In re S.C. CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 13, 2021
DocketA161711
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re S.C. CA1/4 (In re S.C. CA1/4) 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 S.C. CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/13/21 In re S.C. CA1/4

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

In re S.C. et al., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, A161711 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. JD20-3175, J.O., JD20-3175A) Defendant and Appellant.

In this dependency action, J.O. (Mother) appeals jurisdictional and disposition orders of the juvenile court declaring her two children dependents and placing them in the home of their father. She contends on appeal that the evidence was insufficient to declare her younger child, J.C., a dependent and remove her from Mother, that the petition should have been dismissed as to J.C., and that the visitation orders did not serve either child’s best interests. We shall affirm the orders. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The children in this case are S.C. and J.C., who were 13 and five years old respectively at the time of the proceedings at issue. A dependency

1 petition (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300)1 was filed on July 10, 2020. As amended a month later, the petition alleged that both S.C. and J.C. had suffered or were at risk of serious physical harm inflicted nonaccidentally by a parent (§ 300, subd. (a)) and serious physical harm through their parents’ failure to protect them (§ 300, subd. (b)), and, as to S.C. only, that she was at risk of serious emotional harm from Mother’s conduct (§ 300, subd. (c)). Events Leading to Agency Intervention The petition was filed after the San Francisco Human Services Agency (the Agency) received a report that Mother had physically abused S.C. and that J.C. was at risk of abuse. On June 29, 2020, S.C. and Mother became involved in a physical altercation. According to the petition, Mother hit S.C. with a broom and dustpan on her lower bottom, and S.C. used her hand to block a blow. S.C. reported that Mother punched her, pulled her hair, and spat on her face. S.C. tried to hit Mother in self-defense and she scratched Mother under the eye. Mother called the children’s father, J.C. (Father) and asked him to come home; when he did so, he and Mother agreed he would take S.C. with him to work, but when he started to leave the home with S.C., Mother grabbed him to try to stop him from leaving and broke his eyeglasses. Father took S.C. to the hospital because of pain in her finger. S.C. was found to have no broken bones, but she had abrasions to both thighs, bruises with a shape consistent with being struck with a stick, and scratches on both hands and wrists. Mother’s version of the June 29 incident was that she and S.C. argued and the argument “got physical”; S.C. was angry and blocked her bedroom door with a dresser, and she smashed a full-length mirror and sat on her bed holding a shard of glass. Mother was frightened that S.C. might be

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

2 contemplating suicide, and she went into the room and started cleaning up the shards of glass. S.C. punched Mother on the head, and Mother swatted her off with a dustpan and held her down on the bed. Mother called Father, who returned from work. Mother became angry at him, he screamed at her, and she broke his glasses. She testified the bruises on S.C.’s legs might have been caused by S.C. harming herself. Mother and S.C. had been involved in another physical confrontation several months previously, in which, according to S.C., Mother slammed S.C.’s head on the kitchen counter. S.C. had a headache the next day. She did not tell Father about the incident until months later, and when she did so, he told her to tell him immediately if such a thing happened again. J.C. was home at the time of the June 29 altercation. Father reported that Mother did not have the same dynamics with J.C., who was five years old and still being breast-fed, that she did with S.C. Father said Mother was good with young children. Father described Mother as irrational, saying she argued with “everyone” and she was paranoid and suspicious that people were “after her.” Mother told a social worker she was not willing to engage in family therapy unless it was court-ordered. Father was willing to participate in therapy, and he had been contacting his insurer and employment resources to secure services. Physical Altercation After Petition Was Filed On the evening of July 31, 2020, Mother and Father argued, and Mother threw a trash can at his leg in their bedroom, causing a laceration to his shin. She later punched him on his arms, shoulders and back in S.C.’s presence in S.C.’s bedroom, yelled at Father and S.C. and called them names, and threw an open can of chili at S.C. The can hit the wall, and the chili

3 splattered on S.C. S.C. positioned herself against the bedroom door to keep Mother from coming in again. J.C., who was downstairs in the small apartment, could hear Mother screaming and yelling and S.C. sobbing; she intervened by asking Mother to take her for a walk and trying to pull her outside. Mother took the position that the July 31 incident was occasioned by Father “bait[ing]” her by “giving [her] a hard time,” lying in bed “silently smirking at [her],” and taking pictures. She admitted she threw a small waste basket at Father. She acknowledged “knock[ing] over” the can of chili on the windowsill of S.C.’s room because she was upset S.C. had left dirty dishes outside her room and on the windowsill. She denied throwing anything at S.C. and denied that her actions endangered anyone. She thought J.C. asked her to go for a walk during the July 31 incident so she could get away from the “abusive” behavior of Father and S.C. Father called the police after the July 31 incident, Mother was arrested, and an emergency protective order was issued. Mother told the police she had only had a verbal argument with Father. Mother was released three days later, and the charges against her were dismissed. Father reported that Mother had “ ‘no off switch.’ ” He said that when Mother became upset he and S.C. would go into another room, and J.C. would interrupt Mother and ask to go on a walk. S.C., who had a girlfriend, reported that Mother was homophobic and targeted S.C., and that she called S.C. names such as “ ‘dike and traitor.’ ” Detention and Restraining Order The juvenile court temporarily detained the children from Mother and placed them with Father under the Agency’s supervision. By the end of

4 August 2020, Father had filed for divorce and Mother was residing in Canada. Father applied for and on August 27, 2020 was granted a three-year restraining order protecting him and both children from Mother, but the court ordered non-forced supervised visits between Mother and the children. Mother did not appeal from this order.2 The children continued to live with Father. S.C. asked to be called by a different name, with preferred pronouns of he/ze.3 Mother, who was still living out of the country and had not reported any plans to return to the United States, was visiting virtually with the children twice a week. By early November S.C. had said he no longer wished to visit with Mother, but J.C. enjoyed seeing Mother and the visits were positive. Jurisdiction and Disposition At the November 23, 2020 jurisdictional and dispositional hearing, the trial court sustained counts alleging the children had suffered, or there was a substantial risk they would suffer, serious physical harm or illness as a result of the parents’ failure to protect them (§ 300, subd. (b)) and that S.C.

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In re S.C. CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sc-ca14-calctapp-2021.