SHERI T. v. Superior Court

166 Cal. App. 4th 334, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 410, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1360
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 2008
DocketG040245
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 166 Cal. App. 4th 334 (SHERI T. 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
SHERI T. v. Superior Court, 166 Cal. App. 4th 334, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 410, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1360 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

Taylor Y. was made a dependent of the juvenile court. Her mother, Sheri T., failed to reunify with her, and the juvenile court selected long-term foster care as her permanent plan. At a subsequent six-month status review hearing, the Orange County Social Services Agency recommended a new permanent plan selection hearing to consider adoption as Taylor’s permanent plan. The mother objected and requested a hearing so she could show a new permanent plan selection hearing was not in Taylor’s best interests. The juvenile court denied a hearing on Taylor’s best interests and set a new permanent plan selection hearing. The mother seeks extraordinary relief from these orders. We deny relief.

FACTS

Three-year-old Taylor Y. was detained by the Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) in October 2004 when her parents, Sheri T. and Sheldon Y, were arrested and incarcerated, leaving her with no caretaker. A dependency petition was sustained, alleging the parents had unresolved histories of substance abuse and had never completed a drug treatment program. The juvenile court removed Taylor from parental custody and placed her with her maternal grandmother and stepgrandfather, Deanna and Donald M., who lived in Desert Hot Springs in Riverside County.

*337 The mother relocated to Riverside County to be closer to Taylor, and the dependency case was transferred there in May 2005. The six-month review hearing was held in Riverside County in July 2005. The mother had been visiting Taylor twice a week and was “very affectionate, loving and concerned with her daughter during the visits.” However, the mother had not been able to participate in her case plan. “The obstacles she generally has are that the programs are geographically too far, too expensive, or the time frames interfere with her work schedule.” The SSA social worker, who prepared the report for the Riverside Juvenile Court, recommended six more months of reunification services, but the Riverside Juvenile Court returned Taylor to her mother under a plan of family maintenance. The mother left Taylor with the grandparents until September 2005, until she could “execute a plan to provide for the child’s needs.”

In December 2005, the Riverside social worker reported that the mother had returned to Orange County and had still not participated in her case plan. “[The mother] has had her child returned without completing any services, and only drug tested when advised failure to comply would result in immediate removal of the child. She does not appear to perceive the court-ordered services as a necessary set of tasks.” Furthermore, the mother had allowed unauthorized contact between Taylor and the father, who was “again incarcerated for breaching [his parole terms].” The social worker felt the mother was “on the brink” of losing her child. Nonetheless, the Riverside Juvenile Court continued family maintenance services to thp mother and terminated reunification services to the father. The case was transferred back to Orange County in January 2006.

In February 2006, SSA reviewed the status of the case. The mother “continues to have problems maintaining] stable employment and housing. She has moved multiple times without notifying her assigned social worker of her current whereabouts.” Notwithstanding additional assistance from the Riverside County social worker, the mother had not participated in parenting, counseling, or substance abuse treatment. She has had at least two positive drug tests. “Case notes indicate that the child’s mother had some criminal involvement during [late August and early September 2005], She acknowledged stealing money from a towing company she was working [for] and had a court date for credit card fraud.” Taylor, however, was doing well. “She reported that she likes living with her mother and she gets to see all her relatives.”

In June 2006, the Orange County Juvenile Court conducted a six-month status review hearing. The social worker reported the mother had moved three times since January and had changed jobs at least once. She enrolled in the perinatal program in March 2006 and had completed the first out of four *338 phases, but she continued to be late for drug testing. Late tests are counted as positive tests. Taylor appeared to be well cared for and had perfect attendance at school. The court ordered six more months of family maintenance services.

The mother was terminated from her perinatal program “due to consistently being late for groups and for drug testing.” She and Taylor moved in with the paternal grandparents. The father, who was out of custody, also lived there, in violation of the court order that he not be in unmonitored contact with Taylor. In November 2006, the mother moved to another apartment with Taylor; she also changed jobs again. In December 2006, SSA detained Taylor again after the social worker found a crack pipe in an ashtray in the mother’s apartment. The juvenile court sustained a supplemental petition and placed Taylor back in the maternal grandparents’ home. It denied further reunification services to the mother and set a permanent plan selection hearing. In January 2007, Taylor was moved to the paternal grandparents’ home because the maternal grandmother became very ill and was told she did not have long to live.

SSA reported in June 2007 that the paternal grandfather had suffered a serious heart attack, leaving him with residual damage requiring therapy. The paternal grandparents could no longer care for Taylor and wanted her to return to the mother’s care. The juvenile court ordered a 60-day trial release to the mother, which began in late June. This was initially successful, and the court continued the permanent plan selection hearing several times so the placement could be evaluated. But the mother was terminated again from her drug treatment program, continued to allow the father to have contact with Taylor, and lost her job and housing. The social worker removed Taylor from the mother and placed her back with the maternal grandparents, saying “It does not appear that the mother is ready for the child to remain in her care. She appears to need additional time to make her life ready for the child’s inclusion and the undersigned is not convinced that the mother has acquired the skills to set appropriate boundaries with the child’s father. There [is no] question that the mother and child have a strong bond and loving attachment.”

The permanent plan selection hearing was held in October 2007. Pursuant to stipulation by all parties, the court found termination of parental rights would be detrimental to Taylor due to her beneficial relationship with the mother. The court ordered Taylor into long-term foster care with the “specific goal of placement with a relative . . ..” The maternal grandparents stated they were inappropriate for long-term care due to their age and medical conditions. Likewise, the paternal grandfather’s health issues precluded the paternal grandparents from being a suitable placement. SSA was ordered to investigate Taylor’s adult half sister, Dana C., who lived in Utah, as a placement.

*339 In April 2008, SSA prepared a report for the six-month status review hearing. The social worker recommended that the court find Taylor’s placement no longer appropriate and schedule another permanent plan selection hearing. Dana C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 Cal. App. 4th 334, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 410, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheri-t-v-superior-court-calctapp-2008.