In re K.G. CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 2014
DocketA138756
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re K.G. CA1/3 (In re K.G. CA1/3) 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 K.G. CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/28/14 In re K.G. CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

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

DEL NORTE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent, A138756 v. (Del Norte County W.F., Super. Ct. No. JVSQ11-6079) Defendant and Appellant.

W.F. (Father) challenges orders selecting guardianship as the permanent plan for his daughter, K.G., and related letters of guardianship. Father’s main argument is that the court erroneously failed to determine which of two Indian tribes was K.G.’s tribe for purposes of this case. Father and K.G. are enrolled members of the Yurok Tribe. K.G.’s mother, K.M.G. (Mother), is an enrolled member of the Karuk Tribe, and K.G. would be eligible through Mother for enrollment in the Karuk Tribe. But the Yurok Tribe is K.G.’s tribe, and the Yurok have been actively involved throughout K.G.’s case. Father’s other contentions are also without merit. We affirm the orders for K.G.’s permanent plan and the letters of guardianship issued to effectuate the plan.

1 I. BACKGROUND K.G. was four years old and her half-sister, A.F. (Sister), was six years old when they were detained in May of 2011. Sister is Mother’s biological daughter, and is an enrolled member of the Karuk tribe. According to the dependency petition, K.G. and Sister were living with Father and A.B. (for convenience, hereafter Stepmother) when Stepmother brought K.G. to the Del Norte County Department of Health and Social Services (Department) on May 16, 2011, and said that she and Father “just can’t keep the girls.” Stepmother told the Department that K.G. was saying that Father was “coming into her bed after mommy’s asleep,” and that “[Father] and his friends are touching her.” Father and Stepmother had repeatedly requested that Sister be removed from their care. According to the detention report, there had been “problems with [Sister] inappropriately (sexually) touching [K.G.].” The report indicated that Sister had lived with Mother until July of 2007, and there were allegations that Sister had been sexually molested while in Mother’s care. The petition stated that Mother’s whereabouts at the time of detention were unknown. The report stated that Karuk Tribe representative Mike Edward had been contacted and was to attempt to locate Mother. At the May 19, 2011 detention hearing, Father stated that he was K.G.’s biological father and Sister’s “guardian.” When asked whether the children had relatives who were willing and able to care for them, Father mentioned their maternal grandmother (Grandmother). Yurok Tribe social worker Dana Taylor said the tribe was exploring possible placement. Taylor said that the Yurok Tribe would be intervening in K.G.’s case, and that the Karuk Tribe would be intervening in Sister’s case. Father and Taylor said they were satisfied for the time being with the children in separate foster homes. On May 27, the Yurok Tribe filed a notice of intervention in K.G.’s case, and a jurisdictional hearing in both children’s cases was set for June 17. The Yurok and Karuk Tribes were notified of the hearing. The Department’s jurisdiction report stated that Father was given physical custody of K.G. and Sister in December 2009. The record contains a December 7, 2009 judgment in a Siskiyou County dependency case for the children, which terminated jurisdiction and

2 placed them in Father’s custody. The report noted that “[K.G.] is a member of the Yurok Tribe and the tribe is formally intervening as a party. [¶] [Sister] is an enrolled member of the Karuk Tribe. . . . [T]he tribe is planning to intervene and has been involved in locating a relative for placement approval.”1 The Department recommended that K.G. be continued in foster care, and that Sister be placed with Grandmother. The Department was “collaborating with the Karuk and Yurok Tribal Social Services.” The tribes were “in agreement with the children remaining detained in out of home care,” and the Karuk Tribe was completing relative approval paperwork for Grandmother’s home. At the June 17 hearing for K.G. and Sister, Yurok social worker Taylor said that she was “present in the matter of K.G.” No representative of the Karuk Tribe appeared. Taylor said that she could supervise Father’s visitation with K.G. and Sister, and the Department’s social worker stated that Karuk social worker Edwards was assessing relative placements for Sister.2 The court asked Taylor whether the tribes were coordinating their efforts for the children. Taylor said that “the Yurok Tribe hasn’t been able to locate a placement, an ICWA placement for [K.G.] at this time. We had one in the works but it fell through, so definitely that’s something we want to do is talk to the Karuk Tribe and try to coordinate something so they can maintain a relationship.”3 The jurisdictional hearing for the children was continued to June 24. Father’s work prevented him from attending the June 24 hearing. Yurok social worker Taylor was personally present, and Karuk social worker Edwards appeared by telephone. Edwards said that he was appearing as a representative of the Karuk Tribe in Sister’s case. Edwards reported on his investigation of a placement for Sister with Grandmother. Taylor said that she had supervised Father and Stepmother’s visit with

1 Father quotes the report’s language about the Karuk Tribe’s plan to intervene as if it pertained to K.G., but that paragraph in the report concerned Sister, not K.G. 2 Father’s opening brief incorrectly states that the Yurok Tribe was assessing relative placements for Sister. 3 Father’s opening brief incorrectly attributes the italicized statements to a “Karuk tribal representative.”

3 K.G. and Sister that week, and that the family had interacted well. The hearing was continued to July 14. No tribal representatives were present at the July 14 hearing. Father testified that K.G. was claiming that “we” and “a friend that was coming over” were touching her. He immediately contacted the Yurok Tribe when K.G. made these false allegations, as he had taken custody of K.G. and Sister after they were abused by Mother’s friends. He tried “[t]o protect them from each other because the older one [Sister] started to touch the younger one [K.G.],” and he acknowledged that he needed help with the children’s mental health. The hearing was put over to the following day to determine when a tribal representative could be present. The next day, Yurok representative Taylor appeared personally, Karuk representative Edwards was contacted by phone, and the jurisdictional hearing was continued to August 18. Taylor and another representative of the Yurok Tribe appeared at the August 18 hearing. The court proceeded in the absence of the Karuk Tribe, because it was the tribe’s “obligation to call here.” After hearing testimony from Father and Department case workers, and argument from counsel for Father, the Department, and K.G. and Sister, the court sustained the dependency petition’s allegations under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision (b)4 of failure to protect the children. The court denied Yurok representative Taylor’s request that Father be granted unsupervised visitation, and set the dispositional hearing for September 9. The Department’s dispositional report advised that K.G. was in a foster home and that Sister was on an extended visit with Father.

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Bluebook (online)
In re K.G. CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kg-ca13-calctapp-2014.