Fresno County Department of Social Services v. Monica G.

236 Cal. App. 4th 654, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 740, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 2015
DocketF070114
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 236 Cal. App. 4th 654 (Fresno County Department of Social Services v. Monica G.) 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
Fresno County Department of Social Services v. Monica G., 236 Cal. App. 4th 654, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 740, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 380 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

PENA, J.-

When the juvenile court orders a legal guardianship for a child with visitation for the mother, and the child refuses to participate in visitation, may the court terminate dependency jurisdiction with knowledge that its visitation order will not be honored or enforceable? We conclude it may not do so absent a finding continued visitation would be detrimental to the child. We reverse the order terminating dependency jurisdiction.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL SUMMARY

Appellant Monica G. is the mother of nine-year-old Ethan J. who is currently in the custody of his maternal grandmother and legal guardian, Vera. Monica and Vera have a strained and contentious relationship.

These dependency proceedings were initiated in September 2010 after Vera contacted the police to report that Monica was trying to remove then four-year-old Ethan and his sisters, 17-year-old R.S. and 14-year-old G.G., 1 from her home. Monica, who was homeless and using methamphetamine, had left the children in Vera’s custody because she could not care for them. Vera contacted the police after she and Monica argued about Monica’s drug use and Monica tried to leave with the children.

*657 The responding police officer placed a protective hold on the children and contacted the Fresno County Department of Social Services (department). There was at that time an open investigation into allegations that a female friend of Monica’s, Ms. C., sexually molested R.S. and Ethan. Monica admitted she was still in contact with Ms. C.

R.S. and Ethan confirmed the sexual molestation allegation. R.S. told the emergency response social worker that two men and two women tied her arms and legs to a bed and molested her while she was staying in a motel with Monica. She said they also tied Ethan up and Ms. C. touched his private parts. She did not know if Monica was present at the time. Ethan said Ms. C. and another person touched his “peepee” in a motel room.

The department filed a dependency petition seeking the children’s removal and placed them with Vera. The juvenile court exercised its dependency jurisdiction over the children and in March 2011 ordered Monica to participate in reunification services.

Monica participated in her court-ordered services but ultimately made minimal progress in completing them. Most notably, she needed but refused inpatient drug treatment. Nevertheless, Monica regularly visited Ethan and was loving and affectionate with him.

In February 2011, Ethan began weekly therapy sessions with Dr. William Latta who reported Ethan initially presented with frequent anger outbursts, anxiety, poor focus and impulsivity. However, Ethan’s confidence and happiness increased, which Dr. Latta attributed to the loving and structured environment Vera provided him. Dr. Latta did not recommend returning Ethan to Monica’s custody in part because of her noncompliance, but also because Ethan struggled with insecure attachment and was doing well in Vera’s care.

In January 2012, at the 12-month review hearing, the juvenile court terminated Monica’s reunification services. In March 2012, Dr. Latta discharged Ethan from mental health services after determining Ethan met his mental health goals.

In June 2012, at the Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 2 permanency hearing, the juvenile court selected guardianship as the permanent plan for Ethan and G.G. and appointed Vera as the children’s guardian. The court ordered one unforced and unsupervised visit a month for Monica, Ethan and G.G. at Monica’s residence. The court terminated its dependency jurisdiction and retained jurisdiction over the children as • wards of the guardianship.

*658 In February 2013, Monica filed a petition under section 388 (section 388 petition) requesting extended visits with the children. She declared in the petition that she maintained sobriety, completed an anger management class and was working on her general education requirements.

The department recommended the juvenile court deny Monica’s section 388 petition. It reported that the visitation schedule was not being followed because Ethan and G.G. did not want to visit Monica. Ethan and G.G. reported that Monica easily angered and often engaged in verbal arguments with Vera. Vera reported that Monica became angry especially when Ethan chose not to visit her. She berated him and tried to force visitation. Ethan and G.G. also reported that they were happy with Vera and did not want increased visitation. After a contested hearing, the juvenile court denied the section 388 petition.

In November 2013, Monica filed another section 388 petition requesting overnight visits with Ethan and custody of G.G.- Monica had maintained her sobriety, completed a parenting program and outpatient drug treatment, and received high school equivalency and work readiness certificates. Monica declared in the petition that G.G. was unhappy with Vera and fearful of her and wanted to return to her custody.

A social worker interviewed G.G. and Ethan regarding Monica’s requests. G.G. said she was emotionally overwhelmed and mentally stressed in Vera’s care. She said Vera was very restrictive of her activities and verbally aggressive with her. She said she and Ethan wanted more contact with Monica but Vera would not allow it and would not discuss it with Monica. Ethan, however, told the social worker he did not want increased visits with Monica and did not want to visit her even once a month. The department recommended the juvenile court return G.G. to Monica’s custody and grant Monica liberal visits with Ethan.

In February 2014, following a contested hearing on the section 388 petition, the juvenile court reinstated its dependency jurisdiction over Ethan and G.G., terminated the guardianship as to G.G., and returned G.G. to Monica’s custody with family maintenance services. The court ordered Ethan and Monica liberal visitation, the time and place to be agreed upon by Monica and Vera. The parties informally agreed that Ethan would not be forced to visit Monica. Monica’s attorney said Monica did not want Ethan “dragged into a vehicle and . . . forced to visit.” The court set a hearing in April 2014 to review the status of Ethan’s visitation.

In its report for the April 2014 hearing, the department informed the juvenile court that Ethan refused to visit Monica and G.G. Monica blamed *659 Vera, whom she accused of emotionally abusing and manipulating Ethan. The department investigated Monica’s accusations and found them baseless.

In April 2014, the juvenile court dismissed its dependency jurisdiction over G.G. and indicated it would also dismiss dependency jurisdiction over Ethan as required by section 366.3, subdivision (a). At the request of Monica’s attorney, the juvenile court set a contested postpermanency review hearing (contested hearing).

On June 18, 2014, the juvenile court convened the contested hearing. Monica’s attorney requested therapeutic visitation so that Monica could reestablish her relationship with Ethan. The court ordered therapeutic supervised visitation between Ethan, Monica and G.G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 Cal. App. 4th 654, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 740, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fresno-county-department-of-social-services-v-monica-g-calctapp-2015.