Adoption of T.W. CA3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 11/24/21 Adoption of T.W. CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (San Joaquin)
    ----
    Adoption of T.W., a Minor.                                                                    C094016
    T.W. et al.,                                                                         (Super. Ct. No.
    STAFLADOP20190006452)
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,
    v.
    N.M.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    N.M., biological father (father) of the infant minor T.G.W. (minor), appeals from
    an order terminating his parental rights and freeing the minor for adoption by prospective
    adoptive parents T.W. (adoptive father) and M.W. (adoptive mother). N.M. contends the
    trial court erred by finding he did not establish the prerequisites to withhold consent to
    the adoption under Adoption of Kelsey S. (1992) 
    1 Cal.4th 816
     (Kelsey S.). We affirm the
    juvenile court’s order.
    FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
    N.M. and M.H. (mother), the unwed biological parents of the minor, separated
    during early in mother’s pregnancy in December 2019, about eight months before the
    1
    minor was born. Mother went to a domestic violence shelter when she fought with N.M.
    in December 2019, returned, then went back to the shelter. N.M. never saw mother
    personally after she left; he attempted to reach her on Facebook Messenger a number of
    times and had two conversations with her but was otherwise unsuccessful.
    According to N.M., in March 2019, he asked mother if she needed anything or any
    help, and she responded that she was “gonna have an abortion,” asked him to leave her
    alone and not contact her, and that she did not need help. This was the last time N.M.
    contacted mother. Mother proceeded with adoption planning and completed initial
    adoption paperwork identifying N.M. as the biological father and said that he “was not
    involved at that point” and she “had left because of a domestic violence situation, and
    that he had requested that she have an abortion.” Jennifer Shimabukuro, the adoption
    facilitator, attempted to contact N.M. at the phone number provided by mother and left a
    voice message for him; he did not respond. Mother later declared that N.M. did not
    provide money for her child support expenses or any help with the pregnancy expenses.
    Mother also declared that she discussed adoption with father, but she did not know
    whether he would agree. According to Shimabukuro, mother indicated that N.M.
    requested that she terminate the pregnancy. On the date of the minor’s birth (in August
    2019), M.H. gave the minor up to the adoptive parents, whom M.H. had met through an
    adoption agency. The adoptive parents filed their adoption request.
    On December 13, 2019, the State Department of Social Services (DSS) sent a
    letter to N.M. “informing him of the adoption plan and possible steps he could take to
    agree or object to the plan.” DSS investigator Kim Arikawa testified that she did not
    remember the mailing address off the top of her head, but believed “it’s something like
    1646 46th Avenue, or something like that, in Oakland.” DSS stated that the letter was
    not returned by the post office as undeliverable and also that N.M. did not respond to the
    letter. N.M. testified that he did not receive the letter from DSS because he had moved
    by that point and did not provide a change of address form to the post office.
    2
    Attorney James Handy declared that he tried to have N.M. personally served with
    a notice to the alleged father regarding the adoption and requirement that he seek to
    establish his paternity. Handy also conducted searches through three private internet
    search companies for N.M., which yielded the same Oakland address. On February 10,
    2020, Handy contacted the phone numbers produced by the searches and was able to
    speak with N.M. According to Handy, he told N.M. that mother had named him as a
    possible father and she had placed the baby for adoption, and N.M. then “called [mother]
    a few names and denied paternity.” N.M. requested that the form for denying paternity
    be e-mailed to him and refused to provide his address. N.M. denied telling Handy that he
    denied paternity.
    After the call, Handy e-mailed N.M. the one-page form to deny paternity to the
    e-mail address he provided, which N.M. concedes he received. Handy attempted to reach
    N.M. by phone and e-mail several additional times in February through April 2020.
    N.M. claimed that he called Shimabukuro and she denied knowledge of the adoption, but
    Shimabukuro denied ever speaking with N.M.
    On April 22, 2020, N.M. sent an e-mail to Handy asking if the minor was
    biologically his child. Handy responded with information about paternity testing. N.M.
    provided his address and stated that he wanted to pursue the testing. On May 19, 2020,
    N.M. e-mailed Handy that he had not received any of the documents despite providing
    his address. On May 22, 2020, Handy e-mailed N.M. that his process server had
    attempted four times to serve the documents on N.M. without success and requested
    N.M.’s assistance.
    On May 29, 2020, N.M. filed an action to seek custody or to establish a parental
    relationship. On July 23, 2020, the adoptive parents filed a petition pursuant to Family
    Code section 7662 (statutory section citations that follow are to the Family Code unless
    otherwise stated) to terminate parental rights of the alleged father, N.M. The court
    appointed counsel for N.M. and ordered paternity testing. The DNA testing results
    3
    ultimately confirmed his parentage on October 22, 2020. N.M. did not file a motion for
    visitation or contact pending trial. The court set a trial on the section 7662 petition for
    January 14, 2021.
    On January 14 and January 15, 2021, the trial was held. The court concluded in its
    ruling after trial on February 24, 2021, that N.M. did not show by a preponderance of the
    evidence that he promptly came forward and demonstrated full commitment to his
    parental responsibilities. The court found that “[t]here is no dispute that [N.M.] does not
    have statutory presumed father status” and analyzed whether he qualified as a Kelsey S.
    father. The court found “no evidence that before or after [mother] left, [N.M.] provided
    any assistance to [mother] with respect to the pregnancy.” The court noted that N.M.
    “did not testify that he tried to convince [mother] to not get an abortion or offer to parent
    the child after birth.” Nor did N.M. tell mother that he was against adoption. While the
    court acknowledged that after Hardy contacted N.M., he did “take steps to demonstrate a
    commitment to his paternal responsibilities,” these steps did not “counterbalance the
    steps that were not taken when [N.M.] knew that [mother] was pregnant.”
    Additionally, the court noted that mother told Shimabukuro that she left N.M.
    “because of domestic violence and that he wanted her to have an abortion.” Accordingly,
    the court concluded that N.M.’s “actions did not demonstrate that he was supportive of
    [mother’s] physical and emotional health while carrying the child in that twice she left
    and sought assistance at a shelter.” The court ordered parental rights be terminated and
    also found that the termination was in the best interests of the minor because removal of
    custody from the adoptive parents would be detrimental to her health and welfare.
    N.M. timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    N.M. challenges only the trial court’s findings with respect to his constitutional
    rights under Kelsey S., supra, 
    1 Cal.4th 816
     and Adoption of Michael H. (1995)
    4
    
    10 Cal.4th 1043
     (Michael H.). N.M. contends the juvenile court erred when it found he
    did not rise to the status of a Kelsey S. father because “[t]he undisputed facts demonstrate
    [N.M.] did everything reasonably possible to establish a parental relationship with the
    child, especially in light of [] mother’s statement to him she needed nothing because she
    was having an abortion and the obfuscation of the truth by the [adoption] agency and
    attorney Handy.” His claims lack merit.
    “An unwed father’s rights and duties under the Uniform Parentage Act of 1973
    (UPA), adopted by our Legislature as Family Code section 7600 et seq., substantially
    depend on whether he is a ‘presumed father’ within the meaning of Family Code section
    7611.” (In re Tanis H. (1997) 
    59 Cal.App.4th 1218
    , 1228.) “Whether a biological father
    is a ‘presumed father’ . . . is critical to his parental rights.” (Kelsey S., 
    supra,
     1 Cal.4th at
    p. 823.) Only “ ‘presumed fathers’ ” are entitled to custody and reunification services.
    (In re Zacharia D. (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 435
    , 448-449.)
    “In order to become a ‘presumed’ father, a man must fall within one of several
    categories enumerated in Family Code section 7611.” (Francisco G. v. Superior Court
    (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 586
    , 595.) One of the ways a man can establish presumed father
    status is if he meets the conditions provided in section 7570. (§ 7611.) Section 7570 and
    the sections that follow it address the establishment of paternity by voluntary declaration.
    “[A] voluntary declaration of paternity that is in compliance with all the requirements of
    section 7570 et seq. . . . entitles the father to presumed father status in dependency
    proceedings.” (In re Liam L. (2000) 
    84 Cal.App.4th 739
    , 747; see In re Raphael
    P. (2002) 
    97 Cal.App.4th 716
    , 722-723.) Unless rescinded or set aside, a voluntary
    declaration of paternity has the same force and effect as a judgment of paternity issued by
    a court of competent jurisdiction. (Former § 7573, subd. (a); Kevin Q. v. Lauren W.
    (2009) 
    175 Cal.App.4th 1119
    , 1132.) A voluntary declaration of paternity can, however,
    be set aside if the declarant is found not to be the child’s father, or due to mistake,
    5
    inadvertence, excusable neglect, or fraud. (In re William K. (2008) 
    161 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 9-
    10.)
    It is undisputed that father is the biological father of the minor. It is also
    undisputed that he was not present at the minor’s birth and did not sign a voluntary
    declaration of paternity. Where, as here, a biological father does not fulfill the statutory
    criteria to qualify as a presumed father, he may nevertheless attain parental rights equal to
    those of the mother by showing he promptly stepped forward to assume full parental
    responsibilities for the child’s well-being, including a financial, emotional or other
    commitment; the child’s mother or a third party prevented him from assuming his
    parental responsibilities or physically receiving the child into his home; and he
    demonstrated a willingness to assume full custody of the child. (In re Jason J. (2009)
    
    175 Cal.App.4th 922
    , 932; In re D.M. (2012) 
    210 Cal.App.4th 541
    , 545.) Such an
    individual is often referred to as a Kelsey S. father. (Kelsey S., 
    supra,
     1 Cal.4th at p. 849.)
    “From the precise language used by the court in Kelsey S. and as demonstrated by the
    holding in the later Supreme Court case of [Michael H.], there are at least two elements
    of ‘full commitment’: (1) a demonstration of a willingness to financially support the
    child and (2) a willingness—at least to the extent she makes possible—to emotionally
    support the unwed mother during her pregnancy.” (Adoption of T.K. (2015)
    
    240 Cal.App.4th 1392
    , 1394.) Stating opposition to adoption by seeking to block the
    adoption by others is insufficient. (Kelsey S., at p. 849.) “This is so because ‘the mere
    existence of a biological link does not merit . . . constitutional protection’ [citation];
    rather, the federal Constitution protects only the parental relationship that the unwed
    father has actively developed by ‘ “com[ing] forward to participate in the rearing of his
    child” ’ [citation] and ‘act[ing] as a father’ [citation].” (Michael H., supra, 10 Cal.4th at
    p. 1052.)
    In reviewing a determination whether a parent meets the requirements of
    Kelsey S., we review the factual findings for substantial evidence and “[t]o the extent that
    6
    the issue is a mixed question of law and fact, we exercise our independent judgment in
    measuring the facts against the applicable legal standard.” (Adoption of Myah M. (2011)
    
    201 Cal.App.4th 1518
    , 1539.) We examine the whole record to determine whether
    substantial evidence supports the judgment, drawing all reasonable inferences and
    resolving all evidentiary conflicts in favor of the trial court’s findings, and we do not
    reweigh the evidence. (In re A.A. (2003) 
    114 Cal.App.4th 771
    , 782; In re Spencer W.
    (1996) 
    48 Cal.App.4th 1647
    , 1650.) Under the substantial evidence standard, an
    appellant may not win reversal simply by citing the evidence favorable to the appellant.
    (Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon (1971) 
    3 Cal.3d 875
    , 881.)
    N.M.’s challenge fails because he does not show that he met the Kelsey S. standard
    on the full facts found by the trial court. Instead, he asks us either to reject the court’s
    credibility findings against him and make new findings in his favor, or to cherry-pick the
    record for allegedly uncontroverted facts favorable to him while ignoring the rest.
    N.M.’s argument fails in “his portrayal of the facts as he would like them seen rather than
    as the trial court found them.” (Adoption of A.S. (2012) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 188
    , 214.) We
    decline either to set aside the court’s credibility findings or to consider the facts N.M.
    cites (even assuming them to be uncontroverted, which respondents do not concede) in
    isolation from the record as a whole.
    Here, we conclude substantial evidence in the record supports the court’s
    determination that father did not qualify as a Kelsey S. father. Father testified that he
    knew mother was newly pregnant at the time their relationship ended. Yet he presents no
    evidence that he demonstrated a willingness to financially support the child or at least
    emotionally support mother during the pregnancy. He also testified that in March 2019,
    about four months into the pregnancy, he contacted mother and asked if she needed any
    help, and she responded that she was going to have an abortion and asked him not to
    contact her. Thus, according to N.M.’s own testimony, he knew that mother was past the
    first trimester and had not terminated her pregnancy at that time, yet he took no further
    7
    steps to offer support or confirm that she did indeed decide to terminate the pregnancy.
    Further, as the juvenile court acknowledged, N.M.’s actions after birth arguably were
    somewhat more diligent than his actions before birth, the Supreme Court has held that a
    parent cannot compensate for his lack of demonstration of a “ ‘full commitment’ to
    parenthood during pregnancy . . . by attempting to assume his parental responsibilities
    many months after learning of the pregnancy.” (Michael H., 
    supra,
     10 Cal.4th at
    pp. 1054-1055.)
    N.M. contends the juvenile court failed to assess his conduct in light of evidence
    of the conduct of mother and other third parties. For example, he argues he cannot be
    faulted for failing to pay mother’s pregnancy and birth-related expenses because he
    presumed that mother had an abortion. However, the evidence shows father waited until
    about four months into the pregnancy to contact mother, did not offer any support or offer
    to raise the child, and did not attempt to obtain information about whether she actually
    terminated the pregnancy. The fact that she had not yet terminated the pregnancy by this
    time though the pregnancy was known to both mother and N.M. for several months
    should have given N.M. some indication that she may have been hesitant to terminate the
    pregnancy and to follow up with mother or a mutual contact or seek the advice of legal
    counsel. There is no evidence in the record that N.M. would have been willing to pay for
    and participate in prenatal and delivery costs or care for the child. While N.M. asserts he
    “was not required to relentlessly hound her in an attempt to convince her not to have an
    abortion in order to retain his parental rights,” he cites no authority to support his position
    or delineate what amount of effort is sufficient. By his own admission, N.M. was able to
    reach mother but only spoke to her about the pregnancy once after she moved out. There
    is no evidence that N.M. opposed mother aborting the child or giving the child up for
    adoption during that conversation or at any other time. The record thus supports the
    court’s finding that he “did not try to convince [mother] to not have an abortion, he did
    8
    not offer to parent the child, or offer specific financial or emotional support both pre-birth
    or post-birth in stating he wished to help raise the child.”
    As the juvenile court found, N.M. did not consistently come forward to assume his
    full parental responsibilities during mother’s pregnancy, which is required under
    Kelsey S. (Michael H., supra, 10 Cal.4th at pp. 1054-1055; Kelsey S., 
    supra,
     1 Cal.4th at
    p. 849.) He presented no testimony or evidence that during the pregnancy that he stated
    or demonstrated to mother that he wanted to be a parent, or that he would raise the child
    or help raise the child with her should she carry the baby to term. Rather, during that
    time he consistently sought to avoid those responsibilities: Mother told Shimabukuro that
    N.M. requested that she terminate the pregnancy; mother later declared that N.M. did not
    provide money for her child support expenses or any help with the pregnancy expenses;
    and mother also declared that she discussed adoption with father, but she did not know
    whether he would agree. In light of this evidence, N.M.’s belated efforts to assert
    paternal status after the minor’s birth do not meet his burden to establish his entitlement
    to withhold consent to the adoption. (Michael H., at p. 1054; Kelsey S., at p. 849.)
    While N.M. focuses on the fact the juvenile court noted the purported history of
    domestic violence, as we have discussed, the focus of the court’s ruling was on N.M.’s
    failure to promptly come forward and demonstrate a commitment to his parental
    responsibilities during the course of the pregnancy. N.M. contends there was not
    substantial evidence he had actually perpetrated domestic violence or that this
    disqualified him as a Kelsey S. father. Because this was a concise factual finding and not
    the focus of the court’s analysis, we reject his claim.
    Finally, we conclude the juvenile court did not err in finding termination of
    parental rights in minor’s best interest. (See § 7664.) The minor had been living in the
    home of the adoptive parents for approximately one and a half years at the time of the
    ruling and was doing well. N.M. had no relationship with mother. As discussed at length
    above, independent of mother’s evasiveness regarding her pregnancy, father failed to act
    9
    diligently and, as a result, had no relationship with the minor. And as the court noted, the
    removal of the minor from the adoptive parents’ care would result in “tremendous
    emotional stress” and would be detrimental to her health and welfare because “numerous
    witnesses testified to the bond already formed between [the minor] and the [adoptive
    parents].” Thus, there was significant evidence in the record to support the conclusion
    that termination of parental rights was in the minor’s best interest. N.M. does not raise a
    persuasive argument that the best interests determination was in error. The court did not
    abuse its discretion in terminating parental rights under section 7664.
    There was sufficient evidence to support the juvenile court’s finding that father did
    not meet the criteria set forth in Kelsey S. and to support the termination of parental
    rights.
    DISPOSITION
    The juvenile court’s orders are affirmed.
    HULL, J.
    We concur:
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    RENNER, J.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C094016

Filed Date: 11/24/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/24/2021