In re M.D.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
DocketD081568
StatusPublished

This text of In re M.D. (In re M.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 M.D., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/11/23 Certified for Publication 7/20/23 (order attached)

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re M.D., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. D081568 SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, (Super. Ct. No. NJ15072)

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

Miguel D.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Michael J. Imhoff, Commissioner. Affirmed. William D. Caldwell, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Claudia G. Silva, County Counsel, Lisa M. Maldonado, Chief Deputy County Counsel, and Eliza Molk, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent. INTRODUCTION Miguel D. (Father) left his eight-year-old daughter, M.D., alone inside a locked apartment that had no electricity, an empty non-operable refrigerator, and no edible food. Trash, dog feces, electrical cords and power tools were strewn throughout the home. After waking up to find her father and his truck gone, M.D. climbed through a kitchen window to look for him and was found wandering the apartment complex. The San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency (Agency), which had responded to previous reports of Father’s neglect of M.D. since she was two years old, filed a dependency petition alleging Father failed to adequately supervise and protect M.D., and willfully or negligently failed to provide her with adequate food and shelter. The juvenile court found the petition true, took jurisdiction, and removed M.D. from Father’s custody while he was offered reunification services. On appeal, Father asserts we must reverse the juvenile court’s

jurisdictional order because Welfare and Institutions Code1 section 300, subdivision (b)(2), prohibits the juvenile court from assuming jurisdiction over a child “solely” due to a parent’s indigence or poverty. He further asserts we must reverse the dispositional order because the Agency failed to demonstrate there were no reasonable means to protect M.D. without removing her from Father’s custody. Because the record does not support either contention, we affirm.

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

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Circumstances Leading to the Current Dependency Petition M.D. lived with Father. He had been raising her as a single parent as a

result of a prior dependency case filed in June 2015, in which the mother2 was found to have inflicted significant facial injuries to M.D. when she was nine months old. Father was awarded sole legal and physical custody of M.D.

when the juvenile court terminated jurisdiction in September 2015.3 During the dependency case, and the subsequent voluntary case that was opened to monitor Father and M.D., Father received individual therapy, in-home parenting education, and family maintenance services. The voluntary case was closed in February 2016 when Father completed services. But in the years that followed, the Agency continued to respond to concerns about M.D.’s welfare. In May 2017, when she was two years old, Father left M.D. alone in a “hot” car, with the engine and air conditioning running, while he went inside a store for more than an hour. A store employee found M.D. out of her car seat and a car door unlocked. Responding police officers observed “numerous tools and auto parts, several of them sharp and rusty” in the car’s passenger compartment. After Father was arrested, a social worker took M.D. to Polinsky Children’s Center (Polinsky) where she was later released to a paternal aunt. Less than a year later, in March 2018, law enforcement found Father in a stalled vehicle holding a “meth pipe” and “a torch lighter,” while

2 M.D.’s mother is not a party to this appeal.

3 A three-year criminal protective order was issued to prohibit the mother from having any contact with Father or M.D.

3 M.D. was jumping up and down in the backseat. She again was taken to Polinsky when Father was arrested, and subsequently released to him pursuant to a safety plan. In July 2018, the Agency investigated concerns that neighbors saw M.D. unsupervised, hungry and dirty; the referral was closed as “[u]nfounded” when the social worker observed M.D. to be clean and food was available in the home. In March 2022, the Agency received a report that M.D. climbed out of the apartment window when Father left her home alone while he was at work; this referral was closed as “[i]nconclusive” because the

Agency was “unable to locate the family.”4 Seven months later, on October 5, 2022, police officers responded to a call for a welfare check on eight-year-old M.D. “roaming around outside without supervision.” The officers found M.D. “unkempt” and in the middle of the apartment complex. When they walked her back to her apartment, the front door was locked and nobody was home. M.D. then grabbed a step stool she kept near the front door, placed it at the kitchen window, climbed inside through the window, and unlocked the front door for the officers. Upon entering the apartment, the officers were met with “a foul stench” of rotten trash and mold. There was no electricity because Father had not paid the bills and “[t]he floor was littered with extension cords,” some of which were used to illegally “tap[ ] into a neighbor’s electricity” through the attic. The refrigerator was not working and “completely empty.” The kitchen cupboards contained some pantry foods (such as jars of pasta sauce, cans of

4 The Agency reported that it had been unsuccessful in contacting Father during previous investigations because the apartment complex is gated and Father had not responded to the Agency’s letters and telephone calls, and he refused to meet with the Agency.

4 peas, pancake mix, instant mashed potatoes, hamburger helper, and boxed rice) but required additional ingredients to be cooked or edible. “[H]ordes of trash, junk and power tools [were] strewn throughout the apartment” and the back patio floor was covered with trash and dog feces. A stolen catalytic converter and California commercial license plate were also found in the home. It was determined that M.D. slept on the bottom of a bunk bed located in the middle of the living room near the back patio that also contained piles of clothing and “vacuums,” while the top bunk was “completely covered with items nearly reaching the ceiling.” “The odor from the dog feces was extremely strong from the bunk bed where [M.D.] sle[pt].” M.D. told the officers that Father gave her a “gas station pizza” the previous night and told her to go to sleep. When she woke up on the morning of October 5, 2022, Father was gone. She climbed out the kitchen window to look for him and found his truck was also gone. M.D. was taken into protective custody. The assigned social worker tried calling Father multiple times at 5:00 p.m. that day, nearly five hours after officers found M.D. alone, but was unable to locate him. Her voicemail and text messages also went unanswered until the next day. When the social worker interviewed M.D she said she was in the second grade and had only been “home schooled because ‘it costs a lot of money’ to go to school.” When the social worker asked about food in the home, M.D. said, “ ‘Sometimes I am hungry so I drink water and that makes me full.’ ” She was asked about what kind of food was in the home and she responded, “ ‘just water bottles, that’s all.’ ” M.D. said Father leaves her alone for “ ‘10 hours,

5 not that long’ ”5 and “ ‘goes to donate blood [to get money], goes to the casino, [and] goes to the store.’ ” She explained Father “ ‘goes to Pala and San Diego casinos and all casinos.

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In re M.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-md-calctapp-2023.