Public Social Services v. Lisa H.

10 Cal. App. 4th 552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 16, 1992
DocketNo. E009488
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Cal. App. 4th 552 (Public Social Services v. Lisa H.) 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
Public Social Services v. Lisa H., 10 Cal. App. 4th 552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Opinion

McKINSTER, J.

A mother purports to appeal from findings and orders made at hearings conducted pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code sections 366.21 and 366.26.1 Finding that none of the challenged findings and orders are properly before us in this proceeding, we dismiss the appeal.

Procedural Background

On July 18, 1989, the Riverside County Department of Public Social Services filed a petition alleging that Shaqueya H. (bom July 29, 1984) and Ricky H. (born Sept. 9,1986) came within section 300, subdivisions (b), (d), and (g). (This petition amended and superseded a prior petition filed May 3, 1989.) At a joint jurisdiction and disposition hearing conducted on October 10, 1989, the juvenile court found the allegations to be tme, and adjudged the minors to be dependent children of the court. The minors were placed in foster care, and the mother was ordered to complete a reunification plan, including visitation.

A six-month review hearing pursuant to section 366.21, subdivision (e), was conducted on May 17, 1990, at which the dependency finding and the placement in foster care were continued. A 12-month review hearing pursuant to section 366.21, subdivision (f), originally set for November 15,1990, was ultimately conducted on March 12, 1991.2 At that time, the court found “that the department has provided reasonable [reunification] services and that return of the children would be detrimental to their physical or emotional well-being.” It also found that reunification within the next six months [557]*557was not likely. Accordingly, it terminated reunification services, and set the matter for a permanency planning hearing pursuant to section 366.26.3

The mother filed a notice of appeal on May 9, 1991, in which she purported to appeal “from the judgment. . . entered March 11,1991 . . . .” The only action taken in this action on that date was to continue the review hearing to the following day. However, liberally construing the notice (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 1(a)), we understand the mother to be appealing from the orders entered on March 12, 1991.

At the permanency planning hearing, conducted on July 12, 1991, the court adopted a plan of adoption for Ricky, and terminated his parents’ rights. The permanent plan adopted for Shaqueya was for long-term foster care.

The mother initially decided not to appeal the orders of July 12, 1991. After the mother told the counsel appointed to represent her in her first appeal that she wanted her children to be returned to her, that counsel filed a second notice of appeal on September 19,1991, addressed to the orders of July 12, 1991. However, on September 27, 1991, this court on its own motion dismissed the second appeal as untimely, it having been filed more than 60 days after July 12, 1991. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 39(b).)

Following the dismissal of the second appeal, the mother moved in this case to have the first notice of appeal deemed to be a premature appeal from the orders of July 12, 1991, and thus directed toward both hearings. We deferred a ruling on that motion until now.

Contentions

The mother raises numerous alleged errors in the orders emanating from both the March 12, 1991, section 366.21, subdivision (f) (hereinafter, 366.21(f)) hearing and the July 12, 1991, section 366.26 (366.26) hearing. As will be seen, however, we find that none of those issues is properly before us. Accordingly, we conclude that the appeal should be dismissed.

[558]*558Discussion

A. Because the Mother’s Appeal From the Orders of July 12, 1991, Is Untimely, the Alleged Errors in Those Orders Are Not Before Us.

The mother makes several arguments why the order of the 366.26 hearing on July 12, 1991, terminating her parental rights over Ricky and placing Shaqueya in long-term foster care, should be reversed. Specifically, she contends that the termination violates her right to due process for two separate reasons. In addition, she contends that the order terminating her rights to custody of Ricky is not supported by substantial evidence.

However, we need not decide any of those issues unless the second appeal is actually before us. As noted, we previously dismissed that appeal as untimely. The mother makes two arguments why the merits of that appeal, and specifically the issues described above, should be considered here despite that untimeliness. However, we reject both rationales, and now deny the motion to deem the first notice of appeal to be a premature appeal from the orders made at the 366.26 hearing of July 12, 1991.

1. Premature Filing

Generally, “[t]he rules governing appeals from the superior court in criminal cases are applicable to all appeals from the juvenile court. . . .” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 39(a).) Those rules, in turn, provide: “A notice of appeal filed prior to the time prescribed therefor is premature but may, in the discretion of the reviewing court for good cause, be treated as filed immediately after the rendition of the judgment or the making of the order.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 31(a).) This is consistent with the rule governing premature appeals in general: “A notice of appeal filed prior to rendition of the judgment, but after the judge has announced his intended ruling, may, in the discretion of the reviewing court for good cause, be treated as filed immediately after entry of the judgment.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 2(c).)

The mother contends that her first notice of appeal is a premature appeal from the orders entered at the 366.26 hearing, and asks us to exercise our discretion under these rules to deem that premature appeal to be timely. We decline to do so.

Typically, premature appeals are deemed to be timely when the decision being appealed from has been made preliminarily, but is not yet final. For instance, premature notices of appeal have been treated as timely when they were filed after the verdict but before the pronouncement of judgment [559]*559(People v. Richards (1969) 269 Cal.App.2d 768, 769, fn. 1 [75 Cal.Rptr. 597]), or after a judge announced an intended decision but before a final judgment was signed (People v. Municipal Court (White) (1979) 88 Cal.App.3d 206, 209, fn. 1 [151 Cal.Rptr. 861]). Here, by contrast, at the time that the initial notice of appeal was filed, there had been no preliminary decision that the mother’s parental rights to Ricky would be terminated, or that Shaqueya would be placed in long-term foster care. While those were possible consequences of the future 366.26 hearing, those orders were not the only possible outcomes. (§ 366.26, subd. (b).)

Moreover, it does not appear that the mother intended her initial notice of appeal to encompass those possible orders. That notice purports to appeal “from the judgment of [the juvenile] court entered March 11, 1991 at the hearing pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code Section 366.21 (h).” Subdivision (h) of section 366.21 provides: “In any case in which the court orders that a hearing pursuant to Section 366.26 shall be held, it shall also order the termination of reunification services to the parent.

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