Marin County Health & Human Services v. J.B.

230 Cal. App. 4th 1420, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 987
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2014
DocketA140804, A141095
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 230 Cal. App. 4th 1420 (Marin County Health & Human Services v. J.B.) 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
Marin County Health & Human Services v. J.B., 230 Cal. App. 4th 1420, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 987 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

MARGULIES, J.

Minors A.B. and Z.B. were removed from the home of their mother, J.B. (Mother), and placed in the homes of their respective biological fathers in early 2013 pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 361.2. 1 After a contested disposition hearing, the dependency court upheld the removals, ordered the fathers to assume custody of the minors, declined Mother’s request for reunification services, and ordered Marin County Health and Human Services (Department) to conduct home visits and report back within three months pursuant to section 361.2, subdivision (b)(2). We upheld these rulings in an earlier appeal. Mother now appeals from the dependency court’s ensuing orders, which again denied her reunification services, and terminated its jurisdiction as to A.B. She contends she had a due process right to a further evidentiary hearing on the home visit reports that could not be conditioned on the sufficiency of her offer of proof. We disagree, and affirm the findings and orders in issue.

*1423 I. BACKGROUND 2

A. Predispositional Proceedings

Minor A.B., bom in September 2001, is the biological child of Mother and Julian L. A.B. was diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorder at an early age. A.B.’s half sibling, Z.B., was bom in October 2005. Z.B.’s biological father is Gavin E.

1. Section 300 Petitions

Just after midnight on December 31, 2012, San Anselmo police received a call that Z.B. had been observed running from his apartment toward a nearby park. When officers found him he was crying and fearful of Mother. When they brought Z.B. home, officers saw a marijuana pipe, thousands of empty nitrous oxide containers all over the apartment, and very unclean and hazardous conditions, including rotting food in the sink, a toilet bowl full of feces, and prescription pain pills within reach of the minors. A.B. was asleep upstairs. Police arrested Mother for possible child endangerment, child abuse, and possession of illegal substances, and called the Department. The boys were taken to an emergency foster home.

The Department filed section 300 petitions, alleging the boys were at substantial risk of harm due to Mother’s inability to provide them with adequate care and supervision due to her “mental illness, developmental disability, or substance abuse.” Supporting facts were taken from the December 31 police report. The Department recommended the boys be detained with their respective biological fathers, and Mother be given case plan services, including substance abuse treatment services, random drug testing, parenting education, and mental health counseling. Both fathers requested custody of their sons. The plan also included weekly supervised visitation for Mother with the minors.

On January 7, 2013, Mother submitted on detention. The court found both fathers to have presumed father status, and made the recommended orders, including to provide both fathers with parenting education.

2. Jurisdiction

According to the jurisdiction report, there had been a total of 29 referrals regarding the family, dating back to 2005. Some were related to domestic *1424 disturbances between Gavin and Mother in 2005, and physical altercations between Gavin and his brother witnessed by Z.B. Others involved drug use and lack of supervision by Mother, and allegations by Mother of sexual abuse by Z.B.’s uncle during Z.B.’s visitation with Gavin (determined to be unfounded). In 2011, it was reported that Mother may have been under the influence of drugs or alcohol when she dropped Z.B. off for summer camp, that Z.B. stated Mother spanked him for no reason and would sleep and not supervise him or A.B., and that the minors did not get dinner or lunch at home sometimes. These reports were later determined to be unfounded or inconclusive. There were several reports of concerns about Mother’s mental health and appearance of being overmedicated. Z.B.’s special needs school “had many concerns about this family.” He had poor school attendance and many disciplinary actions, including suspension after he brought a lighter and some straw to school and said he knew how to bum the school down. He was suspended from school six times. A reporting party at the school believed Mother was abusing methamphetamines and/or prescription dmgs, and was uncooperative with attempts to help her and Z.B. Mother ignored or rejected repeated attempts by the Department in 2012 to get her to agree to a voluntary case plan, and refirsed all forms of communication with the Department about services for the family.

Social worker Janelle Torres reported Mother told her she was attending a weekly support group and was participating in individual counseling. She had completed an outpatient substance abuse program three years earlier and attributed her current relapse to chronic pain arising after receiving a massage in 2010. Mother presented as disheveled and disorganized. Torres wrote that although Mother wanted to have her sons returned to her care and expressed willingness to participate in services, she tended to minimize the situation leading to the removal of her children and blame others. Torres felt Mother would continue to endanger her children until she was willing to seriously address her chronic drag dependency and unstable mental health.

The court sustained an amended allegation that Mother put the boys at substantial risk of suffering serious physical harm or illness due to (1) her willful or negligent failure to supervise or protect the boys, and (2) inability to provide regular care for the boys due to mental illness, developmental disability, or substance abuse.

3. Disposition Report

A disposition report filed in March 2013 noted Mother had taken initiative in obtaining individual and group therapy, and a pain management course. Nonetheless, social worker Torres stated she was still deeply concerned about Mother due to her long struggle with a polysubstance dependency, and her *1425 recent relapse. Although Mother reported she had ceased to use inhalants as of early January 2013, she had made recent misrepresentations to that effect. Due to limitations in drug testing for nitrous oxide, the Department would have to rely on Mother’s self-reports in order to protect the minors’ safety and well-being in her care. The children stated Mother had instructed them not to divulge information about the family situation, and both children had complied. A.B.’s psychologist for the past year, Dr. Barbara Nova, also believed Mother had coached the children. The Department was “very concerned about [the minors] being safe in [Mother’s] care and about being able to oversee [Mother’s] ability to make appropriate and safe choices in the care of the children,” and therefore could not recommend family reunification services for Mother.

Dr. Nova expressed concern about an “enmeshed” relationship between Mother and A.B., where Mother placed undue focus on A.B.’s body and hygiene. The relationship dynamics between A.B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 Cal. App. 4th 1420, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marin-county-health-human-services-v-jb-calctapp-2014.