In re A.P. CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 2013
DocketF066285
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re A.P. CA5 (In re A.P. CA5) 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 A.P. CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/15/13 In re A.P. CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re A.P., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

DAWN G., F066285

Petitioner and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. S-1501-AT-3104)

v. OPINION MICHAEL P.,

Objector and Appellant.

THE COURT* APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern County. James L. Compton, Commissioner. Linda J. Conrad, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Objector and Appellant. Dawn G., in pro. per., for Petitioner and Respondent. -ooOoo-

* Before Levy, Acting P.J., Franson, J. and Peña, J. Michael P., father, appeals from a judgment granting a petition, pursuant to Family Code section 78221, declaring his daughter A., free from his custody and control. The petition was brought by Dawn G., A.’s mother. Father contends that there is insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings. We disagree and affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY Father and mother met in July of 2001 and A. was born in July of 2002. Father was not listed as A.’s father on her birth certificate. Father and mother separated and, in February of 2003, they were awarded joint legal and physical custody of A., with primary custody awarded to mother and weekly Friday through Sunday visitation with father. Father was later ordered to pay child support in the amount of $254 per month. Mother claimed she left father in 2003 due to increasing domestic violence. Father lost contact with mother and A., but eventually discovered they were living in a Long Beach domestic violence shelter. Father filed an action in Mojave for child concealment against mother. In August of 2004, the trial court discharged the contempt matter against mother and denied father’s motion for change of custody. The parties stipulated that father would have weekly custody for three days from Friday through Sunday, as previously ordered. The court further ordered that mother would notify father of any change in address within Kern County and neither party was to move A.’s residence out of the county without written permission of the other parent or a court order. According to mother, she and father reconciled for three months in 2004, but separated again after mother alleged further domestic violence. Mother moved with A. to a home on Quarter Avenue in Bakersfield; father moved to Ridgecrest.

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

2. In March of 2006, father separated from his then wife, Amy, and moved into his mother’s home on Norma Street in Ridgecrest. A., who was now nearly four years old, spent three days visiting father at that address. At the time, A. and mother were living with mother’s husband, Robert G., whom she had married sometime in 2003. According to mother, in May of 2006, father came over unannounced with A.’s belongings. When mother brought A. to the door, father gave A. a kiss on the forehead, said he loved her and would miss her, and then left. Mother claims that was father’s last contact with A. Father claimed he stopped visiting A. in 2006 because he no longer had a driver’s license and Amy would not drive him to visits. Amy took the vehicle and all of their property. Father had no money or employment and was disabled due to a 2005 assault in which he was beaten by three individuals. Father contacted mother and said he could not provide transportation for visitation, but mother told father he would have to pick up A. to see her. After his last visit with A., father went to Oregon for six months to look for work. He did not change his address and, because he was separated from Amy, she turned off his cell phone. In September of 2006, father returned to California and telephoned mother using his brother’s land line. Father left mother a message where she could return his call, but she did not. Father tried to contact mother many times after 2006, but he could not find her. He stopped calling because he did not think he could get through to her. He searched the internet to try and find mother and A. Father claimed he tried to contact mother in 2007, but he did not know where she and A. were living. He thought mother had moved from the house she shared with Robert, but mother did not notify or call him when she left that house. When father tried to call mother, he got an automated message on an answering machine. He did not call again after that because he thought the phone was disconnected.

3. Sometime before Christmas of 2007, father’s mother helped him research mother’s address on the internet, but was unsuccessful. Father was also unable to locate mother through the child abduction unit because he lived 100 miles from Bakersfield and had no transportation to file the necessary paperwork. According to mother, she and A. lived with Robert in Bakersfield until November of 2007. After that, she moved in with her mother on Horsethief in Tehachapi. Mother did not inform father of the address changes because she did not know where he was located. Mother thought that, since father had not had contact with A. for a few years, it was no longer in A.’s best interest to have contact with him because she would not remember him. But mother claimed she never tried to keep A. away from father, except when she was in the domestic violence shelter in 2003. In February of 2008, Robert shut off mother’s cell phone. Mother thought father could contact her through her mother and stepfather, because their home and cell phone numbers had not changed since 2004 and father had contacted mother on all of those numbers previously. In June of 2008, mother and A. moved to Al Hatta Court in Tehachapi. Mother did not inform father of this move, claiming she could not locate him, and she acknowledged that he had no idea where she lived after she moved there. After Al Hatta, mother moved in with a boyfriend on Quail Spring. Sometime later, she moved again, this time to live with her brother on Monterey Street.2 During 2008, father looked “some more” for mother’s address on the internet. Father did not file further contempt charges against mother because he was told by court personnel in Mojave that he needed mother’s address in order to do so. Mother testified that she learned father was in jail in July of 2009, but she did not send him any notices of where she was while he was in jail. Mother and A. lived in 2 Mother did not say in which city these streets were located.

4. Canada from November of 2009 through January of 2011, with a three-month stint in Washington. Mother admitted that she did not try to contact father to let him know where she was after 2009. In January of 2011, after mother returned from Canada, she and A. lived with mother’s mother and stepfather in Stallion Springs, near Tehachapi. One month later, mother moved in with father’s former wife Amy in Lancaster.3 Mother admitted that she violated the court order by failing to tell father where she lived. At some point, mother moved to a rural part of Tehachapi. Mother and A. lived with mother’s new boyfriend, Eddie, and the two talked about getting married. Eddie wanted to adopt A. In September of 2011, father received a letter from mother asking if he was “Michael [P.]” The letter was sent to his Ridgecrest address, the same address he had in 2006. The letter had a post office box as the return address. Father did not respond to the letter, but went to the sheriff’s station in Rosamond to get help in finding mother’s home address so he could try to get visitation with A.

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In re A.P. CA5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ap-ca5-calctapp-2013.