Contra Costa County Children & Family Services Bureau v. Derrick S.

67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 367, 156 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1754
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2007
DocketA116871
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 367 (Contra Costa County Children & Family Services Bureau v. Derrick S.) 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
Contra Costa County Children & Family Services Bureau v. Derrick S., 67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 367, 156 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1754 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

RICHMAN, J.

Dependent Derrick S. appeals from the order made at the six-month review when the juvenile court denied his motion that his mother not receive additional months of reunification services. Derrick supported his motion with In re Aryanna C. (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 1234 [34 Cal.Rptr.3d 288] (Aryanna C.), where the Court of Appeal for the Third District held that a juvenile court has the discretion to terminate reunification services at any point after ordering them for a dependent minor who was under the age of three years when removed from parental custody. Because Derrick was over the age of three when he was removed from his mother’s custody, the court believed the reasoning of Aryanna C. did not apply, and that the court was required by Welfare and Institutions Code section 361.5 and California Rules of Court former rule 1460 1 to grant the mother the additional six months of reunification services. Indeed, the court expressly stated that it had no discretion not to order the additional services.

We conclude that Aryanna C. is soundly reasoned and that its holding is equally applicable to dependents over the age of three. No statute or rule of court restricts a juvenile court’s discretion to order less than the maximum amount of reunification services when confronted with a parent who is unwilling or unable to benefit from additional reunification services, or if for other reasons the likelihood of reunifying the family is faint. In light of this conclusion, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Derrick’s mother, Stephanie S., had herself been a dependent due to the neglect of her mother, Derrick’s grandmother. Stephanie’s dependency was *440 ended in 1997 because her mother failed to complete her reunification plan, and because Stephanie had become a runaway.

Derrick was bom the following year. Shortly after he was bom, Derrick was the subject of a dependency commenced because Stephanie was unable to care for him adequately. The dependency was terminated in 2000 after Stephanie completed her reunification plan.

In early 2006, the Contra Costa County Children and Family Services Bureau (Bureau) received information that Derrick, then seven years of age, was not attending school and was not receiving adequate food and dental care. Derrick was living with Stephanie and her mother. The relationship between the two women was rocky; both had substance abuse problems. The Bureau was informally attempting to improve matters with a voluntary family maintenance plan.

But it was the dual facts of Stephanie’s arrest and her leaving Derrick in the care of his grandmother that led the Bureau, in March 2006, to file a petition to the effect that Derrick qualified as a dependent child. Derrick was promptly detained at a hearing Stephanie did not attend.

At the jurisdictional hearing held on May 23, 2006, Stephanie submitted on a single amended allegation that she “failed to provide adequate dental treatment and adequate housing for the child and has failed to ensure that the child attend school regularly” within the meaning of section 300, subdivision (b). The juvenile court sustained this allegation. The remaining allegations were “dismissed with the understanding” that Stephanie would undertake 45 days of constant drug testing, and if she tested positive she would enter a “more significant treatment” regimen.

On June 30, 2006, a week before the scheduled dispositional hearing, the Bureau sent a letter advising the court that as of that date it “has not received any drug testing results” from Stephanie. The Bureau also confirmed that Stephanie “settled her criminal matter and [had] been ordered to complete a six-month residential treatment program to be monitored by the Contra Costa County Probation Department.” The Bureau recommended that Stephanie receive reunification services according to a case plan that had been modified “to conform with the requirements of the Probation Department.”

Stephanie was not present at the July 7, 2006 dispositional hearing. Her counsel explained to the court that many, but not all, of her missed drug tests were due to “her being required to appear in criminal court” until “the case settled on June 8th.” After brief discussion of the proposed case plan, the court approved it. The plan required Stephanie to complete the residential *441 treatment program and followup monitoring. Stephanie was ordered to meet with the social worker every month. She was granted supervised visitation with Derrick up to twice a week. Derrick was declared a dependent child.

The six-month review was initially scheduled for late November 2006, but it was continued to January 3, 2007. The Bureau prepared a status' report dated November 21, 2006. Its conclusions were mixed. Stephanie had not entered, much less completed, a residential drug treatment program. The social worker reported that Stephanie “has had fairly regular phone calls with Derrick, but her visitation with the child has been problematic. [Stephanie] is not easily contacted by telephone, as she does not have her own phone and has to rely on others to relay messages to her through their phones. [Stephanie] has also not presented any evidence to the Bureau regarding her participation in any of the services listed on her case plan.”

The social worker was being euphemistic. As she went on to explain; “According to . . . the Concord Police Department, [Stephanie] has a no-bail, felony warrant for arrest for non-compliance with the conditions of her probation .... [Stephanie] has not been testing regularly for probation, nor communicating regularly with her probation office. The Concord Police Department is actively seeking [Stephanie] at this time for arrest.”

As for Derrick reuniting with his mother, the social worker concluded that he “would not be safe in her home at this time due to the [current] instability, substance abuse and illegal activity.” On the other hand, “Derrick appears to be stable in his current location and has bonded with the members of the foster family,” who “are interested in the adoption or guardianship of Derrick should his mother fail to regain custody of him.”

Nevertheless, the Bureau was guardedly optimistic about an ultimate reunification. It recommended additional reunification services, but it warned that even if this recommendation were adopted by the court, Stephanie “must realize that she must make adequate progress during the next six months of Family Reunification Services in order to regain custody of her son or the Bureau will request that a hearing is scheduled to terminate her parental rights to allow Derrick to be adopted.”

In anticipation of the scheduled November hearing, Derrick forwarded to the court a two-page “Review Brief’ consisting of a long excerpt from Aryanna C. and requesting that “an early W&I 366.26 hearing be set as quickly as possible pursuant to the holding” of that decision.

On December 1, 2006, the court received another communication from the social worker reporting that “the Bureau received an anonymous call from a *442

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 367, 156 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/contra-costa-county-children-family-services-bureau-v-derrick-s-calctapp-2007.