In re B.P. CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 2025
DocketH051748
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re B.P. CA6 (In re B.P. CA6) 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 B.P. CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 1/9/25 In re B.P. CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re B.P. et al., Persons Coming Under H051748, H052054 the Juvenile Court Law. (Monterey County Super. Ct. Nos. 23JD000112, 23JD000113, 23JD000114, 23JD000115) MONTEREY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES,

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

J.P.,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appellant J.P. (Father) filed two appeals1 from the juvenile court’s orders, including the findings and orders adjudicating his four children as dependents under Welfare and Institutions Code section 3002 and removing them from his care. Father contends (1) the court violated his constitutional rights by denying him a contested jurisdictional hearing; and (2) the jurisdictional findings and disposition orders removing his children and restricting his visitation are not supported by substantial evidence.

We ordered both appeals (appeal Nos. H051748, H052054) considered together 1

for purposes of briefing, argument, and disposition. 2 Unless otherwise specified, all undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. Respondent Monterey County Department of Social Services (the Department) contends Father’s appeals should be dismissed as untimely and moot, and, in any event, the court’s findings and orders were supported by substantial evidence. Mother M.P. (Mother) is not a party to either appeal. For the reasons stated below, we dismiss Father’s first appeal (appeal No. H051748), we review the merits of Father’s second appeal (appeal No. H052054), and we reverse, in part, the court’s jurisdictional findings and disposition orders.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Father and Mother are married and have four children involved in this dependency proceeding: B.P., also known as N.P. (born 2007),3 Jk.P. (born 2009), Ja.P. (born 2012), and H.P. (born 2020). Although the family—Mother, in particular—has been involved in prior dependency cases, the family’s last dependency case was dismissed in 2019 after the parents completed their reunification plan.

A. Events Leading Up to Dependency Proceedings In late 2023, the Department received a referral concerning N.P. after he was hospitalized for attempting to harm himself. N.P. reported the following to hospital staff: his home was littered with animal and rodent waste, contained mold, his bedroom and the kitchen were infested with rats, Father smoked methamphetamine in the garage, Father and Mother argued, Mother’s friend used drugs in front of the children, Father made statements threatening to kill Mother and urinate in her drinks, and his parents kept his youngest sibling, H.P., in her high chair for up to 10 hours a day. N.P. stated that he did not want to go home and, if forced to do so, he would kill himself. The Department started an immediate investigation. N.P. made the same statements to the social worker and expressed concern for his siblings. N.P. claimed

B.P. prefers to be called N.P. and identifies with pronouns he/his/him. We will 3

refer to the minor by his preferred name and pronouns, as did the parties in the underlying proceedings and appellate briefs.

2 Father hit Jk.P. with a belt two weeks prior for exposing his private parts to his siblings. When H.P. misbehaved, she was “smacked” in the face and got “her hair pulled” (the record does not identify which parent committed these alleged acts). N.P. alleged that his parents were unsupportive of his gender transition, called him names, were inattentive to his dental needs, and Mother previously gave him marijuana and cigarettes. N.P. found a bag with powdery substance in the garage a few weeks prior. N.P. stated his parents argued frequently and, sometimes the arguments were physical; Mother threw objects at Father and hit him with a stick. N.P. had not seen Father carry out the threat to urinate in Mother’s drinks. N.P. stated he felt unsafe with his parents and asked for help. The same day, a social worker from the Department interviewed N.P.’s younger siblings, Jk.P. and Ja.P., at their schools. Jk.P. appeared nervous and stated he needed to call Father before speaking to a social worker, but the interview proceeded regardless. Jk.P. was clean and had no visible injuries, marks or bruises. Jk.P. provided cursory responses and mentioned he did not want to be “taken away” like last time. He denied any domestic violence between his parents, denied any physical discipline and abuse by his parents, and stated “everything is fine.” As to Ja.P., he appeared happy, healthy, and clean with no visible injuries, marks, or bruises. Ja.P. reported that his parents argued and said bad words to each other, and Mother had hit Father on the back of the head. Ja.P. stated that Mother yelled and called Ja.P. profane names, but Father told her to stop and protected him. For discipline, Ja.P. responded that his parents would send him to his room, although they had hit him and his siblings with a belt and a hanger, most recently in the previous week. Ja.P. reported that Mother hit Jk.P. with a belt recently because Jk.P.’s music was too loud, but Ja.P. did not know if Jk.P. sustained any injuries. As to the conditions of the home, Ja.P. stated that the family’s two dogs sometimes urinated or defected in the house, but Father would clean it up. Father usually did the laundry at home and sometimes cooked. Ja.P. denied seeing rodents in the home but had seen them in the backyard.

3 With regard to N.P.’s hospitalization, Jk.P. and Ja.P. both stated, in their separate interviews, that N.P. had been depressed since he recently broke up with his boyfriend, S., of whom the parents disapproved. After the children’s interviews, the social worker met with the parents in a parking lot near Mother’s doctor’s office, as that was the most convenient location for the family at that time. All three children—Jk.P., Ja.P., and H.P.—were present in the family vehicle. H.P. appeared happy, healthy, and clean with no visible injuries, marks or bruises. Father denied using physical discipline, hitting the children, domestic violence, and drug use. Father believed N.P. reported the family to the Department after Father and Mother prohibited N.P. from talking to S., a friend he met online. Father stated they saw an adverse change in N.P.’s mental state and social interactions after he met S., whom they later realized was an adult male and not a teenager. Mother blamed N.P. for making up the allegations of abuse at home after she and Father banned N.P. from speaking to S. Both parents claimed they supported N.P.’s gender identity; Father stated that he took N.P. to school to change his identification to his preferred name and that the family had gone to two pride events with N.P. Later that evening, the social worker, accompanied by law enforcement, made a scheduled visit to inspect the family’s home.4 The social worker noted that the home appeared recently cleaned because the floors were wet and the fan was on, although the weather was cold outside. N.P.’s room appeared messy with clothes on the floor and bed. Jk.P. and Ja.P. shared a room with a bunk bed, and there was a crib in the master bedroom for H.P. The bathrooms appeared dirty and stained. The home had running water, electricity, food, and clean clothing. Father allowed the Department to inspect the garage, which was cluttered and had cigarette boxes on the floor.

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