Conservatorship of Navarrete

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2020
DocketE070210
StatusPublished

This text of Conservatorship of Navarrete (Conservatorship of Navarrete) 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
Conservatorship of Navarrete, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/4/20; Modified and Certified for Publication 12/21/20 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

Conservatorship of the Person and Estate of ANNA NAVARRETE.

RODOLFO NAVARRETE, E070210 Petitioner and Respondent, (Super.Ct.No. RIP1600752) v. OPINION ANNA NAVARRETE, an Incompetent Person, etc.,

Objector and Appellant.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Thomas H. Cahraman,

Judge. Reversed.

Brown White & Osborn and Mark J. Andrew Flory, attorneys for Objector and

Appellant.

No appearance for Petitioner and Respondent.

1 Anna Navarrete is an adult child of Maria Navarrete (mother) and Rodolfo

Navarrete, Sr. (father), who split up during the dispute that led to this appeal. Navarrete is

a 33-year-old woman who has cerebral palsy and a speech disorder which limit her ability

to answer questions and express her needs and desires. Mother has been her primary

caregiver.

Mother filed a petition asking to be appointed Navarrete’s probate conservator.

Navarrete’s father and older brother objected to mother’s petition, and her brother filed a

competing petition asking to be appointed instead. Mother and father also sought

domestic violence restraining orders against each other.

Lurking behind this dispute is the accusation that father sexually assaulted and

raped Navarrete. At trial, Navarrete’s therapist, mother, and younger brother, Adrian

Navarrete (Adrian), said Navarrete told them her father sexually assaulted and raped her

and she fears her father. Father testified and denied the accusations. The trial court

interviewed Navarrete, but concluded she wasn’t a competent witness before eliciting any

testimony from her about the assaults. In the end, though the court expressed uncertainty

about what had happened, it found mother hadn’t proven the accusations of sexual assault

by a preponderance of the evidence, but also found Navarrete had genuine fear of her

father and didn’t want to see him.

The trial court appointed mother as Navarrete’s probate conservator and denied

the brother’s petition. Later, after further hearings, the trial court granted father visitation

and ordered Navarrete to attend joint counseling sessions with her father. The court

2 concluded, over the objection of Navarrete, her conservator, and her attorney, that such

visits were in her best interest because it would allow reconciliation in the event the

accusations of sexual assault weren’t true.

The visitation order is the only part of the case challenged on appeal. Navarrete

attacks the order in several ways. First, she argues the conservatorship statute reserves to

her as an adult conservatee the choice to refuse visitors. Second, she says the court order

violates her constitutional right to privacy and autonomy under the California

Constitution. Third, she says the court abused its discretion by determining visitation with

her father was in her best interest despite her accusations and her genuine fear of him. In

the alternative, she argues the trial court was wrong to bar her testimony, which would

have established her father abused her and made plain that visits are not in her best

interest. Father and the older brother have not filed briefs.

We hold the court did not have the authority to order Navarrete to attend joint

counseling sessions with her father and therefore reverse the order.

I

FACTS

Anna Navarrete has cerebral palsy, a developmental speech and language disorder,

and an anxiety adjustment disorder. She had a kidney transplant as a teenager and takes

several medications to manage her condition. Her mother has always attended to her

medications.

3 Mother said Navarrete is able to help around the house by cooking and doing

laundry. She’s also able to work part-time outside the house. The details of her

employment didn’t come out at trial, but her mother said she had been working from 8:00

a.m. to 2:30 p.m. without supervision by a family member. She made friends at work,

including a boyfriend, who was also disabled. However, Navarrete stopped working after

an incident in April 2016, when she and her boyfriend were found engaged in sexual

conduct at the workplace. Though they don’t see each other often now, they’re still

friends and communicate by texting each other.

On July 29, 2016, Navarrete’s mother filed a petition to be appointed her probate

conservator. Navarrete’s older brother, Rodolfo Navarrete, Jr. (Rudy), filed an objection

to mother’s petition and later filed a petition asking that he be appointed as her

conservator. Navarrete’s father also filed an objection to naming mother as conservator,

and mother objected to Rudy’s petition. Navarrete’s father also asked the court to order

visitation between himself and Navarrete.

The trial court held a trial on the competing requests over several days from

February to June 2017. Mother, father, Rudy, Adrian, and Navarrete’s therapist testified

at trial, and the trial court interviewed Navarrete, but found her not competent to testify.

4 A. Accusations of Sexual Assault and Rape

The conflict within the family appears to have started, or at least escalated, shortly

after May 31, 2016, the night Navarrete accused her father of having molested and raped

her.

According to mother, she woke around 3:00 a.m. that morning when she heard

people talking. She said father had kicked her out of their shared bedroom and she was

sleeping alone in their guest room. She got out of bed and found Navarrete was awake

and in her bathroom, and father was awake and in his own bathroom. She said the fact

that both were up at the same time made her suspicious, so she asked Navarrete about it

the next morning. “I asked Anna, ‘Why were you awake in the morning and your father

was awake too?’ [¶] She goes, ‘Oh, he was in my room.’” Mother asked her what

happened in her room, and Navarrete said, “‘he went into bed. You know, he started

touching me,’ in [my] private.” Mother said her body language indicated she was “[k]ind

of, like scared to tell me what happened.”

Navarrete’s younger brother, Adrian, said she came to him around 7:30 a.m. that

morning after talking to her mother. He said she “was very distressed and emotional. She

was crying a lot, and while – she was shaking her hands a lot, as if she couldn’t control

herself. [¶] . . . [¶] She told me that her father had raped her.” Asked for her exact words,

he said, “She had told me that he had stuck his – well, she used the word ‘dick’ inside her

private word, and she moved her hands towards her bottom to show that.” She also said,

“he had stuck his dick in her mouth and she pointed to her mouth” and “touched her in

5 her breasts and private word, down there, and she would move her hand, showing, you

know, how he had touched her.” Adrian also testified about Navarrete’s reaction when

she saw her father in the hallway during trial. “She was very shaken up. She was wanting

to cry and she couldn’t look at my father in the eyes. He would – she would look down.

She didn’t want to look at him, and she – when everyone would ask if she was okay, she

would kind of shudder whenever she would talk, speak.”

They didn’t call the police or confront father immediately. They said they wanted

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