Court Opinion

ID: 4565006
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-12 00:02:15.1448+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:35:26.936861
License: Public Domain

Filed 9/11/20 In re M.S. CA1/2
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or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

                                      FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                   DIVISION TWO

 In re M.S., a Person Coming Under
 the Juvenile Court Law.

 HUMBOLDT COUNTY
 DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL
 SERVICES,
                                                                        A158842
             Plaintiff and Respondent,
 v.                                                                     (Humboldt County
                                                                        Super. Ct. No. JV170220)
 W.W.,
             Defendant and Appellant.

         W.W. (mother) and V.W. (father) appeal an order terminating parental
rights with respect to their now four-year-old daughter, M.S. Mother
contends the juvenile court committed numerous errors under the Indian
Child Welfare Act (“ICWA”) (25 U.S.C. § 1902), beginning very early in the
case and continuing for 30 months until the case reached the termination
stage. Then, she contends, additional ICWA-related errors were made at the
Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.261 hearing pertaining to M.S.’s

       All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions
         1

Code unless otherwise stated.

                                                               1
status as an Indian child under the ICWA and pertaining to efforts to enroll
her in the tribe. The collective impact of these errors, she contends, is that
they interfered with what she describes as the “concurrent jurisdiction” of the
Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation over the child. Father has filed a brief joining in her
arguments.
       Many of the claimed errors the parents seek to raise are not cognizable
on appeal from the order terminating parental rights. The rest were
harmless. We affirm.
                               BACKGROUND
       A. First ICWA Notice to the Tribe at the Outset of This Case in
          November 2016, and Proceedings Thereafter
       These proceedings were initiated in Santa Clara County on
November 2, 2016, when M.S. was 10 months old, after local police took the
baby into emergency protective custody upon finding her living in squalid
conditions in a car with her parents who were abusing drugs and neglecting
her.
       Based on an interview with mother at the time M.S. was initially
detained, the petition alleged M.S. “may have Indian ancestry” and “is or may
be a member of or eligible for membership” in two tribes, one of which was
the Tolowa Tribe (“the Tribe”). Mother executed a Parental Notification of
Indian Status (Judicial Council Form ICWA-020) stating she is or might be a
member of those tribes.
       On November 18, 2016, the Santa Clara Department of Family and
Children’s Services (DFCS) mailed notice of these proceedings to the Tolowa
Tribe using Judicial Council Form ICWA-030 (“Notice of Child Custody
Proceeding For Indian Child”), which included notice of the upcoming

                                       2
jurisdiction/disposition hearing.2 Mother concedes this ICWA notice was
proper.
      The Tribe responded to the ICWA notice on November 28, 2016, as
follows: “According to our enrollment records along with the information
provided, [M.S.] [date of birth omitted], is not enrolled with the Tolowa Dee-
ni’ Nation. Her mother [W.W.] is not enrolled with the Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation.
[¶] Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation reserves the right to intervene in this case. Feel free
to contact me at the above numbers should you have any questions or require
further information.” (Italics added.)
      At the contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing, which concluded on
December 20, 2016, the Santa Clara County juvenile court sustained the
allegations of the petition (as amended), declared M.S. a dependent of the
court and ordered reunification services.
      At a subsequent review hearing on March 14, 2017, the Santa Clara
County juvenile court made a finding that “ICWA does not apply.”3 The
finding was predicated on a representation in a status report previously filed
by DFCS on December 20, 2016, that attached a copy of the Tribe’s response
and indicated based on it that M.S. was not “ICWA eligible.”
      Despite that ICWA finding, Santa Clara County child welfare
authorities continued their efforts to determine whether M.S. is an Indian
child, and also learned mother was attempting to gain recognition as a
member of the Tribe. As later described in a status review report, on

      2 The relatives identified in the November 18, 2016 ICWA notice as
having tribal ancestry were mother, mother’s biological mother, one of her
biological grandmothers, and another named relative of unspecified
relationship.
      3 That finding would be incorporated into numerous court orders over
the course of the case.

                                         3
April 27, 2017, the girlfriend of mother’s maternal grandfather (Kerri K.)
reported that “the tribes that [mother] has ancestry in are from Yurok
(Clamath, [sic] CA)[4] and Tolowa (Smith River, CA). [Mother’s] biological
mom has [sic][mother’s] birth certificate to the tribes and is waiting for
approval from their respective councils on the matter of recognizing [mother]
as a member of the tribes.” Over the course of May and June, the Agency
attempted to make contact with mother’s biological mother and her
(unspecified) maternal great aunt but was unable to do so because mother
could not locate either of them.5
         Several months later, in August 2017, M.S. was returned to her
mother’s custody with family maintenance services, and on October 2, 2017,
the matter was transferred to Humboldt County because mother had moved
there.
         On May 31, 2018, M.S., now two and a half, was taken into protective
custody again after multiple referrals she was living in unsafe, unsanitary
conditions with both parents who were again abusing drugs and living
together, itinerantly in various squalid locations. The Humboldt County

      It was subsequently determined that M.S. is not eligible for
         4

membership in the Yurok Tribe, and no issue about that is raised here.
        On May 17, a social worker asked mother to provide contact
         5

information for her biological mother and her great aunt, but mother said the
latter had no phone number and that she (mother) usually initiates contact
through a friend. Mother told the social worker she would provide the social
worker’s phone number to her own mother and also would get the aunt’s
contact information. But about two weeks later, on May 31, mother reported
she was “unable to obtain contact information from [sic] her great aunt” and
had not been able to contact her mother. On June 22, the social worker
checked in again with mother to inquire about her progress in obtaining
contact information for her mother and great aunt, and again mother had not
yet been able to contact her mother or get her great aunt’s contact
information.

                                        4
Department of Health & Human Services, (Department) filed a supplemental
petition under section 387 on June 4, 2018, and it was sustained (as
amended) after a contested jurisdiction hearing on November 6, 2018, with
all prior orders ordered to remain in effect.
      In August 2018, a few months after M.S. was detained the second time,
she was placed with a paternal relative (Wendy) in Fairfield, California who
had previously cared for her after her initial removal, and with whom M.S.
would continue to live for the duration of these proceedings.
      On April 19, 2019, at a contested disposition hearing on the section 387
petition, the juvenile court terminated reunification services and set the case
for a permanency plan hearing under section 366.26 on August 19, 2019, with
a prehearing conference on July 23 for receipt of the Department’s report. By
this juncture, the case had been in the system for 28 months and the juvenile
court determined, among other things, there was no statutory basis for
extending further reunification services.
      Mother challenged the order by petition for extraordinary writ, which
we denied on the merits in an opinion filed July 25, 2019. Mother
acknowledges, “no ICWA claim was raised in [her] writ petition.”
      B. Second ICWA Notice in June 2019 and Proceedings
         Thereafter
      After the juvenile court had terminated reunification services and set
the case for a section 366.26 hearing, the Department obtained new
information about M.S.’s tribal ancestry and her potential eligibility for
enrollment in the Tribe which culminated in sending a second ICWA notice to
the Tribe.
      On May 7, 2019, the maternal grandfather’s girlfriend (Kerri K., who is
also sometimes referred to in the record as his partner) emailed the social
worker to report that “I received an enrollment application from the Tolowa

                                        5
Dee-ni’ Nation for our granddaughter, [M.S.]. It requires an original birth
certificate, a copy of her Social Security Card, a family tree, and the
application form. [Mother] is aware of this.”
      Then on May 15, mother emailed the social worker (on the advice of
counsel) that “I believe I am eligible for enrollment with the Tolowat [sic]
Tribe and am investigating [M.S.’s] eligibility for enrollment as well,” and
asked the social worker to contact the Tribe’s social worker “as quickly . . . as
possible” because “I believe that she needs [M.S.’s] social security number.”
The social worker responded, asking if she had any “new information to
provide so the Department can enquire about tribal status.” He also
informed mother how to get a copy of M.S.’s birth certificate as well as her
social security card which he also was in the process of requesting. Mother
asked to “set up an appointment asap to come in . . . and fill out icwa
paperwork,” noting “[t]his is time sensitive.” The social worker offered to
meet, or suggested mother instead could provide him with a family tree of her
Indian ancestry, including full names, dates of birth, tribal affiliation and
last known addresses for each person.
      Mother’s counsel emailed the social worker on May 23, asking what
was being done “regarding ICWA,” to which he responded by asking for any
“new or additional information that was not provided to Santa Clara,” and
offering to “update[e] the ICWA 030 [notice] if there is.”
      On June 6, mother filed an ICWA-020 Parental Notification of Indian
Status indicating that a “maternal great uncle and children” are or were
members of the Tolowa Tribe. Accompanying the notice was information that
her own mother had a tribal membership or enrollment number, “but we do
not know it.” For the first time, she also provided the names of three cousins
who were associated with the Tribe, and disclosed that both she and her

                                        6
mother had received medical treatment on “many” occasions from the United
Indian Health Services.
      Up to this point, the Department had consistently taken the position in
its court filings that ICWA had been found inapplicable on March 14, 2017,
and no new information had been received.
      On June 14, 2019, the Department sent a second ICWA notice to the
Tribe (again, using Judicial Council Form ICWA-030). It set forth the new
information mother had provided, included a copy of M.S.’s birth certificate
as well as the supplemental section 387 petition, and gave notice of the
upcoming section 366.26 pre-hearing conference on calendar for July 23.
      The Tribe responded to the second ICWA notice eleven days later, on
June 25, this time expressing an intent to participate in the case. It wrote:
“According to our enrollment records, [M.S.] is not enrolled with the Tolowa
Dee-ni’ Nation. However, she is eligible to apply for enrollment. This is an
ICWA case. [¶] The Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation reserves the right to intervene in
this case. A notice of intervention will be forthcoming. Please forward all
case information to our office at the above address. Feel free to contact me at
the above numbers should you have any questions or require further
information.” (Italics added.)
      The Department took immediate steps over the following month to
respond to this new information. On July 2, it reported to the juvenile court
that M.S. “has been found eligible for enrollment in the [Tribe]. The Indian
Child Welfare Act applies in this case and an expert’s testimony is required.”
It retained an Indian expert, was granted court approval to share the juvenile
court file and would later retain a second Indian expert. On July 10, the
Department gave the Tribe notice of the section 366.26 hearing, on calendar
for August 19, 2019. The Department also had multiple contacts with the

                                       7
Tribe in early July to discuss the case, inquire about the process for getting
M.S. enrolled in the Tribe, and offer its assistance and documentation to
facilitate that process. In addition, the Department coordinated with M.S.’s
aunt Wendy to engage M.S. in Native American cultural activities, including
local pow wows, and to facilitate her use of Native American health services
based upon proof of her eligibility for enrollment.
      The Tribe’s social worker told the Department in these discussions that
the Tribe had determined M.S.’s eligibility for enrollment based on the
certified degree of Indian blood from mother and the fact that mother’s
brother is an enrolled member. She also relayed that enrollment happens
once a year, and the next enrollment period was in approximately six months,
in May 2020. She said mother had picked up the enrollment packet and
would need birth certificates, a social security card, and a copy of the certified
degree of Indian blood paperwork.
      Thereafter, on July 17, mother filed a section 388 petition asserting
that M.S. is an Indian child and ICWA applies. She asked to vacate the order
terminating reunification services and to “[r]e-open the case from jurisdiction
and proceed according to the heightened burdens of proof” under ICWA,
and/or return M.S. to her custody, asserting that the Department should
have made active efforts to reunify her with M.S. The petition was set for a
hearing on July 26 to determine whether an evidentiary hearing would be
ordered. She later amended the petition to request the court terminate its
jurisdiction and return M.S. to her because of changed circumstances
unrelated to M.S.’s Indian ancestry (i.e., that mother was no longer using
drugs, had a stable job and a home), and eventually her amended petition
was consolidated for hearing at the same time as the permanency planning
hearing.

                                        8
      At the pre-hearing conference on July 23, 2019, the Tribe appeared
through counsel. It raised no objections, did not assert M.S. is a Tribe
member, and expressed no intention to assert (or not assert) tribal
jurisdiction over the case. All the Tribe’s counsel said was that the
“discovery” provided to the Tribe by the Department “indicate[s] that the
child may be an Indian child. So, I do believe that the Court should go
through the further inquiry and due diligence process in this case [¶] . . . at a
minimum.” (Italics added.) The juvenile court agreed, and said that the
ICWA issues that had been raised by mother would need to be addressed, and
that “we should be complying with the additional requirements of the Act”
given “where we are at this point.”
      The Tribe made no further appearances in the case.
      According to a report filed some months later by the Department, on
July 25, 2019, the Tribe’s attorney reported to the involved parties stating,
‘The Tribe will participate in this case to ensure that the child’s best interests
are met, including but not limited to, the right to maintain a connection with
the Tribe. Since the Tribe is participating, the Tribe will not be taking a
position on the permanency plan nor the County’s proposed ICWA expert.”
      At a pre-trial hearing on August 6, 2019, there were informal reports
the Tribe did not intend to participate formally in the case. The minor’s
counsel, who had been in contact with the Tribe’s attorney, reported that the
Tribe was “not formally intervening, although they have indicated to me that
they continue to take the position of agreeing from intervening [sic] and will
not be submitting any recommendations.” She also reported that although
the Tribe had indicated some interest in doing a home visit it no longer
intended to do one, because it considered M.S.’s current placement to be
appropriate as it was with a “tribally-defined family member.” M.S.’s counsel

                                        9
also proposed that she be designated as a holder of M.S.’s birth certificate “so
that we can facilitate enrollment, if and when Mother does enroll next year.”
The juvenile court also believed the Tribe did not intend to appear. It
observed that the Tribe’s attorney “did indicate on the last date[6] that she
would no longer be appearing in the matter and . . . I think she did say they
were not intervening and they weren’t appearing in the matter any further.
[Counsel for the Tribe] made those comments, personally.”
      Thereafter, in August 2019, the Tribe executed a “Cultural Agreement”
with M.S.’s aunt Wendy. The agreement, which does not specify whether
M.S. is a member of the Tribe, recites that M.S. is “eligible to enroll in the
Tribe because she is a descendent of the Tribe but is not promised enrollment
because enrollment is a political process.” The agreement’s purpose was to
“keep [M.S.] connected with the Tribe’s social and cultural traditions
regardless of [her] enrollment status,” and the parties acknowledged that
“preservation of [M.S.’s] cultural and social identity and connection to the
Tribe are in [her] best interest.” The parties agreed to “make active efforts to
facilitate cultural connections and visitation” including attendance at the
Tribe’s annual event (“Dee-ni’ Day”), and to have communications on a
quarterly basis with “the Tribe’s ICWA department” about M.S.’s cultural,
social and educational growth.
      The Department filed three reports before the section 366.26 hearing,
and served all three on the Tribe: its main report (entitled, “366.26 WIC
Report”) which recommended terminating parental rights and selecting

      6 There had been a previous hearing on July 26, 2019, at which the
court calendared mother’s section 388 petition for an August 19, 2019
hearing. The record does not include a hearing transcript but the clerk’s
minutes do not indicate an appearance by the Tribe’s counsel.

                                       10
adoption as the permanent plan, the adoption assessment and a written
report by ICWA-qualified Indian expert, Angela Sundberg.
      The Department reported that M.S.’s paternal aunt Wendy wanted to
provide her with a permanent home and was in the process of working with
its adoptions unit.
      The reports also touched on the Tribe’s continued input into the case.
According to the section 366.26 report, the Department had “reached out to
the [Tribe] to discuss their position on adoption, tribal customary adoption, or
their preferred permanent plan” and additional information about the Tribe’s
position would be provided when received. The adoption assessment report
noted that the Tribe’s attorney “will continue to work with the Tribe in order
to continually assess what is in the best interest of [M.S.]” It also noted that
the Tribe “has declined to state a position on permanency for [M.S.]” but that
M.S.’s paternal cousin “understands the importance of keeping [M.S.]
connected to her ancestral heritage, and is willing to do so,” and that “[i]f [the
Tribe] objects to adoption as it will interfere with the child’s connection to the
[T]ribe or ability to enroll, then the adoptions unit will support the [T]ribe’s
request for an alternative permanent plan.” The Department’s ICWA expert,
Ms. Sundberg, opined in her report (among other things) that she had spoken
with the Tribe and reported that M.S. was “placed in an ICWA approved
placement in which the [Tribe] approves” and the Tribe “is in agreement with
the department of the recommendation of the adoption of [M.S.] with the
current care provider.” She also expressed the opinion that ICWA applies to
the case, that active efforts had been made to prevent the breakup of the
family, and that continued custody by the parents was likely to result in
serious emotional or physical damage to M.S.

                                        11
      The combined hearing under section 366.26 and on mother’s
section 388 petition took place over four days, beginning on
September 20, 2019, and concluding on October 11, 2019. The only two
witnesses were mother and Ms. Sundberg.
      The juvenile court took the matter under submission, and on
November 4, 2019, it terminated parental rights orally on the record, and it
entered a 13-page written ruling containing a statement of findings in
support of the order and also denying mother’s section 388 petition.
      In its written findings, the court concluded ICWA does not apply, but in
an “abundance of caution,” the court applied ICWA’s substantive standards
anyway regarding the showing that must be made to terminate parental
rights over an Indian child, and it found that they had been satisfied
(including proof beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the testimony of a
qualified expert witness, that continued custody by the parent is likely to
result in serious emotional or physical damage, and that active reunification
efforts had been undertaken). It also found that the Tribe supported the
Department’s recommendation, and that its rights had been fully protected in
the proceeding.
      Thereafter, on November 7, 2010, the court entered a written order
terminating parental rights.
      Both parents have timely appealed the order terminating parental
rights, and mother also has appealed the denial of her section 388 petition.
                       SUMMARY OF THE ISSUES
      Mother acknowledges her ability to frame the issues on appeal is
“somewhat problematic” given what she contends is an unusual set of
circumstances. And for our part, given the breadth and scope of her appeal,
in some instances we have trouble discerning the precise ruling(s) by the

                                      12
juvenile court she challenges. We therefore start by identifying the issues as
we understand them.
      First, mother contends that, “The child welfare services agencies of
Santa Clara and Humboldt Counties failed to recognize tribal concurrent
jurisdiction, and that M.S. was an Indian child, when it was first asserted.”
This claim of error encompasses two subsidiary points: that “[i]n effect, the
error was equivalent to a complete failure of notice,” and “[t]he error
wrongfully resulted in the dependency action being adjudicated for over 30
months without the concurrent jurisdiction of the [Tribe].” She also asserts
“[t]he failure to recognize ICWA’s concurrent jurisdiction at the outset of the
case prejudiced the entire proceedings.” She clarifies that “the error was not
a failure of ICWA ‘notice’ per se, but a failure by the child welfare agencies to
recognize that notice had been successful, thereby depriving that notice of
legal fruition, so to speak.” The result, she says, is that for much of the case
the Tribe “was deprived of its concurrent jurisdiction and [mother] was
deprived of the ICWA legal standards applicable to such jurisdiction.”
      This first set of arguments appears to challenge principally two rulings:
(a) the December 20, 2016 jurisdiction/disposition order, because mother says
the Tribe should have been given notice of the jurisdictional hearing yet was
not; and (b) the juvenile court’s determination on March 14, 2017, that ICWA
did not apply, which she contends was erroneous and based on a mistaken
interpretation of the Tribe’s response to the first ICWA notice, and which
then became the basis for a series of “factually incorrect orders” thereafter
that, collectively, “barred the rightful concurrent jurisdiction” of the Tribe for
30 months, deprived mother and M.S. of “expeditious enrollment in the
[Tribe]” and of “the imposition of the heightened standards applicable in an
ICWA dependency action during the 30 months of error.”

                                        13
      Second, she contends “[t]he failure of notice and lack of concurrent
jurisdiction was prejudicial error.” This encompasses subsidiary arguments
that, under former rule 5.484 of the Rules of Court, the Department “failed to
ensure M.S. was enrolled with [the Tribe]” before terminating parental
rights, and failed to provide active efforts to secure tribal membership for
M.S. These arguments are directed to the court’s order terminating parental
rights.
      Third, and finally, she argues the juvenile court erred in finding at the
section 366.26 hearing that M.S. is not an Indian child. She argues the
juvenile court made inconsistent findings about this issue which requires
reversal for clarification, and also erred to the extent it concluded M.S. is not
an Indian child and ICWA does not apply.
      As a remedy, mother asks us to reverse “the orders of the juvenile
court” and remand the case to the jurisdiction and/or disposition stage.
Alternatively, she asks for reversal of the order terminating parental rights
and a limited remand with directions that active efforts be employed to enroll
M.S. and mother in the Tribe, followed by a new section 366.26 hearing and
determination.
      In addressing these contentions, it is helpful to bear in mind what is
not at issue. Mother does not challenge the adequacy of either of the two
ICWA notices sent to the Tribe. On the contrary, she concedes in her reply
brief that the initial notice was “correct[].” She also has not challenged the
denial of her section 388 petition, despite the fact that she appealed that
ruling too. She has not briefed any arguments about the juvenile court’s
denial of her petition. We therefore agree with the Department which
asserts—without contradiction by mother—that she has forfeited her appeal
from that ruling.

                                       14
                                DISCUSSION
                                       I.
    The Only Errors Cognizable on Appeal Are Those Encompassed
            Within the Order Terminating Parental Rights.
      Although mother claims multiple ICWA errors were made “starting
early in the case” and continuing for 30 months, we cannot consider earlier
errors in this appeal. “ ‘[A]n unappealed disposition or postdisposition order
is final and binding and may not be attacked on an appeal from a later
appealable order.’ ” (Sara M. v. Superior Court (2005) 36 Cal. 4th 998, 1018;
see, e.g., In re Meranda P. (1997) 56 Cal. App. 4th 1143, 1150-1160 [on appeal
from order terminating parental rights, claim that entire dependency case
was “defective from its inception” because mother was deprived of right to
counsel at multiple junctures up through 18-month review hearing held not
cognizable; “an appellate court in a dependency proceeding may not inquire
into the merits of a prior final appealable order on an appeal from a later
appealable order”].) Here, parents have appealed only the court’s
November 4, 2019 order terminating parental rights, and so all we have
jurisdiction to decide is whether any ICWA error occurred at the time of the
section 366.26 hearing. We lack jurisdiction to decide whether the any
earlier, unappealed orders were infected by ICWA error.7 (See In re
Isaiah W. (2016) 1 Cal. 5th 1, 10 (Isaiah W.) [on appeal from order
terminating parental rights, mother cannot challenge juvenile court’s earlier
finding in dispositional order that ICWA is inapplicable but may challenge

      7 Mother also concedes that no ICWA claim was asserted in her writ
petition challenging the April 20, 2019 order setting the section 366.26
hearing. This precludes our review of that order as well. (See § 366.26,
subds. (l)(1), (2); In re Jesse W. (2001) 93 Cal. App. 4th 349, 356.)

                                      15
court’s current finding to that effect subsumed within order terminating
parental rights].)
      Mother argues she has not “waived” or “forfeited” review of earlier
rulings and that, under Isaiah W., supra, 1 Cal. 5th 1, the court’s continuing
duty to inquire whether M.S. is an Indian child renders “the error” cognizable
in this appeal. But the problem here is not whether mother has adequately
preserved any ICWA issue for appellate review (by raising the issue below);
we agree that her failure to raise a question of law as to ICWA’s applicability
would not preclude us from considering the issue in a duly perfected appeal.
(See Isaiah W., at p. 9.) The problem is one of appellate jurisdiction.
      In contending that earlier errors are reviewable, mother reads
Isaiah W. too broadly. The Supreme Court held an ICWA notice error made
at the section 366.26 hearing is reviewable on appeal from the order
terminating parental rights notwithstanding a parent’s failure to appeal a
ruling earlier in the case as to ICWA’s inapplicability. The reason is because
a court’s duty under ICWA to inquire whether the child is an Indian child is
continuing, and so ICWA notice errors occurring at different stages of the
proceedings are distinct errors. (See Isaiah W., supra, 1 Cal.5th at pp. 10-11,
14-15.) The Supreme Court thus endorsed the majority view among the
courts of appeal that allow review of ICWA notice errors on appeal from an
order terminating parental rights (see Isaiah W., at p. 13), several of which
appellate decisions are cited by mother here.8 Isaiah W. expressly

      8  See Dwayne P. v. Superior Court (2002) 103 Cal. App. 4th 247, 258-260
[failure to appeal jurisdictional and dispositional order does not divest
appellate court of jurisdiction to review adequacy of ICWA notice on appeal
from order terminating parental rights]; In re Marinna J. (2001)
90 Cal.App.4th 731,737-739 [error in failing to give ICWA notice to three
tribes held cognizable on appeal from order terminating parental rights
notwithstanding parents’ failure to appeal dispositional order or raise issue

                                       16
recognized, though, that a parent cannot challenge an ICWA ruling made at
the dispositional hearing on appeal of an order terminating parental rights
because of basic constraints on our appellate jurisdiction. (See Isaiah W., at
p. 10.) Decisions by the courts of appeal are in accord, both pre- and post-
Isaiah W., and the Supreme Court in Isaiah W. did not discuss or call into
question any of them. (See, e.g., In re J.L. (2017) 10 Cal. App. 5th 913, 917,
fn. 4 [on appeal from order terminating parental rights, findings made at
detention hearing that ICWA is inapplicable not reviewable, citing
Isaiah W.]; In re Jonathon S. (2005) 129 Cal. App. 4th 334, 340 [on appeal
from order terminating parental rights, court of appeal lacks jurisdiction to
reverse earlier orders for ICWA notice error]; In re H.G. (2015) 234
Cal. App. 4th 906, 909, fn. 3 [same]; see also In re A.M. (2020) 47 Cal. App. 5th
303, 320 [on appeal from order terminating parental rights, claims of ICWA
errors not construed as applying to ICWA findings made at earlier hearings].)
      Our inquiry does not stop there, however. As this court has previously
explained, the rule precluding appellate review of prior unappealed, final
appealable orders entered in a dependency case (sometimes referred to as a
rule of “waiver”) “will [not] be enforced [if] due process forbids it.” (In re
Janee J. (1999) 74 Cal. App. 4th 198, 208.) Among other things, this requires
a showing of “some defect that fundamentally undermined the statutory
scheme so that the parent would have been kept from availing himself or
herself of the protections afforded by the scheme as a whole.” (Id. at p. 208,
italics added.)

below]; see also In re Nikki R. (2003) 106 Cal. App. 4th 844, 848-849 [claim
that ICWA notice was defective held cognizable on appeal from order
terminating parental rights].

                                        17
       Attempting to bring herself within this exception, mother argues it was
impossible to have raised these ICWA issues earlier in the case, because “no
party[] was aware of the existence of the November 28, 2016 [Tribe] letter
until after the setting of the section 366.26 hearing.” (That was the Tribe’s
response to the initial ICWA notice stating that neither mother nor the child
were enrolled but that the Tribe was reserving its right to intervene.) We are
not persuaded. Mother does not provide any citation to the record for her
assertion that “no party was aware of the existence” of the letter until after
the section 366.26 hearing was scheduled. For example, mother made no
such claim in her section 388 petition filed in July 2019. Regardless whether
the Agency correctly or incorrectly characterized the substance of that letter
in its December 20, 2016 status report where it indicated M.S. was not
eligible for tribal membership (an issue we need not decide), a copy of the
Tribe’s letter was attached to that report, for all who cared to see and read
it.9

       9 Although the record does not include a proof of service accompanying
the December 20, 2016 report, parents do not claim on appeal they were not
timely and properly served with the December 20, 2016 report and its
attachments. We also find no indication in the record parents ever objected
below on or before March 14, 2017, when the Santa Clara County juvenile
court first found that ICWA did not apply, that neither they nor their counsel
had been served with the attachments to the December 20, 2016 report,
which would have cured any possible problem contemporaneously. In
addition, the clerk’s minutes state that the December 20, 2016 report was
admitted into evidence at the combined jurisdiction/disposition hearing held
that same date, with both parents and their counsel present; that obviously
would have been the occasion to speak up if the attachments were missing.
Yet, there is no indication anybody did. On the contrary, a contested hearing
was not held, both parents waived advisement of their rights, and submitted
on the petition.

                                       18
      Mother likens this case to In re Gerardo A. (2004) 119 Cal. App. 4th 988,
where an ICWA finding made at the disposition hearing was held to be
cognizable on appeal from an order terminating parental rights because due
process required it. In Gerardo A., the appealing father was incarcerated, his
whereabouts had been unknown until after mother’s reunification efforts had
failed, and he did not receive notice of the dependency proceedings or
mother’s claim of Indian ancestry until the case had reached the permanency
planning stage. (Id. at p. 991.) In those circumstances, the court of appeal
held, “this appeal represents the first opportunity for appellant to raise the
issue of ICWA compliance. To accept [that the issue is not reviewable] would
be to violate appellant’s due process rights.” (Id. at p. 993.) But “[n]othing of
the kind occurred here.” (In re Jesse W., supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 360.)
      We cannot turn the clock back to the beginning of this case to decide
whether errors were made at the time of jurisdiction, disposition or
thereafter. We have jurisdiction to address only those claims pertaining to
the juvenile court’s current ICWA findings, made at the time it terminated
parental rights. (See Isaiah W., supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 10.)
      A second reason mother’s contentions about earlier ICWA errors are
not cognizable is because there is nothing we could do to rectify them.
Restoring this case to the jurisdiction/disposition stage would be pointless.
“When no effective relief can be granted, an appeal is moot . . . .” (In re
Jessica K. (2000) 79 Cal. App. 4th 1313, 1315.) The Department has explained
this problem, and mother does not address or attempt to refute it. Even if we
were to reverse the jurisdiction and disposition orders (assuming we had
jurisdiction to do so), the juvenile court could not return M.S. to parental
custody, because it has found beyond a reasonable doubt that doing so is
likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage to M.S and that

                                       19
finding is unchallenged in this appeal. And yet, the parents are precluded
from receiving any further reunification services. As noted in our prior
opinion, when the juvenile court terminated reunification services in
April 2019, it ruled there was no statutory basis for extending reunification
services any further given how long the case had been pending (28 months),
and that ruling was and remains entirely unchallenged. For these reasons,
there is no effective relief we could grant even we concluded the juvenile
court erred at one or more junctures before it terminated parental rights.
(See ibid. [dismissing appeal from denial of section 388 petition; reversal
“would be futile” since “mother’s parental rights cannot be restored even were
we to agree with mother” that juvenile court erred].)
                                      II.
              The Juvenile Court Did Not Prejudicially Err
                     in Terminating Parental Rights.
      This brings us, then, to the section 366.26 hearing. To briefly recap,
mother argues the juvenile court erred at the termination hearing in finding
that M.S. is not an Indian child and concluding that ICWA does not apply,
and also made inconsistent and conflicting findings as to M.S.’s status as an
Indian child. And, captioned under a “prejudicial error” analysis of rulings
made earlier in the case that we have concluded are not reviewable here (i.e.,
the “fail[ure] to recognize that the [Tribe] had intervened in the case from the
time of jurisdiction”), she also argues the order terminating parental rights is
erroneous under former rule 5.484(c) of the California Rules of Court, because
active efforts were required to secure her and M.S.’s enrollment in the Tribe
before parental rights were terminated.
      We address these issues in turn.

                                       20
      A.    The Juvenile Court’s Findings As to ICWA’s Applicability
            and M.S.’s Status As an Indian Child
      The legal framework applicable under ICWA in dependency
proceedings is well-established. As summarized by our Supreme Court: “In
any given case, ICWA applies or not depending on whether the child who is
the subject of the custody proceeding is an Indian child. Congress defined
‘Indian child’ for these purposes to mean ‘any unmarried person who is under
age eighteen and is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is eligible for
membership in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an
Indian tribe.’ (25 U.S.C. § 1903(4).) When applicable, ICWA imposes specific
requirements on child custody proceedings in state court. Among other
things, when ‘the court knows or has reason to know that an Indian child is
involved,’ the party seeking to remove the Indian child from the custody of its
parent or Indian custodian, or to terminate parental rights, must ‘notify the
parent or Indian custodian and the Indian child’s tribe . . . of the pending
proceedings and of their right of intervention.’ (25 U.S.C. § 1912(a).) If the
parent, Indian custodian or tribe cannot be determined, notice must be given
to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). (Ibid.) The tribe may intervene ‘at any
point in the proceeding.’ (Id., § 1911(c).) Under certain circumstances, the
court must ‘transfer such proceeding to the jurisdiction of the tribe.’ (Id.,
subd. (b).) If the proceeding is not transferred, the party seeking to remove
an Indian child must ‘satisfy the court that active efforts have been made to
provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent
the breakup of the Indian family and that these efforts have proved
unsuccessful.’ (Id., § 1912(d).) The court may not enter an order removing an
Indian child ‘in the absence of a determination, supported by clear and
convincing evidence, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that

                                       21
the continued custody of the child by the parent or Indian custodian is likely
to result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child.’ (Id., subd. (e).)
Similarly, an order terminating parental rights requires ‘a determination,
supported by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt,’ that continued custody by
the parent or Indian custodian is likely to result in such damage. (Id.,
subd. (f).) Any placement of an Indian child must follow the preferences set
out in ICWA. (Id., § 1915.) Finally, ICWA authorizes collateral attacks:
When a court removes an Indian child or terminates parental rights in
violation of ICWA, ‘any parent or Indian custodian from whose custody such
child was removed, and the Indian child’s tribe may petition any court of
competent jurisdiction to invalidate such action. . . .’ (Id., § 1914).” (In re
Abbigail A. (2016) 1 Cal. 5th 83, 90-91 (Abbigail A.).) California has
incorporated ICWA requirements into statutory law, and “provides, among
other things, that ‘Indian child’ and ICWA’s other critical terms ‘shall be
defined as provided in [ICWA].’ ” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 224.1, subd. (a).)”
(Abbigail A., at p. 91.)
      Here, mother asserts the order terminating parental rights must be
reversed because the juvenile court made inconsistent findings as to M.S.’s
status as an Indian child and as to whether ICWA applies to this case, and
also erred to the extent its ruling may be construed as a finding that M.S. is
not an Indian child and that ICWA does not apply.
      The juvenile court made a variety of findings on these subjects. In its
written findings entered on November 4, 2019, the court ruled “ICWA does
not apply” because “mother and the child are not yet enrolled members of any
Indian tribe.” (Italics added.) Elsewhere in those findings, however, it said
“ICWA may apply.” (Italics added.) And “in an abundance of caution,” it
undertook the complete substantive analysis required by ICWA to terminate

                                        22
parental rights over an Indian child. Subsequently, in the JV-320 order
terminating parental rights filed on November 7, 2019, the juvenile court
checked boxes stating, “This case involves an Indian child,” (at items 4(b) and
8(b)) and again made the required ICWA findings.
      First, although we agree the court’s rulings as to M.S.’s status as an
Indian child and ICWA’s applicability are unclear and even inconsistent, any
error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Mother does not assert the
juvenile court violated ICWA in terminating parental rights. For example,
there is no argument the Tribe was not notified of the termination hearing (it
was). There is no argument the court failed to apply the appropriate legal
standards applicable to an Indian child when it terminated parental rights (it
did so). Right or wrong, the court’s legal conclusion as to whether M.S. is or
is not an Indian child, or whether ICWA applies, had no impact on the
outcome of the termination hearing. The juvenile court treated M.S. as an
Indian child from the moment the Department notified it of the Tribe’s
response to the second ICWA notice and asserted that “[t]he Indian Child
Welfare Act applies in this case.” (Italics added.) The juvenile court applied
the legal standards applicable to an Indian child at the termination hearing,
and there is no argument to the contrary.
      For these reasons, it is unnecessary to decide whether M.S. meets the
definition of an “Indian child.” (See 25 U.S.C. § 1903, subd. (4) [unmarried
person under age 18 who “is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is
eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a
member of an Indian tribe”]; § 224.1, subd. (a) [incorporating same].) We
have some doubts about the juvenile court’s finding that “ICWA does not
apply” because “mother and the child are not yet enrolled members of any
Indian tribe.” For one thing, only a tribe has authority to determine who is a

                                       23
member, courts do not, and mere evidence a child is not enrolled is not
determinative (see In re Isaiah W., supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 15; In re Breanna S.
(2017) 8 Cal. App. 5th 636, 654-655; In re K.P. (2015) 242 Cal. App. 4th 1063,
1071-1072; D.B. v. Superior Court (2009) 171 Cal. App. 4th 197, 207-208;
§224.2, subd. (h)); yet here, the parties have not directed us to anything in
the record that definitively reflects the Tribe’s position as to whether it
considers M.S. (or her mother) to be a member, despite their lack of
enrollment.10 Second, the juvenile court does not appear to have applied the
correct statutory criteria to decide whether ICWA applies.
      Resolution of M.S.’s status as an Indian child is governed by the
standards set forth in section 224.2 (entitled, “Determination whether child is
an Indian child; considerations; scope of inquiry; membership status”), a
statute that became effective on January 1, 2019, while these proceedings
were underway. Adopted as part of comprehensive revisions to conform state
law to the requirements of recent changes in federal ICWA regulations (see
In re M.W. (2020) 49 Cal. App. 5th 1034, 1042-1043), section 224.2 imposes
different requirements on courts and juvenile welfare authorities in
ascertaining a minor’s “Indian child” status depending on whether there is a
“reason to believe” a child is an Indian child or “reason to know” that. It
states that “[w]hen there is reason to know that the child is an Indian child,

      10 Mother argues the Tribe’s response to the second ICWA notice is
conclusive evidence of M.S.’s membership in the Tribe, but we do not read it
that way and the record as a whole is ambiguous. The Tribe’s response did
not state that M.S. is a member. It said she was “eligible to apply for
enrollment” and “[t]his is an ICWA case,” reserved the right to intervene, and
stated “[a] notice of intervention will be forthcoming.” When the Tribe
appeared, through counsel, at a subsequent hearing it made no assertion of
tribal membership and said M.S. “may be an Indian child.” (Italics added.)

                                       24
the court shall treat the child as an Indian child unless and until the court
determines on the record” pursuant to statutorily prescribed procedures “that
the child does not meet the definition of an Indian child” under state and
federal law. (§ 224.2, subd. (i)(1), italics added; see also id., subd. (d)
[defining “reason to know”].) By contrast, when there is only “reason to
believe” the child is an Indian child, section 224.2 requires further inquiry by
means of statutorily enumerated procedures, following which the court may
make a finding that ICWA does not apply if “proper and adequate further
inquiry and due diligence as required in this section have been conducted and
there is no reason to know whether the child is an Indian child.” (See id.,
subds. (e), (i)(2).)
       We express no opinion as to how section 224.2 applies in the
circumstances here. Although that statute applied to this case by the time of
the November 2019 termination hearing (see In re A.M. (2020)
47 Cal. App. 5th 303, 321; In re M.W., supra, 49 Cal.App.5th at p. 1044),
neither the parties nor the juvenile court proceeded under the standards it
prescribes in assessing M.S.’s status as an Indian child and ICWA’s
applicability, and on appeal the parties have not discussed the statute or
briefed its application to this record. We are mindful of the need for
expeditious resolution of dependency appeals, a policy that would be
thwarted were we to call for supplemental briefing concerning the impact of
section 224.2 on the juvenile court’s findings about ICWA’s applicability when
it can have no impact whatsoever on the court’s decision to terminate
parental rights.
       Accordingly, we neither affirm nor reverse the juvenile court’s findings
as to ICWA’s applicability because they are immaterial to the outcome of this

                                         25
appeal. We presume that in going forward, the parties and the juvenile court
will proceed according to the standards set forth in section 224.2.
      B.   The Department’s Efforts to Assist M.S. to Enroll in the
           Tribe.
      Next we come to mother’s arguments that the Department violated
former rule 5.484(c) of the California Rules of Court (“former rule 5.484(c)”),
because it did not take appropriate steps to help M.S. enroll in the Tribe.
      Former rule 5.484(c), in effect at the time of the termination hearing,
provided as follows:
      “Active efforts. [¶] In addition to any other required findings to place
an Indian child with someone other than a parent or Indian custodian, or to
terminate parental rights, the court must find that active efforts have been
made . . . to provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed
to prevent the breakup of the Indian family, and must find that these efforts
were unsuccessful.
      “(1) The court must consider whether active efforts were made in a
manner consistent with the prevailing social and cultural conditions and way
of life of the Indian child’s tribe.
      “(2) Efforts to provide services must include pursuit of any steps
necessary to secure tribal membership for a child if the child is eligible for
membership in a given tribe, as well as attempts to use the available
resources of extended family members, the tribe, tribal and other Indian
social service agencies, and individual Indian caregivers.”11 (former Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 5.484, reprinted at West Ann. Codes, Rules (2019 ed.),
italics added.)

      11Effective January 1, 2020, this rule has been renumbered without
change as rule 5.485(c)(3).

                                        26
      In upholding its validity, the Supreme Court interpreted former
rule 5.484(c) as applicable only to an Indian child. (See Abiggail A., supra,
1 Cal.5th at p. 96.) As so construed, the Supreme Court concluded it did not
conflict with either state or federal law. There was no question, the court
explained, that a juvenile court “may properly direct that steps be taken to
pursue tribal membership for a child who, while not a member of a tribe, is
already an Indian child to whom ICWA applies because he or she is both
eligible for membership and also the biological child of a member.” (Id. at
pp. 96-97, citing 25 U.S.C. § 1903(5) and § 224.1, subd. (a).)
      At the same time, however, the Supreme Court struck down a related
rule (former rule 5.482(c)) that required active efforts to secure tribal
membership for a non-Indian child who is eligible for tribal membership.
(See Abiggail A., supra, 1 Cal.5th at pp. 91-95.) The latter rule, the Supreme
Court observed, “invites unnecessary delay by requiring the court to make
efforts to secure tribal membership for children who are not Indian children,
apparently without regard to the family’s wishes, and to apply ICWA’s
requirements in cases involving children who are not and may never become
Indian children.” (Id. at pp. 95–96.) The Supreme Court held former
rule 5.482(c) was invalid, because it conflicted with state laws designed to
increase compliance with ICWA while leaving non-Indian children subject to
laws generally applicable in dependency proceedings.12 (See Abbigail A., at
pp. 92-93.)

      12  Former rule 5.482(c) was both invalidated by the Supreme Court in
Abbigail A. and repealed by the Judicial Council before this case began. (See
Amendments to the California Rules of Court adopted by the Judicial Council
on July 29, 2016, effective on Aug. 15, 2016.) Yet mother cites and relies on
former rule 5.482(c) too, as if it applies here. We are puzzled by this, but
suffice it to say it does not.

                                       27
      Accordingly, in this case, any duty on the part of the Department to
take steps to assist M.S. in securing enrollment in the Tribe turns entirely on
whether she is an Indian child. But, again, that is an issue we need not, and
do not, reach.
      Here, the juvenile court made a finding that active efforts had been
made to prevent the breakup of an Indian family. It made no express
findings under former rule 5.484, however, nor was it asked to do so. Mother
does not assert that such findings should have been made. Instead, she
appears to construe the court’s active efforts finding as encompassing an
implied finding that the Department complied with former rule 5.484(c). She
states: “Because of the department’s own notice error, they prejudicially
failed to use active efforts to enroll M.S., which undermines the juvenile
court’s finding when it terminated parental rights that the Department
provided active efforts under California Rules of Court, rule 5.484(c) to secure
tribal membership for the child.” (Fn. omitted.) But she then seemingly
contradicts herself when she asserts “the juvenile court was required, but
failed, to use the ‘active efforts’ standard to ensure [M.S.’s and mother’s]
enrollment prior to termination of parental rights.” (Italics added). However
we construe her arguments, she has not demonstrated any prejudicial error
under former rule 5.484(c) even assuming, without deciding, that M.S. is an
Indian child and therefore that former rule 5.484(c) applies at all.
      A finding the Department complied with its obligations to assist with
the tribal enrollment process is reviewed for substantial evidence. (In re C.B.
(2010) 190 Cal. App. 4th 102, 134 (In re C.B.).) Mother does not summarize
any of the evidence bearing on this issue, however, and so we could deem the
issue forfeited. An appellant who challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
must set forth “ ‘all material evidence on the point . . . . Failure to do so

                                        28
amounts to waiver of the alleged error . . . .” (Toigo v. Town of Ross (1998)
70 Cal. App. 4th 309, 317.)
      Even if we considered the issue, there is substantial evidence to
support the court’s implied finding that appropriate efforts in this regard
were undertaken. As soon as the Department received the Tribe’s response
and learned, for the first time, that M.S. was eligible to enroll, it immediately
began coordinating with both the Tribe and M.S.’s family to gather the
necessary documentation to complete M.S.’s enrollment application. Mother
does not explain why those efforts do not suffice. Her argument seems to be
that all of these steps should have taken place sooner. But we lack
jurisdiction to consider that question. (See In re C.B., supra, 190 Cal.App.4th
at p. 135 [contention under former rules 5.482 and 5.484 of Rules of Court
that active efforts to secure tribal membership were not undertaken earlier in
the proceedings not cognizable on appeal from order terminating parental
rights].)
      Finally, any violation of rule 5.854 was clearly harmless.13 Despite the
fact that M.S. was not an enrolled member of the Tribe, the juvenile court
treated M.S. as an Indian child and applied every substantive standard
applicable under ICWA before it terminated parental rights, the Tribe
concurred with the recommended disposition, and mother has not and cannot
show she would have obtained a result more favorable at the termination

      13  The error asserted here, being one of state law under the Rules of
Court, is subject to ordinary harmless error analysis. (See In re S.B. (2005)
130 Cal. App. 4th 1148, 1162 (In re S.B.) [“any failure to comply with a higher
state standard, above and beyond what the ICWA itself requires, must be
held harmless unless the appellant can show a reasonable probability that he
or she would have enjoyed a more favorable result in the absence of the
error”].)

                                       29
hearing had the Department taken additional active steps to assist M.S. to
seek enrollment in the Tribe.
                                       III.
                  The Tribe’s Rights Were Not Impaired.
      Finally, regardless of how the issues are framed, we reject mother’s
repeated assertions throughout her briefing that the Tribe’s “concurrent
jurisdiction” was violated, or that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to
proceed as it did when it terminated parental rights.14
      The Tribe was properly noticed of this case not once, but twice. And,
despite having stated its intention formally to intervene, it never did so.
Nevertheless, it formally appeared at one hearing, received notice of the
section 366.26 hearing, received all written reports, and concurred with the
Department’s recommendations. Had the Tribe desired to participate in this
case more actively or more fully than it did, including from the outset of this
case when it initially “reserved” its right to intervene, it could have done so.
Neither the parties nor the juvenile court ever “prevented” the tribe from
participating in these proceedings. And it needed no invitation to do so. Both
the Department and the juvenile court commendably proceeded with caution
in adjudicating this case from the moment an assertion of tribal eligibility
was made. There is simply no reason to conclude that the manner in which
the parties and the juvenile court interpreted the Tribe’s response to the first
ICWA notice in 2016 impeded the Tribe’s participation in this case or
impaired its sovereign rights in any way.

      14  Mother’s argument the juvenile court lacked fundamental
jurisdiction at the section 366.26 hearing is difficult to follow, but she
appears to retract it in her reply brief where she concedes “the jurisdiction
issue here was not fundamental jurisdiction over subject matter and the
parties without which the parties cannot proceed.”

                                       30
      Finally, even if there were some error vis à vis the Tribe’s rights (and
we see none), “[a]n ICWA notice violation may be held harmless when the
child’s tribe has actually participated in the proceedings.” (In re S.B., supra,
130 Cal.App.4th at p. 1162; see also In re Miracle M. (2008) 160 Cal. App. 4th
834, 846-847 [rule that defective ICWA notice is usually prejudicial “does not
apply once the tribes have appeared and not asked that any prior actions of
the juvenile court be invalidated”].) Obviously, in those circumstances, the
purpose of ICWA’s requirements have been served. That is certainly true
here too, where the assertion is that the Tribe was erroneously prevented
from exercising its sovereign rights in this case due to a mistake about the
meaning of its response to the first ICWA notice. Given the Tribe’s
participation in this case, albeit not by means of formal intervention, any
ICWA violations committed vis à vis the Tribe are harmless. (See In re S.B.,
at p. 1162, fn. 2 [claim that ICWA notice was inadequate “is moot and/or
harmless, because the Tribe did intervene and did participate below”].)
“Parents unable to reunify with their children have already caused the
children serious harm; the rules do not permit them to cause additional
unwarranted delay and hardship, without any showing whatsoever that the
interests protected by the ICWA are implicated in any way.”15 (In re
Rebecca R. (2006) 143 Cal. App. 4th 1426, 1431.)
                                DISPOSITION
      The orders terminating parental rights and denying mother’s
section 388 petition are affirmed.

      15 Mother’s contention that Rebecca R. and other cases expressing
similar views involve children of no known Indian ancestry, is a distinction
without a difference.

                                       31
                            STEWART, J.

We concur.

RICHMAN, Acting P.J.

MILLER, J.

In re M.S. (A158842)

                       32