In re C.T. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 2016
DocketA146638
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re C.T. CA1/2 (In re C.T. CA1/2) 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 C.T. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 7/7/16 In re C.T. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

In re C.T., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY CHILDREN & FAMILY SERVICES BUREAU, A146638 (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. Plaintiff and Respondent, No. JI3-00386) v. T.T., Defendant and Appellant.

T.T., the mother of C.T., a child born in January 2013, appeals from the Contra Costa County juvenile court’s order terminating her parental rights and setting adoption as a permanent plan for C.T. pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26.1 Mother argues the court should have excepted her from termination based on her beneficial relationship with C.T. and that it denied her due process of law by barring her counsel from asking certain questions at the relevant hearing. We conclude mother does not establish error and affirm the court’s order.

1 All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.

1 BACKGROUND I. Events Leading Up to the Setting of a Section 366.26 Hearing We extensively recounted the events leading up to the juvenile court’s setting of a section 366.26 hearing in our previous unpublished opinion, T.T. v. Superior Court, No. A144740, issued in August 2015. We will not repeat them here at great length. In May 2013, the Contra Costa County Children and Family Services Bureau (Bureau) filed a petition pursuant to section 300. C.T., then four months old, had been removed from the custody of mother, then 20 years old, and detained because of mother’s2 alleged failure to protect him pursuant to section 300, subdivision (b) for a number of reasons. At the heart of the Bureau’s concerns was that mother had exposed C.T. to a physically and emotionally abusive encounter between her and her father (C.T.’s grandfather) in which police had intervened. The juvenile court found certain stipulated allegations to be true, asserted jurisdiction over C.T. and, in its disposition order, ordered that C.T. be placed in foster care and reunification services be provided to mother. At first, mother refused to participate in services, but made enough progress by June 2014 to regain custody of C.T. She then received family maintenance services. Mother subsequently violated her case plan by allowing grandfather unsupervised visits with C.T. In September 2014, she engaged in another abusive encounter with grandfather in C.T.’s presence. She did not disclose this encounter to the Bureau, then lied about it and continued to allow grandfather unauthorized, unsupervised visits with C.T. The Bureau filed a supplemental petition. The juvenile court sustained all of the Bureau’s allegations, asserted jurisdiction and ordered that C.T. be placed in foster care. At disposition, the court declined to order further services, terminated mother’s family

2 There were also allegations against C.T.’s father. The record indicates he did not play any role in taking care of C.T. and never appeared in the proceedings. Therefore, we do not discuss him further. 2 reunification services and scheduled a section 366.26 hearing to consider terminating mother’s parental rights and set a permanent plan for C.T. Mother filed a petition for an extraordinary writ with this court. In our previous opinion, we noted that we were not without sympathy for mother’s view that she was a capable mother and the long-time subject of grandfather’s abuse. Nonetheless, we were required to concern ourselves with C.T.’s best interests. We concluded the juvenile court and the Bureau had repeatedly warned mother that she could lose services, and possibly C.T., if she allowed grandfather unsupervised access to him and engaged in more abusive encounters with grandfather in C.T.’s presence. She did not heed these warnings. Instead, she was deceptive with, and belligerent towards, the court and the Bureau and resisted fully engaging in her case plan. For these reasons, as well as others that are not germane to this appeal, we denied mother’s petition for extraordinary writ. II. The Bureau’s Section 366.26 Report A. The Bureau’s July 2015 Report In its July 2015 report to the juvenile court in preparation for the 366.26 hearing, the Bureau, caseworker Jennifer Lund reporting, indicated C.T., then two and a half years old, had spent 22 of his 30 months of life outside of mother’s care. He had been living in what the Bureau characterized as his “prospective adoptive home” in Contra Costa County since October 2014. He was in good physical health, smiled and interacted with others, and did not show fear of strangers. He showed “a clear bond to his prospective adoptive mother,” who was a single parent with adult children. He sought her assistance and affection often, even while in mother’s presence. He was “very attached” to her and, the Bureau stated, “seeks her out for help, tries to speak to her, climbs into her lap and runs to her to hug her. When social workers visit him at his home, he is happy to interact with others, however, seeks his prospective adoptive parent out for support/affection.” C.T. was responding well “to the prospective adoptive parent’s clear rules and boundaries, because he knows what to expect, his tantrums are minimal.”

3 A doctor who examined C.T. found “ ‘red flags’ present for autism or a related condition” and C.T. was referred for further assessments. Subsequently, he was found to have “ ‘grossly age appropriate play skills,’ ” but “ ‘delayed’ ” speech. The Bureau believed that his prospective adoptive parent was committed to him and that his current home could best meet his special needs. The Bureau further reported that mother had filed for a restraining order against grandfather in January 2015 and had obtained one. She regularly attended her visits with C.T., which were changed in May 2015 from weekly to twice monthly. It “[was] clear” she was bonded with C.T., but it was “not clear” that C.T. shared that same bond with her. Lund and other visitation supervisors had witnessed C.T. “allow the mother to give him affection or interact with him; however, he does not appear to seek her out for affection or to engage with him a majority of the time.” In March 2015, “there were several visitation notes that stated that ‘there is “no” non-verbal communication that happens during the hour visit. If, and when there is, it lasts for minutes, if not seconds.’ ” The Bureau also reported that C.T. “had no reaction to the reduction of visitation [in May 2015]. Additionally, he does not have any reaction to leaving a visit with the mother when it is over. The reoccurring theme throughout the visits since October 2014 is [C.T.] throwing significant tantrums during visits and the mother not knowing how to respond to him. She admitted this fact in December 2014. The mother has been repeatedly coached in how to handle the tantrums by the visitation supervisors and foster parent. She has chosen to allow the tantrums to go on and rewards the behaviors by giving in to [C.T.’s] wishes or offering him something he would like.” [¶] . . . [C.T.] does recognize her as someone he enjoys seeing, however, he does not recognize her as his parent—to put it quite simply she has not parented him the majority of his life. [C.T.] does not have a significant parent/child relationship that would outweigh the benefits of legal permanency for [C.T.].” The Bureau also stated “mother has not changed the core factors that have brought her to the attention of the [Bureau].

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Bluebook (online)
In re C.T. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ct-ca12-calctapp-2016.