In re L.W.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 2025
DocketA170656
StatusPublished

This text of In re L.W. (In re L.W.) 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 L.W., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 2/27/25; Certified for Publication 3/19/25 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

In re L.W., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. ___________________________________ ALAMEDA COUNTY SOCIAL A170656 SERVICES AGENCY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. JD-036423-01) L.W., Defendant and Appellant.

L.W. (mother) appeals from the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and disposition rulings in a juvenile dependency case. In late June 2023, the Alameda County Social Services Agency (Agency) removed her then eight-year-old daughter (L.)1 from her care when mother was hospitalized due to a mental health crisis. Mother contends the juvenile court erred in concluding that it had dependency jurisdiction under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivisions (b)(1) and (g)2, and we agree. We therefore reverse.

1 Mother and daughter have the same initials, L.W., so we

refer to the daughter as “L.” to avoid confusion. 2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and

Institutions Code. 1 BACKGROUND3

A.

Until about a week before she was taken into custody, L. had been living with mother, her stepfather (Seth), her maternal grandmother (grandmother), and her four siblings. Her younger sister, Q., was five years old at the time. Grandmother had legal custody of L.’s teenaged siblings: her brother J.W. (Jamal), and her sisters, Jz. W. (Jz.), and Jm. W. (Jm.). Grandmother had adopted the older siblings in 2010 after mother, who was struggling with substance abuse at the time, relinquished her parental rights.

After the family was told they had too many people for their two-bedroom home, they moved out to avoid an eviction. While they searched for housing, mother, grandmother, L., and L.’s two older sisters went to a homeless shelter, where they had been residing for a week before mother’s crisis. Seth, Jamal, and Q. moved to Seth’s brother’s apartment.

Shortly before L. was removed, mother, grandmother, L., Jz., and Jm. went to visit the rest of their family at Seth’s brother’s home. Mother left to get food and did not return; no one in the family knew where she was. Jz. reported that mother had been crying about the family’s difficult circumstances. Believing they were required to arrive at the shelter before curfew, grandmother, L., Jz., and Jm. returned to the shelter without mother. Because L. had no legal guardian at the shelter, the shelter called the police, who took her into protective custody. There were no signs L. had been injured, neglected, or abused, and she reported that she “feels safe with her mother and is not

3 Mother’s October 18, 2024 request for judicial notice of

her Notice of Appeal is denied as unnecessary. 2 afraid of her.” Grandmother was at the shelter when L. was taken into custody.

When the police contacted Seth and informed him that mother had not returned to the shelter, Seth went to the shelter to retrieve L. However, the authorities declined to release L. to him because he was not her biological parent and did not have his marriage certificate with him.

Approximately eight days later, mother contacted the Agency and reported that she had suffered a mental health breakdown and had been hospitalized as a result. Mother had bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. She had been prescribed the same psychiatric medications since 2012, and she had been taking them until two or three months before her breakdown. Mother had stopped taking her medication because her primary care doctor, who had been issuing her refill prescriptions, said she had to see a psychiatrist to obtain another refill, and she was on a waiting list for a psychiatrist.

Since being released from the hospital, mother resided with Seth and L.’s other’s siblings at Seth’s sister’s home, where there was room for L.

In addition, mother continued to seek treatment for her mental illness. She initially participated in a residential program at Hope House, for women recovering from mental illness and substance abuse. However, mother left Hope House after completing two months of the three-month program. She began seeing a psychiatrist and a therapist, obtained the psychiatric medications she had been prescribed, and resumed taking her medication.

In addition, mother began taking an injectable medication prescribed by her primary care clinic to help address substance abuse. According to mother, she had not had a substance abuse problem in over 10 years, and grandmother confirmed that she

3 did not believe mother was abusing substances at the time of the dependency proceedings.

B.

The Agency’s operative dependency petition alleged two bases for jurisdiction as to mother, both of which the juvenile court sustained. The first was that mother’s mental health or substance abuse issues prevented her from providing safe or adequate care for L. (See § 300, subd. (b)(1).) The second was that mother left L. alone, without a safe and adequate adult caregiver, and she could not be located. (See § 300, subd. (g).) The Agency bore the burden of proving these jurisdictional grounds by a preponderance of the evidence, based on the circumstances existing at the time of the jurisdictional hearing. (§ 355, subd. (a); In re S.D. (2002) 99 Cal.App.4th 1068, 1078 (S.D.); In re Rocco M. (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 814, 824 (Rocco M.), abrogated on other grounds by In re R.T. (2017) 3 Cal.5th 622, 628-630.)

During a combined jurisdiction and disposition hearing in April 2024, the juvenile court found that “mother clearly had a mental health break that brought this case to the [c]ourt’s attention” and neither the homeless shelter nor the police found it appropriate to release L. to grandmother or to Seth, and mother had “nothing [else] in place” in terms of back-up care for L. Noting that mother did not complete the Hope House program, the court reasoned that although mother’s testimony indicated she was “trying to engage in more consistent services specifically for mental health now,” there was not “any real documentation to that effect.” As a result, “mother, at least on this record, has not shown the Court that she’s been able to treat both the substance abuse issues as well as the mental health issues to get her to a point where she could receive her child back in her care.”

4 After ruling that L. was a child described in section 300, subdivisions (b)(1) and (g), the court found that L. could not be safely returned to mother’s home. The court ordered that L. instead be placed in the home of her biological father, D.R., a non-offending parent, and terminated dependency jurisdiction.4

DISCUSSION

Mother asserts that substantial evidence does not support the juvenile court’s jurisdictional findings under section 300, subdivisions (b)(1) and (g). We agree.

We begin with section 300, subdivision (g) because the facts underlying the allegation are relevant to both jurisdictional grounds. In support of jurisdiction under section 300, subdivision (g), the petition alleged that: “[o]n or around June 27, 2023, the mother left the minor . . . alone at a shelter and without adult supervision; she could not be located. The minor . . . has been left without a safe and adequate caregiver, who is able to meet her needs.”

Based on our review of the record, there was no evidence to support the court’s exercise of jurisdiction on this ground. Indeed, the Agency does not even defend the juvenile court’s jurisdictional ruling based on section 300, subdivision (g).

Section 300, subdivision (g), provides for dependency jurisdiction where, as relevant here, “a relative or other adult custodian with whom the child resides or has been left is unwilling or unable to provide care or support for the child, the

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In re L.W., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lw-calctapp-2025.