In re E.T. ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 12/12/18; Certified for Publication 1/10/19 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    In re E.T. et al., Persons Coming Under
    the Juvenile Court Law.
    ALAMEDA COUNTY SOCIAL
    SERVICES AGENCY,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                              A153896
    v.
    (Alameda County
    I.T.,                                                           Super. Ct. No. JD02275902)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Mother, I.T., challenges the juvenile court’s denial of her petition that asserted
    changed circumstances and sought modification of a court order setting a hearing to
    terminate her parental rights. She also appeals the court’s decision to terminate her
    parental rights with a finding her children are adoptable. This is the rare case where the
    juvenile court erred in failing to recognize that Mother’s relationship with her children
    outweighed the benefit to the children that would accrue from termination of parental
    rights and a plan of adoption. Accordingly, we conclude the order terminating Mother’s
    parental rights must be reversed and the case must be remanded for the juvenile court to
    consider an appropriate long-term plan.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    Fraternal twins P.T and E.T., a boy and a girl, were first removed from Mother’s
    care by the Alameda County Social Services Agency (Agency) in April 2014 when they
    were four months old. Mother has a history of mental health issues and drug addiction,
    and the children were removed when her daughter, E.T., was found unresponsive and not
    breathing on her living room couch. After more than a year of reunification services, the
    children were returned to Mother in October 2015 with family maintenance services.
    In February 2017, Mother told her social worker during a home visit that she had
    relapsed into drug use and needed help. The two came up with a safety plan whereby
    Mother would temporarily place the children with their godparents who had previously
    served as the foster parents in this dependency. The godparents picked the children up
    from Mother in March 2017.
    Once the children were with the godparents, Mother met with her social worker
    and service providers in a team decision making meeting. It was agreed that the children
    would remain with the godparents while Mother got treatment for her addiction. A
    second team decision making meeting was held a short time later, and Mother was not
    doing well. She was still using drugs and bickered with one of the children’s godparents
    over her commitment and ability to become sober. Following that meeting, the Agency
    filed a supplemental petition.
    The petition was filed on April 18, 2017, and the children were ordered detained
    on April 19. A jurisdiction and disposition hearing was held August 9, 2017. The
    juvenile court bypassed reunification services to Mother because she was previously
    provided services and reunification was unsuccessful. The court ordered a hearing to
    terminate Mother’s parental rights with a permanent plan of adoption. The Agency was
    also ordered to arrange visitation for Mother with the children as frequently as possible
    consistent with their well-being, beginning with one hour per week.
    In November 2017, Mother moved to modify the order setting the termination
    hearing and denying her services. She sought to be reunited with her children or
    alternatively to be provided services while working toward reunification. The court
    2
    ordered the motion for modification to be heard at the same time as the termination
    hearing.
    The hearing began on January 25, 2018. Mother’s first witness was the women’s
    program coordinator of Options Recovery Services where Mother was enrolled in an
    intensive outpatient program. The coordinator had known Mother since 2014 when she
    began aftercare and drug testing. From 2014 to 2017, Mother had 104 drug tests. Only
    three of them were positive for drugs. Mother fell out of compliance with the program in
    March and April 2017, and her last positive tests before the termination hearing began
    were in June 2017 for alcohol and marijuana. Mother attended substance abuse classes
    and she completed parenting classes in November 2017. She began attending a 12-week
    anger management class in December 2017. Mother needs intensive treatment to support
    her recovery and was attending outpatient treatment for three hours a day, five days each
    week. She regularly attended her program and absence or tardiness were not problems.
    Mother was in the beginning stage of her recovery and Options was intending to offer
    Mother long-term support services.
    Mother next called the licensed clinical social worker assigned to her case through
    the early intervention services program at Children’s Hospital. He had known and
    worked with Mother and the twins for more than two years each Friday for three hours
    when they were in the process of re-unifying until October or November 2016. In early
    2017 he again began working with the family because they had moved back to Alameda
    from Sacramento and were facing some challenges. After the children were removed
    from Mother in April 2017, in May the social worker began supervising Mother’s weekly
    visits.
    At the beginning, while the kids were eager to see their mom, they were hesitant in
    some of their interactions with her during the visits. At times when Mother would have a
    disagreement with one of the kids over a toy or game, it was difficult for her to de-
    escalate her engagement with the child without help from the social worker. Some point
    of disagreement or conflict between Mother and the children arose in approximately 75
    percent of their visits. But over time, Mother became more reflective and better able to
    3
    handle such situations. There was never a time when the children were in physical
    danger because of the way Mother reacted to her differences with them. When they were
    separated from Mother in March 2017, and shortly thereafter, the kids demonstrated
    anxiety, uncertainty and fear. Although these feelings improved over time, the
    uncertainty regarding their permanent living relationship was a persistent source of their
    anxiety.
    Over time the quality of visits improved. The children were easy to engage in
    activities with Mother and at times expressed a wish to visit longer with her or visit her
    home in Alameda. The children love Mother. She provides them comfort and affection,
    and she addresses their fears and anxiety. Permanency in the children’s placement will
    also relieve their anxiety. And both Mother and the foster parents provide consistency in
    the children’s lives.
    The child welfare worker assigned to Mother’s case since December 2016 also
    testified. He first met the children when they were living with Mother in Sacramento.
    At the time he did not have any particular concerns about Mother’s interaction with or
    ability to care for the kids. Shortly after he helped Mother move from Sacramento to new
    housing in Alameda, Mother told him during a home visit that she had relapsed and
    needed to get into treatment. Mother and the case worker developed a relapse prevention
    plan and a safety plan for the children. They agreed the children should be placed with
    their godparents, who had provided them foster care, while Mother sought treatment for
    her addiction. A petition was later filed, the children were formally removed from
    Mother’s care and Mother was denied reunification services.
    The welfare worker was provided reports of Mother’s drug testing from July 2017
    until just before the termination hearing resumed in March 2018. All of Mother’s drug
    tests were negative. The welfare worker set up Mother’s weekly visits with the children
    beginning in 2017 and got verbal reports of the visits. Mother has consistently visited
    with the kids, but all the visits have been supervised and therapeutic. Sometimes
    following visits with Mother the children were sad and withdrawn and sometimes they
    4
    would act out. But some of their behavior may have been due to their separation from
    Mother.
    Although Mother was doing well at the time of the hearing, and the Agency
    thought she should always be a presence in the children’s lives, it could not support
    Mother’s petition for reunification or request for more services. The children needed
    stability and the foster parents were willing to adopt them. It would be difficult for
    Mother to reunify with the children if they were given six more months of services
    because the children were experiencing anxiety and concern over where they were going
    to live and who they were going to live with.
    Mother also testified. The twins were born in December 2013 and Mother lived
    with them in Sacramento until they were four months old. Mother moved from
    Sacramento because she was afraid of the twins’ biological father, and she and the
    children moved in with the twins’ godparents who are the foster parents in this case. The
    children were first removed from Mother and placed with the godparents in April 2014.
    Mother participated in reunification services and the children were returned to her care in
    October 2015. She received family maintenance services for about a year. During that
    time Mother moved to her mother’s home in Sacramento with the children and then back
    to Alameda in January 2017.
    On a typical day in early 2017, Mother would get the kids up and make breakfast
    before taking them to their Head Start program. The twins would be in the program from
    8:30 until 2:30. Mother would pick them up at 2:30 and either go home or to the
    godparents’ home to visit. In the evening Mother would prepare dinner and the children
    would have some play time while she cleaned up the dishes. Then, the children would
    have a bath and watch a movie with Mother or she would read to them before bed. If the
    kids are returned to her, Mother intends to also enroll them in karate classes and
    basketball because she believes such activities will help the children with controlling
    their emotions and behavioral issues.
    In March 2017, Mother relapsed on methamphetamine and was becoming very
    impatient. She talked to her assigned social worker and told him she had relapsed and
    5
    did not want to lose her children, but she needed help. At his suggestion, she approached
    the godparents, told them about her relapse and asked if the children could stay with
    them. The social worker arranged for Mother to enter the Options recovery program.
    She started the program in July 2017 and was still using drugs at the time. Apart from a
    positive test for drugs in July 2017, all of Mother’s drug tests were negative.
    Mother remained in the Options program throughout the proceedings and was still
    in the program at the time of the March 2018 termination hearing. She regularly
    participated in Alcoholics and Narcotics Anonymous and classes in life skills, parenting,
    cognitive behavior, criminal thinking, anger management, acupuncture, and children of
    alcoholics and addicts.
    When she was on drugs, there were times Mother “popped” the children in order
    to correct their behavior. But she has never lost her temper with the children during any
    visits, and she does not act that way when she is sober. Mother now re-directs the
    children and talks with them when they act out or misbehave. In addition to visits,
    Mother also regularly spoke with the children over the telephone once or twice each
    week.
    Mother brings food to every visit because she knows the children are hungry after
    a long day at school, and she misses feeding them. They usually play games, talk and
    eat. Both children smile when they see her, but she knows they may be anxious at the
    beginning of visits. So, she usually plays peek-a-boo when she first sees them or tries to
    ease their anxiety in some way. Her son will hold her hand and her daughter will give
    Mother a spontaneous hug after they warm up.
    Mother gave birth to another son in January 2018. The baby lives with Mother
    and his father helps care for him. The children visited Mother and their baby brother in
    the hospital shortly after he was born.
    Mother understood that her recovery is a life-long process she will need to work at
    every day. She had a support group around her that includes the children’s godparents.
    She remained in the Options recovery program, was in individual therapy and was going
    to begin didactic behavioral therapy. The supportive services are very helpful, but
    6
    Mother feels she could provide for her three children without them. But she thinks it will
    be hard because she is a single mother.
    Mother has had a relationship with the children’s godparents for many years, and
    they provide the children with important support. Even though Mother had a
    disagreement with one of the godparents who questioned her commitment to sobriety,
    Mother would not cut off their contact with the children. She believed that doing so
    would be traumatizing for the kids, and the kids already suffered trauma due to Mother’s
    behavior. She was willing to work on a gradual transition of custody from the
    godparents, and thought anything too quick would be unrealistic and difficult for the
    children.
    The trial court found Mother to be credible and did not doubt her love for her
    children or their love for her. But because Mother had shown her ability to refrain from
    drug use when she was pregnant with the twins, the court placed no weight on Mother’s
    sobriety for the period of the dependency when she was pregnant with her younger son.
    That was what the court “expect[ed] from Mom. She’s shown that before.” For this
    reason the court found no changed circumstances.
    The court also found the children were safe and thriving with their godparents.
    For that reason, the court concluded returning them to Mother would not be in their best
    interest. So, the motion to modify the order setting the termination hearing was denied.
    In a similar vein, the court observed that the children had lived 24 months of their
    lives with the godparents and only 22 months of their lives with Mother, some of
    Mother’s visits with the children had been difficult, and “although they are very tied to
    their mother, it’s not to such an extent that they can’t be happy in their godparents’
    placement.” The court thus concluded that Mother’s relationship with the children was
    not substantial enough to outweigh the children’s need for stability with the godparents,
    and declined to find a beneficial parent-child relationship that would preclude termination
    of Mother’s parental rights. Her parental rights were terminated, and the children were
    freed for adoption.
    Mother appeals.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    “At a [Welfare and Institions Code] section 366.26 permanency planning hearing,
    the juvenile court determines a permanent plan of care for a dependent child, which
    may include adoption. [Citations.] ‘If the dependent child is adoptable, there is strong
    preference for adoption over the alternative permanency plans.’ [Citations.] In order to
    avoid termination of parental rights and adoption, a parent has the burden of proving, by
    a preponderance of the evidence, that one or more of the statutory exceptions to
    termination of parental rights set forth in section 366.26, subdivision (c)(1)(A) or
    (B) apply. [Citations.] The court, ‘in exceptional circumstances,’ may ‘choose an option
    other than the norm, which remains adoption.’ [Citation.] The parental benefit exception
    applies when there is a compelling reason that the termination of parental rights would be
    detrimental to the child. This exception can only be found when the parents have
    maintained regular visitation and contact with the child and the child would benefit from
    continuing the relationship. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i).)” (In re Anthony B. (2015) 
    239 Cal. App. 4th 389
    , 394-395)
    “The exception must be examined on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the
    many variables which affect a parent/child bond. The age of the child, the portion of the
    child’s life spent in the parent’s custody, the ‘positive’ or ‘negative’ effect of interaction
    between parent and child, and the child’s particular needs are some of the variables which
    logically affect a parent/child bond.” (In re Autumn H. (1994) 
    27 Cal. App. 4th 567
    , 575-
    576.)
    “We apply the substantial evidence standard of review to the factual issue of the
    existence of a beneficial parental relationship, and the abuse of discretion standard to the
    determination of whether there is a compelling reason for finding that termination would
    be detrimental to the child.” (In re Anthony 
    B., supra
    , 239 Cal.App.4th at p. 395)
    There is no question here that Mother fulfilled the first component of the
    beneficial relationship exception. She visited with the children as often as she was
    permitted by the social workers, and she also had regular contact with the children by
    phone in between visits. While some of the visits were at first difficult, over time Mother
    8
    became more reflective and was better able to handle disagreements with the children or
    their misbehavior.
    More importantly, the visits coupled with Mother’s efforts during the dependency
    showed that the children would benefit from continuing their relationship with her. They
    love Mother. She provided them comfort and affection, and she was able to ease their
    fear and anxiety. Following visits with Mother, the children would sometimes be sad,
    withdrawn and might act out. But the Agency thought at least some of this behavior was
    due to their separation from Mother. While the Agency thought Mother should always be
    a presence in the children’s lives, it favored termination of her parental rights because the
    children needed stability and the godparents could provide it.
    But the twins are young. At four years old, they have spent almost half their lives
    with Mother, and while they have spent slightly more with their godparents, the
    difference of a couple of months is not so significant here that it would be determinative
    in favor of termination. As the juvenile court observed, the children are “very tied to
    their mother.”
    The record also shows that despite denial of services, Mother continued to
    participate in programs designed to maintain her sobriety and make her a better parent.
    She has consistently tested negative for drugs, and during the dependency remained in
    drug treatment, took classes in life skills, parenting, cognitive behavior, criminal
    thinking, anger management and children of alcoholics and addicts. Moreover, the
    insight she has into her own development and the love and care she has for her children
    was clear in her testimony. Mother recognized that her behavior was traumatic for the
    children, and she did not want to further traumatize them by abruptly removing them
    from the godparents’ custody. Of any possible transition, Mother testified, “as far as
    their emotion and their understanding, it would need to be slow.” Mother considered the
    godparents to be the twins’ “main support when I have not been available” and that it
    would be “horrible” for the children if she broke contact with them. “It would not benefit
    them at all, the twins.”
    9
    On this record, the court abused its discretion when it declined to find a beneficial
    relationship exception because the twins’ bond to Mother “was not to such an extent that
    they can’t be happy in their godparents’ placement.” The standard is whether the
    children benefit from Mother’s presence in their lives, not whether they could eventually
    be happy without her.
    Our recognition of the beneficial relationship exception means “the relationship
    promotes the well-being of the child[ren] to such a degree as to outweigh the well-being
    the child[ren] would gain in a permanent home with new, adoptive parents. In other
    words, the court balances the strength and quality of the natural parent/child relationship
    in a tenuous placement against the security and the sense of belonging a new family
    would confer. If severing the natural parent/child relationship would deprive the
    child[ren] of a substantial, positive emotional attachment such that the child would be
    greatly harmed, the preference for adoption is overcome and the natural parent’s rights
    are not terminated.” (In re Autumn 
    H., supra
    , 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 575.) Such is the case
    here. There is no question that the twins have a substantial and positive attachment to
    Mother such that terminating their familial relationship would cause them great harm.
    Even if Mother may not ultimately regain custody, she should not be excluded from the
    children’s’ lives. “Examining the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment,
    we conclude that not only did Mother maintain regular visitation and contact, but she also
    met her burden of showing a beneficial relationship.” (In re Amber M. (2002) 
    103 Cal. App. 4th 681
    , 689.)
    Perhaps, given the longstanding relationship between Mother and the godparents,
    the court considered that the children may have contact with Mother even though her
    rights were terminated. But “the court cannot nevertheless terminate parental rights
    based upon an unenforceable expectation that the prospective adoptive parents will
    voluntarily permit future contact between the child and a biological parent, even if
    substantial evidence supports that expectation. The purpose of the parent-child
    relationship exception is to protect the parent-child relationship when its continuation is
    more beneficial to the dependent child than a permanent plan of adoption and, in such a
    10
    case, a court cannot leave the protection of such a relationship dependent upon the hoped-
    for goodwill of the prospective adoptive parents.” (In re C.B. (2010) 
    190 Cal. App. 4th 102
    , 128-129.)
    Finally, in light of our conclusion that Mother demonstrated the child-parent
    beneficial relationship exception applies in this case, we will not decide Mother’s claim
    that the court erred when it denied her modification motion. But her argument has
    considerable prospect for success if raised upon remand unless her and the children’s
    circumstances have significantly changed. Even though Mother was denied services
    when her children were removed for the second time, she remained in treatment and
    stayed sober for more than 9 months. While the court discounted Mother’s sobriety
    because she was pregnant and had previously stayed off drugs when she was pregnant
    with the twins, we would not similarly minimize her accomplishment. We cannot
    overstate how difficult it must be for an addict to abstain from drugs without help.
    Mother’s effort was entitled to more credit.
    So too was her self-reporting that she had relapsed. Mother did the right thing
    when she informed her social worker that she was again using drugs. She recognized her
    children were in jeopardy and sought help. She voluntarily placed her children with their
    godparents and sought treatment. The agency’s response when she did not immediately
    test negative for drugs was to initiate this supplemental petition, remove the children and
    deny her services. This record leads to a conclusion that her die was cast at that time.
    But that should not be so. Mother did all she was asked to do and more. In these
    circumstances, we cannot condone making her pay such a severe price when she has
    worked so hard to overcome her addiction, acquired such insight into her parental
    responsibilities and been so attentive to her children’s best interests.
    DISPOSITION
    The order terminating Mother’s parental rights and freeing the children for
    adoption is reversed. This disposition effectively renders Mother’s appeal from the order
    denying her petition for modification moot, so it is dismissed. The case is remanded for
    11
    the juvenile court to consider a long-term plan for the children consistent with the views
    expressed in this opinion.
    12
    _________________________
    Siggins, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Jenkins, J.
    _________________________
    Fujisaki, J.
    In re E.T. et al, A153896
    13
    Filed 1/10/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    In re E.T. et al., Persons Coming Under
    the Juvenile Court Law.
    __________________________________               A153896
    (Alameda County Superior Court No.
    ALAMEDA COUNTY SOCIAL                            JD02275902)
    SERVICES AGENCY,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    I.T.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    BY THE COURT:
    The opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on December 12, 2018, was
    not certified for publication in the Official Reports. For good cause, the request
    for publication is granted.
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1120 and 8.1105(c)(2), the
    opinion in the above-entitled matter is ordered certified for publication in the
    Official Reports.
    Dated: ___January 10, 2019__               ____________SIGGINS, PJ____________P.J.
    Trial Court: Alameda County Superior Court
    Trial Judge: Hon. Kimberly M. Briggs
    Counsel:
    Donna R. Ziegler, County Counsel and Samantha N. Stonework-Hand, Deputy County
    Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Liana Serobian of Serobian Law, Inc., under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A153896

Filed Date: 1/10/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/11/2019