A.H. v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 2023
DocketG061648
StatusPublished

This text of A.H. v. Super. Ct. (A.H. v. Super. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.H. v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 3/17/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE A.H. et al.,

Petitioners,

v. G061648

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE (Super. Ct. Nos. 20DP1070, COUNTY, 20DP1071, 20DP1072)

Respondent; OPINION

ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY,

Real Party in Interest.

PURPORTED APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, treated as a writ of mandate. Mary Kreber Varipapa, Judge. Appeal dismissed. Writ petition denied. Marisa D. Conroy, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Petitioner A.H. Jacob I. Olson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Petitioner S.A. No appearance for Respondent. Leon J. Page, County Counsel, Karen L. Christensen and Deborah B. Morse, Deputy County Counsel, for Real Party in Interest.

* * * Under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), a California court has temporary emergency jurisdiction in a juvenile dependency matter if a child is present in the state and there is an emergency need to 1 protect the child from abuse. (Fam. Code, § 3424, subd. (a).) Thereafter, if the child’s home state declines to exercise jurisdiction, the California court then has the “exclusive jurisdictional basis for making a child custody determination.” (§ 3421, subd. (b).) In August 2020, police went to a motel room to investigate child abuse. Three children were present: K.H. (an eight-year-old boy), A.H. (a five-year-old girl), and P.A. (an 18-month-old girl). The boy had visible bruises on his face and arms; the older girl had multiple bruises on her legs. Police arrested S.A. (“Mother”), and A.A. (“Husband” and father of the younger girl), who had brought the three children from Texas to California about three weeks prior. At that time, A.H. (“Father” of the two older children) was incarcerated in Texas for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. The children were taken into protective custody. The next day, Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) filed a dependency petition, and the juvenile court took “emergency jurisdiction . . . pursuant to UCCJEA.” About a week later, the court phoned a Texas state court judge who “cede[d] jurisdiction to the state of California.” SSA placed the children in foster care with Dana C. (“Caregiver”). Mother pleaded guilty to two counts of child abuse, served a 120-day jail sentence, and returned to Texas. Husband’s disposition and whereabouts are unknown. Father is no longer incarcerated and lives in Texas. In March 2021, the juvenile court sustained the dependency petition, declaring the children to be dependents of the court. Six months later, Mother filed a motion to transfer the matter to the State of Texas. In July 2022, the juvenile court again spoke to a Texas judge and found the

1 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.

2 state continued to decline to exercise jurisdiction under the UCCJEA. Father filed an appeal. Father contends the juvenile court never had subject matter jurisdiction under the UCCJEA and all the juvenile court’s orders must be reversed. Mother joins. The juvenile court’s UCCJEA rulings are not final, appealable orders, but 2 we will exercise our discretion and treat this appeal as a writ of mandate. (See, e.g., A.M. v. Superior Court (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 343, 353-354 [appellate court found writ relief warranted in parental challenge to lower court’s UCCJEA ruling].) We find substantial evidence to support the juvenile court’s UCCJEA rulings. After the court invoked emergency temporary jurisdiction, Texas then ceded subject matter jurisdiction to California. Although the Texas judge purported to cede jurisdiction for only so long as the parents were in California, such equivocation is untenable. Under the UCCJEA, there cannot be concurrent jurisdiction; only one state can have jurisdiction at a time. Further, jurisdiction must be determined by appropriate courts under the terms of the UCCJEA, and not by the decisions of the offending parents. Here, the juvenile court found Texas had ceded subject matter jurisdiction of the instant dependency matter to California. We find substantial evidence to support that ruling. The juvenile court then made jurisdictional orders to protect the abused children. Under the relevant provisions of the UCCJEA, the California juvenile court generally retains exclusive, continuing subject matter jurisdiction, unless and until California cedes jurisdiction back to Texas. (See § 3422, subd. (a)(1).) Thus, we deny the parents’ request to reverse all the juvenile court’s orders.

2 On the date of the filing of this appeal, there had been no dispositional order, which is the first appealable order in a dependency case. (See In re T.W. (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 723, 729.) Father cites Schneer v. Llaurado (2015) 242 Cal.App.4th 1276, 1279 (Schneer), for the proposition: “An order determining jurisdiction under the UCCJEA is an appealable order.” But Schneer is distinguishable. While the substantive issue in Schneer involved the UCCJEA, the appeal itself was from an order of dismissal. (See In re Sheila B. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 187, 197 [“An order of dismissal constitutes a judgment for all purposes and, as such, is generally appealable”].)

3 I FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On Monday, August 24, 2020, at about 1:21 a.m., Buena Park police were dispatched to a motel room for a child abuse investigation. The police saw bruising and welts on the boy’s face, as well as on his arms and shoulders. The pattern of bruises indicated he had been hit with the studded side of a belt. The boy said he had fallen off a swing three weeks earlier; he later said he had fallen while running. The boy initially did not want to show his back to police, who eventually saw bruises on his back, legs, and torso. It was later discovered the older girl had multiple bruises on her legs. Mother said she had “whooped” her son two nights ago, but nothing had happened that night. Mother said she disciplined her son for being disrespectful. Mother said she was so enraged that while she was hitting the boy with the belt, she wasn’t paying attention to the marks on his body. When asked about the injuries to his face, Mother said she did not know about those injuries, and she was “just seeing that.” Husband told police the boy was playing outside and fell, causing the injuries to his arms and face. The family had been staying at the motel since August 1, 2020. The police arrested Mother and Husband for cruel or inhuman corporal punishment on a child. (Pen. Code, § 273d, subd. (a).) The police took the parents to the Orange County jail, took the children into protective custody, and arranged for Child Abuse Services Team (CAST) interviews. During his CAST interview, the boy initially stated he sustained the injuries when he fell and was “nervous” about speaking about what happened. He explained he was instructed “not to say what goes on in the house cause they don’t want to go to court.” The boy said when he gets hit with a belt, “I can’t scream cause the people next door will call the police.” During the “worse whooping” a few weeks earlier, he was hit in the leg with a belt until blood came out. The boy explained that if Mother or Husband ever found he was talking about the whoopings: “They might whoop me.” The boy

4 eventually admitted the marks on his face were from Mother hitting him with a belt. When shown a picture of the marks on his back, he teared up. The boy said Mother had hit him with a belt on his back until Husband grabbed her and told her “that’s enough.” Mother told him that if the police ever came to speak to him that she and Husband need “to be present because bad things can happen when the police are there.” During her CAST interview, the older girl said she was asleep when her brother got whooped that night.

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