In re G.H.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 6, 2022
DocketG061166
StatusPublished

This text of In re G.H. (In re G.H.) 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 G.H., (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 10/6/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re G.H., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

G061166 ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY, (Super. Ct. No. 20DP0284)

Plaintiff and Respondent, OPINION

v.

A.H. et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeals from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Daphne G. Sykes, Judge. Reversed and remanded with instructions. Respondent’s motion to take additional evidence denied. Pamela Rae Tripp, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant A.H. Elizabeth Klippi, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant J.H. Leon J. Page, County Counsel, Karen L. Christensen and Aurelio Torre, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent. * * * A.H. (Mother) and J.H. (Father) appeal from the juvenile court’s order terminating their parental rights to their two-year-old son, G.H., at the permanent plan 1 selection and implementation hearing held under Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26. G.H. was detained from his parents’ custody two days after he was born when both he and Mother tested positive for methamphetamine. Mother and Father were homeless at the time, and had been struggling with methamphetamine abuse for approximately eight years. Father admitted he did not discourage Mother’s drug use during pregnancy. The day before G.H. was detained, Mother, G.H.’s maternal great aunt, and his maternal grandmother denied Native American ancestry. Father claimed he was a “small percent” Cherokee, but he acknowledged he was not registered as a member of the tribe. On appeal, Mother and Father contend the juvenile court erred in finding that a statutory exception to terminating the parental rights of an adoptable child did not apply. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).) They also contend the Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) and the court did not meet their obligations under the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA; 25 U.S.C. § 1901 et seq.) and related state law to investigate G.H.’s Native American background. As we have explained in prior cases, those obligations are not primarily for the parents’ sake, but instead implement federal and state public policy protecting “the broad interest of Native American tribes in maintaining cultural

1 All further undesignated statutory references are to this code.

2 connections with children of Native American ancestry.” (In re A.R. (2022) 77 Cal.App.5th 197, 201 (A.R.).) Father informed the court and SSA he had contacted his mother on the social media platform, LinkedIn. As we explain, because nothing in the record suggests SSA or the court made any effort to take advantage of that contact method for the paternal grandmother, we conditionally reverse and remand for the agency and the court to do so.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We limit our summary here to the factual and procedural history relevant to ICWA issue and related state law. We discuss the background pertinent to the benefit exception, on which the parents raise purely legal issues, in our discussion of those issues below. At the detention hearing, the juvenile court asked Father about his “representation . . . to the social worker about Cherokee heritage.” Father explained that “[t]here was a word-of-mouth understanding in the maternal side of my family that there is . . . a very, very, very small amount, but there’s no registry. I don’t have any details about it . . . .” Father initially represented that “none of my ancestral members are even alive on that side of my family to provide any further information,” but then he mentioned his mother. When the court asked, “And your maternal relatives are all deceased,” Father answered, “Well, my mother is still alive, but my mother has not been a part of my life since age two . . . .” Father told the court his mother lived in “Tampa, I believe, but I’m not sure.” He gave the court two last names for his mother, and when asked for an address, Father said, “I think I can probably get one.” He added, however, that “there’s no contact so I’m not really sure.”

3 The court followed up: “Who would you get it from?” Father responded he “ha[d] some information from an attempt that I made a few years back to try to contact her. I would just have to dig it up.” Father added that he had in fact contacted his mother using social media: “Last time I attempted to contact her, I did reach her via [a] LinkedIn message. It led to a phone call, that then led to no return, and terminated any motivation for me to want a relationship.” (Italics added.) Father gave the court the last name he “believe[d]” was the one under which he had reached his mother on the social media platform. The court recognized that, “[i]n light of that information, even though the chances are slim, the law is very clear that we have to do an investigation . . . .” The court ruled that “the I.C.W.A. issue will remain viable” and “direct[ed] the agency to follow up to see if there is a possibility of reaching [Father’s mother] to clarify and verify that information that the I.C.W.A. heritage is so minute that it would not apply to this case.” Counsel for SSA acknowledged, “Thank you, Your Honor.” It appears that later that same day, according to a report SSA subsequently prepared for the ensuing jurisdiction and disposition hearing, Father “was unable to provide contact information for the paternal grandmother or any other relative for further information.” Two weeks later, on a social worker’s “follow up call,” Father “stated there is Catawba Indian heritage in the family of origin but [he] did not know of any relatives registered with the Tribes.” The social worker wrote in the report that Father “was unable to provide contact information for relatives with further information” and added, “SSA has spoken to available family member [sic] in regards to ICWA. SSA has been provided with all information that the family was able or willing to provide at this time.” Two months later, at the June 2020 jurisdiction hearing, the court found pursuant to Father’s and Mother’s stipulation that “the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) does not apply.”

4 After more than 18 months of ensuing reunification services, a different judge conducted the hearing under section 366.26 (.26 hearing). The court opened the hearing observing, “To begin with, has the ICWA issue been resolved—I don’t think it has—with respect to these parties?” Counsel for SSA responded, “Your Honor, I believe that there was a ruling that ICWA did not apply as of March 6th of 2020,” which was the date of the original detention hearing. The court made reference to a document or documents submitted by “both parents” (presumably their stipulation for the jurisdiction hearing that ICWA did not apply), and proceeded to conduct the .26 hearing. At the close of the hearing, the court found the issues that necessitated the dependency had not been resolved, G.H. could not be safely returned to the parents, he was likely to be adopted, and terminated Father’s and Mother’s parental rights. They now appeal.

DISCUSSION 1. Benefit Exception Father contends a statutory parent-child benefit exception precluded terminating his and Mother’s parental rights. He argues the exception applied because “the record shows that the parents were loving and attentive during the[ir] visits, that the minor called appellant dada, and that the minor had difficulty separating from appellant at the end of the visits . . . .” Mother joins Father’s arguments. We find no error.

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Bluebook (online)
In re G.H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gh-calctapp-2022.