In re T.B. CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 17, 2013
DocketA136182
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re T.B. CA1/3 (In re T.B. CA1/3) 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 T.B. CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 6/17/13 In re T.B. CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re T.B. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

ALAMEDA COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A136182 T.Y., (Alameda County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. OJ12018490)

T.Y. (Father), father of 14-year-old T.B. and 5-year-old M.Y., appeals from the juvenile court‘s order on reconsideration denying reunification services to him. He contends the court: (1) lacked the power to reconsider its dispositional order granting services to him; (2) erred by considering, upon reconsideration, an additional allegation that had not been previously pled; (3) erred in failing to determine whether it was in M.Y.‘s best interest to award reunification services to Father; and (4) violated his equal protection rights by granting services to the children‘s mother (Mother), but not to him. We reject the contentions and affirm the order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND An original petition was filed February 29, 2012, alleging Father punched T.B. in the face and stomach, pushed him to the ground, and made him eat an onion and garlic as a form of discipline. Two days later, Father slapped T.B. across the face, punched him in

1 the stomach, grabbed T.B.‘s head and slammed it into the freezer door, then punched him in the stomach again, causing T.B. to lose his breath. T.B. was fearful of returning home to live with Father. There was a substantial risk that T.B.‘s younger brother, M.Y.—who had witnessed some of the abuse—had also been abused. The children had no provision for support, as Father was in custody on felony charges of willful harm or injury to a child and corporal punishment or injury to a child, and Mother, who had lost physical custody of the children in May 2011, was not capable of providing full time care for them at the time. According to the detention report, the children were placed in their great maternal aunt and uncle‘s home. There was a prior dependency petition from Contra Costa County filed July 10, 2010, in which it was alleged that Mother grabbed T.B. by his face and neck, stomped on him, and banged his head against a wall, causing T.B. to suffer a seizure and be airlifted to a hospital for immediate medical attention. Mother also kicked T.B. out of the home in only his boxer shorts and a t-shirt, and cursed at him that she did not want him. Further, T.B.‘s parents were involved in a domestic violence incident in August 2009 that resulted in Father being arrested for spousal battery and false imprisonment. Another dependency petition filed in Contra Costa County on July 15, 2010 alleged M.Y. was at risk because of the abuse against T.B. The petitions were sustained on the abuse and neglect allegations.1 In an interview with the Alameda County Social Services Agency (Agency), T.B. provided details of the incidents that led to the filing of the instant petition. He added that Father also hits M.Y. and that he and M.Y. are afraid of Father and often flinch when he makes movements. M.Y. reported that Father hit T.B. and also ―whopped [T.B.] with a belt.‖ Father denied the allegations and told police that T.B. is a liar who had also lied about Mother hitting him. When reminded that T.B. was hospitalized from being hit by Mother, Father responded that T.B. had ―faked‖ the seizure. Mother, who participated in

1 Mother was convicted of child cruelty charges and was restricted from having physical custody of the children. She was sentenced to four years probation and 365 days in jail. She was released December 9, 2011.

2 a team decision making meeting, said she wanted to reunify with the children. She acknowledged she was unable to do so right away and said she was taking parenting classes, attending college, and working towards obtaining a stable living environment. The court detained the children, who were ordered to remain in their relatives‘ home. The Agency reported in a jurisdiction/disposition report that the children were doing well. T.B. did not want to live with Father and wanted to live with Mother, or with an aunt in Stockton if he could not be with Mother. The district attorney‘s office reported that Father was being charged with felony child abuse. The police department reported that a felony count had been added for M.Y. and that ―video evidence of [T.B.] being forced to eat an onion‖ had been discovered. The Agency recommended that Father receive no reunification services, stating: ―The father has a significant criminal history that dates back to August 8, 1989 that includes convictions of kidnapping, false imprisonment with violence, and battery of cohabitating partner in March 3, 2009 in Contra Costa County . . . Additionally, the severity of the physical and emotional abuse of the minors by the father in this current situation indicates that he did not incorporate the domestic violence and/or parent training skills he should have learned from the previous Family Reunification Services offered through Contra Costa County.‖ According to a police report, which was attached to the jurisdiction/disposition report, T.B. told police that when he returned home from school on February 24, 2012, Father walked towards him and ―socked him dead in the chest.‖ T.B. could not speak. Father then picked T.B. up and ―threw him across the things‖ and hit him ―more and more‖ as T.B. backed up. T.B. fell to the floor and Father hit him with his knuckle in T.B.‘s lip, causing it to swell up. That evening, Father told T.B. to eat an onion and garlic for dinner as punishment for lying about his homework. T.B.‘s tongue and throat became swollen from eating the onion and garlic. Two days later, Father became mad at T.B. for not cleaning up some food. Father slapped T.B. across the face, causing T.B. to fall. When T.B. got up, Father hit him in the stomach, then hit him again. The hits to the stomach were ―straight punches,‖ and T.B. could not breathe. Father then opened the freezer door and slammed T.B.‘s head against the freezer door, causing the door to hit the

3 wall, then close. T.B. tried to get away but Father punched him in the stomach again. The police officer noted T.B. was ―very consistent‖ in what he reported. According to the police report, Father‘s housemates, who had witnessed some of the abuse, stated they did not want to make a police report but that they would ―come forward‖ if necessary. One housemate stated that when she came home, she noticed T.B.‘s lip was bleeding. She asked T.B. what happened and he said he had a toothache. When she returned that afternoon, she saw T.B. doing his homework. Father asked if T.B. was done, and when T.B. responded he was not, Father ―smacked him twice in the back of the head. The smacks were loud and almost knocked [T.B.‘s] head to the table.‖ Father said if T.B. did not finish his homework, he was going to ―take him outside, drag him up and down the street and beat the shit out of him.‖ Later that day, the housemate saw Father cut an onion and give half to T.B. Father made T.B. eat the onion for dinner while lecturing him about how lucky he was to not be in foster care. T.B. ―was crying and then threw up on the floor and [Father] made him mop it up.‖ Another housemate reported that as soon as T.B. came home from school and walked in the door, Father started ― ‗firing‘ ‖ on T.B., who was backed up against a corner as Father ―was just hitting him, punching him with his fists all over his body.‖ T.B.

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Bluebook (online)
In re T.B. CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tb-ca13-calctapp-2013.