City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 2022
DocketA161503
StatusUnpublished

This text of City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2 (City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2) 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
City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 2/17/22 City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, Petitioner, v. HERSHEL HALE, JR., A161503 Respondent, (San Francisco County Super. Ct. ANGELIQUE MCFARLAND, No. FCS-15-351235) Appellant.

Family Code section 30441 creates a rebuttable presumption that an award of sole or joint physical or legal custody of a child to a person who has perpetrated domestic violence against the other party seeking custody within the past five years is detrimental to the child. If the court determines the presumption has been overcome, it must state its reasons in writing or on the record. Here, the trial court issued a restraining order protecting a mother from the father of a young child and, citing the statute, granted the mother sole legal and physical custody, but left intact a visitation schedule under

Further statutory references will be to the Family Code except as 1

otherwise specified.

1 which the child lived with each parent approximately half time. Mother argues this schedule amounted to joint physical custody and therefore violated the statute. She also contends the trial court erred in refusing her request for a statement of decision. We agree with mother and reverse the visitation order. BACKGROUND The parties are the parents of a son, D.H., who was born in September 2015. The following description of the facts leading to mother’s request for a domestic violence restraining order and sole legal and physical custody of the child are taken from mother’s declaration and the court orders included in the record. Father did not file a respondent’s brief on appeal. According to mother’s declaration, when she told father she was pregnant, he got “so angry, he kicked [her] in the stomach.” She did not call the police because she was scared of what he would do.2 In March or April of 2015, mother saw father downtown with another woman. He got upset and slapped her, and she heard him tell the woman “it wasn’t his baby.” Father grabbed mother by her hair and yanked so hard he tore out two big braids and left a bald spot on her scalp. Mother called the police but father left before they arrived. Thereafter, mother tried to avoid father. The woman started to taunt mother, saying she wanted to fight mother and telling her, “ ‘Bitch, you are having this baby for me.’ ” The birth was difficult and both D.H. and mother ended up in critical care. D.H. remained in the hospital for a month, during which time father visited once. Around the end of 2015, a paternity test father had requested

2 Mother stated that father told her he had two strikes for felony offenses, one for hitting a woman and one for selling drugs and guns, and when he hurt or threatened her, he also “intimidate[d] her into not calling the police, because he said he does not want to get the third strike.”

2 confirmed he was the father and mother filed for child support. Father was furious and called mother many times, calling her a bitch. In early 2016, when mother went to her car to drive to a child support hearing, she found her tires punctured and flat. Later that day, people in her building told her they had seen father flattening the tires. At the hearing, father was angry and aggressive with mother. He came up behind her when she went to the bathroom and yelled, “ ‘Bitch, I am going to beat the fuck out of you!’ ” Mother was so scared she went into the wrong courtroom. Father was arrested. In 2016, father sought custody orders. After hearings and mediation, in August 2016, the court granted mother temporary sole physical and legal custody. In October 2016, mother filed a request for a restraining order against father, which was denied. Father then sought a restraining order against mother, the hearing on which was continued to January 11, 2017. Meanwhile, at a hearing in December 2016, the court granted father visitation from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. on Thursdays and Saturdays, with exchanges on Thursdays at the San Francisco Police Department’s central station and exchanges on Saturdays at Rally Visitation Services (Rally). A review hearing was set for January 11, 2017, together with the hearing on father’s restraining order request. Father did not appear at the hearing on January 11, 2017, and the restraining order request was taken off calendar. Although she was present, mother did not know the custody portion of the hearing was continued to February 23, 2017, and, as a result, did not go to the February hearing. At that hearing, the court ordered joint legal and physical custody of D.H. and increased father’s parenting time, ordering weekly visits running from Tuesday morning to Friday morning or afternoon (depending on the

3 availability of supervision at Rally, where the exchanges were to occur). Mother filed a request to return to sole legal and physical custody but was not able to serve father. Problems escalated when the parties started the new schedule. Father would yell at mother in front of D.H. during exchanges, insult her and tell her he was going to hurt her, and he frequently returned D.H. late after his visits.3 Mother was scared to ask the court to change the custody order because father was “so angry and intimidating,” including threating to “try to kill [mother] if [she] took him to court.” In 2018, on multiple occasions, father called the police or Child Protective Services (CPS), accusing mother of threatening him or hurting the baby, both of which mother denied. Mother was interviewed by CPS repeatedly, as were her older children from a prior relationship, and each time the case was closed. On one occasion in December 2018, father returned D.H. with “so many scratches and bruises that [mother] took him to the doctor, and the doctor reported it to CPS.” Mother spoke with CPS and the case was closed. In January 2019, mother received a call from a doctor saying father had taken D.H. to urgent care and accused mother of burning the child with a cigarette. Father then refused to return D.H. for “many weeks” and filed an ex parte request for sole custody. According to her declaration, mother does not smoke, and she denied hurting D.H. in any way. The court denied the

3 Rally reported late returns after four of five visits in February 2017, and, to mother’s understanding, subsequently kicked father out of the program. Father then started coming to mother’s house “whenever he wanted to exchange our son,” sometimes returning D.H. at 10:00 or 11:00 p.m., even after the parties agreed to have the exchanges at the police station.

4 emergency orders at a hearing on February 1, 2019, but father still refused to return D.H. Mother worked with the San Francisco County District Attorney’s Child Abduction Unit but did not get D.H. back until March 18, 2019. After a hearing on April 2, 2019, the court found it was in D.H.’s best interests to continue the existing custody and visitation orders. The court noted that CPS found the allegations of neglect by mother unfounded and closed the case, and found there was “no credible evidence” supporting mother’s request for sole custody and termination of father’s visitation. The court ordered both parties to participate in the Kids Turn co-parenting program within six months and file proof of completion with the court no later than October 31, 2019.

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Bluebook (online)
City and County of S.F. v. Hale CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-and-county-of-sf-v-hale-ca12-calctapp-2022.