Court Opinion

ID: 6495568
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-27 21:03:49.189562+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:45:49.282791
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/27/22 (see concurring opinion)

                                 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 GARRETT THEROLF,
                                                                   F083561
          Petitioner,
                                                         (Super. Ct. No. MJP018758)
                   v.

 THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MADERA                                    OPINION
 COUNTY,

          Respondent;

 MADERA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF
 SOCIAL SERVICES/CHILD WELFARE
 SERVICES,

          Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; in mandate. Thomas L. Bender, Judge.
        University of California at Irvine School of Law, Susan E. Seager and Jack Lerner
for Petitioner.
        No appearance for Respondent.
        Regina A. Garza, County Counsel, and Christopher B. Dorian, Deputy County
Counsel, for Real Party in Interest.
                                            -ooOoo-

                                   SEE CONCURRING OPINION
       Under Welfare and Institutions Code section 827, subdivision (a)(2) 1 (hereafter
section 827(a)(2) or § 827(a)(2)), the juvenile court is required to release to the public the
“juvenile case files … that pertain to a deceased child who was within the jurisdiction of
the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300” unless the juvenile court finds, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that release of the files would be detrimental to “another
child who is directly or indirectly connected to the juvenile case that is the subject of the
petition.” (§ 827(a)(2)(A).) To obtain a deceased child’s juvenile case files, a petition
must be filed and interested parties afforded an opportunity to file objections. (Ibid.) If
objections are filed, the juvenile court “shall set the matter for hearing” and thereafter
“render its decision” based on the petition, any objections, any reply, and the argument at
the hearing. (§ 827(a)(2)(F).)
       Petitioner Garrett Therolf, a journalist, petitioned to obtain the juvenile case file of
a deceased child, Mariah F., whose adoptive mother was convicted of her torture and
murder. Although the Madera County Department of Social Services/Child Welfare
Services (department) filed an objection to the disclosure of Mariah’s juvenile case file,
the juvenile court denied Therolf’s petition before the time to file a reply had expired and
without holding a hearing, finding release of the file would be detrimental to another
child directly or indirectly connected to Mariah’s case.
       Therolf seeks a writ of mandate or prohibition to compel the juvenile court to
vacate its order denying the petition. He contends the juvenile court erred when it issued
the order denying his petition without allowing him time to file a reply brief and without
holding a hearing. While the department concedes these errors, it argues they are
harmless because Mariah was not within the juvenile court’s jurisdiction when she died,
as she was not the subject of a current dependency case and no jurisdictional finding had
been made with respect to her.

1      Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.

                                               2.
       We agree the juvenile court erred when it did not allow Therolf time to file a reply
to the department’s objection and failed to hold a hearing on his petition. We reject the
department’s contention that Mariah was not within the juvenile court’s jurisdiction when
she died and concur with the decision in In re Elijah S. (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 1532,
1538–1539, 1556 (Elijah S.), which held the juvenile court has exclusive authority to
order release of a deceased child’s juvenile records regardless of whether a dependency
petition has been filed and a prior jurisdictional finding has been made. The juvenile
court prejudicially erred when it failed to require the department to produce the full scope
of documents as set forth in Elijah S. We also reject Therolf’s contention that, contrary
to our decision in Pack v. Kings County Human Services Agency (2001) 89 Cal.App.4th
821, 831–834 (Pack), the juvenile court was required to make specific factual findings
when making a detriment finding. But we find the juvenile court’s failure to comply with
the other procedures set forth in Pack concerning in camera review of the records and
preserving those records for appellate review, also was prejudicial. We conclude the
failure to hold a hearing was prejudicial, especially in light of the juvenile court’s failure
to comply with Elijah S. and the Pack procedures, as we were deprived of an adequate
record to review the juvenile court’s order.
       Accordingly, we grant the petition for writ of mandate and direct the juvenile court
to vacate its orders, hold a hearing on Therolf’s petition after ordering the department to
produce Mariah’s juvenile case file in accordance with Elijah S., review the responsive
documents in camera, and reconsider the petition applying the appropriate standards.
                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       In February 2020, Amy C. was convicted of the torture and October 2014 murder
of her 12-year-old daughter, Mariah, and the torture of her then 14-year-old son, C.F.
Amy adopted the children after being a foster mother to them; the adoption became final
in February 2014. According to a 2020 newspaper account of the case, the department
removed the “remaining children” from the home in March 2015, and before Mariah’s

                                               3.
death, numerous calls and several written reports had been made to the department
expressing concerns about her condition.
       On June 25, 2021, journalist Garrett Therolf filed a request for disclosure of
Mariah’s juvenile case file under section 827(a)(2) using mandatory Judicial Council
form JV-570. 2 On the form, he indicated item 4b, which states, “I believe the child …
died as a result of abuse or neglect,” applied, and listed an approximate date of death as
October 14, 2014. Where the form provided a space to explain why he needed the
records, Therolf wrote that he did not need to provide a reason for seeking Mariah’s
juvenile case file because the petition was filed under section 827(a)(2).
       Therolf requested Mariah’s “entire ‘juvenile case file,’ including records filed in
juvenile court and related records created by county agencies to investigate suspected
child abuse/neglect that were not filed in court, including records where no petition was
filed in court, including records of child abuse hotline calls, and 911 calls and social
worker notes, emails, and reports,” citing section 827(a)(2), California Rules of Court,
rule 5.552, 3 and Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at page 1552. In an attachment,
Therolf asserted that based on these authorities, the term “juvenile case file” consists of a
wide variety of records, including both juvenile court records and documents outside the
court file. Therolf requested the disclosure of 23 categories of documents, which he
asserted he was entitled to even if no juvenile dependency petition had been filed. 4

2      Further references to forms are to Judicial Council forms unless otherwise indicated.
        In his writ petition, Therolf states he is a journalist associated with the Investigative
Reporting Program at the University of California, Berkeley, where he reports on issues related
to California’s child welfare system, and over the past 15 years he has filed over 40 requests to
unseal the juvenile case files of deceased children pursuant to section 827(a)(2), all of which
were granted. Therolf asserts he filed the instant request “as part of his ongoing effort to
promote public scrutiny and informed public debate regarding the circumstances surrounding the
death of Mariah and to promote reform to prevent future child deaths by abuse and neglect.”
3      Further references to rules are to the California Rules of Court unless otherwise indicated.
4       Therolf requested the following documents relating to Mariah: (1) all documents filed in
the juvenile court case; (2) reports to the court by probation officers, department social workers,

                                                4.
       The department filed an objection to release of the juvenile case on September 20,
2021. 5 The department asserted no responsive documents existed because Mariah was
not subject to the juvenile court’s jurisdiction when she died, as required by
section 827(a)(2), and while her death led to a referral that resulted in the removal of her
siblings in October 2014, she died before those juvenile dependency proceedings
commenced. The department argued the Elijah S. case Therolf relied on for the

and Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) volunteers; (3) documents made available to
probation officers, department social workers, and CASA volunteers in preparation of reports to
the court; (4) documents concerning a child for whom a petition has been filed in juvenile court
that are maintained in the office files of probation officers, department social workers, and
CASA volunteers; (5) transcripts, records, or reports related to matters prepared or released by
the court, probation department, or child welfare services program; (6) documents, video or
audio tapes, photographs, and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court hearings; (7) law
enforcement reports; (8) reports or written statements by social workers, probation officers, child
protective service investigators, and public agency personnel involved in investigating a
suspected case of neglect or abuse; (9) audio recordings or transcripts of 911 calls to police or
other emergency services agencies, including the dates and times of the calls; (10) audio
recordings or transcripts of calls to the county child abuse hotline, including the dates and times
of the calls, and the identities of the child hotline call workers; (11) notes, summaries, and
narratives child abuse hotline workers memorializing the child abuse hotline calls, “including the
‘screener narrative’ and references to caregivers”; (12) child abuse hotline workers’
recommended responses to the child abuse hotline calls, including response deadlines;
(13) records of any response to the child abuse hotline call that the child abuse hotline supervisor
approved, including the final designation to screen in or out; (14) records the child abuse hotline
call workers or other county workers forwarded to the emergency response child maltreatment
investigator after the child abuse hotline calls; (15) emails between child abuse hotline workers,
emergency services agencies, law enforcement agencies, county Child and Family Services, and
county Social Services workers; (16) related information from the Electronic Suspected Child
Abuse Report System reflecting messages between law enforcement and Child and Family
Services about the family before and after Mariah’s death; (17) all entries in the Automated
Referral Entry System and Call Back Automated System regarding any referral to an agency for
an emergency response; (18) all CASA reports; (19) the California Law Enforcement
Telecommunication System history for the family; (20) the Child Abuse Central Index history
for the family; (21) the County social services agency history for the family; (22) autopsy or
medical examiner reports; and (23) Mariah’s medical records.
5      In its return, the department asserts its response was timely because the local practices of
the Madera Superior Court Juvenile Division deem the time for filing objections to section 827
requests runs from the date the clerk of the court serves the request on all interested parties,
which occurred on September 8, 2021.

                                                 5.
proposition that section 827(a)(2) applied notwithstanding the lack of a juvenile
dependency petition or jurisdictional finding is fundamentally flawed and disputed its
applicability as precedent. The department noted the parties were in litigation at the
appellate level before this court in two appeals and a writ petition Therolf filed to obtain
review of the trial court’s denial of section 827(a)(2) petitions he brought seeking the
juvenile case files of two siblings. 6 The department attached a summary of the argument
it made in response to those cases, which set forth its analysis and argument as to why
Elijah S. should not be followed, and asked the juvenile court to refrain from ruling on
the issue pending our decision in those cases.
       The department recognized Mariah was the subject of a prior juvenile dependency
case that resulted in her adoption, the legal change of her name, and termination of
dependency jurisdiction. The department objected to the release of this file as being
detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of another child
connected to the juvenile case. The department asserted the records “would be indelibly
intertwined with those of any siblings [Mariah] may have had and who may have been
concurrently detained and found to be dependent minors,” and “[i]t would likely be
impossible to effectively redact the extensive record of that case so as to obscure the
identities of any such siblings, who’s privacy interests would be heightened should they
also have been subject to adoption and subsequent name changes.” The department
argued since Therolf was seeking the records “to further publicize the intimate details of
Mariah’s life,” the release of this file as well as the juvenile case file concerning the
siblings detained after Mariah’s death would risk publication of any sibling’s statutorily
protected information and be detrimental to their physical or emotional well-being. The
department asserted redaction could not prevent the identification of information

6      The appeals are cases Nos. F082698 and F082701, while the writ is case No. F082993.

                                              6.
concerning Mariah’s siblings considering the publicity surrounding the case and attached
a 2020 newspaper article concerning the case as an example of such publicity.
       On September 23, 2021, the juvenile court issued an order, using mandatory form
JV-573, on which it checked the box next to item 5, which states: “The child is deceased
and the court will conduct a review of the juvenile case file and any filed objections.”
That same day, the juvenile court filed an order after judicial review of the petition using
mandatory form JV-574. 7 The juvenile court checked the box next to item 5, which
states: “The child is deceased and the request is denied. The court finds by a
preponderance of the evidence that access to the juvenile case file or of any portion of it
is detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of another
child who is directly or indirectly connected to the juvenile case that is the subject of the
request.” The juvenile court did not make any written findings, although handwritten
notations that were on forms JV-573 and JV-574 were crossed out. 8
       The department requested a hearing, which was held on October 21, 2021. County
counsel told the court he set the hearing to clarify if it was the court who deleted the
handwritten notations and markings that were on the order. The juvenile court confirmed
it did not make the notations and it deleted them. County counsel stated the department
intended to submit additional documents in anticipation of a hearing being set, but since a
hearing was not held, it did not have an opportunity to do so. 9 The juvenile court

7      Therolf submitted forms JV-573 and JV-574 with his petition. On both forms, he
handwrote notations, which he asserts in his writ petition he made to try to correct errors on the
form that do not conform with the requirements of section 827(a)(2).
8       In his petition, Therolf asserts the juvenile court did not mail the department’s objection
to him until the day after it denied the petition and did not serve the order denying the petition
until September 28, 2021, as shown by a postmarked envelope included in the exhibits to the writ
petition.
9      The department asserts in its return that if a hearing on the petition had been held, it
would have presented information concerning the existence of M.F.’s siblings orally, in the form
of argument, with the confidentiality protections afforded juvenile proceedings. Since the
hearing did not occur, it was denied the opportunity to present further argument on that issue.

                                                 7.
responded it already denied the petition and did not know what county counsel wanted.
County counsel responded he was not asking for a specific order—he just wanted
clarification and to let the court know about the documents. Therolf’s attorney stated she
believed the statute requires a hearing and allows for a reply brief, which they did not
have time to file. The juvenile court responded Therolf could seek relief by appeal or
writ.
                                        DISCUSSION
I.      Release of a Deceased Child’s Juvenile Records
        “Section 827 governs the granting of access to confidential juvenile records by
individuals and the public.” (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1541.) In 1999,
prompted by the deaths of several dependent children, the Legislature decided to create
an inroad into the barrier of confidentiality protecting juvenile court records and open a
deceased child’s records to public scrutiny to “promote free investigation, uncover any
government culpability, and prompt necessary changes in the system of placing and
monitoring dependents.” (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 828.) To that end, the
Legislature amended section 827(a)(2) to provide the juvenile case files of a deceased
child “who was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300, shall
be released to the public pursuant to an order by the juvenile court after a petition has

The department also asserts it informally advised the juvenile court clerk’s documents potentially
relevant to the request would be produced prior to the hearing. The department asserts its
reticence to revealing confidential information was warranted, as Therolf’s attorney filed a
declaration in the writ proceeding in the other case, case No. F082993, to which was attached
Therolf’s request for disclosure of Mariah’s juvenile case file, the department’s objection, and
the juvenile court orders denying the request. The department asks us to take judicial notice of
the declaration, asserting it is relevant because it demonstrates Therolf’s disclosure of
confidential case file information. We deny the request, however, as it is not relevant to the
issues we address in this writ proceeding.

                                               8.
been filed and interested parties have been afforded an opportunity to file an objection.”
(§ 827, former subd. (a)(2), as amended by Stats. 1999, ch. 996, § 22.3.) 10
       While the juvenile records of living children are entitled to a “veritable
presumption in favor of confidentiality,” when the child is deceased, section 827(a)(2),
creates “a veritable presumption in favor of release.” (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at
p. 829.) “Thus, unlike records pertaining to a living dependent, which must be
maintained as confidential unless some sufficient reason for disclosure is shown to exist,
records pertaining to a deceased dependent must be disclosed unless the statutory reasons
for confidentiality are shown to exist.” (Ibid.)
       A.      The Pack Decision
       Two years later, in 2001, this court addressed the construction and application of
section 827(a)(2) in Pack. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 825.) There, two
newspapers brought petitions for access to the juvenile case files of a dependent child
whose foster mother was charged with his murder. (Id. at pp. 825–826.) After a hearing
and review of the records in camera, the juvenile court denied the petitions, finding
release of any information from the files “‘would be detrimental to the safety, protection,

10       Section 827, former subdivision (a)(2), as amended, provided in its entirety:
“Notwithstanding any other law and subject to subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3), juvenile case
files, except those relating to matters within the jurisdiction of the court pursuant to Section 601
or 602, which pertain to a deceased child who was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court
pursuant to section 300, shall be released to the public pursuant to an order by the juvenile court
after a petition has been filed and interested parties have been afforded an opportunity to file an
objection. Any information relating to another child or which could identify another child,
except for information about the deceased, shall be redacted from the juvenile case file prior to
release, unless a specific order is made by the juvenile court to the contrary. Except as provided
in this paragraph, the presiding judge of the juvenile court may issue an order issuing an order
prohibiting or limiting access to the juvenile case file, or any portion thereof, of a deceased child
only upon a showing that release of the juvenile case file or any portion thereof is detrimental to
the safety, protection, or physical, or emotional well-being of another child who is directly or
indirectly connected to the juvenile case that is the subject of the petition.” (§ 827, former
subd. (a)(2), as amended by Stats. 1999, ch. 996, § 22.3.)

                                                 9.
physical, or emotional well-being of another child who is directly or indirectly connected
to the juvenile case.’” (Id. at p. 826.)
       On appeal, we rejected the newspapers’ contention that redaction was the only tool
available to protect other children and concluded, based on the statute’s language, the
juvenile court’s power to restrict or deny access to a deceased child’s records was an
alternative to redaction. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at pp. 827, 830–831.) We
explained the statute allows the juvenile court to redact information concerning living
children to maintain the confidentiality that pertains to them, but where redaction is
insufficient to protect the living child, the juvenile court may limit or prohibit access to
all or part of the records when disclosure would be detrimental to the living child. (Id. at
pp. 829–830.) Since the statute manifests a legislative intent that information about the
deceased child is not to be excised even if the information relates to or identifies another
child, once the juvenile court redacts information pertaining solely to the living child, the
court may limit or prohibit the dissemination of information about the deceased child if it
concludes that information would “somehow tend to harm the other child.” (Id. at
pp. 830–831, fn. omitted.)
       We also rejected the newspapers’ assertion the juvenile court was required to
provide specific factual findings when finding release of the records would be detrimental
to a living child. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at pp. 831–832.) We concluded it was
sufficient for the juvenile court to recite the statute’s language, as “the statutory language
describes a circumstance that is as concrete as it rationally can be, given the confidential
nature of the information about the other children.” (Id. at p. 833.) Moreover, a juvenile
court’s conclusion that releasing information concerning the deceased child is
“‘detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical, or emotional well-being’ of an
involved living child recites a legitimate reason for retention and provides the appellate
court with a point on which to focus its evaluation of the record,” and reflects an
“implicit determination” that redaction “would not guard the interests of that child

                                             10.
because of the nature of the information pertinent to [the deceased child].” (Id. at
pp. 833–834.) 11
       We determined substantial evidence is the appropriate standard of review of a
juvenile court’s order withholding a deceased child’s records based on prejudice to an
involved child. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 838.) Applying this standard to the
records the parties submitted to the juvenile court to review, we concluded substantial
evidence supported the court’s refusal to release the deceased child’s records. 12 (Pack,
supra, at p. 841.) We explained that after reviewing the records, we understood why the
juvenile court found it “difficult to expound on its conclusions” without compromising
the living child’s interests and agreed the records’ contents justified the conclusion that
“release of any part of them would be highly detrimental to the well-being of another
child.” (Ibid.) The records showed the children were intimately linked in the
dependency proceeding, as the initial dependency petition named another child, the
subsequent documents and reports involved the other child, and the child welfare agency
closely supervised both children, which made it impossible to disclose information
relating to the deceased child without disclosing the identity of, or information prejudicial
to the interests of, the living child. We further found redaction was not a reasonable
remedy as little in the files related only to the living child and if only that child’s name

11      In so holding, we were concerned that “any more specific standard would risk, on the one
hand, the exclusion of a case where the maintenance of confidentiality is appropriate and, on the
other, the disclosure of confidential information in an effort to support a decision intended to
protect that information.” (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 834.)
12      The parties had agreed the juvenile court would review the records in camera, which we
noted was an appropriate procedure that involved the parties presenting a general outline of their
respective positions supported by nonconfidential or nonprivileged evidence and identifying the
specific confidential or privileged evidence for in camera review, with the juvenile court
preserving the in camera records for later appellate review. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 826, 837–838 & fn. 14.)

                                               11.
were excised, what remained would serve to identify that child and open to view
information that was relevant and prejudicial to that child. (Id. at pp. 841–842.) 13
        B.      The Elijah S. Decision
        Four years later, the First District Court of Appeal was presented with the issue of
“whether section 827 permits the disclosure of juvenile records in cases involving
deceased children where no formal jurisdictional petition had been filed in juvenile
court.” (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1538.) There, two newspapers
conducting a journalistic investigation filed petitions for disclosure of child welfare
agency and juvenile court records pertaining to two deceased children who they alleged
were juvenile court dependents at the time of their deaths. (Id. at p. 1539.) At the
hearing on the petitions, a child welfare services supervisor testified the agency had not
filed a dependency petition with respect to either child, and there were no court records in
either case, although she acknowledged the agency generated records regarding any child
until the child reached 21 years old, which were maintained indefinitely, and did not
testify there were no agency records regarding the children. (Id. at p. 1540.) The
juvenile court granted the petitions for disclosure of the agency’s records, finding that
under section 827 and the case law interpreting it, it had authority to determine whether
to release juvenile records regardless of whether formal jurisdictional proceedings had
been initiated. (Elijah S., supra, at p. 1540.)
        The appellate court agreed, holding that in light of the statute and applicable case
law, “the juvenile court has exclusive authority to order release of juvenile records of
deceased minors who come within its jurisdiction pursuant to section 300,” regardless of
whether a juvenile dependency petition had been filed prior to or concurrently with the

13      Although not required, we also independently reviewed the deceased child’s records and
concluded their release would be “‘detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical, or emotional
well-being of another child’” directly connected to the deceased child’s case and redaction from
the case file of all information “pertaining solely to the other child is not a viable, less restrictive
alternative.” (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 842.)

                                                  12.
filing of a petition for disclosure under section 827. (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 1538–1539; accord, id. at p. 1556.)
       To reach this holding, the appellate court began with the only jurisdictional
requirement set out in section 827(a)(2) for the mandatory release of juvenile case files,
namely, that the files “‘pertain to a deceased child who was within the jurisdiction of the
juvenile court pursuant to Section 300.’” (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1543.)
The appellate court noted under section 300, a child who has suffered or will likely suffer
specified physical or emotional neglect or abuse is within the juvenile court’s
jurisdiction, which may adjudge the child to be a dependent of the court, and section 300
does not require the filing of a dependency petition as a prerequisite to the exercise of
juvenile court jurisdiction. (Elijah S., supra, at pp. 1543–1544.) The appellate court
reasoned that since section 300 implies that a child may come within the juvenile court’s
jurisdiction before the juvenile court adjudges the child to be a dependent, “[b]y
extension, ‘a deceased child who was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court
pursuant to Section 300’ for purposes of section 827, subdivision (a)(2) need not have
been the subject of any section 332 dependency petition for the juvenile court to have
jurisdiction to release his or her records.” (Elijah S., supra, at p. 1544.)
       The appellate court concluded the petitioning party must make the threshold
jurisdictional showing the “deceased minor ‘was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court’ under section 300 by virtue of the fact said minor ‘comes within any of the …
descriptions’ set out in that statute.” (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1544.)
Noting the juvenile court did not expressly find the deceased children came within its
jurisdiction pursuant to section 300, the appellate court pointed out the agency failed to
contest the newspapers’ allegation the children came within dependency jurisdiction,
thereby effectively waiving any opposition to that allegation. (Elijah S., supra, at
p. 1545.) The appellate court concluded that in ordering disclosure of the records, the
juvenile court “made an implied determination that the deceased minors came within the

                                              13.
definitional descriptions enumerated in section 300, and were therefore within its
jurisdiction, and that there was sufficient evidence to support this determination.” (Id. at
pp. 1545–1546.)
       The appellate court rejected the agency’s argument the juvenile court must have
entered a jurisdictional finding pursuant to a previously filed dependency petition as a
prerequisite to any juvenile court order permitting disclosure of juvenile case records.
(Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1546, 1551.) The appellate court found the facts
that section 827(a)(2) did not refer to dependency petitions and section 827 did not
contain any language requiring the filing of a dependency petition before the juvenile
court may release juvenile records strongly supports the interpretation the filing of a
dependency petition is not a prerequisite for disclosure. (Elijah S., supra, at pp. 1546–
1547.) The appellate court determined this construction found support in “numerous
provisions of the Welfare and Institutions Code that assume a child may be ‘within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court’ pursuant to section 300 in the absence of, or prior to,
the filing of a section 332 petition,” including sections 301, 302, subdivision (a), 305,
306, 307, 307.5, 329 and 331. (Elijah S., supra, at pp. 1547–1548.)
       The appellate court further noted the juvenile court “bears ultimate supervisory
responsibility with respect to agency contacts with and actions taken regarding children
described by section 300 as ‘within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court,’” pursuant to
which the records of agency contacts with such children are necessarily under the
juvenile court’s authority and jurisdiction regardless of whether a dependency petition
has been filed. (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1548–1549.) While there were
no cases directly on point, the appellate court found decisional authority in several
analogous cases supported the juvenile court’s jurisdictional authority to release records
relating to a deceased child under section 827(a)(2) despite the absence of a dependency

                                             14.
petition. 14 The appellate court concluded that because nothing in the statute suggests the
juvenile court lacks authority or jurisdiction to release a deceased child’s juvenile case
files unless a dependency petition had been filed, the juvenile court has that authority and
jurisdiction, therefore “the juvenile court did not err in doing so in this case, pursuant to
its implied jurisdictional determination under section 300.” (Elijah S., supra, at p. 1551.)
       The appellate court rejected the agency’s argument the statutory definition of
“‘juvenile case file’” found in section 827, subdivision (e) 15 and the California Rules of
Court shows the juvenile court is without jurisdiction to order disclosure of juvenile
records of deceased children in the absence of a dependency petition. (Elijah S., supra,
125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1551.) The appellate court noted: (1) the statutory definition
includes “written reports and documentation [that] are not always required to be filed
directly with the juvenile court, and are frequently under the control of the applicable
county agencies rather than in the possession of the juvenile court”; (2) section 827,
subdivision (e) does not specifically require the filing of a dependency petition as a

14      The appellate court cited to T.N.G. v. Superior Court (1971) 4 Cal.3d 767, Wescott v.
County of Yuba (1980) 104 Cal.App.3d 103, and Lorenza P. v. Superior Court (1988) 197
Cal.App.3d 607. As the court explained in Elijah S., in T.N.G. v. Superior Court, our Supreme
Court upheld the juvenile court’s authority and jurisdiction “to control the juvenile records of
minors who had been temporarily detained by juvenile court authorities and then released
without any further proceedings such as the filing of petitions for dependency or wardship.”
(Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1549.) Similarly, the appellate court in Wescott v.
County of Yuba “upheld the juvenile court’s authority and jurisdiction under section 827 to
control the release or disclosure of all records of juvenile arrests or detentions, even where no
juvenile petition had ever been filed and no juvenile court proceedings were pending.”
(Elijah S., supra, at pp. 1549–1550.) Finally, the Elijah S. court noted the appellate court in
Lorenza P. v. Superior Court reiterated that the juvenile court has exclusive jurisdiction to
determine the extent to which agency files may be released, even if juvenile court proceedings
are not instituted and the matter is handled informally. (Elijah S., supra, at p. 1550.)
15      Section 827, subdivision (e) provides: “For purposes of this section, a ‘juvenile case file’
means a petition filed in a juvenile court proceeding, reports of the probation officer, and all
other documents filed in that case or made available to the probation officer in making the
probation officer’s report, or to the judge, referee, or other hearing officer, and thereafter retained
by the probation officer, judge, referee, or other hearing officer.”

                                                 15.
“precondition to a juvenile court’s having jurisdiction over these ‘juvenile case files’”;
and (3) there was no “indication that documents generated or maintained by social
workers, probation officers and public agency personnel with respect to suspected cases
of child neglect or abuse must be filed with the juvenile court before they may be
included in the definition of ‘juvenile case files’ subject to release under section 827,
subdivision (a)(2).” (Elijah S., supra, at p. 1552.) Accordingly, the appellate court
concluded “the term ‘juvenile case file,’ as defined and used in section 827, ‘covers a
wide range of records, including agency files where no juvenile court proceedings have
been instituted and the matter is handled informally. [Citations.]’” (Ibid., quoting 87
Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 75–76 (2004).) 16
       Finally, the appellate court determined the legislative history supported “the
conclusion that in enacting section 827, subdivision (a)(2), the Legislature intended to
significantly increase the public’s right of access to otherwise confidential juvenile
records concerning deceased children, by creating a presumption in favor of the release of
such records based on the premise that the child’s death had eliminated his or her legal
interest in the confidentiality of such records.” (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1555.) Thus, the Legislature’s intent was not to further limit the juvenile court’s
authority to order disclosure of this information, but rather to “require the juvenile court
to release the records unless the privacy rights of third parties were involved,” and the
Legislature wanted to open “the workings of the entire juvenile court and child protective
system” to public view “for the purpose of exposing deficiencies therein, and thereby
enabling their correction.” (Ibid.) The appellate court concluded this purpose “would not

16      Similarly, the appellate court found former rule 1423 (now rule 5.552(a)), which listed
documents included in the term “juvenile case files,” did not mention a requirement that a
dependency petition be filed before a juvenile court may order the release of juvenile case files
and included documents that may have been generated by investigations preceding the filing of
any dependency petition, none of which are contingent on a petition ever having been filed.
(Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1552–1553.)

                                               16.
be advanced by limiting disclosure of juvenile records to only those generated and
maintained by the juvenile court after a minor had already been declared a dependent,”
and restricting the juvenile court’s power “would effectively make it impossible to
investigate the kinds of errors or negligence that might lead to the death of a minor before
the responsible agency had filed a dependency petition with the juvenile court.” (Id. at
p. 1556.) Instead, these deficiencies could be exposed only “if the juvenile court
maintains authority to order the release of such documentation regardless of whether or
not a juvenile dependency petition had previously been filed.” (Ibid.)
       C.      The 2007 Statutory Amendments
       Thereafter, concerns were raised that the procedure established in section 827,
former subdivision (a)(2) for “accessing files of children who died as a result of abuse or
neglect has proven to be difficult and too costly to use because the courts lack clear
guidance, resulting in delays as well as inconsistencies between counties on what
information is required to be disclosed,” thereby frustrating “the ability to review these
cases of child death promptly and to advocate for changes to prevent any other child from
suffering the same fate.” (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 39 (2007–
2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 19, 2007, pp. 2–3; see Stats. 2007, ch. 468, § 1(d)
(Senate Bill 39 or Sen. Bill 39).) 17 The Legislature became concerned the standards for
disclosure were vague and provided the juvenile court judge so much discretion that
counties that wanted “to avoid public scrutiny of their operations when children die on

17      We previously informed the parties we may take judicial notice, on our own motion, of
certain legislative history materials related to the 2007 amendments to section 827, and now
conclude judicial notice is proper. (See Evid. Code, §§ 452, 455, subd. (a), 459 subd. (c); Doe v.
City of Los Angeles (2007) 42 Cal.4th 534, 544, fn. 4; Hensel Phelps Construction Co. v.
Superior Court (2020) 44 Cal.App.5th 595, 611, fn. 4.) Therefore, we will take judicial notice of
the material identified in the text above, as well as the following: (1) Assembly Committee on
the Judiciary, Analysis of Senate Bill 39 (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 12, 2007; and
(2) Senate Rules Committee, Office of Senate Floor Analyses, Unfinished Business, Analysis of
Senate Bill 39 (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 28, 2007.

                                               17.
their watch” could find “an abundance of grounds for generating litigation,” which
“thwart[s] one of the aims of public disclosure,” namely, to prevent future deaths, and
creates litigation costs that effectively block nonprofits from seeking documents. (Sen.
Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, supra, pp. 5–6.)
       To address these concerns, in 2007 the Legislature established an expedited
process for the release of specific information in county welfare agency records that
relate to the death of a child and to clarify the presumption of disclosure in existing law,
subject to the statutory grounds limiting or prohibiting disclosure. (Sen. Com. on
Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 3.) The process
consists of a “three-part approach to increasing public access to information surrounding
the death of a child from abuse or neglect”: (1) an informational announcement is made
about the death, which provides limited information regarding the deceased child where
there is a reasonable suspicion the death is the result of abuse or neglect; (2) specified
documents in a county welfare agency’s juvenile case file related to the child’s death may
be provided without court review when the child’s death is substantiated to be from abuse
or neglect; and (3) the court procedure for access to other documents not provided under
the first two categories is expedited, with additional legislative guidance given to courts
in reviewing section 827(a)(2) petitions for disclosure of a deceased child’s records.
(Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, pp. 1, 5;
Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39 (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended
June 12, 2007, p. 4.)
       In establishing this process, the Legislature expressly declared its intent to
“maximize public access to juvenile case files in cases where a child fatality occurs as a
result of child abuse or neglect by both providing for an administrative release of certain
documents without the filing of a legal petition pursuant to” section 827(a)(2), and “by
enacting reforms to the current process of filing a petition pursuant to” section 827(a)(2)
“that will offer clarifying guidance to juvenile courts of the legal standards that apply to

                                             18.
those petitions and an expedited process for their disposition.” (Sen. Bill 39, § 1(e).) The
Legislature further declared that “[i]n petitions governed by” section 827(a)(2), “the
Legislature has concluded that when a dependent child dies within the jurisdiction of the
juvenile court, the presumption of confidentiality for juvenile case files evaporates and
the requirement of an expedited decision becomes manifest, because community reaction
to the child’s death may abate with the passage of time and, without a prompt
investigation and assessment, the opportunity to effect positive change may be lost.” (Id.,
§ 1(f).)
       To enact these changes, the Legislature added sections 826.7 and 10850.4 to the
Welfare and Institutions Code and amended section 827(a)(2). (Sen. Bill 39, §§ 2–4.)
Section 826.7 provides: “Juvenile case files that pertain to a child who died as the result
of abuse or neglect shall be released by the custodian of records of the county welfare
department or agency to the public pursuant to Section 10850.4 or an order issued
pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 827.” (Sen. Bill 39, § 2.)
       Section 10850.4 contains the first two parts of the disclosure requirements. First,
section 10850.4, subdivision (a) requires the county welfare agency’s custodian of
records to release certain information upon request within five business days of learning a
child fatality has occurred in the county and “there is a reasonable suspicion that the
fatality was caused by abuse or neglect.” The following information is required to be
released: (1) the child’s age and gender; (2) the date of death; (3) whether the child was
in foster care or the home of his or her parent or guardian at the time of death; and
(4) whether a law enforcement agency or county child welfare agency is conducting an
investigation. (Id., subd. (a)(1)–(4).)
       When the child abuse or neglect investigation into the child’s death is completed
and abuse or neglect is determined to have led to the child’s death, as shown by either a
county child protective services agency substantiating the abuse or neglect, a law
enforcement investigation concluding abuse or neglect occurred, or a coroner or medical

                                            19.
examiner concluding the child suffered abuse or neglect, the custodian of records must
release certain “documents from the juvenile case file” upon request, subject to
redactions set forth in section 10850.4, subdivision (e). (Id., subds. (b) & (c).) 18 Prior to
releasing the documents, the custodian of records is required to redact: (1) identifying
information of any person or institution mentioned in the documents, other than the
county or the State Department of Social Services; (2) “[a]ny information that would,
after consultation with the district attorney, jeopardize a criminal investigation or
proceeding”; and (3) “[a]ny information that is privileged, confidential, or not subject to
disclosure pursuant to any other state or federal law.” (§ 10850.4, subd. (e)(1).)
       When the custodian of records receives a request for documents, the custodian is
required to “notify and provide a copy of the request upon counsel for any child who is
directly or indirectly connected to the juvenile case file.” (§ 10850.4, subd. (f).) If

18       The “documents from the juvenile case file” that must be released differ depending on
whether the child was living with a parent or guardian or was in foster care when the child’s
death occurred. (§ 10850.4, subd. (c)(2) & (c)(3).) As pertinent here, the documents required to
be released when the child was living with a parent or guardian, as amended by the Legislature in
2016, are “all previous referrals of abuse or neglect of the deceased child while living with that
parent or guardian” (id., subd. (c)(2)) and the following documents: “(A) The emergency
response referral information form and the emergency response notice of referral disposition
form completed by the county child welfare agency relating to the abuse or neglect that caused
the death of the child. [¶] (B) Any cross reports completed by the county child welfare services
agency to law enforcement relating to the deceased child. [¶] (C) All risk and safety assessments
by the county child welfare services agency to law enforcement relating to the deceased child. [¶]
(D) All health care records of the deceased child, excluding mental health records, related to the
child’s death and previous injuries reflective of a pattern of abuse or neglect. [¶] (E) Copies of
police reports about the person whom the child abuse or neglect was substantiated. [¶] (F) A
description of child protective or other services provided and actions taken by the child welfare
agency, and juvenile court if applicable, relating to the deceased child, addressing any services
and actions that are not otherwise disclosed within other documents required for release pursuant
to this section, including the date and a written description of any such service or action taken.”
(Id., subd. (c)(2)(A)–(F); accord, Legis. Counsel’s Dig., Assem. Bill No. 1625 (2015–2016 Reg.
Sess.) Stats. 2016, ch. 320, § 3, pp. 4–5.) The statute defines the terms “‘[j]uvenile case files’”
or “‘case files’” to “include[] any juvenile court files, as defined in Rule 5.552 …, and any
county child welfare department or agency or State Department of Social Services records
regardless of whether they are maintained electronically or in paper form.” (§ 10850.4,
subd. (k)(3).)

                                               20.
counsel for a child, including the deceased child or any sibling of the deceased child,
objects to the documents’ release, “they may petition the juvenile court for relief to
prevent the release of any document or part of a document requested pursuant to
paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of section 827.” (Ibid.) “Juvenile case records that are
not subject to disclosure pursuant to this section shall only be disclosed upon an order by
the juvenile court pursuant to Section 827.” (Id., subd. (g).)
       Finally, the Legislature amended section 827, former subdivision (a)(2) to clarify
the judicial procedure for release of the juvenile case files of a deceased child. That
subdivision was renumbered subdivision (a)(2)(A) and amended to clarify that where a
presiding judge is considering limiting or prohibiting access to a juvenile case file, a
showing that release of the information is detrimental to the well-being of another child
must be made by a preponderance of the evidence. 19 (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis
of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 10.) Subdivision (a)(2)(B) and
(a)(2)(C) were added to section 827 to affirm, respectively, there is “a presumption in
favor of the release of documents when a child is deceased unless the statutory reasons
for confidentiality are shown to exist,” 20 and “[i]f a child whose records are sought has

19      Section 827(a)(2)(A) now provides: “Notwithstanding any other law and subject to
subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3), juvenile case files, except those relating to matters within the
jurisdiction of the court pursuant to Section 601 or 602, that pertain to a deceased child who was
within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300, shall be released to the
public pursuant to an order by the juvenile court after a petition has been filed and interested
parties have been afforded an opportunity to file an objection. Any information relating to
another child or that could identify another child, except for information about the deceased,
shall be redacted from the juvenile case file prior to release, unless a specific order is made by
the juvenile court to the contrary. Except as provided in this paragraph, the presiding judge of
the juvenile court may issue an order prohibiting or limiting access to the juvenile case file, or
any portion thereof, of a deceased child only upon a showing by a preponderance of evidence
that release of the juvenile case file or any portion thereof is detrimental to the safety, protection,
or physical or emotional well-being of another child who is directly or indirectly connected to
the juvenile case that is the subject of the petition.”
20    In adding subdivision (a)(2)(B) to section 827, the Legislature stated it was affirming the
presumption “in favor of the release of information when a child is deceased unless statutory
grounds for non- or partial disclosure or redaction of information exist.” (Sen. Com. on

                                                  21.
died, and documents are sought pursuant to this paragraph, no weighing or balancing of
the interests of those other than a child is permitted.” (§ 827 (a)(2)(B) & (a)(2)(C).) 21
       Finally, subdivision (a)(2)(D) through (F) were added to section 827 to establish
the procedure for a court petition to obtain other records not available through
administrative release. (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as
amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 10.) The petitioner serves the petition on interested parties
whose identities and addresses are known to the petitioner and on the custodian of
records, who in turn must serve a copy of the petition on all interested parties the
petitioner did not serve. (§ 827(a)(2)(D).) An interested party, including the custodian of
records, may object to the petition and “shall file and serve the objection on the
petitioning party no later than 15 calendar days after service of the petition.” (Id.,
subd. (a)(2)(E).) The petitioning party “shall have 10 calendar days to file a reply.” (Id.,
subd. (a)(2)(F).) “The juvenile court shall set the matter for hearing no more than
60 calendar days from the date the petition is served on the custodian of records,” and
“render its decision within 30 days of the hearing.” (Ibid.) The juvenile court is required
to decide the matter solely upon the basis of the petition, objection, reply, and argument
at the hearing, and the court may order the appearance of witnesses on its own motion.

Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 3; Sen. Rules Com., 3d
reading analysis of Sen. Bill 39 (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 1, 2007, p. 2.) The
Legislature noted that “[e]xisting case law provides that a deceased child is ‘within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court’ if the court may adjudge that child to be a dependent of the
court under § 300, even where no juvenile petition has been filed,” citing Elijah S., supra, 125
Cal.App.4th 1532. (Sen. Rules Com., supra, as amended May 1, 2007, p. 2; Sen. Com. on
Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 3.)
21      In adding subdivision (a)(2)(C) to section 827, the Legislature stated it was affirming the
holding in Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th 821, “that where the child whose records are sought has
died, no balancing or weighing of interests is required except where the interests of another child
are involved.” (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, as amended Apr. 19, 2007,
p. 3; Sen. Rules Com., 3d reading analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended May 1, 2007, p. 2.)

                                               22.
(Ibid.) If an objection is not filed, the juvenile court “shall review the petition and issue
its decision within 10 calendar days of the final day for filing the objection.” (Ibid.) 22
II.    The Juvenile Court Committed Prejudicial Error
       Against this backdrop, Therolf sought to obtain Mariah’s juvenile case file,
including the file from the dependency case that resulted in her 2014 adoption and any
postadoption investigations into abuse, by filing a petition pursuant to section 827(a)(2).
       A.      The Hearing Requirement
       Section 827(a)(2)(F) provides that the petitioning party “shall have 10 calendar
days to file a reply” and requires the juvenile court to hold a hearing if an interested party
opposes a request for the release of a deceased child’s juvenile case file. 23 The hearing
requirement is clear from the statute: “The juvenile court shall set the matter for
hearing” within 60 days from the date the petition is served on the custodian of records
and “shall render its decision within 30 days of the hearing.” (Ibid., italics added.)
Moreover, the matter is to be decided solely on the petition, objection, reply, “and
argument at hearing.” (Ibid., italics added.) The only exception to the hearing

22      Section 827(a)(2)(F) provides: “The petitioning party shall have 10 calendar days to file
a reply. The juvenile court shall set the matter for hearing no more than 60 calendar days from
the date the petition is served on the custodian of records. The court shall render its decision
within 30 days of the hearing. The matter shall be decided solely upon the basis of the petition
and supporting exhibits and declarations, if any, the objection and any supporting exhibits or
declarations, if any, and the reply and any supporting declarations or exhibits thereto, and
argument at hearing. The court may, solely upon its own motion, order the appearance of
witnesses. If an objection is not filed to the petition, the court shall review the petition and issue
its decision within 10 calendar days of the final day for filing the objection. An order of the
court shall be immediately reviewable by petition to the appellate court for the issuance of an
extraordinary writ.”
23      We note when interpreting section 827(a)(2), we apply the de novo standard of review.
(Molenda v. Department of Motor Vehicles (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 974, 986–987; see County of
Yuba v. Savedra (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 1311, 1314 [trial court does not have discretion to ignore
a statute’s clear language]; Thornton v. Carlson (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 1249, 1255 [when the trial
court’s decision is based solely on an interpretation of a statute, appellate court reviews the
matter as a question of law].)

                                                 23.
requirement is when no objection is filed: “If an objection is not filed to the petition, the
court shall review the petition and issue its decision within 10 calendar days of the final
day for filing the objection.” (Ibid.) 24
       The department concedes the juvenile court erred. We accept the concession, as
under the plain statutory language, after the department filed an objection, the juvenile
court was required to allow Therolf time to file a reply and to hold a hearing. The
juvenile court was then required to consider not only the petition, objection, and any
reply, but also the arguments made at the hearing, before ruling on the petition. The
juvenile court, therefore, erred when it ruled on the petition before the time to file a reply
had expired and without holding a hearing.
       B.      Elijah S. Controls
       It is undisputed that when Mariah died, there was no dependency petition pending
in the juvenile court concerning her and the juvenile court had not found she “was within
the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300,” as required under
section 827(a)(2). Under Elijah S., however, neither the filing of a dependency petition
nor a prior jurisdictional finding is required for section 827(a)(2) to apply. Rather, the

24      Form JV-573 lists six findings and orders the juvenile court may make on a request for
disclosure of juvenile case files. Item 4 provides: “The child is deceased and the court sets a
hearing on the request,” while item 5, which the juvenile court selected here, provides: “The
child is deceased and the court will conduct a review of the juvenile case file and any filed
objections.” Item 5, however, conflicts with section 827(a)(2)(F), which requires a hearing when
objections are filed; in that situation, the juvenile court has no discretion to conduct an in camera
review without holding a hearing. We note rule 5.552(d), which sets out the procedure for
obtaining the juvenile case files of living children, grants the juvenile court discretion over
whether to hold a hearing, as it permits the juvenile court to summarily deny a petition that does
not show good cause and provides that the juvenile court “may set a hearing” if good cause is
shown. (Id., (d)(1) & (d)(2), italics added.) Rule 5.553(1), however, provides that “[w]hen the
juvenile case file of a deceased child is sought, the court must proceed … [¶] [u]nder
section 827(a)(2) if the request is made by a member of the public .…” Since
section 827(a)(2)(F) requires a hearing when an objection is filed, the juvenile court does not
have discretion to review the juvenile case file and any objections, as stated in item 5 on
form JV-573, without first holding a hearing.

                                                24.
juvenile court has exclusive authority to order release of a deceased child’s juvenile
records regardless of whether a dependency petition has been filed and a prior
jurisdictional finding has been made. (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1538–
1539, 1556.) Thus, a party seeking the juvenile case file of a deceased child may obtain
those records if that party can show the child “‘was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court’” under section 300 when the child died. (Elijah S., supra, at pp. 1544–1545.)
       The department argues Elijah S. is wrongly decided and urges us not to follow it,
asserting it is based on a “drastic misunderstanding of juvenile dependency law” and a
“severely misguided application of that law” to the concept of dependency jurisdiction.
We decline the department’s invitation to depart from Elijah S. The legislative history of
the 2007 amendments shows the Legislature was aware of the holding in Elijah S., as in
its reports it cited the case as existing case law that “provides that a deceased child is
‘within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court’ if the court may adjudge that child to be a
dependent of the court under § 300, even where no juvenile petition has been filed.”
(Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 3;
accord, Sen. Rules Com., Office of Sen. Floor Analyses, Rep. on Sen. Bill 39 (2007–
2008 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 28, 2007, p. 2.) Notably, the Legislature did not
disapprove of Elijah S. or amend the statute to require a dependency petition or a prior
jurisdictional finding. Instead, the Legislature maintained the statutory language the
Elijah S. court interpreted and affirmed the “presumption in favor of the release of
documents when a child is deceased unless the statutory reasons for confidentiality are
shown to exist.” (§ 827, subd. (a)(2)(B).) We generally presume the Legislature is aware
of appellate court decisions, therefore, when “‘the Legislature amends a statute without
altering portions of the provision that have previously been judicially construed, the
Legislature is presumed to have been aware of and to have acquiesced in the previous
judicial construction.’” (City and County of San Francisco v. Strahlendorf (1992) 7

                                              25.
Cal.App.4th 1911, 1915, citing Marina Point, Ltd. v. Wolfson (1982) 30 Cal.3d 721,
734.)
        The department asserts the legislative intent underlying the 1999 amendment of
the statute supports a strict interpretation of jurisdiction, as it shows the Legislature did
not intend to expand section 827(a)(2) beyond the juvenile case files of dependent
children. But, as the appellate court concluded in Elijah S., the legislative history shows
the Legislature was interested in opening “the workings of the entire juvenile court and
child protective system” to public view “for the purpose of exposing deficiencies and
thereby enabling their correction,” which would not be advanced if disclosure of juvenile
records were limited only to those generated after a child had been declared a dependent.
(Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1555–1556, italics added.)
        The department also asserts the 2007 enactment of section 10850.4 shows the
Legislature intended that section “to serve as the primary vehicle for transparency, in
light of the express restrictions imposed on requests made pursuant to
section 827(a)(2)(A),” which, according to the Legislature’s declared intent, “comes into
play ‘when a dependent child dies within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.’” (See
Sen. Bill 39, § 1(f).) While the Legislature used the term “dependent child” in its
declarations concerning the 2007 amendments to section 827(a)(2), the Legislature also
declared its intent “to maximize public access to juvenile case files in cases where a child
fatality occurs as a result of child abuse or neglect by both providing for an
administrative release of certain documents without the filing of a legal petition” and
“enacting reforms to the current process of filing a petition” pursuant to
section 827(a)(2). (Sen. Bill 39, § 1(e) & 1(f).) Given the Legislature’s failure to amend
section 827(a)(2)(A) to require a prior dependency petition or jurisdictional finding, and
the express intent to maximize public access to juvenile case files of deceased children,
we decline to read the statute narrowly.

                                              26.
       Since neither the filing of a dependency petition nor a prior jurisdictional finding
is required for section 827(a)(2) to apply, Therolf may seek the juvenile case files
concerning Mariah by a petition pursuant to that section. We note that many of the
documents Therolf seeks are documents listed in section 10850.4, subdivision (c)(1) and
(c)(2), which he is entitled to obtain without a court order if abuse or neglect led to
Mariah’s death. (Id., subds. (b) & (c).) The department recognizes this, but asserts
Therolf must make a separate request, apart from the section 827 petition, to obtain these
documents, which he apparently has not done.
       Nothing prevents Therolf from obtaining these documents through a petition under
section 827(a)(2). In enacting section 10850.4, the Legislature intended to create a
process whereby the public may request the child welfare agency’s custodian of records
to release specified “documents from the juvenile case file” (id., subd. (c)) without court
intervention when abuse or neglect has led to a child’s death. That section, however,
does not preclude a party from asking the juvenile court to order the production of such
documents in the first instance. Notably, section 10850.4, subdivision (f) allows counsel
for a child, including the deceased child or the deceased child’s sibling, who objects to
the release of these documents to “petition the juvenile court for relief to prevent the
release of any document or part of a document requested” under section 827(a)(2). Thus,
section 827(a)(2) provides a vehicle for judicial review of requests to obtain a deceased
child’s juvenile case file, including documents available for disclosure without a court
order, which is consonant with the juvenile court’s exclusive jurisdiction to control
access to juvenile dependency records. (Elijah S., supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1550
[“courts have consistently upheld the juvenile court’s jurisdiction to control access to
juvenile dependency records”].)
       Therefore, Therolf is entitled to the release of those documents listed under
section 10850.4, subdivision (c)(1) and (c)(2), subject to the following redactions
mandated by section 10850.4, subdivision (e)(1): identifying information of any person

                                             27.
or institution, other than the county or State Department of Social Services; information
that would, after consulting with the district attorney, jeopardize a criminal investigation
or proceeding; and any information that is privileged, confidential or not subject to
disclosure under any other state or federal law. The juvenile court, however, may
prohibit or limit access to these documents if their release would be “detrimental to the
safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of another child who is directly or
indirectly connected to the juvenile case.” (§ 827(a)(2)(A).)
        As for the remaining documents in Mariah’s juvenile case file, including her prior
dependency case file, Therolf is entitled to those documents if Mariah “was within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court” under section 300. (§ 827(a)(2)(A).) The department
contends Therolf’s assertion in his petition that he believed she “‘died as a result of abuse
or neglect’” is insufficient to support such a finding. But the department itself produced
evidence, namely the newspaper article, that showed Mariah’s adoptive mother was
convicted of her murder and torture, which occurred between July 1, 2010, and the day
she was murdered, October 10, 2014. Since a child comes within section 300,
subdivision (a) if the child has suffered “serious physical harm inflicted nonaccidentally
upon the child by the child’s parent,” and within section 300, subdivision (b)(1) if the
child has suffered “serious physical harm … as a result of the failure or inability of the
child’s parent … to adequately supervise or protect the child,” torture by one’s parent
certainly falls within these definitions and would support a finding of jurisdiction. 25
Because Mariah was within the juvenile court’s jurisdiction under section 300 when she
died, the department must produce her juvenile case file within the meaning of
section 827(a)(2)(A) and Elijah S., which includes the file from her prior dependency
case.

25      Moreover, to the extent there is insufficient evidence to establish jurisdiction, Therolf
was deprived of the opportunity to present additional evidence when the juvenile court denied
the petition before the time to file his reply expired and without holding a hearing.

                                                28.
       C.     Pack Controls
              1.     Factual Findings Are Not Required
       Therolf contends the department was required to present evidence of detriment
and the juvenile court was required to make factual findings to support its detriment
finding. But, as we held in Pack, a juvenile court is not required to make specific factual
findings when it denies access to a deceased child’s juvenile case file based on a finding
of detriment to a connected child in part because requiring such findings could result in
the disclosure of confidential information. (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at pp. 833–834.)
The same concern about disclosure of confidential information is also present when a
party objects to release of a juvenile case file based on detriment to a connected child.
(Id. at p. 836 & fn. 13 [noting absent a protective order, the objectors were relegated to
arguing at the hearing against disclosure in general terms and their “ability … to present
facts and specific reasons supporting this stance was compromised by the need to
maintain confidentiality”].)
       We see no reason to deviate from Pack in this case. Therolf contends our holding
in Pack cannot withstand the 2007 amendments to section 827(a)(2), which he asserts
created a “new ‘preponderance of evidence’ standard” for courts denying unsealing
requests by adding the requirement that an order prohibiting or limiting access to a
deceased child’s juvenile case file must be made “‘upon a showing by a preponderance
of evidence’” that release of the case file is detrimental to a connected child.
(§ 827(a)(2)(A).) Therolf reasons that by adding the new standard, the statute places a
duty on the juvenile court to cite evidence establishing detriment. But the legislative
history shows by adding the preponderance of the evidence standard, the Legislature
intended only to “clarify” the applicable standard, not create a new one. (Sen. Com. on
Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill 39, supra, as amended Apr. 19, 2007, p. 10.)
Significantly, the Legislature, which was aware of the Pack decision, did not amend the
statute to expressly state the juvenile court is required to make factual findings. (Big

                                             29.
Creek Lumber Co. v. County of Santa Cruz (2006) 38 Cal.4th 1139, 1156 [“‘“Where a
statute has been construed by judicial decision, and that construction is not altered by
subsequent legislation, it must be presumed that the Legislature is aware of the judicial
construction and approves of it”’”].)
       Therolf argues that Proposition 59, effective November 3, 2004, which amended
the California Constitution to specifically provide for “the people’s right of access to
information in public settings” (Savaglio v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (2007) 149
Cal.App.4th 588, 597), requires us to broadly interpret section 827(a)(2)’s presumptive
right of access to require juvenile courts to make factual findings in support of an order
denying disclosure of juvenile case files. While the amendment expressly provides “for
the broad construction of statutes furthering the people’s right of access to information
concerning the conduct of the people’s business, the amendment specifically provided
that it did not modify the constitutional right of privacy or affect the construction of any
statute protecting the right to privacy.” (In re Marriage of Burkle (2006) 135
Cal.App.4th 1045, 1059, fn. omitted; Cal. Const., art. I, § 3, subd. (b), pars. (1) & (2)
[providing for “the right of access to information concerning the conduct of the people’s
business,” the broad construction of statutes and other authority furthering the people’s
right of access, and the narrow construction of statutes limiting the right of access]; Cal.
Const., art. I, § 3, subd. (b), par. (3) [subd. (b) does not supersede or modify the right of
privacy guaranteed in § 1 of art. I, or affect the construction of any statute or other
authority protecting the right to privacy].)
       Inasmuch as section 827 concerns the confidentiality of juvenile records,
Proposition 59 would not affect the construction of that statute or mandate that we require
the juvenile court to make specific factual findings when it denies access to those records
based on detriment to a connected child. Given the need to maintain confidentiality of
juvenile records, we see no reason to depart from Pack and require factual findings.

                                               30.
       2.      The In Camera and Record Preservation Procedures
       As we stated in Pack, the appropriate procedure when determining whether to
release records pursuant to a petition under section 827(a)(2) is to have “the parties
present a general outline of their respective positions supported by nonconfidential or
nonprivileged evidence” and “identify the specific confidential or privileged evidence for
in camera review.” (Pack, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th at p. 838, fn. 14.) We note the
department, as the custodian of records, is required to produce the responsive documents
for the juvenile court to review, which here includes documents identified in
section 10850.4 and other documents that constitute the juvenile case file, including
documents from Mariah’s prior dependency case. 26 The juvenile court, in conducting its
in camera review of the documents, is required to determine whether, after information
that solely concerns a connected child is redacted, release of the documents would be
“detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of another
child who is directly or indirectly connected to the juvenile case that is the subject of the
petition.” (§ 827(a)(2)(A).) The juvenile court is then required to preserve the in camera
record for appellate review. (Pack, supra, at p. 838, fn. 14.)
       While the juvenile court is not required to make specific factual findings if it
withholds documents based on a finding of detriment to a connected child, the juvenile
court should, as stated in In re Keisha T. (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th 220, “make a record of
its findings adequate for review of its ruling.” (Id. at p. 241.) But this does not
necessarily require specific factual findings. The case the court cited to in Keisha T.,
People v. Reber (1986) 177 Cal.App.3d 523, disapproved on another point in People v.

26      In opposing the petition, the department did not assert that no responsive documents
existed. Instead, the department conceded the existence of the case file from the prior
dependency case and the article attached to the department’s opposition suggests responsive
documents exist from the period between termination of dependency jurisdiction and Mariah’s
death, as it states that at least 20 calls were made to the department, along with four written
reports, concerning Mariah.

                                               31.
Hammon (1997) 15 Cal.4th 1117, 1127–1128, did not require factual findings when
determining whether the defendants should be given access to privileged materials.
There, the appellate court found the trial court’s ruling was unreviewable because it could
not determine the nature and extent of the materials that were examined in camera, as
some medical records released to the defendants were in the appellate record and it was
unclear whether the court examined other records covered by the subpoena, but returned
them to the custodian after making its protective order. (People v. Reber, supra, at
p. 532.) Accordingly, the appellate court found the trial court erred in part by failing to
obtain and examine in camera all the materials under subpoena and create a record
adequate to review its ruling. (Ibid.)
       Thus, the juvenile court clearly must provide a record for us to review by
identifying the documents from the juvenile case file it reviewed in camera and, if it
decides to withhold any of the documents based on a finding of detriment to a connected
child, it must identify the withheld documents while maintaining confidentiality.
       We ordered the juvenile court to provide us with the documents it reviewed, under
seal. In response, we received only the documents filed with respect to the petition,
including Therolf’s petition, objections filed by the department and Mariah’s adoptive
parents, the juvenile court’s orders on forms JV-573 and JV-574, and the writ petition
and other documents filed in this court. From what we were provided, it is apparent that
none of the procedures cited above occurred here. It appears the juvenile court did not
review any documents from Mariah’s juvenile case file, presumably because the
department did not provide the court with any of those documents. While the department
asserts substantial evidence supports the juvenile court’s finding that release of the
juvenile case file would be detrimental to a connected child, the juvenile court could not
have made that finding without reviewing the actual juvenile case file—it cannot make
that finding in the abstract. Accordingly, there is no evidence to support the juvenile
court’s denial of the petition and the juvenile court erred in failing to comply with

                                             32.
Elijah S., denying the petition without reviewing the documents that comprise the
juvenile case file, and in failing to follow the procedures set out in Pack.
       D.     The Errors Were Prejudicial
       As we have explained, the juvenile court committed several errors in denying the
petition by not allowing Therolf to file a reply brief, not holding a hearing, finding
detriment without reviewing the documents that comprise Mariah’s juvenile case file
consistent with Elijah S., and failing to preserve a reviewable record in accordance with
Pack. Even where a juvenile court has erred, however, we will reverse only if the error
was prejudicial, i.e., “‘“‘it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the
appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the error.’”’” (In re Adam H.
(2019) 43 Cal.App.5th 27, 32, quoting In re Abram L. (2013) 219 Cal.App.4th 452, 463.)
       It was patently prejudicial not to follow Elijah S. and require the department to
provide Mariah’s juvenile case file consistent with that opinion, as these failures may
have deprived Therolf of documents to which he is entitled. The juvenile court’s failure
to preserve a record adequate for any meaningful review also was prejudicial. Given
these errors, we cannot say the failure to hold a hearing, at which these matters would
have been fleshed out, was harmless. If a hearing had been held, we would have had the
benefit of what the juvenile court considered and some understanding of its order and
reasoning. Instead, we are left with the juvenile court’s decision to withhold documents
based on detriment to a connected child without any documents to support that decision,
resulting in a wholly inadequate record to review the juvenile court’s detriment finding.
       Accordingly, we will vacate the juvenile court’s orders and remand the matter to
the juvenile court to (1) order the department to produce Mariah’s juvenile case file in
accordance with Elijah S. at a subsequently held hearing, (2) review the juvenile case file
in camera to determine whether, after redacting information that is solely about any
connected child, it can find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that release of the
remaining information would be detrimental to a connected child’s safety, protection, or

                                             33.
physical or emotional well-being, and (3) make a reviewable record by preserving the in
camera record for appellate review. In conducting its review, the juvenile court must
apply the appropriate standards, namely, that there is a presumption in favor of release of
a deceased child’s documents unless the statutory reasons for confidentiality are shown to
exist, and the only interests that may be weighed or balanced are those of a child.
(§ 827(a)(2)(B) & (a)(2)(C).)
                                     DISPOSITION
       We grant Therolf’s petition. Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the
juvenile court to vacate its September 23, 2021, orders issued on forms JV-573 and
JV-574, and to hold a hearing to reconsider Therolf’s request for disclosure of Mariah’s
juvenile case files after ordering the department to produce the case files in accordance
with Elijah S. and reviewing the responsive documents in camera consistent with this
opinion. Therolf shall recover his costs incurred in this proceeding.

                                                                              MEEHAN, J.
I CONCUR:

LEVY, Acting P. J.

                                            34.
POOCHIGIAN, J., Concurring.
       I concur with the majority’s holding that a writ should issue since the court erred
in failing to hold a hearing. (See Welf. & Inst., § 827, subd. (a)(2)(F).) 1 However, I
write separately to express doubt regarding the interpretation of section 827,
subdivision (a)(2)(A) set forth in In re Elijah S. (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 1532, 1543
(Elijah S.).
       Statutory Interpretation
       Elijah S. reads the phrase “within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to
Section 300” (§ 827, subd. (a)(2)(A)) to include any child described by section 300,
regardless of whether a dependency court had “taken jurisdiction” over the child or not.
There are several problems with this reading.
       The word “jurisdiction” in the dependency context is most often used in
connection with the well-known and integral part of the dependency process known as
“taking jurisdiction” over a child at the “jurisdictional hearing.” (See In re Austin P.
(2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 1124, 1129; see also § 355, subd. (a).) Specifically, the juvenile
court “takes jurisdiction over the child” by making a factual finding that the child is
described by section 300. (In re Austin P., supra, at p. 1129; see §§ 355, subd. (a); 356.)
Thus, under its most natural reading in the dependency context, subdivision (a)(2)(A)’s
phrase “child who was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section
300” (§ 827, subd. (a)(2)(A)) means a child over whom the juvenile court had taken
jurisdiction by finding them to be a person described by section 300. In other words, a
child as to whom jurisdictional findings (§ 356) had been affirmatively made.
       Indeed, references to the “jurisdiction” of the juvenile court often mean the formal,
active jurisdiction of the juvenile court during a dependency case. (See §§ 366,

       1 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
otherwise stated.
subd. (a)(1)(D) & (F)(i); 366.1, subds. (g)(1), (h); 391, subd. (b)(5)(B); see also § 391,
subd. (d)(2); but see, e.g., § 301, subd. (a).) If the Legislature had intended section 827,
subdivision (a)(2)(A) to have the meaning Elijah S. ascribes to it, the use of the phrase
“within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court” risks confusion in light of the way
“jurisdiction” is typically used in the dependency context.
       Not only would this risk of confusion have been substantial, it would have been
unnecessary. If the Legislature had meant to refer to any child who happened to be
described by section 300, regardless of whether they had ever been under the active
jurisdiction of a juvenile court, it had a far better phrase to use: a “child described by
section 300.” Indeed, this and similar phrasing is found throughout the dependency
statutes. (See, e.g., §§ 305, subd. (a); 328; 340, subd. (b)(1).)
       Additionally, section 827, subdivision (a)(2)(A) itself seems to presuppose that a
petition to release records will be tied to a specific juvenile case. The last sentence of the
provision reads: “Except as provided in this paragraph, the presiding judge of the
juvenile court may issue an order prohibiting or limiting access to the juvenile case file,
or any portion thereof, of a deceased child only upon a showing by a preponderance of
evidence that release of the juvenile case file or any portion thereof is detrimental to the
safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of another child who is directly or
indirectly connected to the juvenile case that is the subject of the petition.” (§ 827,
subd. (a)(2)(A), italics added.) If subdivision (a)(2)(A) encompasses records of deceased
children who were never the subject of a dependency case, it is unclear what the phrase
“the juvenile case that is the subject of the petition” refers to. Yet, if subdivision
(a)(2)(A) refers only to deceased children over whom the juvenile court had taken
jurisdiction in a dependency case, the meaning of that phrase is clear.
       Legislative Acquiescence
       Petitioner emphasizes that section 827 has been amended since Elijah S. was decided, yet

no alterations were made to the wording about a deceased child who was “within the jurisdiction

                                              2.
of the juvenile court.” And, indeed, it is clear the Legislature was aware of the Elijah S.

decision, because legislative analyses for the subsequent amendments reference the case and its

holding.

          However, the concept of legislative acquiescence has fallen into disfavor because it rests

upon faulty assumptions. (See Brown, Tradition and Insight (1993) 103 Yale L.J. 177, 199–

200.) Courts have concluded that “legislative acquiescence is an exceedingly poor indicator of

legislative intent.” (Donajkowski v. Alpena Power Co. (1999) 460 Mich. 243, 258.) Our

Supreme Court has repeatedly observed, including quite recently, that legislative acquiescence

arguments “rarely do much to persuade.” (Naranjo v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc. (2022) 13

Cal.5th 93, 116; Scher v. Burke (2017) 3 Cal.5th 136, 147.)

          There are several reasons for this. First and foremost, statutory interpretation centers on

the enacting legislature’s intent. The inaction of a subsequent legislature does not speak to that

intent.

          Moreover, while the subsequent legislature’s inaction could be the result of acquiescence

in the status quo, it could just as likely be the result of disagreement on how to alter the status

quo, indifference to the status quo, or a failure to appreciate or focus on the consequences of not

changing the status quo in a bill addressing other issues. Consequently, it is impossible to assert

with any degree of assurance that the Legislature’s inaction represents its affirmative approval of

an appellate court’s statutory interpretation. (See Patterson v. McLean Credit Union (1989) 491

U.S. 164, 175, fn. 1 (McLean) superseded by statute as noted in CBOCS West, Inc. v. Humphries

(2008) 553 U.S. 442, 450, 454.)

          Additionally, even if a majority of legislators had subsequently come to personally

approve of a judicial interpretation contrary to the enacting legislature’s intent, that approval can

only have legal effect upon the passage of a law implementing it. (Cal. Const., art. IV,

§ 8(b)(1).) Legislative silence is no substitute for a bicameral vote upon the text of a law.

(McLean, supra, 491 U.S. at p. 175, fn 1; see Cal. Const., art. IV, § 8(b)(1); see also Thompson v.

Thompson (1988) 484 U.S. 174, 191–192 (conc. opn. of Scalia, J.).)

                                                   3.
       Finally, even if a subsequent legislature’s understanding of the legal status quo were

pertinent, that conclusion would not inure solely to petitioner’s benefit here. Senate Bill No. 39,

which enacted the 2007 amendments underlying petitioner’s argument, observed that subdivision

(a)(2) reflects the Legislature’s conclusion “that when a dependent child dies within the

jurisdiction of the juvenile court, the presumption of confidentiality for juvenile case files

evaporates and the requirement of an expedited decision becomes manifest.…” 2 (Sen. Bill

No. 39, § 1(f), italics added.) (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.) (Senate Bill 39.) Unlike the references to

Elijah S. which appear solely in legislative history documents, this description of

subdivision (a)(2) as addressing dependent children was part of a finding actually enacted by the

Legislature in Senate Bill 39.
       Practical Considerations
       When a court determines whether to take jurisdiction (i.e., whether the child is a
person described by § 300), it usually does so after a contested evidentiary hearing with
well-developed rules of evidence. (§ 355.) Under Elijah S., in order for a court to
determine whether a deceased child for whom there were no prior jurisdictional findings
qualifies as a “child who was within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to

       2  A court can make jurisdictional findings and dispositional orders at the same hearing.
(§ 358, subd. (a).) In that circumstance, the child can be taken under the jurisdiction of the
juvenile court and become a dependent on the same day. This is likely why Senate Bill 39
section 1(f) refers to “a dependent child” while subdivision (a)(2) refers to a child “within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court.”
        However, it is true that a “dependent child” and a child over whom the court has taken
“jurisdiction” are not always synonymous. Because while the juvenile court can address
disposition at the same time as jurisdictional findings (§ 358, subd. (a)), the disposition hearing
can also be continued 10 to 30 days from the jurisdiction hearing. (§ 358, subd. (a)(1)–(3).) In
practice, the delays are often longer.
        During the gap between jurisdictional findings and dispositional orders, the court has
taken jurisdiction over the child, but the child is not yet “a dependent child.” Given the very
short statutory timeframe that a child would be under the jurisdiction of the court, yet not a
dependent of the court, and given that there is no shorthand way to refer to such children, Senate
Bill 39’s use of the phrase “dependent child” is unsurprising. Moreover, whatever mild friction
there is between my reading of subdivision (a)(2) and Senate Bill 39’s reference to “dependent
child[ren],” it pales in comparison to its incompatibility with Elijah S.’s interpretation.

                                                  4.
Section 300,” (§ 827, subd. (a)(2)(A)), it would often – if not always – be necessary to
conduct a factfinding inquiry similar to the one performed at a jurisdictional hearing.
       Legislative Policy
       Elijah S. held the Legislature “was interested in opening up to public view the
workings of the entire juvenile court and child protective system for the purpose of
exposing deficiencies therein, and thereby enabling their correction.” (Elijah S., supra,
125 Cal.App.4th at p. 1555; see maj. opn at p. 26, ante.) The opinion concluded that this
legislative purpose “would not be advanced by limiting disclosure of juvenile records to
only those generated and maintained by the juvenile court after a minor had already been
declared a dependent.” (Id. at p. 1556.)
       This type of reasoning, once widely employed, has also been rejected due to its
faulty assumptions. “ ‘[N]o legislation pursues its purposes at all costs.’ ” (CTS Corp. v.
Waldburger (2014) 573 U.S. 1, 12; American Exp. Co. v. Italian Colors Restaurant
(2013) 570 U.S. 228, 234; Rodriguez v. United States (1987) 480 U.S. 522, 525–526;
City of Selma v. Fresno County Local Agency Formation Com. (2016) 1 Cal.App.5th 573,
584; County of Sonoma v. Cohen (2015) 235 Cal.App.4th 42, 48.) Accordingly, courts
have roundly rejected the approach of assuming that “whatever furthers the statute’s
primary objective must be the law.” (Cyan, Inc. v. Beaver County Employees Retirement
Fund (2018) ___ U.S. ___ [138 S.Ct. 1061, 1073].) That is because “statutes have
stopping points as well as general objectives, and how far to go in pursuit of those
objectives is integral to the legislative choice.” (N.L.R.B. v. HH3 Trucking, Inc. (7th Cir.
2014) 755 F.3d 468, 471.) In other words, “the textual limitations upon a law’s scope are
no less a part of its ‘purpose’ than its substantive authorizations.” (Rapanos v. United
States (2006) 547 U.S. 715, 752.)
       Here, as in many areas of legislative activity, there are various goals being
balanced against one another. “Opening up the workings of the child welfare system” is
certainly one of those goals, but only to a certain extent. On the other hand, it remains

                                             5.
the case that juvenile court records, in general, should be kept confidential. (§ 827,
subd. (b)(1).)
       Similarly, Senate Bill 39 itself embodied dual legislative intents that needed to be
balanced against one another. With that enactment, the Legislature expressly intended
“to maximize public access to juvenile case files in cases where a child fatality occurs as
a result of child abuse or neglect … while also ensuring that basic privacy protections are
consistently afforded.” (Sen. Bill 39, § 1(e), italics added.) (2007–2008 Reg. Sess.)
       It is not for us to decide how far to pursue public access at the expense of privacy
protections. We must avoid the presumption that whatever statutory interpretation
furthers public access must be the law, regardless of how it affects privacy interests or
other competing policies. Instead, we must adhere to the statutory text itself to identify
where the Legislature chose to stop in its pursuit of the statute’s “general objectives.”
(N.L.R.B. v. HH3 Trucking, Inc., supra, 755 F.3d at p. 471.) Put simply, the Legislature
wrote the statute it wrote – “meaning, a statute going so far and no further.” (Michigan v.
Bay Mills Indian Community (2014) 572 U.S. 782, 794.)
       It is important to note that a straightforward reading of section 827,
subdivision (a)(2)(A) would not eliminate the ability of journalists to investigate or
expose possible lapses or misconduct by social services agencies, foster parents, or
others, in connection with the death of children. Section 10850.4 independently requires,
without court order, the release of redacted documents concerning children who die under
“a reasonable suspicion that the fatality was caused by abuse or neglect.” (§ 10850.4,
subd. (a).)
       Even if section 10850.4 were not enough, section 827, subdivision (a)(2)(A)
merely sets forth a presumption in favor of release for certain records. (§ 827,
subd. (a)(2)(B).) The juvenile court may still release records not covered by section 827,
subdivision (a)(2)(A). (§ 827, subd. (a)(1)(Q); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.552(d).) While
there is no presumption in favor of release for such records, the court may still order

                                             6.
release after it “engage[s] in a careful balancing of … competing interests,” including
those of the child, parties, petitioner, and the public. (J.E. v. Superior Court (2014)
223 Cal.App.4th 1329, 1337–1338.)
       It seems eminently reasonable to establish a presumption in favor of the release of
documents pertaining to children who die while under the active jurisdiction/supervision
of a government system designed to protect children. It also seems reasonable to decline
to extend that presumption to records regarding other children, while still allowing for
their release after a balancing of interests, including those of the petitioner and the public.
       While I do not endorse Elijah S.’s reading of section 827, subdivision (a)(2)(A), I
respectfully concur with the majority as to the issuance of a writ directing the juvenile
court to vacate its prior ruling and to hold a hearing.

                                                                           POOCHIGIAN, J.

                                              7.