In re H.B.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
DocketA169493
StatusPublished

This text of In re H.B. (In re H.B.) 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 H.B., (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/8/24; certified for publication 10/29/24 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re H.B. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

A169493 SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, (San Francisco City & County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. Nos. JD23-3241. JD23- v. 3241A)

H.B., Defendant and Appellant.

H.B. (father) appeals from a disposition order declaring his two sons dependents of the juvenile court, vesting the continued custody of the children with their mother, and granting family maintenance services to mother and supportive services to father. Father argues the disposition findings must be reversed as to him because the juvenile court applied an incorrect legal standard and insufficient evidence supports its findings. Finding merit to some of his contentions, we reverse the disposition order and remand.

1 BACKGROUND Original Petition and Detention On August 1, 2023,1 the San Francisco Human Services Agency (Agency) filed a petition on behalf of H.B. (then age 15) and D.B. (then age 12), alleging the minors were at substantial risk of suffering physical and emotional harm, that their parents, father and G.B. (mother), failed to protect the minors, and that the minors were at risk of suffering serious emotional damage. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300, subds. (a), (b) & (c).)2 The petition alleged father had purchased for and given H.B. Xanax, psilocybin mushrooms, and marijuana, which in turn had the potential to exacerbate H.B.’s anxiety and depression. The petition further alleged that father had his own substance abuse issues. According to the detention report, the Agency received a referral on July 6 based on mother’s report that father had given H.B. Xanax, psilocybin mushrooms, and marijuana. On other occasions, H.B. allegedly stole drugs from father. The police were called to the home while both father and H.B. were intoxicated. The police advised father to obtain a medical marijuana card. On July 24, the Agency went to the family home and interviewed H.B., D.B., and mother. H.B. reported he used marijuana for his anxiety, even though his parents were against it and his psychiatrist recommended antidepressants and not marijuana. H.B. said he obtained the marijuana from “random people” at school and denied that father had given him or helped him buy it.

1 All further dates refer to the year 2023 unless otherwise stated.

2 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and

Institutions Code.

2 D.B. told the social worker he did not use drugs, but his brother used marijuana. Father wanted H.B. to “ ‘go slow’ ” in using marijuana, while mother wanted H.B. to stop. When H.B. was under the influence, he did not rest or sleep and had mood swings. When he was not under the influence, he was sad. D.B. said he was the one who had called the police during the earlier incident, because H.B. threw a tantrum and tried to hit mother. Father intervened and pinned H.B. down until the police arrived. D.B. said this felt “ ‘normal because [his] brother is always throwing tantrums like this.’ ” Mother reported she had confiscated H.B.’s phone because he regularly missed curfew, appeared under the influence, and smelled like marijuana. Mother had the passcode to his phone and saw messages indicating father was the one giving H.B. drugs. She showed and sent screenshots of those messages to the Agency. Father bought H.B. a new phone after mother confiscated his other one. According to mother, H.B. did not listen to her. Father and H.B. did not include her in conversations or give her information about how H.B. was doing in therapy or whether he was taking his medication. Father called mother “ ‘crazy’ ” or threatened to call the police and report that she was having a mental crisis when she pleaded with father to keep her “ ‘in the loop’ ” about H.B. The social worker found in H.B.’s bedroom a pocketknife, smoking paraphernalia, an empty prescription bottle, small pieces of foil-like paper, and a half-full pack of a sleep sedative. On July 28, the Agency obtained a removal warrant. When social workers went to the family home to execute the warrant, the parents agreed

3 that father would leave the home and that mother would remain in the home with the children. In the detention report, the Agency listed its “reasonable efforts [¶] . . . made to prevent or eliminate the need for the child’s removal from the home,” which included two upcoming child and family team meetings and a referral for father to submit to drug testing and a substance use assessment. The Agency recommended that the children be removed from the custody of father and placed temporarily with mother. At the detention hearing on August 2, the juvenile court adopted the Agency’s recommendations and ordered supervised visitation and phone calls for father, but granted the Agency the discretion to move the visits to unsupervised with 48 hours’ notice. Jurisdiction and Disposition Disposition Report On September 15, the Agency filed its disposition report in advance of the combined jurisdiction and disposition hearing set for November 2. Although entitled “Disposition Report,” it included recommendations concerning jurisdiction. Protective Social Worker (PSW) Jessica Navidad wrote the report. The report discussed the facts supporting jurisdiction, quoting at length various conversations between H.B. and father indicating father had purchased for or given H.B. marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms.3

3 For example, on July 20, H.B. texted father, “ ‘Can I get some shroom

capsules[?]’ ” Father replied, “ ‘Hey, dude, I think I actually have some of those. How much? $5/pill. They’re like 0.2 each.’ ” Father also texted H.B., “ ‘Ugh. Ok. So that’s what . . . $180? Ok. On 19th at Lincoln is gas station. In men’s room under sink is an obviously loose tile. Move that and is a space. Put $180 there then text. Then I’ll text after ive [sic] counted it. Thanks.’ ”

4 The report then discussed the family’s history and current dynamics. Mother stated that after being together with father for about 19 years, mother wanted to end their marriage. She had filed for divorce the year prior, which case was pending. Father reported past domestic violence incidents with mother, who had hit him, thrown objects towards him and H.B., called him names, whipped him with cords, threatened to stab him, made sexually explicit comments, and damaged his property. Mother admitted she had “ ‘exploded’ ” in her reactions toward father. Father reported he fed the children, cleaned the home, supported the children with homework, and contacted H.B. when he was late for curfew. Mother said she was the primary caregiver. She was not working, and father paid for the rent and bills. According to mother, D.B. listened to her, while H.B. did not. H.B. was aggressive towards mother and D.B. D.B. told mother he wanted to leave the home because of H.B.’s behavior. Mother felt unsupported by father when he was living with them because he disregarded her parenting style, which she described as a form of emotional abuse. She did not agree with father’s parenting style, because he “just [went] along with what [H.B.] sa[id],” including allowing him to attend concerts, hang out with his friends, and miss school. Father acknowledged he was undermining mother and that both he and H.B. needed to be mindful of how they made mother feel. The report went on to describe father’s struggles with substance abuse and recent efforts to address it. Father drank alcohol and used Xanax. He was enrolled in an outpatient treatment program with Kaiser Permanente (Kaiser) at the time. He was also engaged in treatment with the Homeless Prenatal Program, as well as the San Francisco County Family Treatment

5 Court.

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Bluebook (online)
In re H.B., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hb-calctapp-2024.