In re J.M.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 2020
DocketH046917
StatusPublished

This text of In re J.M. (In re J.M.) 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.M., (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/24/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re J.M., a Person Coming Under the H046917 Juvenile Court Law. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. JD024706)

SANTA CLARA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY & CHILDREN’S SERVICES,

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

J.M.,

Defendant and Appellant.

Due to a brain injury suffered as an infant, nine-year-old J.M. has extraordinary physical needs. In this dependency action, J.M. challenges the juvenile court’s permanent plan of legal guardianship with continued dependency jurisdiction. He argues the appointment of his grandmother as legal guardian is not authorized by the governing statute, his grandmother is not a suitable guardian, and the guardianship is not in his best interest. Finding no error in the guardianship appointment, we will affirm the placement order. I. BACKGROUND J.M. was born in 2010. He suffered an accident at home when he was 10 months old, which rendered him permanently disabled. Since the accident J.M. has resided at the Children’s Hospital of Northern California, a rehabilitation facility formerly operated as The Children’s Recovery Center of Northern California. He suffers from anoxic brain injury, epilepsy, developmental delays, and bone disorders. He has gastrostomy and tracheal tubes to help him eat and breathe, and he will need them indefinitely. He is immobile, will never walk, and is fully dependent on others for care. He is nonverbal, but oriented to those with whom he interacts, communicating through eye gazes and facial expressions. J.M. has an individualized education plan, and he attends elementary school in a tilt-in-space wheel chair accompanied by a medical aide. He is a client of the San Andreas Regional Center, a facility designated to “assist persons with developmental disabilities and their families in securing those services and supports which maximize opportunities and choices for living, working, learning, and recreating in the community” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 4640.7, subd. (a)), and he is eligible for the center’s services for life. J.M. came to the attention of the Santa Clara County Department of Family and Children’s Services (the Department) in 2017 when the children’s hospital declared him medically cleared for discharge, provided that two adults be trained as caregivers. Neither parent had completed the necessary training. J.M.’s father had never visited him, and his mother’s visits were infrequent. J.M. was taken into protective custody while continuing to reside at the hospital, and the Department filed a petition alleging that he was subject to the juvenile court’s jurisdiction because his parents were unwilling and/or unable to care for him upon discharge, and that both parents had a history of substance abuse. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300, subds. (b)(1), (g).) The petition was sustained and J.M. was declared a dependent of the court. Family reunification services were ordered for both parents, but neither embraced reunification, services were terminated, and the matter was set for a hearing under Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 to select a permanent plan for J.M. The Department assessed J.M. as “not adoptable” due to his complex specialized needs. The Department recommended a permanent plan of legal guardianship with J.M.’s maternal grandmother, who visited J.M. regularly and with whom J.M. had formed 2 a positive emotional bond. J.M.’s two siblings, close to him in age, were also in the grandmother’s care, and she was committed to maintaining the sibling relationships. The social worker’s report stated that J.M.’s grandmother sought legal guardianship because she understood her grandson’s specialized care requirements and his emotional need for a familial connection—a need that her daughter (J.M.’s mother), who struggled with sobriety, was unable to meet. The grandmother understood the responsibilities of a legal guardianship; she was committed to overseeing J.M.’s care and providing the “continuous emotional support and the family connection that the department and/or any other institution are not able to afford him.” An addendum report explained that the Department had been unable to find a qualified placement for J.M. because of his need for subacute care, and the regional center had reached out to care facilities in Stanislaus County (mother and grandmother moved to Modesto in 2017) which were either full or accepting only adult referrals. At a contested hearing to determine J.M.’s permanent plan, the juvenile court admitted in evidence the social worker’s reports and the following stipulations: J.M. had resided at the children’s hospital since December 1, 2010; J.M. was cleared for discharge from the hospital; grandmother completed some but not all of the training to care for J.M.; grandmother did not reside in accessible housing and had no plans to obtain accessible housing; and grandmother was not seeking placement of J.M. in her home. J.M. opposed the Department’s proposed permanency plan, arguing that the juvenile court lacked statutory authority to appoint grandmother as legal guardian without him being in her physical custody, and that the plan was not in his best interest because it would relieve the Department of any obligation to find a less restrictive placement, thus “functionally committing [J.M.] to indefinite institutional care.” The juvenile court adopted the Department’s recommendation. It found that the permanent plan of legal guardianship was statutorily authorized and in J.M.’s best interest due to his unusual needs. It appointed grandmother as legal guardian, continued 3 dependency jurisdiction with 2028 as the anticipated termination date, and placed J.M. in the care, custody, and control of grandmother under the supervision of the Department. The court asked the Department to continue to look for a more permanent placement for J.M., and it set a six-month post permanency review hearing. II. DISCUSSION Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 governs a juvenile court’s selection of a permanent plan for a dependent child when the child cannot be reunited with his or her parents. (Undesignated subdivision and paragraph references are to this code section.) Subdivision (b) requires that the placement decision be made according to the following order of preference: adoption; legal guardianship to a relative with whom the dependent child is living; legal guardianship to a non-relative; permanent placement with a fit and willing relative; and foster care. (Subd. (b)(1)–(7).) In choosing among the options, the juvenile court is directed to “proceed pursuant to subdivision (c).” (Subd. (b).) Under paragraph (1) of subdivision (c), the juvenile court first determines whether the child is likely to be adopted. If so, paragraph (c)(1) directs the court to terminate parental rights and order the child placed for adoption. (Subd. (c)(1).) Subdivision (c) also provides exceptions to terminating parental rights. One of those exceptions applies when the court finds that terminating parental rights would be detrimental to the child in circumstances including when “[t]he child is placed in a residential treatment facility, adoption is unlikely or undesirable, and continuation of parental rights will not prevent finding the child a permanent family placement if the parents cannot resume custody when residential care is no longer needed.” (Subd. (c)(1)(B)(iii).) Paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) provides an exception to terminating parental rights when the child welfare agency has failed in its statutory duties to facilitate reunification. (Subd. (c)(2)(A).) Under paragraph (3) of subdivision (c), a permanent placement goal of adoption is ordered without terminating parental rights

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Bluebook (online)
In re J.M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jm-calctapp-2020.