In re Caden C.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 2019
DocketA153925
StatusPublished

This text of In re Caden C. (In re Caden C.) 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 Caden C., (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 4/9/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

In re CADEN C., A Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, A153925, A154042 Plaintiff and Appellant, v. (San Francisco County CHRISTINE C. et al., Super. Ct. No. JD15-3034)

Defendants and Respondents; CADEN C., a Minor, Appellant.

We are familiar with this dependency proceeding, having previously reviewed and upheld several prior court orders in the matter, including the juvenile court’s decision to set a permanency planning hearing pursuant to section 366.26 of the Welfare and Institutions Code1 for then seven-year-old Caden C. (C.C. v. Superior Court (Aug. 28, 2017, A151400 [nonpub. opn.].) At the permanency planning hearing in early 2018, the juvenile court determined that Christine C. (mother) had established a beneficial relationship with Caden under section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(B)(i), sufficient to justify a permanent plan of long-term foster care rather than the statutorily preferred plan of adoption. Both Caden and the San Francisco Human Services Agency (Agency) appeal the court’s application of the beneficial relationship exception and decision to forgo termination of parental rights. Having consolidated and considered the two

1 All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise specified. appeals, we conclude the juvenile court’s reliance on the beneficial relationship exception in this case was an abuse of discretion under the applicable legal standard. We therefore reverse. I. BACKGROUND A. Mother’s Prior Child Welfare History Mother’s involvement with the child welfare system began in 1986 when her first child, M.C., was detained at birth after both mother and child tested positive for marijuana and cocaine. In August 1989, M.C. was again detained, this time with his younger brother B.P.C. (born in 1987). The same pattern continued for 30 years: each of mother’s six children would be removed from her care—sometimes several times—and declared a juvenile court dependent based on recurring concerns about mother’s chronic substance abuse, inability to care for her children, and domestic violence in the household. Mother would often enter residential drug treatment and stabilize temporarily, only to relapse again. During this timeframe, sole custody of mother’s third child, T.A. (born in 1995), was granted to the noncustodial, nonoffending parent. Mother’s fourth child, B.C. (born in 2000), was removed and placed in the home of her paternal grandmother, who adopted her. Mother’s fifth child, N.C.-G. (born in 2002) was removed as a toddler from mother’s care and placed in legal guardianship with her paternal grandmother. Mother was convicted of felony drug offenses in 1991 and 2004. After conviction for a third felony drug offense in September 2006, mother was sentenced to three years in prison. It was into this significant history of dysfunction that Caden, the minor involved in these proceedings, was born in 2009. B. Caden’s Initial Removal from Mother Prior to his initial detention in September 2013, Marin County Health and Human Services (Marin CPS) was well aware of Caden’s situation, having received 11 referrals expressing concern for the minor’s well-being in mother’s custody. When Caden was a toddler, Marin CPS received reports that mother was actively smoking methamphetamine, including in a closed room with the minor present. Mother was seen

2 getting angry and “taking it out” on the minor by pushing and throwing him in his crib. As a result of these referrals, mother signed a contract with Marin CPS, agreeing to obtain a sponsor, attend a baseline number of 12-step (AA/NA) meetings, and participate in random drug testing. Mother was offered voluntary services but declined them. The contract did not take. In May 2012, mother reportedly stated she had been smoking methamphetamine on a daily basis for two years. A drug task force searched mother’s home in Fall 2012, with Caden present, and found a methamphetamine pipe in mother’s purse. Other referrals in 2012 expressed concern about mother’s drug use in Caden’s presence and plan to sleep outdoors with Caden. Although Marin CPS offered funding for several nights’ shelter and arranged for mother to enter a treatment program, mother declined these resources. Caden was taken into protective custody on September 11, 2013—at the age of four years three months. Mother and Caden were ineligible for transitional housing due to mother’s lack of employment and positive drug test for PCP in February. Mother’s “behavior and language was increasing in frequency and intensity”—she was observed screaming at Caden and was reported to have stated: “ ‘I want to get rid of Caden so I can get high on Oxycodon.’ ” Caden was not bathing and did not appear to be eating regularly. He was not enrolled in Head Start and only sporadically attended his speech therapy. Mother defended her drug use, commenting that she does better on methamphetamine than without it. Mother admitted she was an addict but asserted she nevertheless took good care of her son. She stated she did not need a treatment program and did not understand why Caden had been removed from her. Although diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression, mother was not taking medication or following through with mental health referrals. Caden was present when mother expressed extreme frustration, feelings of hopelessness, and suicidal thoughts. According to the social worker, mother was “relying on Caden for emotional support rather than focusing on his needs.” In September 2013, Marin CPS filed a dependency petition with respect to Caden, stating the minor was at risk of harm due to mother’s

3 entrenched substance abuse, mental health issues, and prior child welfare history with her other children.2 Agency reports revealed the traumatic impact of mother’s lifestyle on Caden. M.G. reported mother would scream at Caden and get physical with him. He stated that, although Caden loved mother, he seemed “ ‘very confused’ ” by all of the instability he witnessed. Father described the circumstances underlying his domestic violence conviction as follows: “ ‘[Mother] was smoking meth, and dealing drugs, and put her hands on Caden too many times, so I put my hands on her once.’ ” Mother’s case manager at a shelter program where she and Caden had recently stayed related that mother would yell at the minor and placed “ ‘a lot of her problems onto him.’ ” Prior to his removal, mother and Caden had sporadically attended parent-child therapy but were dropped after repeatedly failing to appear when scheduled. Caden was diagnosed with disruptive behavior disorder and PTSD, with symptoms of aggression, impairment of social relationships, tantrums, regressions, and emotional dysregulation. In the social worker’s view, mother’s untreated drug addiction and mental health issues exposed Caden “to chronic trauma, instability, and dangerous situations including domestic violence, his parents’ alcohol and poly-substance abuse, and most recently, homelessness” after mother failed to take advantage of numerous community-based services. In November 2013, both mother and father submitted on an amended petition, and the juvenile court found that Caden was a child described by subdivision (b) of section 300. At the dispositional hearing on January 14, 2014, the juvenile court declared Caden to be a juvenile court dependent, formally removed him from mother’s custody,

2 The jurisdictional report also raised concerns about domestic violence. Caden reported viewing a domestic violence incident involving his mother and her ex-husband M.G. In addition, Caden’s biological father, Brian C. (father), was arrested for domestic violence in September 2011 while living with mother and Caden.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Caden C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-caden-c-calctapp-2019.