Court Opinion

ID: 6118534
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 00:02:27.70734+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:22:33.537342
License: Public Domain

Filed 2/3/22 Thomas B. v. Superior Court CA5

                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

           IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
                                     FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

    THOMAS B.,
                                                                                             F083539
           Petitioner,
                                                                               (Super. Ct. No. MJP018577)
                    v.

    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MADERA                                                          OPINION
    COUNTY,

           Respondent;

    MADERA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF
    SOCIAL SERVICES,

           Real Party in Interest.

                                                   THE COURT*
         ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for extraordinary writ. Thomas L. Bender,
Judge.
         Thomas B., in pro. per., for Petitioner.
         No appearance for Respondent.
         No appearance for Real Party in Interest.
                                                        -ooOoo-

*        Before Hill, P. J., Levy, J. and Peña, J.
        Thomas B. (father), in propria persona, seeks an extraordinary writ from the
juvenile court’s orders terminating reunification services and setting a March 3, 2022
Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 hearing1 as to his now two-year-old
daughter, S.B. He contends the Madera County Department of Social Services
(department) failed to provide him reasonable reunification services. We deny the
petition.
                     PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL SUMMARY
        On September 18, 2020, the department received a referral concerning then
eight-month-old S.B. Father and S.B.’s mother, L.A. (mother),2 had recently moved to
Madera County from Oklahoma. They were homeless and staying with father’s sister in
a known drug house. The home was unsafe for S.B. and the parents were fighting.
        Father denied knowing his sister was a drug user or that there was drug activity in
the home. The home had a broken refrigerator, which contained cockroach droppings but
no food. A smaller refrigerator on the counter contained salsa, butter, and popsicles.
There was a hole in the ceiling and several paint cans and tools around the house within
S.B.’s reach.
        Father said he took mother to Denver, Colorado to deliver S.B. because of
mother’s child welfare history in Madera County. In June 2018, S.B.’s then
one-month-old twin half brothers were removed from mother because of her drug use and
domestic violence. She was provided reunification services but failed to comply and her
parental rights were terminated. The children were awaiting finalization of their
adoption. S.B. was father’s only child and he did not want the department involved.

1       Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions
Code.
2       Mother did not file an extraordinary writ petition.

                                              2.
       The social worker made a safety plan which required father to get a hotel room for
the night and stay with a friend afterward. The friend signed the safety plan. However,
when the social worker went to the friend’s home several days later to follow up, the
friend stated father was not living there and claimed not to know anything about the
safety plan. The social worker prepared an order for S.B.’s detention, which the juvenile
court signed.
       The following day, the department received a report that father was pulled over
with S.B. in his car. He was arrested for having 21 grams of methamphetamine in his
possession and for previous warrants. A social worker took custody of S.B. and placed
her in foster care.
       On September 23, 2020, the department scheduled a meeting with the parents who
attended but were hostile and refused to speak without an attorney, sign anything or
participate in services. They wanted S.B. placed with father’s former foster mother.
They did not understand why S.B. was removed from them and said they were going to
sue the department. They were angry and left the meeting abruptly.
       The following day, the department filed a dependency petition on S.B.’s behalf,
alleging she came within the juvenile court’s jurisdiction under section 300,
subdivision (b)(1) (failure to protect) because of her parents’ methamphetamine use and
subdivision (j) (abuse of sibling) because mother neglected S.B.’s half siblings by using
drugs and engaging in domestic violence, and there was a substantial risk S.B. would be
similarly neglected or abused.
       The juvenile court ordered S.B. detained, offered the parents parenting classes,
domestic violence, substance abuse and mental health assessments and recommended
treatment, random drug testing and reasonable supervised visits. The court set the
jurisdictional hearing for October 29, 2020.
       On September 28, 2020, father was approached by a police officer outside of a
liquor store with a marijuana cigar he appeared ready to smoke. In addition to the cigar,

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father had a large grocery bag which contained 198.8 grams of marijuana, more than
seven times the legal limit. He also had a small clear bag with 5.3 grams of
methamphetamine and a loaded firearm. Father admitted to the officer that he was
addicted to methamphetamine and had a drug problem. He was arrested and booked into
county jail.
       On October 29, 2020, father’s attorney informed the juvenile court there was an
out-of-state restraining order that prohibited father from having contact with mother and
S.B. The department had obtained a copy of a five-year restraining order issued by a
court in Oklahoma in June 2020, protecting mother and S.B. from father.3 Father’s
attorney requested supervised visitation. The court stated it would address visitation at
the next hearing, which it continued until January 5, 2021.
       On January 5, 2021, the parents’ attorneys informed the juvenile court they had
attempted contact with the parents but were unsuccessful. The juvenile court adjudged
S.B. a dependent child as alleged and set the dispositional hearing for January 19, 2021.
       Meanwhile, father was arrested on January 6, 2021, for kidnapping (Pen. Code,
§ 207, subd. (a)), rape of a spouse (Pen. Code, former § 262, subd. (a)), corporal injury
(Pen. Code, § 273.5, subd. (a)), and violating a protective order (Pen. Code, § 273.6) after
mother reported that father forced her into his car and over three days assaulted her and
forced her to engage in sexual acts.
       In its dispositional report, the department recommended the juvenile court provide
father reunification services but deny them to mother because of her untreated drug abuse
and failure to reunify with S.B.’s half siblings. (§ 361.5, subd. (b)(10) & (11).) Mother
refused referrals for services and had not provided the department any information that

3      According to the minute order from the October 29, 2020 hearing, father’s
attorney represented that the restraining order was issued in Arizona. However, aside
from this one instance, the only restraining order mentioned in the record is the one from
Oklahoma. We believe the reference to Arizona is a mistake.

                                             4.
she was participating in services or no longer using methamphetamine. Father had not
been cooperative with the department and had not participated in a drug test. In addition
to his recent assault charges, father had a history of assaulting mother in Oklahoma. In
March 2020, he was arrested for domestic assault and battery by strangulation, and
domestic assault and battery in the presence of a minor. Mother told the police officer
father choked her and threatened to kill her. Mother sustained facial bruising, a cut on
the bridge of her nose, bruising on the inside of both forearms and scratches on her back.
       The dispositional hearing, originally set for January 19, 2021, was continued and
conducted as a contested hearing on March 2, 2021. Father appeared in custody and
informed the juvenile court he was taking classes in jail and expected to be released on
March 9, 2021. The juvenile court ordered father to complete programs in parenting,
domestic violence and outpatient substance abuse treatment, and participate in random
drug testing. The court ordered county counsel and father’s attorney to contact the court
in Oklahoma regarding the restraining order and set a hearing on March 16, 2021, to
review the status of the restraining order and for September 2, 2021, as a six-month
review of services.
       On March 16, 2021, the juvenile court ordered father to provide his attorney
certificates of completion for the classes he attended and granted the department
discretion to arrange supervised visits for father.
       In its report for the six-month review hearing, the department recommended the
juvenile court terminate father’s reunification services and set a section 366.26 hearing.
He regularly visited S.B. but had not completed any of his court-ordered services and was
not cooperative with the department. He told his probation officer he did not “ ‘want
anything to do with CPS and [would] do it all himself.’ ” There were maternal relatives
in Oklahoma who were interested in providing S.B. a permanent home and had been
approved for placement.

                                              5.
       The department attached to its report father’s certificates of completion for various
courses completed from January through March 2021 while he was incarcerated:
“Handling Depression,” “Parenting While Incarcerated,” “Applying for Health
Insurance,” “Seeking Substance Abuse Treatment,” “Stressful Life Events,” “A Guide
Through the 12 Steps of Recovery,” “Anger Management,” “Dealing with Anger,”
“ART-Aggression Replacement Therapy,” “Visitation 2.0 Survey,” and “Houses of
Healing-A Prisoner’s Guide to Inner Power and Freedom.” The department also attached
father’s nonresponsive answers to questions regarding domestic violence. As an
example, to the question “In what ways is domestic violence a quiet, lonely abuse?”
father typed in “Bjbuvuu.” Asked what all abusers had in common, father answered
“Ghgh.”
       On May 31, 2021, father was arrested for kidnapping (Pen. Code, § 207,
subd. (a)), threatening a crime with the intent to terrorize (Pen. Code, § 422, subd. (a)),
battery (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (e)(1)), and violating probation after he grabbed mother
by the hair, placed her in a choke hold and dragged her into the road.
       The six-month review hearing was continued and set as a contested hearing on
November 1, 2021. On September 9, father’s probation officer reported that father
admitted to methamphetamine use on July 27 and August 18, 2021. On October 1, 2021,
he was arrested for forging or altering a vehicle registration (Veh. Code, § 4463,
subd. (a)(1)), having a warrant out of Oklahoma, and unlawful display of evidence of a
registration. (Veh. Code, § 4462.5.)
       The department submitted its case on its reports at the contested six-month review
hearing on November 1, 2021. Father testified he could not recall if anyone from the
department presented him with a written service plan. He was in jail from September 22
until March 9, 2021. During that time the department did not contact him regarding
services. He did not receive visitation while he was in jail and did not know why. He
completed numerous classes while in jail but was never told they would satisfy his

                                              6.
service plan requirements. He completed two anger management classes and learned he
was responsible for his anger. In aggression replacement therapy, he learned to substitute
constructive behavior like reading a book or taking a walk for aggressive behavior. He
took a parenting class in jail and learned that each child needed different parenting. He
signed up for a mental health evaluation while in jail and was still waiting for one to be
scheduled. He did not complete a substance abuse evaluation and the department did not
offer him domestic violence classes.
       When father got out of jail, he contacted the department right away. He was told
he needed to drug test and take anger management classes. He did not understand what
the department told him since he had already completed anger management classes while
in custody. He offered to participate in a substance abuse program and was referred to
probation for assistance. He attempted to get into a program but could not due to
COVID-19 restrictions. His probation officer told him to drug test for the department.
However, when he went to test, he learned he needed an identification card, which he did
not have. He made an appointment to get an identification card but was taken into
custody soon after and unable to keep the appointment. The department also did not give
him sufficient advance notice to allow him to drug test. They notified him by text
message the morning of the day he was required to test, but he worked and could not get
to the testing facility before it closed at 3:00 p.m. He never tested for the department.
       On cross-examination, father disagreed that the social worker contacted him
16 times to discuss his services. When asked about his nonresponsive answers to his
online classes, father said his answers were not important. What was important was
whether his actions demonstrated he learned from the material. He did not know much
about violence because he had never really been a violent person. Father did not know
when he was being released from custody but knew that he had a warrant for his arrest in
Oklahoma. He knew he would be released in Oklahoma because mother was “nowhere

                                             7.
to be found.” Following father’s testimony, the juvenile court heard argument and
continued the hearing to November 15, 2021, for its ruling.
       The juvenile court found it could not return S.B. to father’s custody because he
was incarcerated with no known release date and was pending extradition in a criminal
matter. The department provided him reasonable reunification services and he had not
completed them. The court found there was not a likelihood that father could complete
services in a timely manner and ordered them terminated. The court set a section 366.26
hearing.
                                      DISCUSSION
       Father contends the department did not provide him reasonable reunification
services because it did not provide him referrals for services it required him to complete,
did not tell him the ones he completed in jail would not suffice, and did not tell him he
had to drug test until the day he was required to test, which was impossible due to the
constraints of his employment. The record does not support father’s claims.
Reasonableness of Services: Relevant Legal Principles and Standard of Review
       California’s dependency system is designed “to protect children from harm and to
preserve families when safe for the child.” (Tracy J. v. Superior Court (2012) 202
Cal.App.4th 1415, 1424.) During the reunification period of a dependency case, the
primary focus is on preserving the family by addressing the issues that led to dependency
jurisdiction. (Rita L. v. Superior Court (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 495, 507.) That means
until reunification services have been terminated, “family reunification is the goal and the
parent is entitled to every presumption in favor of returning the child to parental
custody.” (Tracy J., at p. 1424.) Once reunification services are terminated, however,
the focus shifts to finding the child a safe and permanent home. (Ibid.)
       “When a child is removed from a parent’s custody, the juvenile court ordinarily
must order child welfare services for the minor and the parent for the purpose of
facilitating reunification of the family.” (Tonya M. v. Superior Court (2007) 42 Cal.4th

                                             8.
836, 843.) The duration of services depends on the age of the child when initially
removed. (§ 361.5, subd. (a)(1).) Court-ordered services must be provided for
six months from the dispositional hearing to the parents of a child who was under
three years of age when initially removed. (§ 361.5, subd. (a)(1)(B).) The court must
advise the parent that reunification services may be terminated after six months if the
parent fails to participate regularly in any court-ordered treatment programs or to
cooperate or avail him or herself of services provided. (§ 361.5, subd. (a)(3)(C).)
       The child’s status, and the question of whether services should be extended for an
additional period, must be reconsidered no less frequently than every six months. (§ 366,
subd. (a)(1); Sara M. v. Superior Court (2005) 36 Cal.4th 998, 1009.)
       At each review hearing, “there is a statutory presumption that the child will be
returned to parental custody.” (In re Marilyn H. (1993) 5 Cal.4th 295, 308.) A court,
therefore, must return the child to parental custody at the six-month review hearing unless
it finds by a preponderance of the evidence that doing so would “create a substantial risk
of detriment to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of the child.”
(§ 366.21, subd. (e)(1).) A parent’s failure to participate regularly and make substantive
progress in court-ordered treatment programs constitutes prima facie evidence that return
would be detrimental. (§ 366.21, subd. (e)(1).)
       If the child is not returned to parental custody, the juvenile court is required to
determine whether “reasonable services that were designed to aid the parent … in
overcoming the problems that led to the initial removal and the continued custody of the
child have been provided or offered to the parent.” (§§ 366.21, subds. (e)(8) & (f)(1)(A),
366.22, subd. (a)(1).) “If … the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
parent failed to participate regularly and make substantive progress in a court-ordered
treatment plan, the court may schedule a [section 366.26 hearing].” (§ 366.21,
subd. (e)(3).) The court, however, is not compelled to terminate reunification services
and set a section 366.26 hearing if it makes the requisite findings. It simply has the

                                              9.
discretion to do so. (M.V. v. Superior Court (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 166, 176.) “If,
however, the court finds there is a substantial probability that the child … may be
returned to his or her parent or legal guardian within six months or that reasonable
services have not been provided, the court shall continue the case to the 12-month
permanency [review] hearing.” (§ 366.21, subd. (e)(3).)
       “The adequacy of reunification plans and the reasonableness of the [department’s]
efforts are judged according to the circumstances of each case.” (Robin V. v. Superior
Court (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 1158, 1164.) “To support a finding reasonable services
were offered or provided, ‘the record should show that the supervising agency identified
the problems leading to the loss of custody, offered services designed to remedy those
problems, maintained reasonable contact with the parents during the course of the service
plan, and made reasonable efforts to assist the parents in areas where compliance proved
difficult .…’ [Citation.] ‘The standard is not whether the services provided were the best
that might be provided in an ideal world, but whether the services were reasonable under
the circumstances.’ ” (Tracy J. v. Superior Court, supra, 202 Cal.App.4th 1415, 1426.)
       We review for substantial evidence a court’s factual findings supporting an order
terminating reunification services at a six-month review hearing. (Kevin R. v. Superior
Court (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 676, 688.) Under this standard, “we review the record in
the light most favorable to the court’s determinations and draw all reasonable inferences
from the evidence to support the findings and orders. [Citation.] ‘We do not reweigh the
evidence or exercise independent judgment, but merely determine if there are sufficient
facts to support the findings of the trial court.’ ” (Id. at pp. 688–689.) When examining
the evidence supporting the trial court’s findings, we “bear in mind that clear and
convincing evidence was required in the trial court.” (T.J. v. Superior Court (2018) 21
Cal.App.5th 1229, 1239.)

                                            10.
Substantial Evidence Supports the Juvenile Court’s Reasonable Services Finding
       According to the record, father was incarcerated intermittently from September 22,
2020, to March 9, 2021. The department provided him referrals for anger management
classes, parenting classes, a mental health assessment and random drug testing at the time
of the dispositional hearing when he was in county jail. After his release on March 9,
2021, social workers attempted to engage him in services 16 times from March 15 to
August 9, 2021. Those attempts included having him sign referrals and releases of
information, providing him information and documents for services, and reviewing the
case plan objectives. However, father was not cooperative. He claimed he completed a
parenting class while in jail, however, the printout of his answers indicated he gave little
thought to his responses and simply gave an answer for the sake of obtaining a certificate
of completion. When the social worker pointed out his answers were not responsive, he
told her she was not qualified to evaluate his answers. Further, because father refused to
sign a release of information, the department was unable to confirm he completed any of
the services required. Contrary to his claims, father’s failure to complete his
court-ordered services was not for lack of referrals or communication from the
department.
       Father contends the department led him to believe that the classes he completed in
jail would satisfy his services plan requirements. Yet he testified at the contested
six-month review hearing that no one, not the department nor the juvenile court, ever told
him that the classes he completed in jail would suffice. He had from his release in
March 2021 until the contested hearing in November 2021 to cooperate with the
department and engage in the department-approved services. Instead, father chose to
complete classes on his own, refused to engage with social workers, and then faulted the
department when his efforts failed. The record simply does not support his assertion the
department misled him into believing the classes he completed in jail met its
requirements.

                                             11.
       Finally, father’s claim the department prevented him from drug testing by not
giving him sufficient notice is also unfounded. Father was unable to test because the
testing facility required proper identification, which he did not have and was unable to
obtain. He was unable to obtain identification, he testified, because he was in custody
and unable to make his scheduled appointment to get it.
       We conclude substantial evidence supports the juvenile court’s finding father was
provided reasonable reunification services and affirm its orders terminating his
reunification services and setting a section 366.26 hearing.
                                     DISPOSITION
       The petition for extraordinary writ is denied. This opinion is final forthwith as to
this court pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.490(b)(2)(A).

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