In re Carson A. CA1/4 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 5/13/22 In re Carson A. CA1/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    In re CARSON A., a Person Coming
    Under the Juvenile Court Law.
    HUMBOLDT COUNTY
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
    HUMAN SERVICES,                                                        A162148
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                  (Humboldt County
    v.                                                                     Super. Ct. No. JV2000097)
    K.A.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Before us is the all too familiar story of estranged parents who are at
    odds with each other regarding what they believe is in the best interest of
    their child. What began as a highly contentious family law dispute has
    turned into a vigorously contested juvenile dependency case. On appeal, K.A.
    (father) challenges the juvenile court’s orders asserting dependency
    jurisdiction over Carson A. and removing Carson from father’s custody.1
    Because this case involves juvenile proceedings, we refer to the minor
    1
    initially by first name and last initial to protect his privacy. (Cal. Rules of
    Court, rule 8.401(a)(2).) For ease of reading, we omit the minor’s last initial
    in subsequent references.
    1
    Father contends he was denied due process when the juvenile court amended
    the dependency petition sua sponte to conform to proof. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A.    Commencement of Dependency Proceedings
    On May 27, 2020, the Humboldt County Department of Health and
    Human Services (the department) received a referral alleging child abuse
    and/or neglect of then 14-year-old Carson by father. Father took Carson’s
    phone away while Carson was at father’s house. In response, Carson left
    father’s house, contacted his maternal grandmother,2 and asked her to pick
    him up. Father went to the grandmother’s house. Law enforcement was
    called because father was pounding on the doors and yelling; father had
    “impulsive rage and anger issues.”3 Following the incident, father forced
    Carson to wake up at 5:00 a.m. to go to work with father and “drag rebar
    across the yard.” “Carson does not have a work permit, has learning
    challenges at school, and his father’s actions reportedly prevent him from
    working on his schoolwork.” It was reported that, as discipline, father makes
    Carson stand and face a corner. Carson felt he was being “tortured” and had
    suicidal thoughts of killing himself by either hanging or shooting himself; he
    had a previous suicide attempt in the summer of 2019. Carson was feeling
    helpless, hopeless, and fearful, reportedly only when in his father’s care.
    Following the initial referral, the department commenced an
    investigation detailed in the detention report filed on July 8, 2020.
    2   Carson’s mother was reportedly out of state at the time.
    3 According to the report, father had exhibited similar behavior in the
    past at Carson’s therapist’s office and that, as a result, father is not allowed
    to contact or come near the therapist’s office.
    2
    On June 18, 2020, a department social worker interviewed Carson, who
    reported a history of problems with father not allowing him to access his
    phone when at father’s house. Carson stated his father blames his mother for
    his running away because Carson had “texted his mother and asked her what
    to do.” Carson stated that his mother told him to go to his grandmother’s
    house. Carson’s brother saw him leave father’s house at 10:30 p.m. (his
    grandmother was waiting across the street) and told father’s girlfriend.
    Carson denied reports that he ran away because father and his girlfriend
    took away his video games. He ran away because, when at father’s house,
    father “makes him want to hurt himself.”
    When asked how he might take his life, Carson stated “he would shoot
    himself because that was the easiest.” Carson went looking for a gun three
    weeks earlier and found his father’s gun safe but did not have the
    combination. Carson was “just done.” Carson’s father was screaming at him
    most of that week; he “screams so much he drools.” When father yells he tells
    Carson his mother hates him and thinks he is “the bad kid,” but Carson said
    he knows that is not true. As punishment for running away, father took
    Carson’s phone, which is the way Carson contacts his friends and cousins —
    “the only thing that makes him happy” — and made Carson wake up at
    5:00 a.m. and go to work with father. Carson thought father was angry with
    him because Carson does not like being at father’s house. The social worker
    reported, “there are so many things that he doesn’t like to talk about
    regarding his father’s home,” and it “makes him uncomfortable and sad, and
    that every time he thinks about it, it makes his stomach hurt.” Carson felt
    that father’s girlfriend Jessica had turned father’s family against Carson, and
    they take her word over his. Jessica had lied about Carson on social media
    3
    and posted he uses “the ‘N-word’ every day.” Jessica had also called him
    “fat.”
    Carson further stated that he sees a therapist, Dr. Roberta “Robin”
    Nolan, who father does not like, and father does not let Carson see or talk to
    Dr. Nolan while at his house. Dr. Nolan reported to the social worker that
    she previously had a plan in place with mother and father for successful co-
    parenting to reduce stress on Carson, but father was unable to follow the
    plan. Dr. Nolan also reported father called mother a “whore,” put Carson
    down, and yelled at him. Dr. Nolan believed Carson was at a high risk of
    suicide if left at father’s house.
    The social worker met with mother about Carson’s desire to find a gun
    and kill himself. Mother began to cry and stated that six months ago,
    Dr. Nolan had told her that Carson had plans to hang himself. Mother
    agreed that Carson needed more support and to contact Dr. Nolan about
    Carson’s recent suicidal thoughts.
    The social worker also spoke with father and expressed her concern
    about Carson wanting to hurt himself when at father’s house. Father denied
    owning a gun and stated “the only gun in the house is a BB gun that does not
    work.” Father stated that Carson discussed a plan to hang himself because
    Carson “was one of the first people to find the child who hung themselves at
    [his high school] and it was really affecting [him].” Father had told his
    children to speak with “another adult if they ever felt like doing something
    like that.” The social worker asked father to make a safety plan for Carson to
    remain at mother’s house for two weeks and for more supports; father agreed.
    After review of the safety plan the social worker sent him, father stated he
    believed mother was behind the safety plan and that she was trying to keep
    father from his children. The social worker created a final safety plan which
    4
    provided that Carson would always have his phone with him and would have
    regular check-ins with mother; Carson’s paternal grandfather would pick
    Carson up if he needed to get away from father’s house; Carson would tell an
    adult right away if he was feeling suicidal; and Carson would attend
    counseling as directed.
    On June 22, 2020, mother reported to the social worker that while with
    father over the weekend Carson did not have access to his phone and no one
    knew how Carson was doing.
    On June 25, 2020, father told the social worker that he wanted contact
    with Carson twice a day while he was with mother and a safety plan because
    mother had guns at her home. Mother denied having guns in the home and
    reported her boyfriend uses guns for target practice that he stores in an off-
    site location where Carson does not have access.
    On June 26, 2020, Carson told the social worker that he never feels
    suicidal while at mother’s house and did not feel suicidal during his last visit
    with father. The social worker spoke with father on July 2, 2020, and
    reported it seemed that father did not believe that Carson was suicidal at his
    home. The social worker suggested a new safety plan. Father refused, stated
    he felt the need to consult his lawyer, and hung up on the social worker.
    Later, the social worker received a text message from father indicating he
    would follow a safety plan, but the social worker had concerns that father
    seemed to minimize Carson’s suicidal thoughts and would not follow a safety
    plan. The department determined it was necessary to place Carson in
    protective custody. The social worker met with father and Jessica on July 2,
    2020, to provide notice. They both denied anything was wrong with Carson
    in their home and stated mother was influencing Carson. Neither father nor
    5
    Jessica were receptive to discussing Carson’s mental health needs, and both
    would redirect the conversation back to mother.
    B.    Detention
    1.     Dependency Petition
    On July 7, 2020, the department filed a Welfare and Institutions Code4
    section 300 petition pursuant to subdivisions (b)(1) (failure to protect/general
    neglect) and (c) (serious emotional damage) on behalf of then 14-year-old
    Carson.
    Under subdivision (b) of section 300, the department alleged the
    following facts: “b1: [Father] is unwilling or unable to provide adequate
    supports or services to address his son, Carson’s, suicidal thoughts and
    feelings. [Father] did not follow a safety plan developed with the department
    to ensure that Carson had adequate support to remain safe while dealing
    with the child’s suicidal ideation. [Father] removed Carson from his safety
    network and prevented Carson from having access to a telephone to contact
    his support network. Carson has reported two separate plans to kill himself.
    [Father] has stated that Carson’s behaviors are due to his mother
    manipulating Carson and refuses to acknowledge Carson’s mental health
    needs and the potential harm to Carson if his needs are not addressed.
    [¶] b2: [Father] does not allow Carson to participate in counseling when he is
    in his father’s care.”
    Under subdivision (c) of section 300, the department alleged the
    following facts: “c1: Carson has stated that he feels suicidal while at his
    father’s house due to his father frequently yelling at him. Carson has stated
    that talking about things that happen at his father’s house makes him sad
    4 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and
    Institutions Code.
    6
    and uncomfortable and that every time he thinks about it, his stomach hurts.
    Carson has expressed to his mother and his counselor how his father’s
    behaviors make him feel. [¶] c2: Carson has been exposed to his father’s
    rageful and angry behavior, which has included the father going to Carson’s
    grandmother’s home while Carson was there and pounding on the windows
    and doors and yelling, which resulted in a call to law enforcement. The
    father and his girlfriend have verbally abused Carson; this abuse has
    included the father telling Carson that his mother hates him and that his
    mother thinks he is ‘the bad kid’ and the father’s girlfriend posting
    defamatory comments about Carson on Facebook. [Carson] expressed that he
    had decided to kill himself because he was done.”
    In the detention report submitted in support of the section 300 petition,
    the department expressed concern “that Carson’s father will continue to
    engage in behaviors in the home that contribute to Carson’s feelings of
    helplessness, hopelessness and despair and that this could result in Carson
    harming or killing himself if he is allowed to remain in his father’s care.” The
    department further noted that safety plans had been created for Carson by
    the department and by Carson’s counselor, but father was unwilling or
    unable to follow them.
    2.    Detention Hearing
    At the detention hearing held on July 8, 2020, minor’s counsel (who had
    also been representing Carson in a related family law proceeding for over two
    years) informed the juvenile court that she was in support of detention “given
    Carson’s suicidal ideations at this point in time and the fact that this is a
    recurring event for Carson, which gives me great concern. We have already
    addressed this once before.” Minor’s counsel also advised the court that the
    7
    14-year-old youth expressed his discomfort with visitation with father at that
    time.
    After hearing from all parties, the court granted father’s request to be
    elevated to “presumed father status.” The court further found a prima facie
    showing had been made that Carson was a child described by section 300,
    that continued detention from father’s physical custody was necessary, and
    that placement with mother was appropriate. Father was provided with
    supervised visits a minimum of two times per week for two hours; the
    department was ordered to provide all parties “services in order to reunify
    the child with the family.”
    C.      Jurisdiction
    1.    The Jurisdictional Report
    The department submitted a jurisdictional report that included
    information and witness statements and concluded with the department’s
    recommendation for formal judicial intervention. The department’s report
    revealed that there were several past investigations relating to reports of
    child abuse and neglect of Carson by both parents that began when Carson
    was still a toddler, though none had been substantiated.
    The department reported that father and Jessica denied that Carson
    was unsafe in their home, disagreed with the department’s decision to place
    Carson in protective custody, and claimed that Carson was being
    manipulated by mother. Father was unreceptive to discussing Carson’s
    mental health needs and had refused to attend a child and family team
    meeting regarding Carson’s care.
    The department also informed the juvenile court that Carson was
    reluctant to engage in family meetings with father and to attend court
    because he feared father would yell at him. Carson also told the social
    8
    worker that father had been texting him messages such as “if you didn’t want
    to be with me why don’t you just tell me?” Father and Jessica had told
    Carson that if he were removed from father’s care, he would end up in
    juvenile hall and be placed in a “straitjacket.”
    The department opined that father had not shown an adequate level of
    concern for Carson’s mental health issues and disclosures of suicidal
    ideations and suggested that father’s ongoing behavior and conduct would
    continue to contribute to Carson’s feelings of helplessness, hopelessness, and
    despair that could result in Carson self-harming or committing suicide. The
    department believed Carson was being emotionally abused by father,
    including being yelled at, being called fat, and having negative comments
    publicly posted about him on Facebook by Jessica. The department
    recommended that the juvenile court sustain the allegations of section 300
    petition pursuant to subdivisions (b) (failure to protect/general neglect) and
    (c) (serious emotional damage).
    2.      Initial Jurisdictional Hearing
    The contested jurisdictional proceedings began on July 28, 2020, at
    which time father requested a Marsden5 hearing to obtain new legal
    representation. The juvenile court excused the other parties to conduct the
    Marsden hearing, and the motion was denied. At father’s request and
    without objection, the juvenile court took judicial notice of the related family
    law file, Humboldt County Superior Court case No. FL160259. The contested
    jurisdictional hearing was continued to the next available date of August 10,
    2020.
    5   People v. Marsden (1970) 
    2 Cal.3d 118
    .
    9
    3.      Continued Hearing
    At the August 10, 2020 hearing date, father’s newly retained private
    counsel appeared and requested a 30-day continuance. The juvenile court
    continued the contested jurisdictional hearing again to September 14, 2020,
    with a pretrial hearing scheduled on September 11, 2020. In advance of this
    next hearing, father’s counsel submitted a “lodgment of reporter’s
    transcripts”6 from the related family law case which counsel asserted
    revealed that Carson was more properly described as “a misbehaving child
    who is failing school” rather than a “victim.” At a June 21, 2018 hearing, the
    family court observed: “The best I could . . . surmise is that each of you
    [father and mother] spend a great deal of time . . . and energy disliking each
    other. And how you express that to the children, whether it be oral or
    otherwise, they are well aware of it. [¶] And until you change, that won’t
    change. And if you don’t think it [a]ffects them, just look at their status,
    state of . . . life at this time. [¶] . . . [T]hey are very mixed up, confused,
    looking for stability in respect by others, the parents in particular, to them,
    and back to each other. It’s, quite frankly, not happening.”
    4.      Father’s Jurisdiction Hearing Brief
    On September 10, 2020, father, through his counsel, filed a “jurisdiction
    hearing brief” in which he characterized the dependency proceeding as a
    disagreement between “two different parenting styles” with father’s
    “emphasis on responsibility” and mother’s “emphasis on doing what the
    children want.” Father suggested Carson had been fabricating suicidal
    ideations to “manipulate” the family law case, questioned whether Carson
    was actively suicidal because he had not yet exhibited any self-destructive
    behavior, and described Carson’s behavior as “fairly routine embroiled-
    6   The family law file is included in the record on appeal.
    10
    teenager fare in a family law case.” Father also wanted to compel Carson to
    testify at the jurisdictional hearing so that “Carson can . . . be confronted
    with his lies,” asserting that it was necessary for the juvenile court “to
    understand that Carson is lying in order to make appropriate orders.”
    Father opined that this case should return to the family law court for
    resolution, and that “[s]ustaining the petition will teach Carson that he can
    manipulate situations in the future by using the ‘s’ word.”
    5.    The Department’s First Addendum Report
    On September 14, 2020, the department filed an addendum to the
    jurisdictional report regarding previous familial conflicts which were
    documented by numerous police incident reports. These conflicts include:
    (1) an October 15, 2018 trespassing incident committed by father; (2) a May
    24, 2019 incident where father reported two of his sons were missing when
    they were subsequently found with mother; (3) a June 23, 2019 custody
    dispute where father reported that, contrary to a custody order, mother was
    refusing to give father a child, but the police investigation found the child
    was refusing to leave his room and go with father; (4) an April 24, 2020
    report where father complained mother was not walking children out to his
    car for a visit; (5) a May 27, 2020 incident where Carson’s grandmother
    requested assistance because father was outside her residence and Carson
    did not want to leave with father; (6) an August 17, 2018 report by father
    that mother was violating a custody order; and (7) a November 7, 2018
    incident where mother struck and injured Carson.
    6.    Testimony at Contested Jurisdictional Hearing
    Testimony at the September contested jurisdictional hearing was taken
    over two days. At the outset of the jurisdictional hearing held on September
    14, 2020, the department asked the juvenile court to sustain the section 300
    11
    petition as pled. Minor’s counsel advised the juvenile court that “Carson is a
    troubled youth who does need lots of support” and clarified the issue before
    the court as “whether or not the father is willing and able to provide the
    supports necessary to address his needs. And I think the evidence is going to
    show that the father has been unwilling or unable to do so, hence the need for
    us being in court.” Mother concurred with both the department’s counsel and
    minor’s counsel.
    Father’s counsel reiterated father’s objection to Dr. Nolan providing
    therapeutic services to Carson, arguing that Dr. Nolan’s earlier meetings
    with the family presented a conflict and further objected to the department’s
    interpretation of the events leading up to Carson’s detention. Father also
    noted that he had subpoenaed records from the Eureka Police Department,
    the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Department, and Carson’s school to be
    produced directly to the juvenile court. The juvenile court confirmed they
    had been received.
    Carson testified that father and mother do not get along “really well”
    and do not talk. Carson was unsure if he liked Jessica. There was a time
    when Carson lived primarily with father and saw mother on the weekends.
    He was not happy at father’s home. Carson admitted sending a text message
    to mother saying, “You don’t love me” and another text message where he
    sent the “middle finger” to mother. Carson sent a text to father saying that
    mother punched him in the eye. Carson also acknowledged that in text
    messages, mother encouraged him to run away from father’s house and said
    that Carson’s brothers were “counting down the days” until they did not have
    to go to father’s house, and “they hate it over there.”
    Carson told the social worker that Jessica lied about him on Facebook
    in saying he used the “N” word every day. He admitted to using the “N” word
    12
    but denied doing it regularly. Carson did not like it that Jessica posted that
    message on Facebook because he did not want people on Facebook seeing it.
    Carson told the social worker that father screams at him, and “drool”
    comes out his mouth when he does, but it would be a lie to say father screams
    at him “the whole time.” Carson reported that father told him mother said
    that she hated Carson and he is a bad kid.
    Carson recalled the night he ran to his grandmother’s house after
    getting in trouble or being yelled at for his brothers arguing. He had been
    playing video games that day, and around 4:30 in the afternoon father told
    Carson to put the phone away, turn the video games off, and do his
    homework. Later, by text message, Carson contacted mother and his
    grandmother and said he wanted to go to his grandmother’s house. Carson’s
    grandmother picked him up without informing father. After Carson left,
    father showed up at Carson’s grandmother’s house, where he banged on the
    glass of the door “really loud.” Carson’s grandmother told father that he
    needed to leave, and she “called the cops.” The police arrived and sent
    Carson home with father. Father punished Carson by making him go to work
    with father and haul rebar around for a couple of hours. Carson also lost his
    phone privileges.
    Carson testified that father took his phone away from him whenever
    they thought Carson “was on it too much.” The last time was when Carson
    ran away, and father took Carson’s phone away for more than a day. At the
    time, mother had bought Carson a new phone because that is what he
    wanted as a graduation gift, but father took that phone away as well.
    Carson described other issues he had with father and/or with staying at
    his house, including “untruthful statements.” Carson did not feel safe at
    father’s house because he was lied to, not really trusted, and he did not feel
    13
    part of the family. The lies were about Carson’s mother, school, and “pretty
    much everything.” Father has said “really bad things” about mother, such as
    mother tries to take Carson away from father completely.
    Carson admitted sending a pornographic video to a friend and a picture
    of a dildo to another person. He admitted that he had been struggling in
    school. Father submitted a report, which was received into evidence, showing
    that Carson’s grades for the most recent term included three F’s.
    Carson did not recall the first time that he told someone that he was
    thinking of committing suicide. However, he did remember seeing a gun at
    father’s house and telling the social worker that he would kill himself with
    that gun. On other occasions, Carson saw guns and knives in father’s open
    safe.
    Carson testified about his relationship with his current therapist,
    Dr. Nolan, who he began to see in late 2019. Carson said initially both his
    parents took him to therapy, but that his father eventually stopped taking
    him after father got in a disagreement with Dr. Nolan. Carson reported that
    his mother still took him to his counseling sessions with Dr. Nolan. Carson
    confirmed that he enjoyed his weekly sessions with Dr. Nolan and felt the
    sessions were a benefit to him. He recalled that his father would be brought
    in to speak with Dr. Nolan at the end of his sessions and family therapy
    would occur with his brothers as well. Carson recalled that this family
    therapy happened two or three times after he had started his individual
    counseling with Dr. Nolan. Carson also spoke about his past suicidal
    attempts and confirmed that he told a friend less than a year ago that he was
    thinking about committing suicide.
    On September 18, 2020, at the conclusion of Carson’s testimony, father
    moved for a directed verdict and requested that certain items be stricken
    14
    from the section 300 petition. Mother’s counsel, minor’s counsel, and the
    department’s counsel opposed the request. Father’s request for a directed
    verdict was largely based on his proposition that “[t]here is no evidence
    before the court that Carson is, in fact, suicidal.” Father did concede that
    there was evidence that Carson may want to hurt himself but denied that
    there was any realistic plan or actual “competent evidence that this kid is
    suicidal.”
    7.     Amendment of the Dependency Petition According to Proof
    After hearing from all parties, the juvenile court denied father’s motion
    for a directed verdict. The court then turned to the specific language of the
    petition. Finding there was sufficient evidence presented to sustain the
    petition under subdivisions (b) and (c) of section 300, the court declined to
    strike specific portions of the pleadings but instead proposed amending the
    petition according to the proof:
    “Both parents have unresolved conflict and continual hostility that has
    negatively impacted Carson, has substantially — negatively and
    substantially impacted Carson. Carson has emotional and behavioral
    problems as a result of this parental conflict, exemplified by moodiness,
    anxiety, school problems, and acts of defiance.”
    The court referenced specific aspects of evidence that supported the
    proposed language, opined that “having a continued hearing that just has
    people put on to say how bad Carson is will only make the language that I
    have outlined stronger,” and provided an opportunity for counsel to
    separately discuss the proposed amendments with their respective clients.
    The court also offered, “[o]bviously, with that, Mother would be able to
    present evidence, if she wanted to, since it is different in that regard, and
    then, obviously, with the change of language, Father . . . could present
    15
    evidence in that regard.” The court also acknowledged that “Obviously, the
    department could challenge or say that they think there should be other
    language.”
    After the parties and their counsel returned from their respective
    breakout rooms, all parties expressed their concurrence with the amended
    language without need for additional witnesses, except for father whose
    counsel indicated an interest in resolving the case and wanted to be able “to
    kind of break out and have some discussion about how this dependency case
    would look.” He specifically raised concerns about an appropriate therapist
    and any implications on Jessica’s ability to act as a foster parent and a
    daycare provider if there was a 300 finding. With those open details, father’s
    counsel stated, “We’re not prepared to agree.” He also offered to call
    additional witnesses to contest the allegations that there was anger and
    yelling in father’s house.
    In response, the court clarified, “First of all, the court has modified the
    language of the petition, and that it's not a negotiable situation. And so, the
    petition is found true, and then we talk about what’s going to happen, once
    it’s true. That’s disposition. And folks have a right to contest the
    disposition.” The court further found “that what has been presented as offers
    of proof aren’t relevant now to the petition as it’s sustained.”
    The juvenile court sustained the amended petition and found by clear
    and convincing evidence that Carson was described by section 300,
    subdivisions (b) (failure to protect/general neglect) and (c) (serious emotional
    damage).
    As summarized by the court, “The gist of it, essentially, is, is that both
    parents have unresolved conflict and continual hostility that has . . .
    substantially negatively impacted Carson; that Carson has emotional and
    16
    behavioral problems as a result of this parental conflict, exemplified by
    moodiness, anxiety, school problems and issues, and acts of defiance . . . . And
    I guess I would further put in that . . . the parental behavior sets bad
    examples for Carson, who . . . is still learning to form relationships and learn
    appropriate behaviors. [¶] . . . [T]hat is what the court finds by clear and
    convincing evidence. That is language that would both be in [section] 300(b)
    and (c) in the matter.
    D.    Disposition
    The department filed its dispositional report and three addendum
    reports, recommending that Carson be declared a dependent of the court with
    continued placement in mother’s home, with family maintenance services to
    mother and family reunification services to father. The department further
    recommended that Carson remain with his current therapist, Dr. Nolan,
    pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 124260, which permits youths
    aged 12 years or older to consent to therapy without parental consent if they
    are mature enough to intelligently participate in therapy. The department
    supported Carson’s engagement in family therapy with his father that would
    be facilitated by a counselor who was suggested by father and father’s
    counsel.
    The evidentiary portion of the contested dispositional hearing took
    place over two days, January 15 and February 1, 2021. After hearing
    testimony from numerous witnesses, including father, the marriage and
    family therapist, the Arcata Police Department’s juvenile diversion counselor
    and parent project facilitator, and the social worker who wrote the
    dispositional report, the parties submitted written closing briefs.
    17
    On February 19, 2021, the juvenile court made an oral ruling declaring
    Carson a dependent and ordering family maintenance services to mother and
    family reunification services to father.
    On March 1, 2021, the juvenile court issued its written dispositional
    order. Among other things, the court concurred with minor’s counsel that
    “Carson is suffering emotionally because of the toxic relationship of his
    parents,” and further observed that “the parents seemed trapped in a
    relationship dominated by a lack of trust.” The court also found that Carson
    was “suffering severe emotional damage, as indicated by extreme anxiety,
    depression, withdrawal, or untoward aggressive behavior toward self or
    others, and there are no reasonable means by which the child’s emotional
    health may be protected without removing the child from the physical
    custody of father.” The court further found by clear and convincing evidence
    that returning Carson to his father’s physical custody would create a
    substantial risk of emotional harm to Carson.
    Father appeals the jurisdictional and dispositional findings and
    orders.7
    DISCUSSION
    Father contends he was denied due process when the juvenile court
    amended the dependency petition sua sponte to conform to proof at the
    jurisdictional hearing. The department counters that father’s challenge to
    the juvenile court’s jurisdictional findings is moot because he does not contest
    the court’s dispositional findings; he is only seeking to reverse the
    dispositional order removing Carson from his care. The department posits
    that father has otherwise forfeited his due process claim by failing to timely
    7Mother has not appealed the jurisdictional and dispositional findings
    and orders.
    18
    object to the court’s amendments to the petition. Father maintains his
    challenges have been preserved and, in the event the issues are deemed
    forfeited, he was denied effective assistance of counsel.
    A.    Father Has Preserved His Challenge to the Jurisdictional
    Findings by Timely Appealing from the Disposition.
    In juvenile dependency proceedings, only the dispositional order is
    appealable; the prior jurisdictional order is reviewable on that appeal. (§ 395;
    In re Tracy Z. (1987) 
    195 Cal.App.3d 107
    , 112 [appeal from jurisdictional
    order was construed as appeal from dispositional order].) In the absence of
    an unambiguous stipulation, parents may appeal from a finding of
    jurisdictional even if they have stipulated to the dispositional order. (In re
    Jennifer V. (1988) 
    197 Cal.App.3d 1206
    , 1210 [stipulation to dispositional
    order did not waive parent’s challenge to jurisdictional findings]; In re
    Christie D. (1988) 
    206 Cal.App.3d 469
    , 475 [following Jennifer V.]; In re Eric
    A. (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 1390
    , 1394 [distinguishing Jennifer V. and
    dismissing appeal as moot where parent unambiguously stipulated to
    jurisdictional findings]; In re Dani R. (2001) 
    89 Cal.App.4th 402
    , 404 [appeal
    dismissed as moot where parents made unqualified admissions that
    jurisdictional findings and dispositional orders were supported by substantial
    evidence].)
    Here, father’s notice of appeal unambiguously states that he is
    appealing both the findings and orders from the jurisdictional and
    dispositional hearings. At no point in these hotly contested proceedings has
    father ever stipulated to the findings and orders of the juvenile court.
    Consistent with established appellate principles of law in dependency
    proceedings, we therefore reject the department’s argument that father’s
    appeal is moot.
    19
    B.    Father’s Due Process Challenge Fails.
    Father argues that the juvenile court’s sua sponte amendments to the
    petition deprived him of due process because: 1) the amendments were based
    on factual and legal theories not raised in the original petition, which
    deprived him of notice and a fair opportunity to be heard; and 2) by amending
    the allegations sua sponte the court assumed two roles: advocate and trier of
    fact, which deprived him a fair trial before a neutral arbiter.
    We agree with the department that father’s failure to object on these
    grounds at the jurisdictional hearing forfeits this argument on appeal. (See
    In re David H. (2008) 
    165 Cal.App.4th 1626
    , 1640 [had the mother raised her
    objection to the sufficiency of the petition at the jurisdictional hearing, the
    court could have allowed the child protective agency to amend the petition to
    conform to the proof offered at the hearing]; In re Wilford J. (2005) 
    131 Cal.App.4th 742
    , 754 [“when a parent had the opportunity to present [a
    defect in notice] to the juvenile court and failed to do so, appellate courts
    routinely refuse to exercise their limited discretion to consider the matter on
    appeal”]; see also In re A.A. (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 597
    , 606 [by failing to
    object at the dispositional hearing, mother forfeited argument that the
    juvenile court violated her constitutional rights by failing to consider placing
    her children with her].)
    In any event, we reach the merits of father’s claim and conclude the
    juvenile court did not violate father’s due process rights by amending the
    petition according to proof.8 A juvenile court can amend a dependency
    petition to conform to the evidence received at the jurisdictional hearing to
    8Because we reach the merits of the father’s due process challenge, we
    need not address his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
    20
    remedy immaterial variances between the petition and proof. (§ 348; Code
    Civ. Proc., § 470.) However, material amendments that mislead a party
    to his or her prejudice are not allowed. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 469–470; In re
    Andrew L. (2011) 
    192 Cal.App.4th 683
    , 689 (Andrew L.).)
    “Given the haste with which petitions are sometimes drafted, . . . the
    ability to amend according to proof plays an important role in the overall
    dependency scheme. If a variance between pleading and proof—to use the
    traditional term of art from civil law [citation]—is so wide that it would, in
    effect, violate due process to allow the amendment, the court should, of
    course, refuse any such amendment. [¶] The basic rule from civil law,
    however, is that amendments to conform to proof are favored, and should not
    be denied unless the pleading as drafted prior to the proposed amendment
    would have misled the adversarial party to its prejudice.” (In re Jessica C.
    (2001) 
    93 Cal.App.4th 1027
    , 1041–1042, fn. omitted (Jessica C.).)
    “[T]he allowance of amendments to conform to the proof rests largely in
    the discretion of the trial court and its determination will not be disturbed on
    appeal unless it clearly appears that such discretion has been abused.”
    (Trafton v. Youngblood (1968) 
    69 Cal.2d 17
    , 31; see Jessica C., supra, 93
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1043.) “While the abuse of discretion standard gives the
    trial court substantial latitude, ‘[t]he scope of discretion always resides in the
    particular law being applied, i.e., in the “legal principles governing the
    subject of [the] action . . . .” ’ [Citation.] ‘Action that transgresses the
    confines of the applicable principles of law is outside the scope of discretion.’ ”
    (Nickolas F. v. Superior Court (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 92
    , 119.)
    Jessica C. illustrates the type of amendment that is appropriate in the
    dependency context. There, the social services agency filed a petition alleging
    the minor’s father had “penetrated his daughter’s vagina with his penis,” but
    21
    the child later testified that the father had only “touched her vagina with his
    penis.” (Jessica C., supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 1040.) The juvenile court
    denied the agency’s request to amend the petition by substituting “touching”
    for “penetrating.” (Ibid.) The appellate court reversed, holding the proposed
    amendment would not have prejudiced the father since it involved conduct
    and legal theories nearly identical to the original allegations. (Id. at p. 1042.)
    The court reasoned: “Here, it cannot be seriously maintained that [the
    father] would possibly have prepared his defense differently if the allegation
    had been that he had ‘touched’ his daughter’s vagina with his penis, as
    distinct from ‘penetrated.’ The basic allegation was there, and any variance
    between ‘touching’ and ‘penetrating’ could not have misled him to his
    detriment. Both allegations are heinous, and entail the intimate violation of a
    child.” (Ibid.)
    Similarly, in Andrew L., supra, 
    192 Cal.App.4th 683
    , 689–690, the
    court held it was not prejudicial error to conform the petition to proof by
    striking entirely a section 300, subdivision (a) count, as well as the specific
    allegation of a diagnosis of a subdural hematoma caused by trauma in the
    subdivision (b) count, when the remaining subdivision (b) allegations that the
    child was at substantial risk of serious physical harm or illness were proved.
    By contrast, in In re G.B. (2018) 
    28 Cal.App.5th 475
    , 486 (G.B.), the
    juvenile court exceeded its authority to amend the petition to conform to
    proof where the court’s amendments included allegations that “completely
    changed the grounds for establishing jurisdiction over G.B. Specifically, the
    court’s allegations sought to establish jurisdiction over G.B. under a different
    legal theory than the original allegations (emotional abuse versus sexual
    abuse); they named father as an offending parent even though he was
    nonoffending in the original petition; and they were based on a set of facts
    22
    not at issue in the original allegations (father’s alleged coaching of G.B.
    to fabricate allegations against mother and her boyfriend versus the
    boyfriend’s alleged sexual abuse and mother’s failure to protect G.B. against
    that abuse).”
    Recently in In re I.S. (2021) 
    67 Cal.App.5th 918
    , our colleagues in
    Division Two of this appellate district held the juvenile court’s amendments
    to the petition to conform to proof deprived the mother of her due process
    rights. The original petition raised allegations pursuant to section 300,
    subdivisions (b)(1) (failure to protect) and (d) (sexual abuse). (Id. at p. 921.)
    The juvenile court’s amendments did not incorporate the “same ‘basic
    allegation’” regarding mother’s failure to protect [the minor] under section
    300, subdivision (b). (Id. at p. 929.) Rather, similar to G.B., the amended
    allegations “essentially sought to establish jurisdiction based on Mother’s
    infliction of emotional abuse—a distinct basis for jurisdiction under section
    300, subdivision (c), which was not alleged in the original petition.” (Ibid.,
    fn. omitted.) Additionally, the amendments presented “ ‘entirely new
    theories: actual knowledge [of sexual abuse] contrasted with a conclusion
    that a reasonable investigation might have led to the discovery of sexual
    abuse.’ ” (Ibid.) The court concluded mother “ ‘would possibly have prepared
    [her] defense differently’ ” if mother’s lack of diligence and the mere
    possibility of her knowing about the sexual abuse had been alleged as a basis
    for failing to protect I.S. against the risk of repeated sexual abuse. (Id. at
    p. 930.)
    The juvenile court’s amendments to the petition here are far more
    similar to those made in Jessica C. and Andrew L. than to those in G.B. or
    I.S. The juvenile court’s amendments did not allege a new or distinct basis
    for jurisdiction as to father, but rather they narrowed the scope of the initial
    23
    pleading, which, as the court said “has lots of problems and issues.” Under
    subdivision (b), the initial petition alleged multiple, specific grounds
    concerning Carson’s suicidal thoughts and father’s failure to provide
    adequate support or services, his removal of Carson from his safety network,
    and his blame of mother for Carson’s behavior. Under subdivision (c) it
    further alleged exposure to father’s frequent yelling, his rageful and angry
    behavior, defamatory comments, and blame of mother.
    The amended petition framed the same conduct in more general terms,
    still focusing on the “continual hostility that has negatively impacted Carson”
    but expanding the context to include “both parents.” As the court explained,
    “The father is not the only person who is in the wrong. The conduct of both
    parents and the conduct being painted by the department as one parent being
    in the light and the other all in the dark is also harmful to getting to a
    successful conclusion of this case as well.”
    And although the original petition did not expressly allege that
    parental conflict and hostility had negatively impacted Carson, it did include
    specifically related concepts such as father’s failure to provide support, his
    removal of Carson from his safety network, and father’s rageful and angry
    behavior. It is disingenuous to assert that such specifics initially alleged are
    distinct from the “continual hostility” as amended and found to be true.
    Parents’ acrimonious relationship and its effect on Carson had been well-
    documented since prior to the inception of this dependency case, which
    included notice of the preceding contentious family law matter. The juvenile
    court’s amendments merely summarized this largely acknowledged dynamic
    as demonstrated by the evidence presented. It cannot be seriously
    maintained that father “would possibly have prepared his defense differently”
    (Jessica C., supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 1042) if the initial dependency
    24
    allegations had been that “unresolved conflict and continual [parental]
    hostility” had negatively impacted Carson.
    On this record, we are hard-pressed to find how these variances could
    have misled father to his detriment. Moreover, after proposing the
    amendments, the court provided all parties the opportunity to consult and to
    potentially call additional witnesses. After this, all agreed to the amended
    language,9 and no one asked to call any witnesses different from those
    originally contemplated.10
    This brings us to father’s additional argument that the juvenile court
    failed to act as a neutral arbiter when it crafted, asserted, and adjudicated
    jurisdiction allegations against parents. Relying on G.B., father contends the
    juvenile court assumed the dual roles of advocate and trier of fact when it
    amended the allegations to conform to proof. G.B. is readily distinguishable.
    In G.B., after dismissing the allegations against the offending parent, the
    court on its own motion crafted, asserted, and adjudicated “new allegation
    against a nonoffending parent based on a factual and legal theory not at issue
    in the original petition.” (G.B., supra, 28 Cal.App.5th at p. 487, italics
    added.) Here, father, as the original offending parent, was on notice of the
    legal and factual theories, which as discussed ante, were not materially
    9 Father’s counsel did not object to the language of the amendment, as
    father concedes, but instead wanted to “break out and have some discussion
    about how this dependency case would look.”
    10 Father offered additional witnesses to disprove the allegations of
    anger and yelling in the house, which were contemplated prior to the
    proposed amendment and, as the court said, “aren’t relevant now to the
    petition as it’s sustained.”
    25
    changed by the amendments.11 We conclude the juvenile court did not violate
    father’s due process right to fair trial.
    DISPOSITION
    The jurisdictional and dispositional orders are affirmed.
    DESAUTELS, J.*
    WE CONCUR:
    POLLAK, P. J.
    STREETER. J.
    11 We note that mother, as a nonoffending parent in the original
    petition, may have a claim similar to that in G.B.; however, she has not
    appealed this issue.
    *Judge of the Alameda County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A162148

Filed Date: 5/13/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/13/2022