In re Am. D.R. CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 2024
DocketA168489
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Am. D.R. CA1/3 (In re Am. D.R. CA1/3) 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
In re Am. D.R. CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 6/4/24 In re Am. D.R. CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

In re Am. D.R., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

A. D.R., Appellant, v. A168489 Z. M.G., (Alameda County Respondent. Super. Ct. No. HA21112775)

A. D.R., the stepmother of minor Am. D.R., appeals the denial of her petition to terminate the parental rights of minor’s mother, Z. M.G., pursuant to Family Code section 7822.1 On appeal, stepmother contends: (1) the trial court applied the incorrect standard of proof; (2) the court failed to properly apply a “burden shifting doctrine”; (3) the court’s decision is an abuse of discretion and contrary to law; and (4) substantial evidence does not support the court’s decision. We affirm.

1 All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise indicated.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Mother and father are the parents of minor, a boy born in late 2016. By January 2019, mother and father appeared before the trial court seeking custody orders. Mother wanted to relocate to New Jersey (where she is from) with minor. Though noting there was an existing order that minor stay within the county, the court indicated mother could file a Request for Order. Father indicated mother had once already taken minor to New Jersey against court orders. In February 2019, father appeared in court without mother, stating that he did not know where she was and that she said she was moving to New Jersey. The court granted father’s request for sole physical and legal custody with no visitation rights to mother. In March 2019, father appeared in court and indicated he had retrieved minor from mother. Mother appeared by phone, and the court informed her that she could file a Request for Order or work out an agreement with father, but that minor would otherwise stay in California. In October 2021, stepmother filed a petition seeking to terminate mother’s parental rights pursuant to section 7822.2 In support of the petition, stepmother filed a declaration averring, among other things, that: she and father have resided in their current residence since June 2019; she and father are minor’s primary caretakers; they have provided minor a safe,

2 Around the same time, stepmother filed a request to adopt minor, and a document entitled “Consent to Adoption by Parent Retaining Custody” in which father declared his consent to terminating mother’s parental rights and to stepmother’s request to adopt minor. The Alameda County Social Services Agency wrote a report recommending the court grant stepmother’s petition to adopt minor if the court found the allegations of stepmother’s petition to adopt to be true, and “provided the parental rights of the mother . . . are terminated.” (Boldface and italics omitted.)

2 stable, and nurturing environment while mother has no stable residence; mother abandoned minor; mother abducted minor, taking him to New Jersey from April to August 2017, December 2018 to January 2019, and January to March 2019 without father’s consent; mother previously violated court orders; and mother falsely claimed that father had abused her. Various other documents accompanied the petition and stepmother’s later filings, e.g., a marriage certificate showing father and stepmother were married in May 2020, and transcripts from the aforementioned 2019 hearings. Mother filed an opposition, denying any intent to abandon minor. She contended that stepmother had no personal knowledge regarding various facts stepmother alleged in her declaration, and that stepmother was “ ‘throw[ing] mud’ ” with allegations having nothing to do with the issue of terminating parental rights. Mother acknowledged she did not follow proper legal procedures before, explaining she was fleeing domestic violence and did not understand how to navigate the family court system. She indicated she loves minor, raised him in the early years of his life, and wants visitation and a relationship with minor. She further indicated stepmother and father made efforts to cut her out of minor’s life, such as by not accepting or facilitating calls. Mother claimed she paid child support through April 2020, but became unemployed during the pandemic and resumed paying child support after getting a new job. Though she had been saving money to hire an attorney to file a request for visitation, stepmother filed her petition to terminate mother’s parental rights before mother could do so. Accompanying mother’s opposition and later filings were text messages from August 2021 between mother and father, and a printout showing mother’s child support payments.

3 In August 2022, the trial court appointed separate counsel for minor. At a bench trial on June 14, 2023, the parties stipulated to the admission of a report summarizing child support payments. Four witnesses testified, as follows. Father testified the court had granted him sole legal and physical custody of minor in February 2019, with no visitation to mother. Father obtained physical custody of minor in March 2019, after mother had taken minor to the East Coast in violation of the court’s orders. After returning to California, mother initially called minor daily, but less frequently thereafter. She stopped calling around July 2019, though she called once in November 2019. After November 2019, mother made no contact until August 2021. Father arranged it so that mother would not call him; instead, she was supposed to call his mother (the paternal grandmother) in order to talk to minor. To father’s knowledge, his mother never stopped answering mother’s phone calls. Father tried calling mother but did not have the right number. Mother reached out in December 2021, after stepmother filed her petition, and initially called or sent text messages every day. Subsequently, however, she sent text messages only once or twice a month asking about minor. Father did not have a problem with mother’s requests to speak with minor, but he is concerned because minor does not know who mother is. Father wants mother to take a “parenting class on the effect that a missing parent has on a child and then get a psych eval, and that’s it.” Mother apparently provided father a picture of a certificate showing she took a parenting class in 2022, but father indicated the certificate did not show the parenting class was aimed at the effects of “being a missing parent.” Father further testified that mother did not provide child support from March 2019 to early November 2019, and during Covid from April 2020 to

4 December 2021, but now she does provide support. Father indicated he and his family have relocated to Texas. Minor knows stepmother as his mother, but minor also knows and loves mother’s family, some of whom live in California. Minor, who was still very young, had not yet asked who mother’s family members are in relation to him, and father is not sure what he and stepmother would say to minor, but they would eventually tell him everything. Mother testified on her own behalf as follows. Mother was minor’s primary care giver from the time he was born in late 2016 until March 2019. She and minor had a strong bond, and minor has a close relationship with mother’s family and saw them regularly until he and father moved to Texas. Starting in March 2019, mother had phone contact (voice and video calls) with minor, facilitated by father’s mother. After mother moved to the East Coast, she changed her number and did not give her number to father because members of his family were harassing her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In re Am. D.R. CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-am-dr-ca13-calctapp-2024.