In re J.D.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
DocketA161973
StatusPublished

This text of In re J.D. (In re J.D.) 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 J.D., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/29/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re J.D., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, A161973 Plaintiff and Respondent, (San Francisco County Super. v. Court No. JD18-3156) R.T., Defendant and Appellant.

R.T., the young mother of now six-year-old J.D., appeals an order terminating her parental rights, entered after she was unable to overcome parenting struggles that were the byproduct of a damaged childhood spent in foster care, without the care and comfort of parents herself. She contends the juvenile court abused its discretion in declining to apply the beneficial relationship exception to termination of parental rights (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i)).1 After the appellant’s opening brief was filed, the California Supreme Court decided In re Caden C. (2021) 11 Cal.5th 614 (Caden C.), which clarified how that exception must be applied. As we will explain, we cannot determine on this record that the juvenile court’s ruling complied with the principles announced in the Supreme Court’s decision. Although we

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

1 recognize it is in J.D.’s interest to expeditiously select his permanent plan, the interests at stake when parental rights are terminated are of the utmost importance to both parent and child, and proper consideration of the factors deemed relevant by our dependency scheme is vital. Accordingly, to ensure the juvenile court properly discharges that task, we will reverse the order terminating parental rights and remand this matter for a new section 366.26 hearing in light of the legal standards articulated in Caden C. BACKGROUND A. The Initiation of This Case On July 7, 2018, shortly before turning three years old, J.D. was removed from his mother’s custody following two violent altercations in his presence, one of which seriously injured his six-month-old half-sister, R.G. The first was an argument between mother and R.G.’s father that took place when the two encountered each other on a train platform; their argument escalated into a physical struggle while mother was holding her baby girl (each accusing the other of being the aggressor), and it culminated with J.D. either falling or getting pushed to the ground near the edge of the train platform as a train approached. Mother reached down to grab him just as the train whizzed by. The second incident occurred a few days later. That time, after another child hit J.D., mother had a physical fight with the child’s father (J.D.’s uncle), again while holding her baby daughter (and again, the two adults accused each other of being the aggressor), and mother accidentally dropped her daughter. The baby was transported to the hospital and later diagnosed with a skull fracture of undetermined cause (according to the attending physician, it was possibly pre-existing). This second fight precipitated a 911 call to police by mother which, in turn, resulted in her own arrest for an injury to the uncle’s arm, a referral to child welfare authorities,

2 and the commencement of this case by the San Francisco Human Services Agency (the agency).2 J.D. and his baby sister were ordered detained and placed in foster care, with mother granted supervised visitation.3 The court also issued a temporary restraining order protecting mother and the two children from J.D.’s uncle.4 Mother already had secured a restraining order against R.G.’s father. Thereafter, the juvenile court sustained amended allegations (in September 2018) that mother failed to protect J.D. based on the two fighting incidents (§ 300, subd. (b)(1)) and that her relationship with her daughter’s father was characterized by domestic conflict. The court also sustained allegations that J.D. was left without support (§ 300, subd. (g)), because his father was incarcerated and unable to care for him. The court bypassed services for J.D.’s incarcerated father and ordered reunification services for mother.5 Shortly thereafter, about three months into the case, in October 2018, the two children were removed from their initial foster home and placed with

2 The record does not reflect she was ever charged in connection with the incident. 3 J.D.’s little sister would go on to spend more than a year and a half in foster care with J.D., until sometime in early 2020. Eventually she reunited with her own father, and her dependency case closed sometime in the fall of 2020. The record does not reflect the precise date it closed, nor the date she returned to her father’s actual physical custody. 4Later after a settlement conference, mother withdrew her request for a more permanent restraining order against the uncle. 5 The parental rights of J.D.’s father ultimately were terminated and are not at issue in this appeal.

3 C.J., a relative of mother’s who is variously identified in the record as her aunt or cousin. Mother, herself a product of California’s foster care system, had been cared for by C.J. for part of her childhood. According to agency records, mother had been detained at birth and soon thereafter abandoned by her own mother. Mother did not want to talk about the details but reported she had been in foster care all her life. She lived with C.J. from the time she was one year old until early in her adolescence, when she was sent to live in a series of foster homes and group homes after acting out and displaying sexual behaviors. She first got pregnant at age 15.6 J.D. was born on her 19th birthday. Later, she tried without success to get her foster care extended from age 18 to age 21. By the time this case began, mother was almost 22 years old and homeless, couch surfing among the homes of acquaintances and relatives in San Francisco and Vallejo. Her relationships with the fathers of her two children and some of the fathers’ relatives (with whom she sometimes lived) were turbulent, chaotic and sometimes physically violent.7 She had been arrested for carrying a deadly weapon (brass knuckles, although no charges were pursued), which she said she carried for protection because she felt unsafe in the homes of her former boyfriends’ relatives where she had been living.

6 The record does not reflect whether her pregnancy was carried to term, but the only reasonable inference is that she did not have a child or else that fact would have been noted as part of her family history in the agency’s various reports. 7 For example, mother reported having been the victim of physical violence by several extended relatives of her daughter’s father, including having been “jumped” several times. One time she secured a restraining order against one of them after receiving a gash to her face while on her way to pick up her children.

4 B. Mother’s Progress During the First Two Review Periods (September 2018 to September 2019) Mother received close to two years of reunification services , a period marked by periodic conflict with the children’s caregivers and recurring angry episodes. Initially, there was conflict between mother and C.J., culminating with C.J. refusing after several weeks to allow mother to have in-home visits with the children.8 But matters were resolved, and C.J. continued to supervise mother’s weekly visits in her home. About eight months later, there were additional problems. On June 6, 2019, mother encountered R.G.’s father in public after he had picked up R.G. for a visit. An argument ensued and escalated, and he hit mother. Police were called, and a bystander said mother had antagonized R.G.’s father by trying to block his way and take R.G. from him. Two days later, mother got into an argument with C.J., claiming she’d been approved for an overnight visit; when C.J.

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Bluebook (online)
In re J.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jd-calctapp-2021.