Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services v. Paul S.

27 Cal. App. 4th 541, 32 Cal. Rptr. 2d 670, 94 Daily Journal DAR 11047, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6081, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 814
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 5, 1994
DocketB063908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 27 Cal. App. 4th 541 (Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services v. Paul S.) 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
Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services v. Paul S., 27 Cal. App. 4th 541, 32 Cal. Rptr. 2d 670, 94 Daily Journal DAR 11047, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6081, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 814 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion

EPSTEIN, J.

Appellants Paul S. (father) and Marlene B. (mother) appeal from a judgment terminating their rights to parent their four minor children. They contend the judgment must be reversed because they were not provided with adequate reunification services. Mother also contends the minors should have been returned to her at the time of the permanency planning hearing, that she was wrongfully deprived of counsel at the hearing in which her parental rights were terminated, and that the trial court erred in selecting the option of adoption rather than guardianship for her children. 1

In the published part of this opinion we conclude the trial court erred in depriving mother of counsel at the Welfare and Institutions Code section *544 366.26 2 hearing, but that the error is not per se reversible and was harmless under the circumstances in this case. We also comment about the delay in the trial and appellate proceedings. In the unpublished portion of the opinion we reject the other grounds asserted as a basis for reversal.

Factual and Procedural Summary

Deputy sheriffs went to appellants’ home four or five times between 1987 and 1989, primarily in response to the children’s calls regarding family disturbances. In August of 1987 they investigated allegations that three- and one-half-year-old Brandy S. had been sexually molested by a fifteen-year-old boy named Jimmy. 3

On April 26, 1988, they responded to a call reporting suspicious circumstances, including a woman screaming, at appellants’ residence. When they arrived they found father sitting on the front porch. He told the officers there was no problem. Mother was shaking and crying and had reddish marks around her neck. She told police she was afraid of father. She said he was violent, and she feared he would kill her.

On August 26, 1988, deputy sheriffs arrested father for violation of Penal Code section 273.5 (felonious corporal injury on spouse or cohabitant), but mother refused to prosecute.

On July 19, 1988, the sheriff received a call of a domestic dispute in a trailer park, possibly a man with a gun. When deputies arrived, they found mother and her children in an unfurnished trailer. Inside, there were mildewed clothes in a cardboard box and mushy fruit on the floor. The refrigerator did not work, and flies flew around an open package of lunch meat in the kitchen. Everything was very dirty, including the children. The' two-month-old infant (Jacob S.) and the one-year-old baby (Danielle S.) had severe diaper rashes. Danielle also had a bad cough, a runny nose, and scabs on her upper lip, and appeared to have a fever.

Mother said she and father had been in a fight. She had a black eye. She told deputies they were staying at the trailer park and had nowhere else to go. She said she had no one to call to help her with the children and had no *545 money at all. Mother said she was afraid of her husband. 4 She was arrested for domestic violence. 5

Deputies took the children into custody and transported them to a hospital where they were cleaned and fed. Brandy, who was four and one-half years old at the time, said her mommy hurt her eye when daddy hit her. 6

The proceedings in this case were protracted over a period of time beginning July 19, 1988, when the minors were detained, continuing with the filing of a dependency petition, 7 the sustaining of the petition (as amended to conform to proof) after an adjudication which was completed on July 18, 1989, a contested disposition hearing which ended on July 31,1990, a permanency planning hearing completed on August 2, 1991, and ending with the order terminating parental rights on January 21, 1992. We shall have more to say about this delay at the conclusion of our discussion of the issues.

During this period the four minor children were placed in foster homes. Ultimately, two foster families each sought to adopt two of the children.

Discussion

I, II *

III

The section 366.26 hearing was held on January 21, 1992, to determine whether parental rights should be permanently terminated. Neither mother *546 nor father was present. Mother’s counsel requested to be relieved due to a conflict of interest. Counsel said that at the last hearing mother complained that she had not been properly represented and stated that she intended to hire another attorney. Counsel represented that several lawyers had telephoned, saying they were going to represent mother, but no formal substitution of counsel was ever presented. Counsel informed the court that mother had called the court clerk that morning and left a telephone number in Kirkland, Washington. When counsel called that number, mother was not there. She had left a message, however, that she did not have the money to come to court.

The court relieved counsel, noting that mother had been ordered to be present. The court found that mother had purposefully absented herself from the hearing.

Upon the basis of a report filed by the children’s social workers pursuant to section 366.26, and a stipulation that the two older minors, if called to testify, would say they wished to be adopted by their present caretakers, the court found it was in their best interests to be adopted. The court further found that mother and father had relinquished their parental rights.

Mother asserts that she was wrongfully deprived of counsel because her counsel did not notice a motion to be relieved and because the trial court granted the motion and proceeded with the case without notifying her. We agree.

Mother’s attorney asked to be relieved on the spot, and the court granted her request. She told the court that mother had said something to her about trying to find another attorney. But there was no other attorney at the time, and counsel did not say that she had informed her client that she would seek to be relieved before the section 366.26 hearing.

At that point, the trial court had several options. The most obvious was to deny the motion because counsel had failed to demonstrate even a semblance of compliance with the statutory and rule requirements for being relieved. (Code Civ. Proc., § 284, subd. 2 and Cal. Rules of Court, rule 376.) Compliance with that procedure was especially important in this case, since section 317 gave appellant an undoubted right to be represented by counsel throughout the dependency proceedings. Her right was to be represented by *547 the same attorney (“vertical representation”) unless that attorney was removed as provided in the statute itself. 10

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. App. 4th 541, 32 Cal. Rptr. 2d 670, 94 Daily Journal DAR 11047, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6081, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-county-department-of-childrens-services-v-paul-s-calctapp-1994.