BLANCA P. v. Superior Court

45 Cal. App. 4th 1738, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 687, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6356, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3978, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 524
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1996
DocketG019071
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 45 Cal. App. 4th 1738 (BLANCA P. v. Superior Court) 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
BLANCA P. v. Superior Court, 45 Cal. App. 4th 1738, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 687, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6356, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3978, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 524 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

Introduction

At a critical hearing in this juvenile dependency case, the juvenile court judge was under a serious misimpression about what was at stake. The hearing concerned a subsequent petition which alleged that the father, Rogelio, had molested his three-year-old daughter Daisy. The judge, however, mistakenly believed that the matter had already been decided against Rogelio. At the outset he thought the hearing was a simple six-month review; he was not disabused of his misimpression until after the evidentiary portion of the hearing had been completed. The record also indicates that the judge had not read the subsequent petition alleging the molestation. Nor was any oral testimony concerning the alleged molestation presented at the hearing. The only evidence that might have supported a finding that Rogelio had molested his daughter would have to have been painstakingly extracted from a series of lengthy reports written by a social worker.

The court sustained the petition at the conclusion of the hearing and ordered a forensic psychologist to do an in-depth study of the entire family, including Rogelio’s two stepdaughters. A few months later the psychologist exonerated Rogelio of any child molestation, or any tendency toward child *1742 molestation. Even so, the fact the court had sustained a petition alleging child abuse remained; consequently, at an 18-month review conducted by another judge, the juvenile court determined that—without ever examining whether any molestation ever really occurred—it would be detrimental to return the children of Rogelio and Blanca to them. From the orders made in the wake of that review, Blanca has brought this writ proceeding, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support the detriment finding.

As we explain below in greater detail, the only support for the detriment finding is the fact that the juvenile court sustained the subsequent petition alleging child molestation. However, after examining the record of the hearing at which the petition alleging molestation was sustained, we have concluded that a new 18-month hearing must be held, one which deals squarely with the question of whether any molestation was ever committed in the first place.

Facts

In April 1994, the minors Nora, thirteen, Juan, seven, Daisy, three, and Isaías, one, the children of Rogelio and Blanca P., were detained at Orange-wood Children’s Home after Juan was struck in the face several times by his mother, petitioner Blanca, hard enough to leave finger marks. The children were made dependents of the juvenile court based on an initial petition charging excessive corporal punishment and were eventually placed in foster care. 1

During that summer Daisy’s foster parent noticed a vaginal opening the foster mother herself opined was too large for a three-year-old. A child abuse services team (CAST) interview was then conducted with the child.

She was asked if anyone touched her “pee-pee.” The girl first answered, “my mom.” Daisy was asked again. This time the answer was “boy.” She was asked a third time. Having exhausted “mom” and “boy,” she answered, “yes, my Pappy.” On October 17, subsequent petitions were filed alleging that Daisy’s father, Rogelio, had, prior to the detention, digitally penetrated her vagina.

The hearing on the subsequent petition was not held until almost eight months later, on April 12, 1995. The hearing was a short one. The evidentiary portion took fewer than 30 pages of trial transcript (which, for readers not familiar with the size of reporter’s transcripts, is quite short). The trial *1743 judge was not the same judge who would later hear the 18-month review. We describe what happened in detail.

The deputy county counsel introduced a variety of reports written by the social worker assigned to the case. Rogelio’s attorney then cross-examined the social worker and elicited the comment that the social worker still recommended reunification. However, the social worker also stated the children should not be returned immediately because there was an “allegation of sexual abuse” and the parents had not “accept[ed] that the molest ha[d] occurred.” The social worker further testified the parents had only monitored visitation because “in the past mother has told the minors not to say, you know, what happened in the home in the past because they won’t ever go back home and issues of that nature.”

The social worker was also asked whether Blanca believed “Daisy’s allegations against the father,” and the social worker’s answer was that the mother waffled. The social worker said Blanca said there “might be a possibility,” but, then again, she would “later” say “it didn’t happen.”

After the court ascertained the social worker spoke Spanish, the father was called to the stand. An interpreter was needed. Rogelio’s attorney asked him directly: “And since the day that Daisy was bom, have you ever taken your finger and inserted it into Daisy’s vagina?” Rogelio’s answer: “Never.”

On cross-examination, Rogelio had to admit that there were no other “male figures” that took care of Daisy in the first three years of her life, and that he was called “pappy” at home. Rogelio’s cross-examination ended with a colloquy initiated by the deputy county counsel’s question, “Do you and your wife teach Daisy to tell the truth?” Rogelio tried to explain that “we didn’t teach her because she would not understand.”

The evidentiary portion of the hearing concluded with the judge asking a number of questions of Rogelio. “It says in the report that you have forced yourself upon your wife, forcing her to have sexual intercourse with you even if she did not want to. [<30 Have you ever done that?” Answer: “Not that I remember. You can ask her.” Next, “Mr. P[.], it says that there have been times when you have withheld money from your wife so that she could not feed herself or her children. [TD Do you agree that it is your responsibility as a man, as a husband and as a father to provide money for the mother to feed herself and the children?” Answer: “I never took it away, I always give her as much as I could.” The court then struck that answer as nonresponsive, and asked the father, “Do you agree that you, as a man, as a father and as a husband have a responsibility to provide money to the mother for her to feed herself and her children.” This time: “Of course, yes.”

*1744 At this point, the trial judge said something very strange.

“Do you understand, Mr. P[.], that today is not a trial to determine if you have done those things, if you have, in fact, done this to Daisy[;] that you are asked whether you have hit your wife, hit your children or supplied them with money for food, that is not what we are deciding today, because that has already been decided. [<jD Do you understand that?” (Italics added.)

After Rogelio responded that, “well, [he] believe[d] so,” the trial judge continued: “Do you understand that we in this system, the court, the social services are acting as if these things did happen, they

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45 Cal. App. 4th 1738, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 687, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6356, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3978, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanca-p-v-superior-court-calctapp-1996.