Patricia W. v. Superior Court

244 Cal. App. 4th 397, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 2016
DocketA146378
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 244 Cal. App. 4th 397 (Patricia W. v. Superior Court) 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
Patricia W. v. Superior Court, 244 Cal. App. 4th 397, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 60 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

STEWART, J.—

INTRODUCTION

Patricia W. (mother) and J.T. (father) are the parents of two-and-a-half-year-old S.L. They petition for extraordinary relief to overturn an order entered at a six-month review hearing terminating reunification services for them, and setting a hearing for January 22, 2016, under Welfare and Institutions Code section 1 366.26 to establish a permanent plan for their son’s adoption.

*401 This is a sad tale of a family broken up by mental illness. A local social services agency, acting with commendable speed, removed a toddler from his parents’ custody when mother ran out of her medication and, a week later, experienced a relapse of schizophrenic episodes that involved violent hallucinations of harming and killing their child. The sole reason it removed the child from father’s custody was a concern he was in denial about the gravity of mother’s mental illness and therefore could not, and would not, protect the child from mother.

The law requires a court to decide, at six months, whether a parent has been provided or offered “reasonable services . . . designed to aid the parent or legal guardian in overcoming the problems that led to the initial removal and the continued custody of the child . . . .” (§366.21, former subd. (e).) Here, the problem that led to the child’s detention was mother’s failure to properly take her medication. But there is no evidence the agency in this case even sought to diagnose mother’s mental illness and her medication needs as part of a case plan, much less help S.L.’s parents ascertain whether and how they could more effectively manage and monitor her medication to avoid another relapse.

The agency got court approval for two psychiatric examinations of mother, but not in order to facilitate reunification services for either parent. Rather, it did so in order to potentially bypass mother’s reunification services altogether, due to her mental illness. And even so, the only evidence of the results consists of several sentences in the social worker’s report that shed practically no light on the examining psychologists’ conclusions or mother’s condition. Mother also had a treating psychiatrist who prescribed and monitored her medication, but that individual was not called as a witness. Her social worker also had doubts during the reunification period that mother was staying on her medication but, by all accounts, did not fully investigate whether that was true. She admitted on cross-examination she did not even know if mother was on the right medication, and that if mother was not then her recommendation to terminate services might change. And whatever mother’s medication needs might have been, a subject concerning which there is no substantial evidence from any competent medical professional, there also is no evidence the agency offered services to either parent designed to help them improve mother’s ability to take her medication as prescribed.

In these circumstances, we conclude no substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings that adequate reunification services were provided to either parent. Accordingly, we grant both petitions.

*402 BACKGROUND

S.L. was born in July 2013. His parents are unmarried but live together. When S.L. was bom, mother began hearing voices for the first time in her life, which initially was thought to be postpartum depression but later was diagnosed as schizophrenia. The voices were scary to her, and sometimes, though not always, would urge her to injure or kill people, including her son. She testified she did not like hearing these voices and resisted them, and would seek immediate psychiatric treatment whenever she heard them— either by contacting her counselor or psychiatrist on an emergency basis, or by going to a hospital psychiatric ward where she could be safely away from her son and detained until the hallucinations had passed.

When S.L. was two months old, the Del Norte County Department of Health and Human Services, Child Protective Services (Agency) initiated dependency proceedings and removed S.L. from his parents’ custody, due to concerns arising from mother’s mental illness. The record contains few details of that proceeding. Based largely on reports filed by the Agency and S.L.’s court-appointed advocate, it appears the initial proceeding was opened in September 2013 because mother was having delusions and hearing voices telling her to kill her child. Mother and father received counseling and other parenting services. After nine months, S.L. was returned to his parents’ custody and judicial supervision terminated. Under the safety plan put into place, father was not to leave their infant son alone with mother, although he had done so three times while the case was open, and he was to monitor mother’s medication to ensure she took it as prescribed.

I.

The Petition

On February 4, 2015, shortly after the first case closed, the Agency initiated this dependency proceeding and S.L. was detained a second time. He was 18 months old. 2

According to the Agency, mother was expected to be released from a mental health facility the following day and father was refusing to speak with the Agency. Yet “[m]ental [h]ealth professionals have voiced concern if [S.L.] is left alone with mother, for even a few moments, she is capable of seriously harming or killing her child.” The petition alleged father “has stated that mother does not have a significant mental health problem, that ‘she’s never *403 done anything violent and is very passive’ and he is not worried about her hurting their child.” The same social worker who had been involved in the prior dependency proceeding, Deidra Ward, was assigned to this case.

The following day, after S.L. had been removed, the Agency filed an amended petition asserting jurisdiction both under section 300, subdivision (a), alleging mother posed a risk of serious physical harm to S.L., and under section 300, subdivision (b) alleging father was failing to protect S.L. from mother and mother was unable to care for him due to mental illness.

Allegations Against Mother. The amended petition alleged that mother (1) “suffers from bipolar with persistent delusions along with command auditory hallucinations. The voices [mother] hears have told her to kill her son . . . , her boyfriend [father], family members, and herself’; (2) “has identified several plans as to how she will kill her son, [S.L.], age 1. She has identified use of rat poison, use of a knife, drowning in a bathtub and has stated that if she had access to firearms, she would already have killed [S.L.]”; (3) “has been non compliant with her medications which exacerbates her condition” and “has doubled up on her medication so she is off her medications prior to refill and does not request a refill of the prescribed antipsychotic medication”; (4) “has been hospitalized in psychiatric hospitals on at least two separate occasions since January 15, 2015 for periods of longer than one week”; and (5) “[o]n or about February 3, 2015, [mother] continued to hear auditory hallucinations commanding her to commit infanticide despite medication compliance in a psychiatric hospital setting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 Cal. App. 4th 397, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-w-v-superior-court-calctapp-2016.