In re M.V.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 2022
DocketD079473
StatusPublished

This text of In re M.V. (In re M.V.) 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.V., (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/22/22; Certified for publication 5/17/22 (order attached)

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re M.V. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. D079473 SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, (Super. Ct. No. NJ15751A, B)

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

J.V. et al.,

Defendants and Appellants;

M.V., a Minor, etc., et al.,

Appellants.

APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Michael Imhoff, Commissioner. Reversed and remanded for further proceedings. Neale B. Gold, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant J.V.

1 Valerie N. Lankford, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant M.Z. Lelah S. Fisher, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Minors and Appellants M.V. and I.V. Lonnie J. Eldridge, County Counsel, Caitlin E. Rae, Chief Deputy County Counsel, and Lisa M. Maldonado, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

INTRODUCTION After declaring them dependents of the court, the juvenile court removed M.V. and I.V. (together, Children) from the physical custody of their parents, J.V. (Father) and M.Z. (Mother), and placed them with a relative caregiver pending reunification efforts. Father, Mother, and the Children appeal those dispositional orders. They assert substantial evidence does not support the court’s findings, by clear and convincing evidence, that there was substantial danger to the Children if they were returned home and that there were no reasonable means to protect them without removing them from their parents’ custody. On the record before us, we agree. Accordingly, we reverse the dispositional orders as to both Father and Mother. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Dependency Proceedings Before the Children’s Removal Father and Mother had been together for about five years when dependency proceedings were initiated in June 2021. Later that same month, they married. They have two children, M.V. and I.V., who were at the relevant time three and two years old, respectively. Father also has joint custody of his six-year-old son, A.V., from a previous relationship. The family

2 lived in “an RV” or a “small[,] manufactured trailer” on a nursery lot, where Father worked. The family came to the attention of the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency (Agency) on December 11, 2020, when Mother was arrested after law enforcement determined she was the “domina[nt] aggressor” in a physical altercation with Father. Father, who had called 911, told the deputies Mother became angry, threw a coffee cup at him, cutting his wrist, broke the window of their family truck, and punched herself in the

face.1 Mother told the deputies that Father threw shoes at her, struck her face with his hand, knocked the television to the ground and, although she did not see him do it, she heard Father break the window of the truck. Mother also reported that Father struck then one-year-old I.V. in the face. When the deputies spoke with then five-year-old A.V., the child said he saw Mother throw a coffee cup at Father and Father bleeding; Father hit Mother but he could not say where it happened or how he hit Mother; and Father did not hit I.V. Father had a one-inch cut to his wrist, Mother had visible redness to her cheek, and the passenger-side window of the family’s truck was broken. All of this occurred with the Children in the home. Immediately after the incident, the parents agreed to a safety plan where Mother would take the Children and stay with maternal grandmother in Los Angeles. Then on January 6, 2021, the Agency approved of the parents and the Children residing together with maternal great grandmother (MGGM) staying in the home until the parents were connected to services.

1 Father is a Spanish speaker and his statements were translated from Spanish to English by a deputy sheriff.

3 On January 15, the Agency opened a voluntary services case for the family and the parents agreed to take domestic violence and parenting classes. In the Agency’s view, however, the parents only participated “minimally” in services and had not made progress in addressing the protective issues that necessitated the Agency’s involvement. By June 2021, Mother had attended only two of the domestic violence classes and was dropped from the parenting classes for excessive cancellations after attending six classes. Father had attended two of five domestic violence classes; he had missed some classes due to being hospitalized for stomach cancer. He was, however, participating consistently in his parenting classes since January. On June 3, 2021, the Agency received a report through its child abuse hotline of another incident of domestic violence between the parents in the Children’s presence. On June 2, A.V., now six years old, was playing with M.V. and accidentally hit her. Mother yelled at A.V., called him derogatory names (“ ‘malparido (bastard)’ ” and “ ‘pendejo (stupid)’ ”), and told him his biological mother does not love him. Mother then angrily splashed soda on Father and A.V. That same day, Mother hit A.V. on the neck with a sandal when she believed A.V. was playing “rough” with the Children. Later that night, after all three children went to bed, Mother yelled at Father to erase videos he had recorded of her earlier being angry and yelling at the children. Mother was pulling Father’s hair, when A.V. woke up. The child started to hit Mother to defend Father. The same day it received the hotline referral, Father called the assigned social worker, C. Morales. He reported that Mother had been having angry and aggressive outbursts with A.V. and the Children. On June 2, she had been “ ‘verbally and physically aggressive’ ” towards A.V. and had been taking her anger out on him. Father reported that Mother “started

4 ‘going off’ on him” the day before on June 1, calling him “ ‘Viejo ojete, pendejo, pito chiquito, (fucken old man, stupid and small penis).’ ” “[S]ometimes the children are in the same room” and “ ‘can hear everything.’ ” Father told the social worker Mother’s “behavior changes constantly” so he video recorded her. Father claimed that in one recording, Mother pulled his hair and, in another, she grabbed a knife. During one of these incidents, Mother struck him with a “BB gun.” Morales and another social worker went to the family home on June 3, 2021. Father showed them a video recording on his cell phone. It showed Mother yelling and “extremely angry.” Mother was “waving her arms and pointing at the father,” “moving in and out [of] the father[’s] face as if she wanted to hit him and [A.V.] who was sitting next to the father.” M.V. and I.V. were standing near Mother, with facial expressions suggesting “they were frightened.” Mother was yelling at Father and referred to A.V. several times by a derogatory name (“ ‘ese hijo de puta (that son of a bitch).’ ” At one point, she “launch[ed] forward to grab for [A.V.]” but Father covered the child. Mother slapped Father, either to hit him or to stop him from recording, kicked him once, threw an object at him, grabbed and shook a soda can and spilled it in his direction. Father told the social workers that after the incident in the recording, Mother demanded he delete the recordings. It was then that she pulled his hair and struck him with an “unloaded BB gun,” once on his leg and once on his foot. A.V. woke up and tried to hit Mother to defend Father. They all went back to bed after Mother calmed down. But the next morning, Mother threw rocks at Father and called him names. When she left with the Children, he took the opportunity to call Morales. Father told the social

5 workers there were more video recordings and agreed to email them to the Agency.

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In re M.V., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mv-calctapp-2022.