In re W.Y. CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 31, 2023
DocketA167653
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re W.Y. CA1/4 (In re W.Y. 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 W.Y. CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/31/23 In re W.Y. CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 W.Y. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

W.K.Y. et al., Petitioners, A167653 v. (Contra Costa County SUPERIOR COURT OF CONTRA Super. Ct. Nos. J2200428, COSTA COUNTY, J2200429) Respondent,

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES BUREAU, Real Party in Interest.

J.F. and W.K.Y. (Mother and Father, collectively Parents) petition for extraordinary writs compelling the juvenile court to vacate its order denying them reunification services with their children, W.Y. and A.Y., and setting a hearing pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.261 to terminate parental rights. The order rests on findings that Parents caused the death of the children’s 18-month-old sibling O.Y. by abuse or neglect. Parents also contend that the juvenile court abused its discretion in denying

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

1 them visitation with the surviving children, and Father contends that the court erred in implicitly finding that the Contra Costa County Children and Family Services Bureau (the Bureau) satisfied its duty of further inquiry into whether the children are subject to the Indian Child Welfare Act (25 U.S.C. § 1901 et seq. (ICWA)), after it discovered reason to believe that they might be Indian children. Parents have shown no abuse of discretion in the setting of a section 366.26 hearing. However, while there was substantial evidence that visitation would be detrimental to W.Y., there was no such evidence as to A.Y., whose distinct interest in visitation was not meaningfully addressed. We thus vacate the order insofar as it denies visitation with A.Y. and direct the juvenile court to assess visitation specifically as to her. The court also erred in implicitly finding that the Bureau satisfied its duty of further inquiry under California law related to ICWA (§ 224 et seq.). After Father stated that his grandfather had Cherokee ancestry and provided contact information, the Bureau did not document its efforts to contact the grandfather in a way sufficient to permit a finding of diligence. And while the Bureau reported sending inquiry notices about the children to three Cherokee tribes, it did not submit copies of the notices to enable evaluation of their adequacy by the court. We thus conditionally affirm the disposition order subject to the court’s duty to confirm that the Bureau will satisfy its duty of further inquiry. As the parties are familiar with the factual and procedural history of the case, and this opinion does not warrant publication, we need not recite the full history. (People v. Garcia (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 847, 851.) We instead summarize as necessary the parts of that history relevant to the issues raised by the petitions. While the propriety of a section 366.26 hearing is plainly the

2 central issue, we discuss that of visitation first, as it gives rise to and informs our assessment of one argument raised about the section 366.26 order. 1. The Court Properly Denied Visitation with W.Y. But Must Separately Assess the Propriety of Visitation with A.Y.2 At the initial hearing on August 30, 20223, the court ordered weekly joint supervised visitation for both parents. On September 29, after two visits that went well, the Bureau applied ex parte to suspend visitation because, after the second visit, three-year-old W.Y.’s aggressive behavior toward four- month-old A.Y., and a younger child in the home where they were placed, escalated in a way necessitating a change in placement. The Bureau reported no harmful effects of visitation on A.Y. It also noted that Parents were exhibiting conflict and volatility and showing signs of substance abuse. The court granted the request. At a hearing a week later, the court left visitation suspended, noting the likelihood of harmful effects on W.Y. The court identified no detriment to A.Y. It renewed the suspension of visitation on October 27 and November 17, each time referring only to detriment to W.Y. The next hearing was the jurisdiction hearing two and a half months later, on February 2. Its focus was medical testimony, but the court allowed counsel to briefly address visitation. Noting that W.Y. had begun therapy

2 Of necessity, Parents limit their requests for prospective writ relief to

the order denying visitation now in effect, issued at the disposition hearing. We discuss the prior orders suspending visitation both because they provide background essential to the operative order and because Mother contends that the prior denials unfairly prevented her at the disposition hearing from demonstrating bonds with the children, which could have enabled her to prove that reunification services were in their best interest (see part 2, post). 3 All proceedings at issue occurred between August 2022, when the case

was filed, and the April 2023 disposition hearing, so all unspecified references to dates are correspondingly to 2022 or 2023.

3 that day, the Bureau’s counsel represented that the therapist recommended delaying contact with Parents. The court asked “What about for [A.Y.]?” but then said, “Oh, [A.Y.] is seven months [old].” In cross-talk, the Bureau’s counsel said, with apparent regard to A.Y., “The information, I believe, was that it would be detrimental to do that right now.” Each parent’s counsel asked to be put on the waitlist for therapeutic visitation. The court declined to resume visitation or order that parents be put on the therapeutic-visitation waitlist, noting only the detriment to W.Y. The record does not make clear the basis for the Bureau’s counsel’s representation that supervised visitation would be detrimental for A.Y. The social worker had spoken a week earlier with the therapist who had been assigned to (but not yet begun treating) W.Y. The therapist “reported that she will be monitoring [A.Y.]’s mental health status as she is not currently displaying any signs of concern.” The therapist, as paraphrased in the report, noted that although A.Y. “was only four-months-old when she was detained . . . [,] she was still exposed to ongoing domestic violence and the incident with [O.Y.],” and that “studies have shown” that even if a child is an infant when exposed to trauma, “there is still an impact on their emotional and mental health.” The record does not indicate that the therapist had assessed A.Y., or expressed a view as to the effects of visitation on her. The jurisdiction hearing resumed on March 23 (after continuances due to illness). At that point, each parent requested that visitation resume, but the court deferred the issue to the disposition hearing, which occurred on April 20. In its memo, the Bureau reported a discussion on March 1 with the therapist who had begun play therapy with W.Y. and opined it was too soon in the process to reintroduce visitation.

4 At the April 20 disposition hearing, Father again asked to resume visitation; each parent objected to a finding of detriment.

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Bluebook (online)
In re W.Y. CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wy-ca14-calctapp-2023.