In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 22, 2024
Docket39593-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.J.J.I. (In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.J.J.I., (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED AUGUST 22, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

) In Matter of the Welfare of C.J.J.I. ) No. 39593-6-III Cons. with ) No. 39594-4-III, No. 39595-2-III ) ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION )

FEARING, J. — The mother of three children, two of whom are Native American,

appeals from a juvenile court order declaring her children dependent and from a

disposition order continuing the placement of the children outside her home. She

clutches Washington Supreme Court decisional language that imposes on the juvenile

court, in accordance with the Washington Indian Child Welfare Act (WICWA), the duty

of assessing active efforts at every dependency hearing. Based on this principle, she

assigns error to the juvenile court’s failure to find active efforts during the dependency

hearing that preceded the disposition hearing. In response, the State contends that the

juvenile court needed to address active efforts only at a hearing in which the State sought

out-of-home placement. According to the State, the mother’s children were already

placed elsewhere, at the time of the dependency fact-finding hearing, and the juvenile

court addressed their continued placement only later during the disposition hearing. At No. 39593-6-III (Anchor Case) Consolidated: 39594-4-III, 39595-2-III In re the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.

the dependency hearing, the juvenile court found Department of Children, Youth and

Families (DCYF) exerted active efforts to reunite the family.

We rule, based on RCW 13.38.040(1)(a)(ii) and In re Dependency of G.J.A., 197

Wn.2d 868, 875, 489 P.3d 631 (2021), that the dependency court must review and find

active efforts during every hearing, in which the State seeks to place the Indian child out

of the home. As a result, the trial court erred when not finding active efforts at the

dependency hearing. This lack of review poses particular problems in this appeal

because of the significant delay between the dependency hearing and the disposition

hearing.

FACTS

This appeal concerns the dependency of the mother’s three children, daughter

C.V.I., age 13, son C.J.J.I., age 8, and son R.R., age 5. The ages listed are the ages of

each child in September 2022 when the State filed the dependency petition. The father of

C.V.I. and C.J.J.I. is B.I., a Native American. The father of R.R. is also R.R., not Native

American. Neither father has participated in the care of their respective children or

responded to the dependency proceeding. We procure most of the substantive facts from

testimony at the dependency fact-finding hearing.

C.J.J.I. is an enrolled member of, and C.V.I. is eligible for enrollment in, the

Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe through their father, who is a member. Thus, the two oldest

2 No. 39593-6-III (Anchor Case) Consolidated: 39594-4-III, 39595-2-III In re the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.

children are Indian children within the meaning of Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA)

chapter 13.38 RCW and WICWA.

This appeal arises from a dependency action for all three children filed in 2022.

DCYF administered an earlier dependency action for C.V.I., C.J.J.I., and R.R. from 2017

to 2021. We begin the facts on the return of the three children to the mother in 2021.

Jessica Richter, a program manager for the substance use disorder program at the

Spokane Addiction Recovery Center (SPARC), spoke with the oldest child, C.V.I., soon

after the children’s return home in 2021. C.V.I. mentioned the mother’s drug use but

provided no specific information on the use. On a later day, C.V.I. disclosed to Richter

that her mother used methamphetamine, and she had seen methamphetamine in her

mother’s bedside drawer.

In March 2022, Child Protection Services (CPS) opened a new intake file for the

mother’s family. The reporting party related that the mother ingested methamphetamine

and the children had access to the drug. The mother had directed C.V.I. to move a bong

into the bedroom so that visitors would not espy the device. Cassidy Rose, the DCYF

social worker assigned to the file, requested that the mother provide a urinalysis (UA).

Rose listed services available to assist mother. The mother completed the UA testing, but

declined any further assistance from DCYF. The mother abhorred the government’s

harassment of her and her family.

3 No. 39593-6-III (Anchor Case) Consolidated: 39594-4-III, 39595-2-III In re the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.

Jessica Richter, the substance use disorder program manager at SPARC, testified

at the dependency hearing about the mother’s substance use. Richter averred that the

mother failed to disclose cocaine use in March 2022 during a substance abuse evaluation.

In mid-April 2022, CPS received another referral concerning supervision of

middle child, C.J.J.I. C.J.J.I., while unsupervised in the apartment complex where the

family lived, exposed himself to another child. CPS received five additional reports of

concerns for the children in May 2022. These intakes alleged that the mother physically

assaulted C.V.I., that C.V.I. performed most of the care and supervision of her younger

siblings, and that C.V.I. reported to her school counselor the presence of illicit substances

in the home. At that time, DCYF concluded that insufficient evidence supported each

report.

During the later dependency fact-finding trial in November 2022, Janet

McDonald, a Greenacres Middle School counselor, testified to events in May 2022.

C.V.I. attended Greenacres Middle School. According to McDonald, C.V.I. reported that

she supervised her brothers when her mom socialized with her boyfriend, Shawn Nason,

and C.V.I. commented that Nason carries a gun, which rendered her uncomfortable. In

response to C.V.I.’s allegations, the mother blamed C.V.I. for R.R. running away

unsupervised from a park. The mother also claimed that C.V.I. attempted to fist fight her.

4 No. 39593-6-III (Anchor Case) Consolidated: 39594-4-III, 39595-2-III In re the Welfare of: C.J.J.I.

DCYF social worker Cassidy Rose testified at the dependency hearing to

interviewing C.V.I. on May 17, 2022 about the purported altercation between the mother

and C.V.I. C.V.I. disclosed she visited a park with her boyfriend. Her mother had tasked

her to supervise youngest child, R.R., and he had run home unsupervised. According to

C.V.I., when she returned home, her upset mother punched her throughout her body.

C.V.I. stated the punching was strong enough to cause bruises, but Rose did not see any

bruises. During the May 17 interview, C.V.I. also added that she saw her mother strike

R.R., which caused a mark on his leg.

C.J.J.I. attended Greenacres Elementary School, not to be confused with the

nearby Greenacres Middle School. A May 24 report prepared by DCYF from

information supplied by Greenacres Elementary School recorded that C.J.J.I. mentioned

drinking alcohol to fall asleep. The report gave no date for the incident.

On May 26, 2022, the mother did not answer the phone when Greenacres

Elementary School personnel called her to retrieve C.J.J.I. from school. C.J.J.I. needed

transportation home because of his banishment from the school bus due to poor behavior.

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