In Re Cjw
This text of 69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 197 (In Re Cjw) 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.
Opinion
In re C.J.W. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.
San Bernardino County Department of Children's Services, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
Theresa W. et al., Defendants and Appellants.
Court of Appeal of California, Fourth District, Division Two.
*198 Konrad S. Lee, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, Riverside, for Defendant and Appellant Mother.
Nicole Williams, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant Father.
Ruth E. Stringer, County Counsel, and Danielle E. Wuchenich, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Jacquelyn E. Gentry, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Minor.
*199 OPINION
GAUT, J.
1. Introduction[1]
Mother and father appeal separately from the dependency court's order denying their petitions brought under section 388. Father joins in mother's arguments to the extent they are relevant. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.200(a)(5).) Two children, C.P. and C.J., are the subject of the appeals.
We hold the dependency court did not abuse its discretion in denying the section 388 petitions. It properly conducted a hearing on the petitions and determined parents did not show that changed circumstances or the best interests of the children warranted a modification of its order denying reunification services.
2. Factual and Procedural Background
Mother was born in August 1979. She began using drugs at age 16. She has given birth to seven children in 12 years by three men. Her first child, M.F., was born in 1993 when she was 14 and had been molested by her stepfather. Her next two children, D.K. and C.K., were fathered by her foster brother and born in March and November 1997. Her parental rights to these three children were terminated in 1998 and 1999. Her fourth child, Chad, was by the father in this case and was born in June 1999. The court terminated parental rights in 2001. Casey was mother's fifth child, born in May 2002 to mother and father as their second child together. The court terminated their parental rights to Casey in November 2003.
Father, who was born in 1957, has served a prison sentence for drug manufacturing. He has been married twice before, fathered three other children, and divorced because of his drug use.
C.P. was born in February 2004 and C.J. was born in July 2005. The San Bernardino County Department of Children's Services (DCS) filed an original dependency petition (§ 300) in September 2006, when the children were one and two years old, alleging a failure to protect, no provision for support, and abuse of a sibling, based on the parents' extensive drug use, an unsafe home, and the previous dependency proceedings involving their siblings.
The detention report recorded that parents had been arrested for wilful harm or injury to a child or endangering a child's health. (Pen.Code, § 273a.) The social worker had found mother sleeping in a car outside the family residence with C.P. The house was dirty, cluttered, and unsafe and contained drug paraphernalia and methamphetamine. Witnesses stated the parents had neglected the children, left them unattended in the bathtub, and allowed C.P., the two year old, to cook food in the microwave. Both parents admitted using methamphetamine while disclaiming possession of several glass methamphetamine pipes in the home. Father had lost his job. Five children have been removed from mother and adopted between 1994 and 2003. Two of those five children were father's. The court ordered C.P. and C.J. detained.
The jurisdiction/disposition report recommended the parents be denied reunification services and proposed a permanent plan of adoption. Both parents had received services for their other two children, Casey and Chad, between 1999 and 2003 and failed to reunify. The court found jurisdiction and set the contested dispositional hearing.
*200 At the dispositional hearing on November 9, 2006, father testified that he was incarcerated for 220 days until January 2007 but had started Narcotics Anonymous the night before and had signed up for parenting classes. He admitted to being an occasional drug user for 20 years or more. He blamed the drugs and paraphernalia found at parents' residence on baby-sitters who had used his methamphetamine pipe.
Mother testified she was in custody but had enrolled in a program involving substance abuse, living skills, and anger management. Three years before she had successfully completed a drug court program when she was pregnant with C.P. Both C.P. and C.J. were born drug free. A few months before the detention she had relapsed. The parents left C.J. with the babysitters because they were using drugs.
The court denied* reunification services to the parents and set a section 366.26 hearing to determine a permanent plan.
The adoption assessment by DCS recommended both children be adopted by a middle-aged single woman who has stable employment and owns a house. Since being released from custody in January 2007, the parents had visited the children for one hour weekly.
In April 2007, both parents filed section 388 petitions, (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.570(b)) requesting a change in the court's orders. Both petitions alleged as changed circumstances that parents had completed a panoply of programs, including drug treatment, 12-step meetings, Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, drug testing, and private counseling, and additional classes in parenting, living skills, anger management, domestic violence, child abuse, religion, and education.
At the hearing in April 2007, the court found no changed circumstances and no benefit to the children. The court denied the section 388 petitions. It then conducted the section 366.26 hearing and terminated parental rights.
3. Discussion
Mother, joined by father, asserts the dependency court erred by not allowing an evidentiary hearing on the section 388 petitions: "Such petitions are to be liberally construed in favor of granting a hearing to consider the parent's request. [Citations.] The parent need only make a prima facie showing to trigger the right to proceed by way of a full hearing. [Citation.]" (In re Marilyn H. (1993) 5 Cal.4th 295, 309-310, 19 Cal.Rptr.2d 544, 851 P.2d 826.) "There are two parts to the prima facie showing: The parent must demonstrate (1) a genuine change of circumstances or new evidence, and that (2) revoking the previous order would be in the best interests of the children. [Citation.] If the liberally construed allegations of the petition do not show changed circumstances such that the child's best interests will be promoted by the proposed change of order, the dependency court need not order a hearing. [Citation.] We review the juvenile court's summary denial of a section 388 petition for abuse of discretion." (In re Anthony W. (2001) 87 Cal. App.4th 246, 250, 104 Cal.Rptr.2d 422.)
Section 388 provides: "(c) If it appears that the best interests of the child may be promoted by the proposed change of order ... the court shall order that a hearing be held..." California Rules of Court, rule 5.570(f), (h), and (i) set forth the procedures for deciding a section 388 petition: "If it appears to the court that the requested modification will be contested or if the court desires to receive further evidence on the issue, the court must order *201
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69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 197, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cjw-calctapp-2007.