In re X.W. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 2026
DocketA172965
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re X.W. CA1/1 (In re X.W. CA1/1) 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 X.W. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/26/26 In re X.W. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 ONE

In re X.W., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A172965 X.W., (Mendocino County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. 24JD00075-1)

X.W. appeals from a restitution order for $6,475 of mental health services that was entered after she admitted committing a misdemeanor assault against another high school student, C.S. After seeking treatment, C.S. was diagnosed with attachment disorder, a condition that preexisted the assault. On appeal, X.W. claims that (1) there was insufficient evidence she was the but-for cause of all the mental health services C.S. received; (2) the juvenile court’s refusal to release C.S.’s mental health records or allow X.W. to question C.S.’s service providers violated due process; and (3) we should independently review C.S.’s school disciplinary records to determine whether the juvenile court correctly declined to order their disclosure. We reject the first two claims, and our review of the disciplinary records shows the court did not err by concluding they were immaterial. Thus, we affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. The Underlying Incident and the Case’s Disposition In November 2023, 15-year-old X.W. and 14-year-old C.S. were both students at a Sonoma County high school. Video footage from the school showed X.W. approach C.S. A “verbal altercation” took place, during which C.S. “was seen with both hands in her pockets.” X.W. eventually hit C.S. in the head and “took [her] to the ground.” X.W. then got on top of the other girl “and began to punch her multiple times in the head and torso.” Eventually, school personnel arrived and broke up the fight. C.S. went to urgent care after the attack. As reported by her mother, she “sustained a swollen left eye and bruising, a small laceration on her lip, and bruising on the back of her neck.” C.S. also had a concussion. The Sonoma County District Attorney filed a wardship petition alleging that the juvenile court had jurisdiction over X.W. under Welfare and Institutions Code1 section 602, subdivision (a). The operative petition contained two felony counts, battery with serious bodily injury and assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury (GBI), and a misdemeanor count of battery.2 In May 2024, X.W. admitted to a reduced misdemeanor count of

1 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions

Code unless otherwise noted. 2 The allegations were made under Penal Code sections 243,

subdivision (d) (battery with serious bodily injury), 245, subdivision (a)(4) (assault by means likely to produce GBI), and 242 (simple battery).

2 assault by means likely to produce GBI. The case was then transferred to Mendocino County, X.W.’s county of residence. At the July 2024 disposition hearing, the juvenile court placed X.W. on non-wardship probation under section 725. The following January, the court terminated X.W.’s probation as successful and ordered the matter sealed under section 786. It reserved the issue of restitution. B. The Restitution Proceedings The People ultimately sought $6,475 for mental health services C.S. received from two different providers between April and June 2024. In an undated letter submitted with the restitution request, C.S.’s mother explained, “After [C.S.] was attacked, she started to spiral so we found a family therapist,” Dr. Mary Susan Sams, PsyD, “to talk to as a family to support [C.S.] emotionally.” The letter continued, “[A]fter a few appointments it was apparent to [Dr. Sams] that [C.S.] need[ed] to speak to a Psychotherapist . . . [because] what [C.S.] was dealing with was much more complex and we needed to find out exactly what i[t] was so we could take the next steps to fix it.” The family then sought a neuropsychological evaluation from Dr. Eliza Lehrke, PsyD. As described by C.S.’s mother, the evaluation showed that C.S. was “having a form of P[TS]D due to the attack.” C.S., who was adopted, was also diagnosed with attachment disorder. Her mother continued, “[C.S.] . . . experienced abuse before we brought her home and due to this attack [by X.W.], it has brought it all back up, and we are now dealing with a sever[e] case of [attachment] disorder.” In response to the restitution request, X.W. subpoenaed “[a]ll billing and payment records” and “[a]ll notes and reports pertaining to intake, diagnostics, evaluations, and treatment (past and ongoing)” from Drs. Sams

3 and Lehrke. X.W. also subpoenaed from the high school C.S.’s “disciplinary records and notes” for the 2023–2024 academic year. At an October 2024 hearing for receipt of the subpoenaed records, an attorney who appeared for Dr. Sams objected to releasing any records on the basis of psychotherapist–patient privilege under Evidence Code section 1014. Dr. Lehrke, who appeared herself, relied on the same privilege to oppose releasing “the clinical content of [her] evaluation,” although she had “authorization from the family to release [her] bill of record of what was done and the bill receipt of payment.” C.S.’s parents likewise objected to the release of their daughter’s mental health records. The family did not oppose the release of C.S.’s disciplinary records, which the high school had provided. X.W.’s trial counsel explained that she subpoenaed the mental health records because she was “seeking evidence that [C.S.’s] injuries . . . [were] related to [X.W.’s] conduct as opposed to the . . . issue that [was] already in existence,” namely attachment disorder. The juvenile court questioned whether, assuming X.W. “contribut[ed] to any of the need for therapy,” it would be possible to “parse . . . out” which portions of C.S.’s treatment were due to the criminal conduct. X.W.’s counsel responded that while she might agree “if this was just normal therapy,” it was not clear that C.S.’s potential treatment and the “extensive psych eval” for an existing disorder resulted from X.W.’s conduct. Admitting there were “issues regarding the [psychotherapist-patient] privilege,” counsel asked the court to perform an in camera review of the mental health records. The juvenile court took the matter under submission. At a November 2024 hearing, the court declined to review or release the mental health records. It found there was “an overriding and compelling interest in maintaining confidentiality” that outweighed what would be an “incredibly

4 intrusive and futile” effort to attempt “to ascertain what, if any, portion of the treatment can be attributed to the assault.” The court did, however, order both Drs. Sams and Lehrke to “disclose a list of dates and costs of the treatment.” As for the school disciplinary records, the juvenile court had already conducted an in camera review and could not “see how they’re relevant to the issue of restitution.” As a result, the court declined to order their release either. The restitution hearing was held in February 2025. The juvenile court admitted into evidence the prosecution’s restitution request, which included C.S.’s mother’s letter and the billing records of Drs. Sams and Lehrke. Dr. Sams’s records showed she had eight $200 sessions with C.S. between February 28 and May 28, 2024.3 Dr. Lehrke’s records showed she spent 19.5 hours, billed at $250 per hour, to perform a “Neuropsychological Assessment” of C.S. between April 12 and June 14, 2024.

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Bluebook (online)
In re X.W. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-xw-ca11-calctapp-2026.