Lopez v. County of Los Angeles CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 2025
DocketB327598
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lopez v. County of Los Angeles CA2/1 (Lopez v. County of Los Angeles CA2/1) 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
Lopez v. County of Los Angeles CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 1/7/25 Lopez v. County of Los Angeles CA2/1

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

VIVEANA LOPEZ et al., B327598

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 19AVCV00601) v.

COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Stephen Morgan, Judge. Affirmed. Offices of Sanford Jossen, Sanford Jossen for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Peterson, Bradford, Burkwitz, Gregorio, Burkwitz & Su, Avi Burkwitz, Gil Burkwitz and Avery Canty for Defendants and Respondents. ___________________________________ Appellants Viveana Lopez and Omar Duron Rodriguez, the parents of 18-month-old SLD, filed a civil rights action against the County of Los Angeles and three of its employees, social workers Yesenia Serrano, Vilma Hernandez, and Rina Mejia, alleging that these defendants fabricated allegations supporting a dependency petition. The petition resulted in the juvenile court placing SLD in a foster home, where she died after asphyxiating on a peanut. Lopez and Rodriguez appeal from a judgment entered in favor of the County defendants after the trial court granted their motion for summary judgment. They argue that triable issues of material fact exist on several issues. We disagree, and thus affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND A. Introduction The County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) received an anonymous referral about Lopez and Rodriguez getting into an argument with SLD present. DCFS filed reports and a petition with the juvenile court, which ordered SLD detained and suitably placed away from the parents. DCFS placed SLD in a foster home where, four months later, she asphyxiated on a peanut and died. Lopez and Rodriguez represent that when the foster parents were not watching, another foster child gave SLD trail mix, and she asphyxiated in her sleep. They sued the foster parents and foster agency for wrongful death, and that litigation is concluded. The foster parents and foster agency are not part of this appeal. Lopez and Rodriguez also sued the County and three of its employees for statutory and civil rights violations. The primary

2 thrust of their complaint against the County and its employees is not that they caused SLD’s death, but that they caused her wrongful detention, which ultimately led to her death.

B. Referrals and Reports 1. Prior Incidents Lopez had three other children, M.C., A.P., and H.P., with two other fathers. Lopez lost parental rights to M.C. in 2010 following a domestic violence dispute that occurred in the child’s presence, and lost custody of A.P. and H.P. in 2015. These children then lived with their fathers. SLD was born on March 13, 2017. On September 12, 2017, an anonymous caller reported to DCFS that SLD was riddled with rashes and that Lopez was constantly intoxicated. DCFS social worker Shannen Gonzalez investigated. Gonzalez found Lopez to be lucid and appropriate with SLD, and although she tested positive for marijuana, she had a medical marijuana card. Lopez tested negative for alcohol and other drugs. Gonzalez observed that the home was clean and SLD had no rashes, and the father of A.P. and H.P. reported he had no “worries or concerns” about Lopez. Gonzalez concluded the allegations were unfounded and recommended that the referral be closed because the “situation [was] stabilized,” stating: “At this time CSW has not found children to be in imminent risk and does not require further DCFS and/or court involvement.” DCFS closed the referral.

2. The March 14, 2018 Incident On March 15, 2018, an anonymous caller to the County’s Child Protective Hotline reported that on March 14, Lopez and

3 Rodriguez were involved in a domestic dispute in the presence of SLD. According to the caller, Lopez asked Rodriguez to leave the house but he refused. When she tried to leave with SLD, he pushed her shoulder. She left with SLD in her car but Rodriguez pursued in his car, driving erratically. The caller reported that Lopez ultimately stopped “and began running on foot until she flagged down” police. Rodriguez was arrested. DCFS assigned the matter to Serrano, an Emergency Response Unit social worker, who was supervised by Mejia. Serrano reviewed prior DCFS investigative summaries and dependency court proceedings regarding Lopez and her other children, M.C., A.P., and H.P., and interviewed Lopez, Rodriguez, SLD’s maternal grandmother, and A.P., H.P., and their father.

a. Police Report Serrano also received a police report that was ultimately excluded in the proceedings below due to lack of authentication. Although the report was excluded, we will outline some of the contentions it contained, not for their truth but for their effect on Serrano’s decisionmaking. The report stated that Lopez, the “victim,” reported that in the March 14 incident, Rodriguez, the “dominant aggressor,” “struck[] her on her right shoulder area with open hand” while SLD was present. The report continued: “The victim said that she exited her apartment and left in her vehicle with her child to get away from the suspect, but the suspect entered his vehicle and followed her. . . . [W]hile she was driving, [Rodriguez] was in his vehicle, driving behind her flashing his headlights at her causing a hazard and a very dangerous situation as she was attempting to get away from

4 him. . . . [W]hile driving, she called the suspect and told him to stop following her and to stop flashing his lights at her because she feared that she was going to have an accident with their child inside the vehicle. [¶] The victim said that when the suspect continued to follow her, she stopped her vehicle and parked. . . . [S]he exited her vehicle and fled on foot with her child. . . . [T]he suspect parked his vehicle behind her vehicle and followed her on foot, until they flagged down a San Fernando PD patrol unit. [¶] When the victim found out that the suspect was going to be arrested, she changed her story. The victim originally said that she was struck on the chest, but later said that the suspect only touched her very lightly on the right shoulder area. The victim said that she was not in fear, however, she will go to the courthouse to obtain a restraining order against the suspect. [¶] The victim appeared to have been crying and was very upset. [She] was very distraught and was genuinely concern[ed] about her safety and the safety of her child.” Police also interviewed Rodriguez, and detailed his statement: “Rodriguez said that on 03/14/18 at approximately 1930 hours he was inside the motel room with the victim and their child when an argument ensued over money. The victim became angry, got on top of the bed to prevent him from getting close to [SLD]. The victim then kicked him twice on the chest. Rodriguez said that he did not fall to the ground, and was able to hold her leg the second time. . . . [Lopez] then got down from the bed and kicked him on his testicles. [¶] Rodriguez said that the victim grabbed their child from the bed and attempted to leave. . . . [He] followed the victim in his vehicle because he . . . feared for the safety of his child.”

5 b. Other Incidents Serrano learned that a 2010 dependency petition alleged Lopez engaged in a violent altercation with her brother (a minor), in the presence of M.C., striking her brother with a hot frying pan, which caused him first- and second-degree burns. M.C.

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