In re T.O. CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2025
DocketE084173
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re T.O. CA4/2 (In re T.O. CA4/2) 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.O. CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 3/28/25 In re T.O. CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

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

SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, E084173

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super.Ct.No. J293829, J293830, J293831, J293832) v. OPINION D.O.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Annemarie G.

Pace, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Offices of Vincent W. Davis & Associates and Vincent W. Davis for

Tom Bunton, County Counsel and Dawn M. Martin, Deputy County Counsel, for

Plaintiff and Respondent.

1 In this dependency matter, the juvenile court took jurisdiction over five minors

and removed them from parental care. This appeal involves only the four older children

and their father, not the youngest child or the mother of all five. The father argues there

is no substantial evidence to support removing his children from him. In his view, he

should be deemed a non-offending parent and his children should be placed in his care.

We affirm the challenged findings and orders.

FACTS

Defendant and appellant De.O. (father) has four children, all boys, with R.H.

(mother): D.O. (born June 2015), G.O. (born Jan. 2017), S.O. (born June 2018), and T.O.

(born Mar. 2019). In June 2022, their infant half-sister F.H. (born Feb. 2022) was

hospitalized for “failure to thrive.” Doctors subsequently “ruled out any medical

reasons” for the infant’s health issues, and changed the diagnosis to “severe malnutrition

due to inadequate intake,” possibly caused by neglect by mother. During this period,

mother and father already had an open family law matter to establish a visitation

schedule; father told the social worker mother “only wants him to have the boys every

other weekend,” but he “wants to see his children more than that.” In July 2022, plaintiff

and appellant San Bernardino County Children and Family Services (the department)

obtained a warrant to detain all five children from mother, and it placed the four boys in

father’s care.

In dependency petitions filed July 20, 2022, the department alleged the children

come within Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision (j), because their

2 1 sister suffered severe malnutrition while in mother’s care. The next day, the juvenile

court detained the children from mother and ordered the boys to remain in father’s

custody. At the jurisdiction hearing, held after several continuances in October 2022, the

court sustained the dependency petitions, removed the boys from mother and placed them

with father. It ordered family maintenance services for father and reunification services 2 for mother.

In an April 2023 status report, the department recommended the children be

“jointly maintained” by mother and father, and that “the dependency matter be

continued.” The department “believe[d] the matter could be ready for dismissal in three

months,” explaining that mother had made significant progress on her case plan. Father

had opposed mother having unsupervised visits, including overnight and weekend visits;

he was “not in agreement with the case moving so rapidly in the mother’s favor.” The

visits were held over father’s objection, however, and the department found they had

been appropriate.

Father’s behavior had raised some concerns. He had been uncooperative by

dropping the children off late for visits, holding them in the car, and being argumentative

with mother. The department also received “several anonymous messages” reporting

father “driving around the neighborhood” and talking to neighbors in an attempt to “spy

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. 2 After this point, we use “children” to refer to the four boys, and not their younger half-sister.

3 on [mother].” Father told the social worker it “is not fair he does all the work for the

children” while mother “has no responsibilities,” and he “indicated he does not have to

follow the court orders.”

The social worker observed the children seemed to “have a difficult time

comprehending why they have been uprooted from their home” and were living with

their father. They “asked why they share a room with their step siblings, and have said

that some of their big brothers are mean to them, hit them.” They said when this happens

they tell their stepmother, because their father “has lots of jobs” and “is always at work.”

At the April 2023 status review hearing, father’s counsel asked that the

dependency be closed because the children were not at risk in father’s care and the

parents’ custody dispute could continue in family court. The department asked that it

remain open, noting the social worker’s opinion that father had been interfering with

mother’s reunification. The court ordered the dependency case to remain “open in family

maintenance with the parents to share equal time.”

In August 2023, mother sought a temporary restraining order against father. She

alleged father had “harassed” her since the dependency began. He would follow her as

she went into and came out of the department’s parking lot for supervised visits,

including “with the kids in the car.” When unsupervised visits were authorized he

“started driving by [her] house.” He called her neighbors “asking them questions” about

mother and requesting they “report to him if they saw anything.” A few weeks earlier,

4 she “found an apple air tag in our son’s shoe” and realized father had been tracking their

location.

The juvenile court denied the temporary restraining order request, finding “no

immediate threat to physical safety,” but set the matter for hearing. At the hearing, too,

the court declined to issue a restraining order. Instead, it issued a series of orders in the

dependency, including that the children may not have on them a tracking device when

going to the other parent’s home, that the parents must not disparage one another or

discuss the dependency case with the children in any way, and that custody exchanges

will be made inside the local police station. The court also authorized re-referrals to

coparenting therapy.

In an October 2023 status report, the department again recommended the children

be jointly maintained by both parents and the dependency case be continued. The parents

were employed, they were communicating through the “Talking Parents” app, and they

had participated in joint coparenting therapy. They still were having “a very difficult

time being amicable” with each other, let alone coparenting. Their coparenting therapist

recommended that father “participate in individual therapy in order for the couples

therapy to be a benefit.” The social worker observed the parents’ uncooperative and

“petty” behavior toward each other was “affecting their children,” and the children said

“they do not like it” when the parents say “yucky things” about the other parent. The

children said that their stepbrothers were sometimes mean to them when they were at

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Related

San Diego County Health & Human Services Agency v. L.T.
214 Cal. App. 4th 1154 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
Humboldt County Department of Health & Human Services v. A.E.
169 Cal. App. 4th 710 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)
San Diego Cnty. Health & Human Servs. Agency v. E.S. (In re C.M.)
222 Cal. Rptr. 3d 892 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2017)
Sacramento Cnty. Dep't of Child, Family & Adult Servs. v. F.C. (In re D.D.)
244 Cal. Rptr. 3d 420 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2019)

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