. None of these
constituted grounds for the court’s ongoing jurisdiction. Contrary to Mother’s
assertion, Father eventually brought the children for mental health
assessments, and none of them met the medical necessity standard for
services. Further, despite Father’s resistance to therapy, the Agency found
no safety risks to the children in his care. As noted, the Agency believed both
parents were able to ensure the children were not in danger.
Mother also argues the case should have remained open to allow the
Agency to observe a longer history of parental cooperation at visit exchanges,
given the difficulty the parents have had in the past navigating these issues.
She points to other interpersonal conflict between her and Father or
members of his family. These issues were not grounds for continued
jurisdiction either. (See In re Sarah M. (1991) 233 Cal.App.3d 1486, 1498–
1499 [“[I]f parents’ poor communication skills and distrust established a need
for its continued supervision, the juvenile court could assume or continue
jurisdiction in virtually every family law case involving custody or visitation
issues.”], disapproved on other grounds in In re Chantal S. (1996) 13 Cal.4th
196, 202–204.)
Finally, Mother contends the Agency had failed to provide her with
sufficient services to reunify with her children, notwithstanding the court’s
order at disposition that she participate in parenting classes and therapy.
She says she demonstrated she was capable of change and such services
would have helped her, so the Agency’s inaction “presented a sufficient
roadblock to terminating the dependency case.” This, too, was not reason to
continue jurisdiction. Mother was not entitled to reunification services since
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the children had been placed with Father at disposition. (See § 16507, subd.
(b) [“[f]amily reunification services shall only be provided when a child has
been placed in out-of-home care, or is in the care of a previously noncustodial
parent under the supervision of the juvenile court”]; In re A.L. (2010) 188
Cal.App.4th 138, 145 [no reunification services called for when a child is not
removed from a custodial parent].)3 Moreover, as discussed, the paramount
consideration at a section 364 hearing is whether conditions that led to the
court’s jurisdiction continue or were likely to continue without the court’s
supervision. (§ 364, subd. (c).) Whether the Agency provided Mother services
did not bear on the determinative issue of the children’s safety. On that
point, there was substantial evidence that when jurisdiction was terminated,
the children were safe with both parents.
B. Order Granting Father Sole Physical Custody
Mother also contends the court abused its discretion when it awarded
Father sole physical custody of the children. Again, we disagree.
“ ‘When a juvenile court terminates its jurisdiction over a dependent
child, it is empowered to make “exit orders” regarding custody and visitation.
[Citations.] Such orders become part of any family court proceeding
concerning the same child and will remain in effect until they are terminated
or modified by the family court.’ ” (In re A.C. (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 796,
799.) “When making a custody determination in any dependency case, the
3
At disposition, Mother was offered “supportive services,” not
reunification services. The Agency represents, and Mother does not dispute,
that “supportive services” are San Francisco County’s name for
“enhancement services,” which in dependency jargon describe “ ‘child welfare
services offered to the parent not retaining custody, designed to enhance the
child’s relationship with that parent.’ ” (In re Destiny D. (2017) 15
Cal.App.5th 197, 212.) Mother provides no authority that such services were
designed to reunify her with the children.
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court’s focus and primary consideration must always be the best interests of
the child. [Citations.] Furthermore, the court is not restrained by ‘any
preferences or presumptions.’ [Citation.] Thus, for example, a finding that
neither parent poses any danger to the child does not mean that both are
equally entitled to half custody, since joint physical custody may not be in the
child’s best interests for a variety of reasons. [Citation.] By the same token,
a finding that the parent from whom custody was removed no longer poses a
risk of detriment or that the parent whose custody has been subject to
supervision no longer requires supervision is relevant to, but not necessarily
determinative of, the best interests of the child.” (In re Nicholas H. (2003)
112 Cal.App.4th 251, 268 (Nicholas H.).)
We review the juvenile court’s decision to issue a custody (or “exit”)
order for abuse of discretion. (Bridget A. v. Superior Court (2007) 148
Cal.App.4th 285, 300.) “[W]hen a court has made a custody determination in
a dependency proceeding, ‘ “a reviewing court will not disturb that decision
unless the trial court has exceeded the limits of legal discretion by making an
arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd determination.” ’ ” (In re Stephanie
M. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 295, 318.)
Here, the juvenile court did not abuse its discretion in awarding sole
physical custody of the children to Father. There is no doubt that Mother
made great efforts to address the issues that precipitated the dependency.
She appears to have severed ties with Jorge, took a parenting class, and
created a safe space for the children in her home. We also understand that
the children reported feeling happy and excited when visiting Mother. The
juvenile court’s paramount concern in determining custody is the best
interests of the child based on the totality of the circumstances. (Nicholas H.,
supra, 112 Cal.App.4th at p. 268.) The court found the children were “doing
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very well” with their current placement. The social worker even shared
feedback from the children’s teachers of all the positive developments with
respect to academics and socializing with peers. It was reasonable for the
juvenile court to maintain the status quo on physical custody to not disrupt
the children’s progress, especially in light of its decision to allow Mother to
retain joint legal custody of the children and have increased visitation. Based
on the record before us, we conclude the juvenile court did not abuse its
discretion in granting Father sole physical custody of the children.
DISPOSITION
The juvenile court’s order terminating jurisdiction and granting father
sole physical custody of the children is affirmed.
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_________________________
Wiseman, J.*
WE CONCUR:
_________________________
Fujisaki, Acting P.J.
_________________________
Jackson, J.
* Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate
District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
California Constitution.
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