Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 2013
DocketA134472
StatusUnpublished

This text of Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1 (Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1) 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
Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 4/23/13 Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 ONE

Guardianship of J.G., a minor.

B.W., A134472

Petitioner and Respondent, (Contra Costa County v. Super. Ct. No. P04-01537) L.F., Objector and Appellant.

When the natural mother (Mother) of J.G. (the minor) found herself incapable of caring for him, she consented to a probate guardianship, turning over responsibility for the minor’s care to her own mother (Guardian). During the first years of the guardianship, Mother maintained contact with the minor, but her continued drug use rendered her incapable of resuming his care. As Mother eventually overcame her problems, seeking unsupervised visitation and playing a greater role in his life, she and Guardian proved incapable of cooperating in the minor’s care. The probate court eventually terminated the guardianship, concluding the continuing conflict between Mother and Guardian was harmful to the minor. Guardian contends the probate court abused its discretion for a variety of reasons, but we find no error and affirm. I. BACKGROUND The minor was born in February 2004 into a deeply dysfunctional home. Mother had been a methamphetamine addict from age 18, and his father had a long criminal record, including charges of kidnapping, armed assault, and domestic violence. When the minor was seven months old, Mother abandoned him with Guardian, her own mother. Mother did not oppose a petition for appointment of Guardian as a temporary guardian, filed in November 2004. At the time, as Mother later recognized, she “was in no condition to take care of myself or a child.” The guardianship was made permanent in February 2005, just after the minor’s first birthday. Mother’s involvement in the minor’s life over the following two years was sporadic, as she continued to struggle with drug abuse. Despite her problems, however, she visited with the minor fairly frequently and remained a presence in his life. Conflict between Mother and Guardian began almost with the inception of the guardianship. In late 2005, Mother was forced to apply for relief to the probate court when Guardian, as she admitted, refused to comply with the court’s visitation order. In requiring compliance, the court noted, “It is not reasonable for [Guardian] to decide unilaterally whether she will choose to comply with court orders. Ideally the parties’ relationship will improve to the point where no specific visitation orders are required. Clearly they are not yet at that point.” Thereafter, Mother and Guardian continued to bring various disputes to court. Notwithstanding the hopes of the court, the parties’ relationship seemed only to worsen over the subsequent six years. In August 2007, three and a half years after the minor’s birth, Mother asked the court for unsupervised visitation “to begin the slow transition for my son to eventually resume in my full custody.” A child custody evaluator appointed by the court filed a report in January 2008. According to the report, the parties were still in conflict over Mother’s visitation. Guardian, who criticized Mother as insensitive, untrustworthy, and tolerant of risky conduct, reported to the minor’s therapist that the minor showed “stress and agitation” in connection with the visits. The therapist had observed similar signs. The minor’s attorney believed Guardian had thwarted Mother’s supervised visitation with the minor by being “inflexible” with respect to visitation supervisors. The evaluator concluded Mother was “more stable than years ago” because she had ceased drug use eight months earlier and begun living with her father, but the evaluator believed Mother’s

2 “underlying personality problems” would interfere with her parenting and recommended continued custody to Guardian. Notwithstanding the evaluator’s report, Mother filed a petition to terminate the guardianship in March 2008. In the months afterward, the parties continued disputing the scope and nature of Mother’s visitation. In a declaration requesting an “interim visitation order,” Guardian stated the minor “in parallel with the increased visitation and supervision changes” had “exhibited a re-occurrence and increase of anxiety symptoms.” Based on the minor’s comments, the therapist blamed these symptoms on the conduct of Mother and her family members, although the therapist had never actually observed the interaction between the minor and Mother. Mother blamed the minor’s symptoms on Guardian’s manipulative conduct. As a result of the parties’ inability to cooperate, even seemingly trivial matters continued to require court intervention. In November 2008, Mother proposed her paternal grandparents as replacement guardians. In an interview with the investigator appointed in connection with this proposal, Guardian expressed concern over the minor’s anxiety in anticipation of visits with Mother and criticized Mother’s conduct with the minor. The minor himself told the investigator he liked visiting Mother. Mother was equally critical of Guardian, believing she was thwarting her own attempts to reestablish a relationship with the minor. When the investigator covertly observed Mother’s interactions with the minor at a park, the minor appeared “carefree,” and the minor, Mother, and her grandparents “appeared to have a genuine, loving and connected relationship with one another.” In a brief report to the court, the minor’s counsel similarly noted warm and positive relationships between both the minor and Mother and the minor and Guardian, and the minor told the attorney he “had fun” at both homes. A three-day trial on the petition to terminate the guardianship or replace the guardian began on June 9, 2009, by which time Mother had been drug-free for two

3 years.1 The child custody evaluator who rendered the January 2008 report recognized Mother’s “tremendous progress in her own life” and her love for the minor, but she believed Mother was more concerned with regaining custody of the minor than being a good parent. She was also uncertain whether the minor was comfortable with Mother and believed Mother was motivated by jealousy of Guardian and her relationship with the minor. The evaluator strongly recommended a permanent continuation of the guardianship because the minor had developed a strong relationship with Guardian and suffered anxiety over the uncertainty created by the possibility of the loss of his home. She saw Mother as a weekend parent, rather than a primary caretaker. The minor’s long- time therapist reached a similar conclusion. The probate court denied the petition to terminate the guardianship, but it expanded Mother’s visitation rights, removed the requirement for supervision of visits, and increased Mother’s role in the minor’s everyday life, on condition Mother submit to periodic drug testing. The court told Guardian her “lack of flexibility” regarding visitation “is contrary to [the minor’s] best interest” and warned her that an unwillingness to compromise “will play a part in perhaps accelerating a termination of a guardianship.” At the end of 2009, a new therapist appointed for the minor filed a letter report with the court. The therapist found the minor to be a “very fragile child” with a “major anxiety disorder.” The therapist objected to a planned vacation with Mother, since the minor had expressed contempt for Mother and had “difficulty negotiating” the visits with Mother.

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Guardianship of J.G. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-jg-ca11-calctapp-2013.