In re Priscilla R. CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 2015
DocketG051448
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Priscilla R. CA4/3 (In re Priscilla R. CA4/3) 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 Priscilla R. CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 10/7/15 In re Priscilla R. CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re PRISCILLA R., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY, G051448 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. DP025235) v. OPINION M.K. et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeals from orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Craig E. Arthur, Judge. Appeals dismissed. Marissa Coffey, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant M.K. Liana Serobian, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant Nicholas R. Nicholas S. Chrisos, County Counsel, Karen L. Christensen and Aurelio Torre, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent. No appearance for the Minor. INTRODUCTION Appellants Nicholas R. and M.K. are the parents of the minor Priscilla R., who was born heavily addicted to the drugs M.K. had been taking during her pregnancy. Nicholas too was addicted to drugs and to alcohol. After Priscilla was born, he saw her in the hospital only once because he did not want to get “attached” to her, and he voiced several times his hope that she could be put up for adoption. He repeatedly disclaimed his readiness for parenthood. Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) detained Priscilla on the day of her birth. She spent nearly a month in the hospital getting drugs out of her system and was then placed with Nicholas’ mother, who now wishes to adopt her. Between detention and the hearing on the termination of parental rights, Nicholas could not be found. His attorney did not know where he was. Two due diligence searches by SSA failed to locate him. He turned up for an interview by a social worker about a month after Priscilla’s birth and then disappeared again. The dependency hearings went on without him, but with his court-appointed attorney present. Because of their heavy drug use, the juvenile court bypassed reunification services for both Nicholas and M.K. Nicholas finally surfaced at the Welfare and 1 Institutions Code section 366.26 hearing, maintaining that he had turned over a new leaf and had been in a rehabilitation program for a month. He opposed termination of his parental rights. Needless to say, it was too late.

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

2 Faced with this history, Nicholas does not assert on appeal that the termination order should be reversed because his bond with Priscilla outweighs the benefits of adoption. His focus is elsewhere: The clerk of the court was a day late in mailing writ review papers. The juvenile court should have granted a continuance to allow his attorney to continue to scour Orange County to find him. He should not have been bypassed for reunification services. All of these purported deficiencies took place in connection with the hearing on reunification services, on October 22, 2014. The time to seek review of the events of that hearing has expired. We therefore dismiss this portion of Nicholas’ appeal. Nicholas also raised an issue on appeal, although not in the juvenile court, about the sufficiency of notice under the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). After the appeal was filed, SSA redid the notice and moved in this court to augment the record and to take additional evidence. Nicholas’ objections to the motions lacked merit. We granted the motions. Nicholas failed to file timely objections to the additional evidence, and the revised notice appears to us to conform to the requirements of the ICWA. We therefore dismiss this portion of the appeal as moot. Finally, M.K. filed an appeal adopting Nicholas’ arguments. She did not assert that notice to her was defective, that her request for a continuance should have been granted, or that she should not have been bypassed for reunification services. She failed to object to SSA’s motions to take new evidence and to augment the record. We dismiss her appeal for the same reasons as Nicholas’. FACTS Priscilla was born in late July 2014. She was immediately admitted to the neonatal ICU, because of the drugs in her system. She spent most of the first month of her life going through withdrawal. SSA filed a non-custodial detention petition, and the detention hearing took place on July 30, 2014. At that time, the juvenile court appointed counsel for Nicholas, M.K., and Priscilla. M.K. attended the hearing, but Nicholas left

3 before the hearing, after meeting his counsel. At the time of the hearing, Nicholas’s 2 mailing address was his father’s house in Huntington Beach. SSA interviewed Nicholas twice in late July – once in person at Priscilla’s hospital and once by phone. At that time, he stated he was not ready for parenthood. He had another interview with a social worker at the end of August, at which time the person whose couch he had been occupying for 10 days washed his hands of Nicholas, and his address became problematic. The social worker presented Nicholas with information about an array of services, including substance abuse treatment, and reminded him of the drug testing requirement, which Nicholas had failed to fulfill. Nicholas had no clear idea of where he would be residing in the future. SSA spoke to Nicholas’ mother on July 30, 2014, the day of the detention 3 hearing. She claimed her family had Blackfeet ancestry. She called her father, Priscilla’s great-grandfather, on the spot; he too claimed Blackfeet ancestry. SSA gathered all the “information that the family was able to or willing to provide at this time.” Nicholas’ mother said he would not know any more than she did about this ancestry. SSA sent a notice of child custody proceeding for Indian child form to the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Sacramento, to the Secretary of the Interior in Washington, D.C., to the Blackfeet Tribe of Montana in Browning, Montana, and to M.K. and Nicholas at the addresses they had provided to the juvenile court. The Blackfeet tribe responded that neither Nicholas’ mother nor his grandfather was listed on tribal rolls. Therefore, Priscilla was not an “Indian child.”

2 M.K. originally gave this address as hers as well. At the detention hearing, however, she changed her address. 3 This is a term that sometimes causes controversy and confusion between the Blackfoot of Alberta and the Blackfeet of Montana. Our case involves the latter.

4 Priscilla was discharged from the hospital toward the end of August. She was placed with Nicholas’ mother. SSA set up a visitation schedule for both Nicholas 4 and M.K. At a predisposition hearing on September 10, 2014, at which neither parent was present, SSA put the parents’ counsel on notice that it would seek to bypass reunification services when the disposition hearing finally took place. The addendum report for a hearing on September 30 made the same recommendation, citing in Nicholas’ case his denial of any problem with alcohol, despite two DUIs, his expressions of his unwillingness to care for Priscilla, and his wish to have her adopted. SSA had no direct contact with Nicholas between the end of August and the middle of October 2014, when he left a telephone voice message stating that he wanted to get into a drug program. Up to that time he had missed scheduled appointments with SSA, had not been visiting Priscilla, and nobody – including his lawyer – seemed to 5 know where to find him. It does not appear that he had turned up for even one drug test.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Priscilla R. CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-priscilla-r-ca43-calctapp-2015.