Court Opinion

ID: 6329199
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-04-01 17:02:33.623568+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:48.611353
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/1/22 In re M.N. CA6
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re M.N., a Person Coming Under the                               H048489
Juvenile Court Law.                                                 (Santa Clara County
                                                                    Super. Ct. No. JD026270)

SANTA CLARA COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND
CHILDREN’S SERVICES,

         Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.

E.M.,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         On January 22, 2020, a young girl, M.N. (the minor), who was then 11 years old,
was taken into protective custody after a reported domestic violence incident two days
earlier.1 The minor had reported to the police on January 20 that her parents, E.M.
(mother) and M.N. (father), had a domestic dispute at their San Jose home. In the

         1   All dates are 2020 unless otherwise specified.
minor’s presence, father verbally abused mother, struck her in the head, causing her to
bleed, and discharged a firearm inside the home.2
       The Santa Clara County Department of Family and Children’s Services
(Department) filed a petition under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300,
subdivisions (a), (b)(1), (c), and (i).3 The Department alleged that the minor’s physical
and emotional health was at risk due to the parents’ ongoing domestic violence. The
juvenile court ordered the minor detained. Mother subpoenaed the minor to testify at the
contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing, and the minor filed a motion to quash the
subpoena. After receiving briefs, the court granted the motion to quash in an order filed
on July 13.
       After a four-day contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing, on August 24, the
juvenile court sustained the allegations of the petition under section 300, subdivisions (a),
(b)(1), and (c), and it ordered the minor a dependent child to be placed into the care,
custody, and control of the Department.
       On appeal, mother challenges the juvenile court’s order granting the minor’s
motion to quash. Mother argues that the juvenile court abused its discretion because it
quashed the subpoena of the minor “without balancing the risk of psychological harm to
[the minor] against the necessity for [her] testimony.” We conclude that there was no
error. We will affirm the order granting the motion to quash and the order after the
jurisdiction/disposition hearing.

       2 The minor’s older brother also bears the initials M.N. To distinguish the three
family members, we will refer to the dependent child, M.N., as the minor, the father,
M.N., as father, and the older brother, M.N., as M.N., Jr.
       3 Further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
otherwise stated.

                                              2
                     I.    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
       A.     Petition (January 2020)
       On January 23, 2020, the Department filed a petition under section 300,
subdivisions (a), (b) (1), (c), and (i) relative to the minor. The Department alleged that on
January 22, San Jose Police officers placed the minor in protective custody because she
was at risk of physical and emotional harm and neglect in her parents’ care because of the
minor’s exposure to ongoing domestic violence. On January 20, “father perpetrated
high-lethality-risk domestic violence in the family home in the child’s presence” with
actions consisting of calling mother names and punching her in the head, resulting in
bleeding, pointing a loaded gun at mother, and firing two shots in the air inside the home.
The minor fled, hid in an alley, and called for assistance. Mother transported father, a
convicted felon on parole, to an unknown destination, leaving without knowing the
minor’s whereabouts or condition. After being contacted by the police, mother denied
any domestic violence, and she was cited for child endangerment. The Department
reported that “mother’s choice [was] to protect the father rather than prioritize the child’s
safety and wellbeing.” At the time the petition was filed, father was continuing to evade
an arrest warrant.
       The Department advised that father had a lengthy history of domestic violence and
aggressive and abusive behavior, and “the parents [had] repeatedly exposed [the minor]
to this domestic violence in the family home.” Father kept firearms and ammunition in
the home accessible to the minor. “[B]oth parents minimize and deny the father’s
volatility and extreme violence and have failed to protect the child from chronic exposure
to this violence.”
       It was alleged further that since the January 20 incident, mother had emotionally
abused the minor by blaming her for calling the police. She told the minor, “ ‘I’ll never
forgive you for this. I hate you.’ ”

                                              3
          The Department advised in its initial hearing report that on January 20, the parents
fled the home after the police were contacted, leaving the minor at home with the elderly
paternal grandfather, who was blind and bedridden. Both parents were charged with
child endangerment and neglect, and father was also charged with assault with a deadly
weapon and possession of firearms/ammunition. Father was “at large and . . . deemed
‘armed and dangerous.’ ”
          The court ordered the minor detained on January 24. The court made findings that
the Indian Child Welfare Act did not apply, and that the father, M.N., was the presumed
father.
          B.     Jurisdiction/Disposition Report
          The Department submitted a report in connection with the jurisdiction/disposition
hearing in which it provided detail regarding the family’s child welfare history from
2006; the police report of the January 20 incident; and its interviews with the minor,
mother, father, and the minor’s brother, J.N. It recommended that the court sustain the
allegations of the petition, order that minor continue to remain in the custody, care, and
control of the Department, and order that the parents receive family reunification
services.4
                 1.     Child Welfare History
          In a March 2006 referral, the minor’s older brother, M.N., Jr., had told the
reporting party that his parents fought in front of him, mother had grabbed the child by

          4
          There appears to be a significant erroneous factual assertion in the opening brief,
which is reiterated in the reply brief. Mother’s counsel asserts that the Department
initially recommended that services be bypassed for both parents, but the court later
ordered that mother receive services and that services for father be bypassed. The record
shows that the Department initially recommended in the jurisdiction/disposition report
(stated three times) that both mother and father receive services. The Department later
recommended that services for father be bypassed, but it was consistent in its
recommendation that mother receive services.

                                                4
his ear and pulled him to the floor, and on one occasion, father threw a pizza at mother.
Both parents denied any domestic violence.
       In a February 2007 referral, M.N., Jr. had told the reporting party that he had
observed father hit mother on multiple occasions. When interviewed, M.N., Jr. told the
social worker that his parents argued but he had not seen domestic violence in the home.
The child said that mother had instructed him “not to tell anything about the ‘bad things’
that are happening in the home because he will be ‘taken away to live with a new family.’
” Mother denied there was domestic violence or that she and father fought in the
children’s presence.
       In an October 2011 referral, the San Jose Police responded to a hospital
concerning a reported domestic violence incident in which father had assaulted mother,
causing her injuries, including a broken nose. The parents reported to the Department
that they were separated and that the assault incident had not occurred in the presence of
their children.
       In a March 2012 referral, the reporting party indicated concerns that mother was
neglecting her children. The reporting party stated that the children did not attend school
regularly, mother did not bathe the children or change their clothes, and that the home
was “ ‘filthy.’ ”
               2.      Police Report—January 20, 2020
       According to a police report concerning the January 20, 2020 incident that was
attached to the Department’s report, the minor reported to responding officers that father
had “ ‘[y]ell[ed] and curs[ed] at her mother’ ” and had “ ‘called her a bitch and a slut.”
The minor said that father had pointed a gun at mother, “ ‘racked the slide back’ and
‘fired two shots inside the house.’ ” One shot was about 20 feet from the infirm paternal
grandfather, and the other was fired at mother. The minor also stated to the police that
father had struck mother with a closed fist, causing her to bleed.

                                              5
       Police located mother by telephone on January 20 and told her the minor was safe
and with the police in San Jose. When asked if she knew the whereabouts of father, she
said she did not, and had not seen him since that day at 4:00 p.m. The police requested
that mother meet them at the home; mother refused, said she would meet at a Starbucks,
and hung up the phone.
       After the police met mother in Santa Clara and transported her to the home, she
told the police there had been no incident. Mother stated that the minor had run away
from home before “and was a ‘liar.’ ” She made these statements about the minor
repeatedly while she ignored questions by the police. Mother told the police “she was
never going to forgive her daughter.” She also denied that there were any firearms in the
residence. When the police asked mother again if she knew of father’s whereabouts, she
said that—contrary to her earlier statement to the police that she had last seen father that
day at 4:00 p.m.—the two of them had had dinner together at a restaurant. She said they
had returned home to San Jose5 and were told by the paternal grandmother that the minor
was missing. Mother stated that she had then gone looking for the minor in her car, while
father left the house on foot to look for the minor.
       The police observed that mother was bleeding from her head. When they asked
how she had received her head injury, mother was uncooperative and rapidly moved her
head to prevent the police from observing the injury. She told one officer that she had
bumped her head exiting her car. Mother was handcuffed by the police due to her

       5  There is some lack of clarity as to the living circumstances of mother at the time
of the January 20 incident. At the contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing on July 22,
mother testified that she had “always” lived with her parents in Santa Clara, and that she
only occasionally stayed with father in San Jose at the paternal grandparents’ home. She
denied other testimony that she lived in the paternal grandparents’ home. Social worker
Dawn MacDonald-Vargas, however, testified that both the minor and her older brother,
J.N., told the social worker that mother lived with father at his parents’ home in San Jose.
And the maternal grandmother told the social worker that mother was not living with her
in Santa Clara at the time of the January 20 incident.

                                              6
creating an unsafe environment while police were attempting to enter the home to
perform a welfare check on the paternal grandfather. The concern of the police was that
mother, who refused to put her phone down, may have been texting father (whom the
police considered armed and dangerous) to alert him about police movements. The
police arrested mother for child endangerment (Pen. Code, § 273a, subd. (a)).
       The minor told the police that father owned an AR-15, a .44 Magnum, and a
stainless-steel semiautomatic handgun. The minor said that she had observed the
firearms frequently, and father had often talked about the guns being present in the home.
The minor also said that father left live ammunition on the floor inside the house, and that
she was afraid of him.
       The homeowner (paternal grandfather) consented to a police search of the home.
Police located ammunition for a .44 Magnum, a rifle (found in the minor’s sock), and a
magazine (found under father’s mattress). The minor told the police that she collected
ammunition around the house to prevent father’s having access to it. She also pointed out
a bullet hole in the ceiling which she stated was caused by father’s accidental discharge
of a rifle two months earlier. Police found no guns at the home. The minor told the
police that she believed father had removed the guns when he left the house “because he
‘knew the police were coming.’ ”
       One anonymous witness told the police that the witness heard a female “yell ‘Call
9-1-1’ and then heard a scream.” That witness saw two females and a man
“talking/arguing outside the residence.” The witness believed that the people left in a
black car.
       Another anonymous witness reported to the police that the witness heard a gunshot
and a woman scream. That witness heard the woman telling “ ‘[father’s forename]’ to
‘get in the car’ and [asking] ‘where did she go?’ ”
       The police also reported that the living conditions in the home were unsanitary.
There was mold on the refrigerator and kitchen area, flies, and a smell throughout the

                                             7
house of feces and urine. There were items strewn on the floor that made it difficult to
move around the house.
              3.     Department Interviews
                     a.     The Minor
       Social worker Dawn MacDonald-Vargas interviewed the minor on January 22.
The minor said that on the evening of January 20, she was at the home of the paternal
grandparents when “father ‘ran into the house, and shot once and ran back out.’ ” The
minor told the social worker that father then came back inside, cocked the gun, and then
“ ‘hit [mother] on the head with a closed fist.” The minor called the police to report the
incident, and mother told the minor that she “ ‘[will] never forgive [her] for this. I hate
you.’ ” The minor told the social worker that her parents gathered the guns in the house,
mother called father’s name, and she took him away to prevent him from being arrested.
The minor then left the home and went to a nearby alley. The minor told the social
worker that she felt mother would “ ‘rather leave [her] out in San Jose alone at night, in
the alley where two people were just shot, instead of [her] dad going to jail.’ ”
       The minor told the social worker that her parents’ relationship was “ ‘toxic’ and
‘they should not be together.’ ” She said that father often broke things for no reason
when he was angry, and his assaultive behavior was “ ‘[a]lways the same.’ ” After each
episode of domestic violence, “mother acted like nothing happened.”
       The minor described to the social worker two prior instances of violent behavior
by father. In the spring of 2019 in San Francisco, father repeatedly punched mother in
the head and face, causing her to bleed. Afterward, “father grabbed the [minor’s] hoodie
from behind and pulled her forcibly back into the car so that she would not leave.”
Mother falsely reported to the police that she had been assaulted by three teenagers.
       In another incident in or about September 2019, father, after drinking, drove
mother and the minor to pick up her brother, J.N. When they arrived to pick up J.N., the
parents began to argue, father punched mother, and she struck him back. J.N. noticed

                                              8
that both parents were bleeding, and father threatened J.N., telling him that he would “
‘rape’ ” him if he called law enforcement. The minor told the social worker about
father’s threat; she said, “ ‘I thought at that moment, what happened to you [the father] in
prison? What kind of person are you?’ ” When they arrived home, mother served father
more alcohol. He tried to grab the minor’s cell phone, and when she refused, he tried to
strike her, she fell, and he landed on top of her. J.N. intervened, grabbing a knife, and
pushed father off of the minor. Father then grabbed J.N.’s hand that held the knife and
punched J.N. repeatedly. The minor attempted to protect her brother by kicking father in
the groin and hitting him on the head with a wrench. “[F]ather then began to ‘attack’
her,” and J.N. broke a lamp over father’s head. Mother intervened by striking father in
the ribs with a bag containing a six-pack of beer. The minor said that after this assault,
she and her brother “had their father’s blood ‘all over them.’ ” The minor described to
social worker MacDonald-Vargas the intensity of father’s attack on J.N., stating that “she
still remember[ed] the sound of the father’s punches landing on the sibling, and began to
tear up as she stated, ‘J.N. was in a protective stance’ . . . and . . . the sibling [had]
disclosed to her that he experience[d] intrusion or flashbacks of the incident.”
       The minor “described her relationship with her mother as distant.” She told social
worker MacDonald-Vargas that mother was “ ‘always in a bad mood,’ ” and she was
constantly in a bad mood for the three years that father was incarcerated. This impacted
the minor’s mental health when she was nine; “she became depressed and began to
engage in self-injurious behaviors,” namely, “ ‘cutting.’ ” The minor indicated that
mother was inattentive and did not notice the self-harming but was told about it by an
acquaintance from church.6

       The Department assessed the minor as being “an extraordinarily insightful and
       6
empathetic child” who was “resolute and unwavering in her disclosures.”

                                                9
                      b.     Mother
       During an interview at the Department’s offices on January 22, mother denied all
allegations in the petition, including ongoing domestic violence or violence in the
children’s presence. The social worker observed that “mother used the interview time to
[say] that ‘she loves her children, always puts them first and would do anything for them’
and blamed [the minor] for bringing her family to the attention of law enforcement and
the Department.” Mother told the social worker repeatedly that she was “ ‘shocked’ ”
that the minor would report that there had been domestic violence in the home, and she
stated that “ ‘we . . . have such a close relationship.”
       Mother denied that there was a domestic violence incident on January 20. Mother
said she and father had gone out to dinner and were not home at the time of the alleged
incident. In response to the Department’s question about reports by the minor and
neighbors about gunshots at the home that evening, mother said that the minor had been
jealous of the parents’ going out for dinner rather than mother taking her to the mall as
mother had promised. Mother stated further that her neighbors didn’t like them. She also
denied that father had caused the injury to her head, saying that she had hit her head on
the door of her car because “she was in a rush to find [the minor] after law enforcement
informed her [the minor] was safe at home.” The social worker commented in the report
that when mother discussed the injury, she “pointed above her temple where there was no
visible mark. Police photos . . . indicate the wound was not located above her temple.”
       Mother denied that she had blamed the minor for intervening on January 20 or that
she had told the minor, “ ‘I’ll never forgive you for this. I hate you.’ ” She said the
minor “runs away to be with her boyfriend” and “has “emotional problems and
behavioral issues in the home and at school.” Mother stated that she knew about the
minor’s past self-harming behavior and mother had taken her out of school and home-
schooled her for a year. She said that the minor had not received counseling at that time.

                                              10
       Mother also denied any knowledge of prior child welfare referrals. She
acknowledged that she had obtained a restraining order in 2003 against father, and that he
had been ordered by the court to take anger management classes. She said more recently,
father sometimes would “yell, but . . . not physically assault her.” Mother denied that
father possessed firearms and ammunition in the home, but she “evaded questions” on the
subject and could not explain the presence of ammunition at, and the existence of a bullet
hole in the ceiling of, the residence.
       Mother ended her meeting with the Department early due to another appointment.
She did not make herself available to the Department for a follow-up interview.7
                      c.     Father
       Although father answered questions concerning paternity, he refused an interview
by the social worker because he believed he would be arrested if he came to the
Department’s offices. He did not make himself available later for an interview.
                      d.     Minor’s Brother, J.N.
       The minor’s brother, J.N., was interviewed by the Department on January 24. He
was not home on the evening of January 20. J.N. said he did not know about domestic
violence between his parents, but he said it could have occurred on weekends when he
stayed with the maternal grandparents. He told the Department he did not believe that his
sister, the minor, would lie about domestic violence.

       7 The Department’s assessment concerning mother was that she “has repeatedly
professed her love for [the minor], despite lack of follow[-]through and has asserted that
they have a close relationship, which [the minor] denies. The mother’s persistent, fixed
denial and minimizations of the ongoing violence in the home, blame and shaming of the
child and self-focus, have rendered her audible claims null and void. The mother has
demonstrated that she cannot get past her own hurt to attend to the hurt of her child,
exemplified by expressing grief attached to her own pain when [the minor] did not
request to be back in her mother’s care and when she refused to see her. In each
example, the mother has attended to her own hurt and has not questioned or addressed the
hurt of her child.”

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       C.     Jurisdiction/Disposition Addendum Reports
              1.     February 26, 2020 Addendum Report
       In an addendum report dated February 26, the Department reported that the minor
had her first supervised visit with mother on February 20; prior to that time, the minor
had refused any visits, “indicating that she was not ready to have any interactions or
communications with [mother].” Mother was appropriate during the visit and the minor’s
“emotional engagement with the mother was positive, though measured.”
       The Department reported that a CFT (Child and Family Team) meeting took place
on February 21. The social worker stated in the report that the three-hour meeting had
been unproductive, indicating that “mother [had] demonstrated an egregious lack of
insight into the serious nature of the case, exampled when she asked this worker to
explain why her child was removed from her care and when she did not appreciate the
explanation, indicated . . . she believed this worker did not do a thorough investigation.
Further, the mother denied the allegations before the Court, in fact dismissing them as
hearsay.” Mother denied that there was any domestic violence in the home. Regarding
the January 20 incident, mother told the case worker variously, “ ‘We were not even
home at the time this . . . was supposed to have happened’; ‘[the minor] wasn’t even in
the room when it happened’[;] and ‘[the minor] wasn’t in the house when it happened.’ ”
       Social worker MacDonald-Vargas advised in the report that she was “concerned
about undue pressure being placed on the [minor] by her siblings, who have been
supplying the mother with information regarding the child. The child has vacillated in
her opinion on placement and visits. This vacillation coincides with information fed to
the child by her sibling and her mother’s friend which indicate that if the child is not
returned to the mother’s care, the mother will move out of state and the mother will give
away the child’s pet.”
       The Department was advised that father had turned himself in to authorities in
Colorado, and he had been extradited to Santa Clara County on January 24. Father’s

                                             12
parole agent advised the social worker that father was on parole from a 2016 felony
conviction of assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(1)), with a great
bodily injury enhancement (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (d)). With respect to the
January 20 incident, criminal charges were pending against father that included assault
with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(1)), possession of ammunition by a
felon (Pen. Code, § 30305, subd. (a)(1)), child endangerment (Pen. Code, § 273a,
subd. (a)), domestic violence (Pen. Code, § 273.5, subd. (a)), and brandishing a weapon
(Pen. Code, § 417, subd. (a)(2)). The parole agent advised the Department that father
would receive long-term incarceration if he were convicted of any of the pending
charges.
         The Department recommended that mother receive reunification services;
additionally, it recommended that she receive a psychological assessment to determine
the services that would best enable her to reunify with the minor. The Department
recommended that services for father be bypassed.
               2.     July 21, 2020 Addendum Report
         In a July 21 addendum report, the Department advised that the minor had had four
placements since her removal, three of which having failed due to her “engag[ing] in self-
sabotaging.” The case worker explained that “[t]he child presents with a pattern of
behaviors that include absconding, . . . defiance, volatility, coercion and emotional
dysregulation, evidenced by dissociation, assaultive behaviors, . . . [and] engag[ing] in
self-isolation, so much so she refuses to eat or leave her room for extended periods of
time.”
         The Department reported that the minor was engaged and was actively
participating in her case planning and plan. The social worker advised that in April,
Dr. Marlene Storm, the medical director of the Santa Clara Valley Health and Hospital
System, indicated “that the child presents with symptoms of a personality disorder . . .
[and that] the need for a psychological evaluation was urgent.” Dr. Sturm “strongly

                                             13
recommend[ed] focused intervention to address [the minor’s] mental health issues.”
Mental health services for the minor had been delayed, however, due to difficulties with
obtaining consent from mother for treatment, and shelter-in-place orders resulting from
the COVID-19 global pandemic. The minor was scheduled for a psychological
evaluation on July 10.
       D.     Motion to Quash/Jurisdiction-Disposition Hearing (July 2020)
       The juvenile court originally set the jurisdiction/disposition hearing for
February 14. The hearing was postponed multiple times, initially because mother had
requested a contested hearing, and thereafter because of shelter-in-place and emergency
orders related to the COVID-19 global pandemic. The contested hearing took place on
July 20 and 22. Prior to that contested hearing, the motion to quash that is the subject of
this appeal was presented and decided by the juvenile court.
              1.     Motion to Quash
                     a.      Motion
       Mother filed a witness list on February 26 that included the minor as a witness to
be called at the contested hearing.8 Subsequently, mother filed a list on May 20,
identifying the minor as a witness for “cross-examination regarding her allegations as
stated in the petition and the report. [This requires the service of a subpoena, which has
not been completed at this date.]”
       On July 1, 2020, the minor’s counsel filed a motion to quash the subpoena that
required the minor to testify at the jurisdiction/disposition hearing. The motion sought an
order that the minor not be compelled to testify, or, in the alternative, that her testimony
be given in chambers out of the presence of the parties. The motion was accompanied by

       8 We note that at a hearing less than two weeks earlier, mother’s counsel advised
the court that the minor was not on the witness list, and that having the minor called as a
witness was not “something that [mother] want[ed] to put her daughter through.”

                                             14
a declaration, filed by the Department, of the assigned social worker MacDonald-Vargas.
The minor’s counsel took the position in the motion that “[i]t is not in [the minor’s] best
interests to testify because of the high probability that testifying will be psychologically
and emotionally harmful.” Citing In re Jennifer J. (1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 1080 (Jennifer
J.), minor’s counsel asserted that the court had the discretion to exclude the testimony of
a child witness if necessary to avoid psychological harm to the child. Counsel argued
that the minor’s statements concerning the allegations in the petition were available in the
Department’s reports, which were admissible hearsay and to which no objection on the
ground of admissibility had been asserted.
       Social worker MacDonald-Vargas, who received a Master’s Degree in Clinical
Social Work in 2017,9 declared that the minor had “been exposed to chronic high
lethality domestic violence” in which father was the aggressor. Father had physically
assaulted the minor in the past, and mother had “emotionally abused [the minor] by
protecting father, minimizing and denying the extent of the abuse, and blaming [the
minor] for seeking help.”
       Social worker MacDonald-Vargas assessed that the minor had “suffered serious
emotional damage as a result of her parents’ conduct,” and she “remain[ed] emotionally
fragile.” The social worker opined that “[the minor] presents with emotional
dysregulation consistent with trauma exposures, both pervasive due to domestic violence
in the home and acute due to the high lethality incident that led to her removal. [The
minor] presents traits and behaviors akin to personality disorder. [The minor] has been
suspended from school for fighting with a peer. She has experienced suicidal ideations.
She has engaged in volatile interactions with family care providers.” The social worker
stated that the minor’s “trauma ha[d] not been addressed.” The minor had not yet begun

       9
       At the later jurisdiction/disposition hearing, the juvenile court ruled that social
worker MacDonald-Vargas was qualified to testify as an expert in the area of “risk
assessment and placement of dependent children.”

                                             15
receiving mental health services, which delay was due to both the COVID-19 pandemic
and “the parents’ reluctance to sign mental health authorizations.”
       Social worker MacDonald-Vargas declared further that when she discussed the
case with the minor, she “presents as emotional[,] evidenced by crying and intermittent
disassociation. When recounting the events of January 20, 2020, [the minor] cries and
reports that she cannot get ‘this’ out of her head. [The minor] has expressed fear and
concern for her mother’s wellbeing upon learning that her father was released from jail.”
The social worker indicated that the minor’s emotional stability had been impacted
during the dependency due to mother’s consistent unauthorized contacts with the minor
(cell phone, social media, and intermediaries) outside of supervised visitation. After
these contacts, the minor’s “demeanor and behaviors [would] change dramatically. [The
minor] becomes easily agitated, defensive, and acrimonious toward her foster family and
the professionals involved in her life.”
       Social worker MacDonald-Vargas opined that “[i]f forced to testify in this matter,
[the minor] would be in jeopardy of emotional and physical decompensation given her
past self-injurious behaviors and recent suicidal ideation. For the sake of her emotional
wellbeing, it is imperative that [the minor’s] parents believe her and demonstrate
empathy. Unfortunately, that has not happened. Instead, [the minor] is under enormous
pressure to corroborate her mother’s denials and misrepresentations, to validate her
mother at the expense of herself, and to do what she believes is necessary to protect both
herself and her mother from further abuse by her father. [The minor] is highly
susceptible to unspoken coercion and is vulnerable to further emotional damage if she is
required to retell her trauma narrative.”
                     b.     Opposition to Motion
       A trial management conference was scheduled for July 8; it was anticipated that
argument would be heard on the minor’s motion to quash at that time. No opposition to
the motion was submitted by mother prior to July 8. The argument on the motion was not

                                            16
heard that day, due to the illness of one of the attorneys. Instead, the court provided a
deadline of July 10 for submission of papers concerning the motion, and it indicated it
would then rule on the papers submitted.
       Mother opposed the motion to quash in papers filed on July 10. Mother’s
opposition was not accompanied by a declaration. She argued that there is no automatic
disqualification of a child’s testimony in a dependency proceeding. To the contrary,
mother argued, section 350, subdivision (b) anticipates the need for a child’s testimony
and contains procedures, such as in-chambers testimony, that may limit the negative
emotional impact upon a child in giving testimony. She asserted that the motion and
supporting declaration contained conclusory, unsupported statements about the negative
impact upon the minor that would result if she were compelled to give testimony.
                     c.      Order on Motion to Quash
       In an order dated July 10 and filed July 13, the juvenile court granted the minor’s
motion to quash. The court considered the possibility that by testifying remotely, the
minor could provide testimony without having to see or hear her parents. But it found
“under the unique facts of this case, . . . that even the use of remote testimony is not
sufficient to protect [the minor] from psychological harm.” The court recited a number
of matters relevant to its decision, including that the allegations in the petition involved
“very serious, high lethality domestic violence” which was reported to the police by the
minor herself; the parents’ subsequent concerning behaviors, including mother’s having
blamed the minor; the pressures reportedly facing the minor to corroborate mother’s
account of the events leading to the removal; and the high level of emotional risk
associated with the minor’s prospective compelled testimony. The court concluded: “It
is not in [the minor’s] best interests to testify due to the high probability that testifying—
even remotely—will be psychologically and emotionally damaging to her. [The minor’s]
statements are readily available in the social worker’s report.”

                                              17
              2.     Jurisdiction/Disposition Hearing
       The juvenile court conducted a combined, contested jurisdiction and disposition
hearing on four days between July 20 and August 24. The court heard two days of
testimony on July 20 and 22 from two witnesses, social worker MacDonald-Vargas and
mother. Mother testified at length concerning her account of the events of January 20.
Social worker MacDonald-Vargas also provided testimony as to the minor’s account of
the January 20 incident.10 Counsel for the Department, mother, father, and the minor
thereafter submitted written closing arguments.
       On August 24, the juvenile court found the allegations under subdivisions (a) and
(b)(1), and (c) of section 300 as alleged in the petition true, and it adjudicated the minor a
dependent child of the court. The court struck the allegations under section 300,
subdivision (i) alleged in the petition. It found by clear and convincing evidence that the
minor’s welfare required that the minor be removed from the physical custody, care, and
control of the parents. The court ordered reunification services for mother, and it ordered
services for father bypassed. In reaching its conclusions, the juvenile court found the
testimony of social worker MacDonald-Vargas “to be credible and detailed.” The
juvenile court judge also concluded that mother’s testimony was not credible, noting that
“in order to believe [mother’s testimony], I would have to believe that pretty much
everybody else is lying.”
       Mother filed a timely appeal from the juvenile court’s August 24 order after the
jurisdiction/disposition hearing and the August 13 order granting the motion to quash.

       10Social worker MacDonald-Vargas testified that the minor never recanted her
account of what had transpired on January 20.

                                             18
                             II.    DISCUSSION
       A.     Applicable Law
       As was recently explained by the First District Court of Appeal (Division One),
“ ‘Parents have a fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of
their children.’ [Citation.] Unlike a criminal defendant, a parent in a dependency
proceeding does not have a right ‘to full confrontation and cross-examination’ under the
Sixth Amendment of the federal Constitution or article I, section 15 of the California
Constitution. [Citations.] A parent does, however, have ‘a due process right to a
meaningful hearing with the opportunity to present evidence,’ including a right to
confrontation and cross-examination of witnesses. [Citations.]” (In re Daniela G. (2018)
23 Cal.App.5th 1083, 1092 (Daniela G.).)
       Section 341 provides: “Upon request of the social worker, district attorney, the
child, or the child’s parent, guardian, or custodian, or on the court’s own motion, the court
or the clerk of the court, or an attorney, pursuant to Section 1985 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, shall issue subpoenas requiring attendance and testimony of witnesses and
production of papers at any hearing regarding a child who is alleged or determined by the
court to be a person described by Section 300.” (See also Cal. Rules of Court,
rule 5.526(d)) [clerk’s issuance of subpoenas on court’s motion or request of agency,
parent, child, or caregiver].)
       In the instance of a child witness in a dependency proceeding, the juvenile court is
empowered to “control all proceedings during the hearings with a view to the expeditious
and effective ascertainment of the jurisdictional facts and the ascertainment of all
information relative to the present condition and future welfare of the person upon whose
behalf the petition is brought.” (§ 350, subd. (a)(1).) In that regard, the court, may order
a minor’s testimony to be given in chambers outside the presence of the parents and with
their counsel present, if it finds “(1) . . . testimony in chambers is necessary to ensure
truthful testimony[; ¶] (2) [t]he minor is likely to be intimidated by a formal courtroom

                                              19
setting[; or ¶] (3) [t]he minor is afraid to testify in front of his or her parent or parents.”
(Id., subd. (b).)
       Notwithstanding a parent’s rights to confront and cross-examine witnesses and to
subpoena witnesses under section 341, the juvenile court in an appropriate case may
refuse to require a child who is the subject of the proceeding to testify as a witness.
(Jennifer J., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at p. 1089.) As the Jennifer J. court explained, “This
power derives . . . from a recognition of the overriding objective of the dependency
hearing—to preserve and promote the best interests of the child. It would be a perversion
of the procedure to impose upon it a requirement that the child’s testimony always be
presented, regardless of the trauma resulting to the child therefrom, and regardless of the
necessity of such testimony in the resolution of the issues before the court.” (Ibid., fn.
omitted.) The juvenile court, “in considering whether to exclude a child’s testimony, . . .
must engage in “a careful weighing of the interests involved,” including a parent’s right
to call and cross-examine witnesses. [Citations.]” (Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th at
p. 1092, quoting Jennifer J., supra, at p. 1086; see also Maricela C. v. Superior Court
(1998) 66 Cal.App.4th 1138, 1146 [“[d]ue process requires a balance”].) Although the
decision in Jennifer J. involved testimony at a selection and implementation hearing
under section 366.26, the principle that the court may exclude a child’s testimony in an
appropriate case has been “explicitly extended” to jurisdiction and disposition hearings.
(Daniela G., supra, at p. 1087.)
       B.      Standard of Review
       “[A] juvenile court has discretion to refuse to require a child to testify . . . if the
material effect of the child’s testimony on the relevant issues is outweighed by the
psychological injury the child risks by testifying. [Citation.]” (Daniela G., supra, 23
Cal.App.5th at p. 1091.) Thus, an order excluding a child’s testimony based upon the
avoidance of psychological harm is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Id. at p. 1090.)
“To the extent [the appellant] challenges the factual findings underlying the juvenile

                                               20
court’s ruling, our review is for substantial evidence, and to the extent his [or her] claims
raise questions of law, our review is de novo. [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
       C.     No Error in Granting Motion to Quash11
       Mother challenges the juvenile court’s order granting the motion to quash,
claiming that the court abused its discretion in violation of her due process rights to
confront and cross-examine witnesses. She asserts that the court did not properly
consider the need for the minor’s testimony at the contested hearing when it found that
there was a likelihood that her compelled testimony would cause her psychological and
emotional harm. We will now address in detail mother’s contentions.12

       11  Mother’s counsel in her opening brief addresses an issue of the potential
mootness of this appeal. (The minor, in her appellate brief, does not address this issue.)
Mother asserts that since the making of the jurisdictional finding below, the juvenile
court ordered the minor returned to mother, and it terminated jurisdiction. In support of
this assertion, counsel refers to her declaration attached to the brief, in which she states
she was informed by her client that the juvenile court made these orders on
September 27, 2021. Counsel stated further that she had inquired of the court but was
advised that certified orders relating to the termination had not yet been prepared.
Counsel advised that upon receipt of the certified records, a motion to augment would be
filed. No such motion was filed in this case, and the issue was not addressed in the reply
brief filed four months later. There is thus nothing before this court to consider
concerning the potential mootness of this appeal. Therefore, we need not consider
mother’s argument, citing In re Daisy H. (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 713, 716, that the
claimed subsequent termination of jurisdiction did not render the appeal moot.
        12 Mother’s notice of appeal reflects a challenge to both the juvenile court’s
August 24 order after jurisdiction/disposition hearing and its July 13 order granting the
minor’s motion to quash. Mother’s position in her appellate briefs is solely that the court
erred in granting the motion to quash. She makes no specific argument concerning
alleged error at the jurisdiction/disposition hearing. Rather, her position is that the order
after the jurisdiction/disposition hearing must be reversed because the court erred in
precluding the minor from testifying. Therefore, to the extent that mother may claim
error in connection with the order after the jurisdiction/disposition hearing independent of
her claim that the motion to quash should have been denied, she has abandoned any such
claim. (Tanner v. Tanner (1997) 57 Cal.App.4th 419, 422, fn. 2 [appellate court may
treat as partial abandonment of appeal where appellant fails to challenge in opening brief
an order specified in notice of appeal].)

                                             21
       We observe initially that mother’s opposition to the motion filed in the juvenile
court was, at best, cursory. Mother presented no facts through a separate declaration.
She cited no case authority, did not argue that her due process rights would be infringed if
the motion were granted, and did not respond to the motion’s central position that the
juvenile court had the authority under Jennifer J., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th 1080 to exclude
the testimony of a child if necessary to prevent the child from sustaining emotional harm.
Mother argued that the motion and supporting declaration contained “broad, sweeping
generalizations and conclusions” without factual support that compelling the minor’s
testimony would have a negative impact on the child. Aside from this conclusory
argument, mother’s opposition did not address the specifics contained in social worker
MacDonald-Vargas’s declaration regarding the minor’s circumstances and her existing
psychological and emotional condition. And mother did not address at all why the
minor’s testimony at the hearing was necessary and what mother hoped to accomplish by
compelling her daughter to testify besides repeating her account of the January 20
incident as provided in detail in the Department’s reports. This latter omission in
mother’s opposition is significant, since the focal point of her appellate briefs is her claim
that the juvenile court did not adequately consider the necessity of the minor’s testimony.
       Mother asserts that the court failed to conduct the requisite balancing of the need
for the minor’s testimony against the risk that requiring the minor ’s testimony would
result in psychological harm. In making this assertion in her opening brief, she argues
that the juvenile court made no findings concerning the necessity of the minor’s
testimony, suggesting it was error not to do so. Elsewhere in her opening brief, mother
reiterates that the juvenile court abused its discretion because it did not “consider the
materiality of [the minor’s] potential testimony,” “failed to consider the importance of
[the minor’s] credibility,” and “failed to conduct the required balancing test.” The
suggestion from mother’s arguments is that the juvenile court erred (1) by failing to make

                                             22
express findings in granting the motion to quash; and (2) by not appreciating or applying
the law in reaching its decision. Both contentions lack merit.
       First, mother cites no authority, and we are aware of none, that imposes an
obligation on the court to make specific findings in granting or denying a motion to
quash. (See McDermott Will & Emery LLP v. Superior Court (2017) 10 Cal.App.5th
1083, 1103 [trial court not required to make findings in support of its ruling on
applicability of attorney-client privilege, and appellate court would “infer[] it made all
favorable findings that are supported by substantial evidence”]; see also In re A.L. (2022)
73 Cal.App.5th 1131, 1156 [no requirement that juvenile court issue findings in denying
claim of parental benefit exception to adoption].)13 Thus, we infer that the juvenile court
impliedly found that, balancing the necessity of the minor’s testimony against the
likelihood that compelling her testimony would cause her emotional harm, an order
precluding the minor from testifying in order to protect her from emotional harm was
necessary.
       Second, we will presume that the juvenile court understood and applied existing
law relevant to its decision on the motion to quash. “In the absence of evidence to the
contrary, we presume that the court ‘knows and applies the correct statutory and case
law.’ [Citations.]” (People v. Thomas (2011) 52 Cal.4th 336, 361.) The court stated in
its order that it had read and reviewed the minor’s motion to quash, the social worker’s
declaration, and mother’s opposition. The motion to quash cited the specific authority—
Jennifer J., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th 1080, and Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th 1083—

       13 Having said this, we acknowledge that a record containing some detail
concerning the trial court’s reasoning and findings that have resulted in the order in
question is always very helpful to the appellate court. This is no less true, and perhaps
more so here, where the decision involves a weighing of two important interests, i.e., the
interest of a parent in examining a child witness to the critical events leading to the
dependency, and the interests of the dependent child in not having his or her emotional
well-being further damaged by being compelled to give testimony.

                                             23
that discusses the legal principles upon which the juvenile court may exclude the
testimony of a minor after weighing the competing concerns. The fact that the juvenile
court did not state specifically in its order that it had reached its determination after
weighing the need for the minor’s testimony against the risk of emotional harm to the
minor resulting from that compelled testimony is of no consequence, and it does not
demonstrate that the court failed to consider or apply the law.
       Mother argues further that the juvenile court did not adequately consider
safeguards that could be employed to minimize any potential harm to the minor, such as
having her testify in-chambers, or testify remotely with the parents not visible to the
witness. This argument ignores the fact that the court, in the penultimate paragraph of the
order, specifically found that there was “a high probability that testifying—even
remotely—will be psychologically and emotionally damaging to her.” In any event, there
is no evidence that the juvenile court failed to consider all matters relevant to the motion
to quash, including the potential emotional harm to the minor in compelling her to testify,
the likely ameliorative effects of having the minor testify in chambers or remotely, and
the necessity of the minor’s testimony. We will therefore not presume that the court
failed to consider the matters relevant to determination of the motion to quash. “Where
. . . the record is otherwise silent with respect to what the trial court considered, we must
presume it considered all the pertinent matters presented to it and ruled in favor of the
prevailing party.” (Lydig Construction, Inc. v. Martinez Steel Corp. (2015) 234
Cal.App.4th 937, 945.)
       The juvenile court below recited significant factors relevant to its determination
that precluding the minor’s testimony was proper. After acknowledging it could order
that the minor testify remotely so that she would not need to see or hear her parents, the
court stated that “under the unique facts of this case, the court finds that even the use of
remote testimony is not sufficient to protect [the minor] from psychological harm.” It
identified those facts as “includ[ing] the following: [The minor] is relatively young (age

                                              24
12). The [petition’s] allegations . . . detail very serious, high lethality domestic violence,
and in fact, [the minor] was the reporting party who called law enforcement. . . . [T]he
parents’ [reported] behaviors subsequent to [the minor’s] removal cause the court great
concern: father fled, was arrested out of state, and was extradited back to California
where he is facing serious criminal charges; mother blamed [the minor], threatened to
give away her pet bearded dragon, and told [the minor] she would move out of state if
[the minor] does not come home. According to the social worker’s declaration, [the
minor] is under enormous pressure to corroborate and validate her mother, and [the
minor] is emotionally fragile and is at risk for emotional and physical decompensation if
forced to testify.” The court found social worker MacDonald-Vargas, who had six
months of experience working with the family, to be credible.
       There were a number of other matters bearing on the question of whether
compelled testimony in this proceeding presented a likelihood of emotional harm to the
minor that outweighed the need for her testimony. This included (1) the specifics of the
January 20 incident as reported by the minor to the police and to the Department, which
specifics included father’s, in the minor’s presence, subjecting mother to verbal abuse
and a physical assault causing her to bleed from the head, and intentionally discharging a
firearm in the house; (2) the parents’ abandoning the minor unattended to evade law
enforcement; (3) corroboration of the January 20 incident from two third-party witnesses;
(4) mother’s blaming of the minor for reporting the incident, uttering the extremely
harmful words that she would never forgive the minor and she hated her;
(5) corroboration of mother’s blaming the minor, with mother telling the police that she
would never forgive her daughter, as well as repeatedly telling the police that the minor
was lying and had run away from home previously; (6) mother’s giving the police

                                              25
conflicting versions of what had transpired on January 20;14 (7) the minor’s having been
present during prior instances of domestic violence between the parents; (8) the minor’s
having reported that she had been physically assaulted by father on two prior occasions;
(9) father’s having possessed several firearms and various ammunition in the home,
which were accessible to the children; (10) the minor’s prior history of self-harming for
which she was not treated; (11) social worker MacDonald-Vargas’s statements that the
minor had (a) been suspended from school for fighting, (b) “experienced suicidal
ideations,” (c) presented with “traits and behaviors akin to personality disorder,” and (d)
“engaged in volatile interactions with family care providers”; and (12) the minor’s having
not yet begun receiving mental health services.
       In her appellate briefs, mother discusses at length Jennifer J., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th
1080, and Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th 1083, arguing that the cases compel the
conclusion that the juvenile court here erred by granting the motion to quash. The tenor
of mother’s argument is that the two cases affirming decisions of the juvenile court to
exclude child testimony involved circumstances in which the appellant(s)/parent(s) had
failed to make a sufficient showing of necessity for the child’s testimony. In Jennifer J.,
the juvenile court accepted the parents’ position that the child wished to have further
contact with them, was bonded with them, and did not favor adoption, thereby obviating
the need for the child’s testimony. (Jennifer J., supra, at p. 1087.) In Daniela G., in
which there was an allegation of sexual abuse by the father of his stepdaughter, the
appellate court, inter alia, rejected the father claim that cross-examination of his daughter,
Daniela, was essential, concluding that her “testimony would not have helped to resolve
any disputed issue. Daniela never said that father had sexually abused her or

       14This included telling the police when initially questioned on the evening of
January 20 that she had last seen father at 4:00 p.m. that day, and later the same evening
advising police that she had gone to dinner with him and had returned home to find the
minor gone.

                                             26
stepdaughter.” (Daniela G., supra, at p. 1094.) Mother argues that in contrast to these
two cases, (1) the juvenile court here did not consider the necessity of the minor’s
testimony, and (2) because “mother fully disputed [the minor’s] version of what
happened” and there were inconsistencies in the minor’s account, the minor’s compelled
testimony was essential. We have already addressed the first argument; mother’s
contention that the court did not weigh the necessity of having the minor testify in
arriving at its decision is without merit. As to the second point, mother presented no
argument to the court below concerning the need for the minor’s compelled testimony.
Even acknowledging that there may have existed a greater reason than in Jennifer J. and
Daniela G. for child testimony here, that need for testimony does not compel a finding
that the juvenile court erred in granting the motion. The court, considering the record
before it, properly exercised its discretion by concluding that any need for the minor’s
testimony was outweighed by “the high probability that testifying . . . [would] be
psychologically and emotionally damaging to her.”
       In Daniela G., appellant-father also challenged the juvenile court’s order
precluding the testimony of the stepdaughter on the central question of whether he had
sexually abused her. (Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1094-1095.) Although
the appellate court “agree[d] that stepdaughter’s allegations went to the heart of the
case, . . . her testimony would [not] have materially affected the juvenile court’s
evaluation of the truth of the allegations.” (Id. at pp. 1094-1095.) The appellate court
noted that the stepdaughter had given a detailed account of the abuse to a sexual abuse
resource center, and the father, although generally denying the allegations, “did [not]
identify any basis on which he hoped to impeach her.” (Id. at p. 1095.) Here, the minor
gave a detailed account to the police and later to the Department, and she never recanted.
And mother below did not offer anything substantive in opposition to the motion
identifying matters upon which she hoped to impeach her daughter if she were called as a

                                             27
witness.15 Although there were factors existing in Daniela G. not present here—such as
the fact that the father did not testify, and the court, after considering the stepdaughter’s
out-of-court statements, found them to be “extremely credible” (ibid.)—we are not
persuaded by mother’s argument that in applying Daniela G., the juvenile court below
abused its discretion in granting the motion to quash.16
       Mother also relies on In re Amy M. (1991) 232 Cal.App.3d 849 (Amy M.) in
support of her claim that the juvenile court erred by precluding the minor’s testimony.
There, the parents disputed jurisdiction, and competing experts (a court-appointed
evaluator and the parents’ expert) were presented as to whether the minor had suffered
emotional damage that was inflicted by his parents, or alternatively, was a result of the
child’s removal. (Id. at pp. 864-865.) The juvenile court judge—after hearing testimony
from the court-appointed evaluator that “it would be stressful for [the child] to testify

       15   The record is clear that, beyond the fact that mother could contrast her version
of the January 20 incident with the minor’s, there were some “slight differences in some
facts she reported at various times.” The court however, concluded that “there were
enough indicia and reliability of corroborating witnesses on the whole, that the Court
found [the minor’s] account of the events more believable.” These discrepancies,
however, do not suggest that the juvenile court was compelled to deny the motion to
quash after balancing the relevant factors, including the likelihood of emotional harm
resulting from the minor’s compelled testimony.
         16 Mother notes that in Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th at page 1089, the
juvenile court deferred its ruling on the motion to exclude the children’s testimony until
after it conducted an evidentiary hearing, thereby suggesting that the juvenile court in this
case erred by ruling on the motion to quash prior to the jurisdiction/disposition hearing.
This implicit argument is forfeited because mother did not object below to the court’s
procedure of deciding the motion to quash before conducting the evidentiary hearing.
(See K.C. Multimedia, Inc. v. Bank of America Technology & Operations, Inc. (2009)
171 Cal.App.4th 939, 948-949 [appellant forfeited argument challenging court’s
procedure of dismissing claims through motion in limine by acquiescing to that
procedure].) Mother, in any event, cites no authority in support of such claim of
procedural error. (See People ex rel. 20th Century Ins. Co. v. Building Permit
Consultants, Inc. (2000) 86 Cal.App.4th 280, 284 [failure to cite legal authority for
position in appellate brief “amounts to an abandonment of the issue”].)

                                              28
because he was under significant psychological stress . . . [and she opined that he] would
suffer additional emotional harm if he testified” (id. at p. 864)—denied the parents’
motion to have the child testify, concluding “that ‘I don’t think in this case balancing
what this child could do or could say versus what the damage to the child. . . . I don’t
think it makes any sense to have this child [testify].’ ” (Ibid.) A panel of this court found
error, concluding that the child’s testimony was crucial, because it had the potential to
directly verify or refute the expert testimony. (Id. at p. 865.) In so concluding, a panel of
this court noted that there was no “report containing [the child’s] statements which could
have substituted for his testimony.” (Ibid.) Here, there were reports detailing the minor’s
statements, and the purpose for her prospective testimony was not to verify or refute the
opinions of other witnesses. Amy M., which was decided prior to Jennifer J., is
distinguishable and does not support mother’s claim of error.
       Lastly, mother, in seven pages of her reply brief, asserts new arguments that were
not (but could have been) raised in her opening brief. Generally, these arguments consist
of evidentiary objections to the motion to quash and the accompanying declaration of
social worker MacDonald-Vargas, and procedural objections to the manner in which the
motion was decided.17 We will disregard these arguments for two reasons. First, an
appellate court “need not consider new issues raised for the first time in a reply brief in

       17 The new arguments in mother’s reply brief include objections that (1)
statements made by the minor’s attorney in the motion to quash were not evidence; (2)
there were misleading statements in the motion as to matters contained in the social
worker’s declaration; (3) the minor’s counsel did not specifically offer into evidence the
Department’s reports referenced in the motion and declaration; (4) the minor’s counsel
never introduced the declaration into evidence; (5) the declaration contained inadmissible
hearsay; (6) the procedure of deciding the motion on written submissions rather than
through an evidentiary hearing was “unsatisfactory”; (7) opinions offered by the social
worker in her declaration were improper because she was not offered or qualified by the
court as an expert witness; and (8) the social worker’s opinions were not subject to
testing through cross-examination at a hearing.

                                             29
the absence of good cause.” (In re Marriage of Ackerman (2006) 146 Cal.App.4th 191,
214; see also Varjabedian v. City of Madera (1977) 20 Cal.3d 285, 295, fn. 11
[“[o]bvious reasons of fairness militate against consideration of an issue raised initially in
the reply brief of an appellant”].) Second, these evidentiary and procedural objections to
the motion and accompanying declaration are forfeited; mother did not assert these
objections below, and she may not raise them now on appeal. “ ‘An appellate court will
ordinarily not consider procedural defects or erroneous rulings, in connection with relief
sought or defenses asserted, where an objection could have been but was not presented to
the lower court by some appropriate method.’ [Citation.]” (Doers v. Golden Gate Bridge
etc. Dist. (1979) 23 Cal.3d 180, 184-185, fn. 1; see also Broden v. Marin Humane Society
(1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 1212, 1226, fn. 13 [challenge to sufficiency of declaration not
made in trial court forfeited on appeal].) This forfeiture doctrine applies to dependency
appeals and is intended to prevent a party from standing by silently until the conclusion
of the proceedings. (In re Dakota H. (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 212, 221-222.)
       The juvenile court concluded that “[i]t is not in [the minor’s] best interests to
testify due to the high probability that testifying—even remotely—will be
psychologically and emotionally damaging to her.” The court, giving “recognition [to]
the overriding objective of the dependency hearing . . .to preserve and promote the best
interests of the child” (Jennifer J., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at p. 1089), did not abuse its
discretion in granting the motion to quash. Based upon both the matters identified by the
court and other factors present in the record, there was substantial evidence supporting
the express and implied findings of the juvenile court that excluding the testimony of the
minor was appropriate and necessary to protect her from psychological and emotional
harm. (Daniela G., supra, 23 Cal.App.5th at p. 1090 [“factual findings underlying
juvenile court’s ruling” reviewed for substantial evidence].)

                                             30
                                  III.    DISPOSITION
       The July 13, 2020 order granting motion to quash, and the August 24, 2020 order
after the jurisdiction/disposition hearing are affirmed.

                                             31
                           BAMATTRE-MANOUKIAN, ACTING P.J.

WE CONCUR:

DANNER, J.

WILSON, J.

In re M.N.; DFCS v. E.M.
H048489