K.B. v. Super. Ct. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2014
DocketA143110
StatusUnpublished

This text of K.B. v. Super. Ct. CA1/1 (K.B. v. Super. Ct. 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
K.B. v. Super. Ct. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 12/23/14 K.B. v. Super. Ct. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

K.B., Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN A143110 MATEO COUNTY, (San Mateo County Respondent; Super. Ct. No. 81608, 81612, 81613) SAN MATEO COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, Real Party in Interest.

Petitioner K.B. (mother) petitions this court for extraordinary writ review of juvenile court orders setting a selection-and-implementation hearing under Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.261 for her two sons, 13-year-old L.L.B. and 10-year-old L.A. (the brothers), and her daughter, 6-year-old J.W. She argues that the juvenile court improperly applied a statutory presumption and lacked substantial evidence to find that the brothers would suffer a substantial risk of detriment if returned to her care.2 We disagree and deny the petition.

1 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise noted. 2 Mother does not argue that the juvenile court erred in making any findings as to J.W., and we therefore do not discuss facts pertaining to J.W. except as relevant.

1 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. July to November 2011: Mother Has Difficulty Caring for Her Four Children After a Fifth Child Dies. In July 2011, 12-year-old L.B. (L.L.B.’s sister and L.A. and J.W.’s half sister) died after overdosing on methadone mother was prescribed to treat her chronic pain. Real party in interest San Mateo County Human Services Agency (Agency) filed petitions seeking dependency court jurisdiction over the four other children under mother’s care: L.L.B., L.A., J.W.,3 and P.F., another half sister.4 Jurisdiction was alleged under section 300, subdivision (b) (failure to protect) and subdivision (j) (abuse of sibling) on the bases that mother (1) had “mental health issues” and had left controlled substances where the children could reach them; (2) had failed to seek mental health treatment for L.B. even though L.B. had been cutting herself for several months before her death; and (3) had improperly cared for P.F., who had attempted suicide the previous year by taking mother’s sleeping pills. None of the four children was removed, however, and they remained in mother’s care. At the detention hearing, counseling was ordered for mother and the children. Although she insisted that the family needed counseling to address L.B.’s death, mother failed to return therapists’ telephone calls, sign the necessary releases, or otherwise secure counseling services. P.F. and the brothers eventually began to be assessed for counseling, but it was still “a slow process, mainly due to . . . mother not calling back service providers to set appointments or failing to show up for appointments.”

3 L.L.B., L.A., and J.W. all have different fathers, none of whom had custody at the time the children were detained and none of whom has sought relief from the juvenile court’s order. As a result, we do not discuss facts pertaining to the children’s fathers except as relevant. 4 The orders at issue do not include P.F., and the current status of her dependency case is unclear from the record before us. We do not discuss facts pertaining to her except as relevant.

2 Mother reported that from 2004 to 2008 she was in a relationship with J.W.’s father that was marked by “ ‘a lot’ of domestic violence” and her reliance on methamphetamine and alcohol. Several child-welfare referrals involving the family were made throughout those and following years. Mother stated that she had completed a drug treatment program in 2009, relapsed in February 2010 after P.F. overdosed on sleeping pills, and stopped using drugs again in November 2010. Several months later, mother admitted that she had relapsed after L.B.’s death and “began shooting methamphetamine and heroin two to three times a day” and drinking “approximately one bottle of wine a day.” Mother also has had a history of mental health issues. She has suffered from depression, particularly during her relationship with J.W.’s father. She reported that at some point during that relationship, she “ ‘had a nervous breakdown’ ” and was “ ‘so depressed that [she] couldn’t function’ ” so that “ ‘[t]he kids had to help [her]. . . . It was like [six] months of doing nothing’ ” during which she “ ‘wanted to die.’ ” Around August 2010, she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder during an initial mental health assessment, but she failed to follow through with treatment. The jurisdiction/disposition hearing was set for late August 2011, but it was continued after mother was hospitalized for psychiatric issues when she overdosed on one of her medications and said “ ‘she wanted to go to sleep and never wake up.’ ” She later told the social worker she was hospitalized because she felt “ ‘overwhelmed.’ ” A therapist who treated mother after her hospitalization reported that mother’s mental health had “stabilized,” but mother still failed to follow through to obtain counseling for herself and her children. Mother also confessed to cutting herself in September 2011 “because it made her ‘feel better,’ ” although she denied suicidal thoughts. Agency reports filed in the months after L.B.’s death noted that the maternal grandfather—who, it was later learned, was using heroin, often with mother, during this period—and his partner were providing most of the children’s care. When social workers visited the home, mother often seemed overcome with grief and unable to cope.

3 In late September and early November 2011, the juvenile court adjudged the four children to be dependents after finding them children described by section 300, subdivisions (b) and (j). Court-ordered family maintenance services required the family to receive grief counseling and required mother to participate in a substance-abuse outpatient program, be drug tested, and be evaluated for mental health issues. The children remained in mother’s care. B. November 2011 to March 2013: Mother Is Incarcerated. In mid-November, mother was arrested on numerous felony charges—including burglary, identity theft, heroin possession, and possession of drug paraphernalia—and jailed. She was on probation at the time. The Agency filed supplemental petitions under section 387 for a more restrictive placement for the four children, and they were removed. The brothers were placed together in a foster care home, where they have remained throughout this case. P.F. and J.W. were placed together in a different foster home, but they were soon separated and have both had many subsequent placements. While in jail, mother completed several programs and classes, including a parenting program and a substance abuse program. She also received counseling to address the “trauma and grief” she felt after L.B.’s death and learned, in her words, that “I needed to accept what had happened. I needed to move forward and not stay stuck, . . . for myself and for my children. I needed to learn ways to deal with that grief without drugs.” In January 2012, the brothers began weekly visits with mother at the jail. Although their foster mother reported that afterward they were “routinely more physical with each other and . . . [got] into more arguments and fights with one another,” the social worker concluded that mother was “making progress and working hard in her supervised visitation program with” them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
K.B. v. Super. Ct. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kb-v-super-ct-ca11-calctapp-2014.