In re Mary C.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 2020
DocketA157256
StatusPublished

This text of In re Mary C. (In re Mary C.) 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 Mary C., (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 5/4/20

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

In re MARY C., A Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. ___________________________________ SONOMA COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, A157256 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Sonoma County v. Super. Ct. No. DEP-4910) J.C., Defendant and Appellant. ___________________________________ In re MARY C. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. ___________________________________ SONOMA COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, A157444 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Sonoma County v. Super. Ct. Nos. DEP-4910, J.C. et al., DEP-5365) Defendants and Appellants.

J.C. (Father) and N.E. (Mother) appeal from the termination of their parental rights to their daughters, Mary C. (age five) and Aurora C. (age three) on May 24, 2019. They contend the judge erred in finding the children

1 adoptable because the report prepared by the Sonoma County Human Services Department (Department) for the hearing under Welfare and Institutions Code1 section 366.26 (section 366.26 report) failed to contain substantial evidence supporting those findings. They claim the children have too many special needs to be generally adoptable and should not have been deemed specifically adoptable because the Department’s section 366.26 report failed to contain all the statutorily required detail about the prospective adoptive mother and failed to report at all on her longtime partner who resides with her. Father also appeals from an order on April 2, 2019, terminating both parents’ visitation with Mary, but he has made no arguments in support of that appeal. We shall affirm the judgment in the parents’ appeal (A157444) and dismiss Father’s separate appeal (A157256) as abandoned. I. BACKGROUND Mary and Aurora have already been involved in the dependency system for most of their young lives. Mary was first removed from her parents in June 2016, when she was 18 months old, due to both parents’ drug abuse, which had led to their chronic unemployment and homelessness.2 With the exception of 9 or 10 months spent with them in 2017, Mary has been out of her parents’ custody ever since—by the time parental rights were terminated she had been in foster care for “almost half of her life.” Aurora was only eight

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. Even before the Sonoma County dependency petition, Mother had 2

tested positive for marijuana and methamphetamine or amphetamine twice during hospital visits in Lake County in 2014 and 2015, including when Brother was born. The parents also came to the attention of the child welfare authorities in Arizona in February 2016 due to a loud argument and unsanitary and potentially dangerous conditions in their home.

2 months old when she was first removed. Mary and Aurora have one full sibling (Brother, age four) and an older paternal half-sister, neither of whom lives with them. Mary and Aurora live together in the concurrent foster-adoptive home of Shawn D., a single woman in her forties who formerly had a career in early childhood development but now stays at home with the children. Shawn lives with her partner and their 16-year-old daughter. She also has two adult sons (ages 24 and 26), who live independently. Both Mary and Aurora have lived there since December 2017. Shawn has lived in the same home in Lake County for 13 years. Shawn and her partner appear to have a stable relationship, having raised their 16-year-old daughter together. In June 2016 Mother and Father were found living in a tent with Mary (age 18 months) and Brother (8 months), with marijuana and a bong within easy reach of the children. Mother and Father both tested positive for methamphetamine and marijuana. Mary and Brother were removed and declared dependents under section 300, subdivision (b). Mother managed to find work, the couple found transitional housing for six months, and they regained custody of Mary on a trial basis in March 2017. In April 2017, Aurora was born. Aurora was not detained, and Mary remained in her parents’ care. When their time in transitional housing ran out at the end of July 2017, they moved in with the maternal grandmother in Lake County, which caused Mother to lose her job. A couple months later the grandmother decided to move out of state and the parents were homeless again. They were, in fact, still homeless and living in their car when Mary’s dependency case was dismissed on November 20, 2017. At the same hearing, reunification services were terminated for Mother and Father with respect to Brother, who had severe health problems,

3 including fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, related to his premature birth and exposure to substances in utero. In May 2018 parental rights were terminated and Brother was freed for adoption. He was adopted, and Mary and Aurora have contact with him and with their half-sister through Shawn’s efforts. The family was still homeless when, less than a month after Mary’s dependency was dismissed, the police found them in a car parked at a gas station just after midnight with the engine running and Father slumped over in the driver’s seat. Mother was passed out in the passenger seat, and Mary was strapped into her car seat in the back seat of the car. (Aurora was not mentioned in the police report.) The parents were difficult to rouse and appeared to be under the influence. Marijuana and paraphernalia were found throughout the car. Mother had a methamphetamine pipe in her jacket pocket and was cited for possession of drug paraphernalia. Mary and Aurora were taken into protective custody on December 22, 2017, and later were declared dependents under section 300, subdivisions (b) and (j). Aurora had a flat, bald spot on the back of her head, apparently from being left in her car seat for prolonged periods, so that her head appeared to be deformed. She also had deteriorated muscle mass. She did not move much or make many sounds. During the dependency, her development improved markedly, as did Mary’s. By March 20, 2018, Shawn had indicated her desire to adopt Mary and Aurora. Meanwhile, the parents remained homeless, struggling daily just to get their basic needs met for food and shelter. They were looking for work, but apparently found none. They engaged in services half-heartedly, but they did participate regularly in visitation. Suffice it to say reunification efforts

4 failed, and the court terminated reunification services on January 4, 2019 and set a hearing under section 366.26. Before the section 366.26 hearing was held, the maternal grandmother petitioned under section 388 to adopt Mary, but her petition was denied because Mary was already placed in a concurrent foster-adoptive home. The section 366.26 hearing was then delayed by the Department’s request under section 388 for termination of visits between Mary and her parents. After a hearing, at which Mary’s therapist testified that the visits were detrimental to Mary, the court terminated Mary’s visitation with her parents. Father alone appealed that order. On April 26, 2019, the Department filed its section 366.26 report, which recommended termination of parental rights and a permanent plan of adoption. The section 366.26 report described Mary as a generally healthy child who had certain medical and behavioral problems, which we shall discuss in more detail in part II.D., below. In an assessment by the regional center, Mary’s cognitive and academic skills were in an age-appropriate range. She had attended preschool for a few months and was scheduled to begin a transitional kindergarten in September 2019. The social worker wrote that Aurora was in general good health but had asthma and other medical and developmental issues we shall discuss in part II.D., below.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Mary C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mary-c-calctapp-2020.