Opinion
Maureen K. (mother) appeals from a juvenile court order denying her Welfare and Institutions Code section 388
1
petition to modify a juvenile guardianship order pertaining to her son, Daniel K. She challenges this order on the ground the juvenile court failed to hold an evidentiary hearing on her modification petition. A juvenile court must hold a full hearing on a section 388 petition only if the petition establishes a prima facie cаse for modification.
(In re Marilyn H.
(1993)
I
Facts
The juvenile court first obtained dependency jurisdiction over eight-year-old Daniel on November 4, 1993, on the ground he was suffering severe emotional harm at the hands of his mother. (§ 300, subd. (c).)
2
During the next two years — before the juvenile court adopted a permanent plan of guardianship — Daniel exhibited severe emotional problems and mother showed an inability to deal with those problems. Although the juvenile court
Subsequently, Daniel lived at the Edgewood Children’s Center, a residential treatment program, during the 1994-1995 school year, while he attended a private elementary school. Although mother was at first cooperative with the Edgewood staff, she later became hostile and disruptive. A psychiatrist who evaluated mother concluded that, while she admitted she could not manage Daniel’s problems, she resented the involvement of professionals. Consequently, “she is obliged to challenge virtually all clinical efforts, even to denigrate the care-givers themselves, in order to restore her self-image as a ‘good mother’ and also to regain her sense of control.” The psychiatrist recommended Daniel be sent far away from his mother’s war with the clinical world so he could begin to lеad a normal life, free of her direct influence. He recommended Daniel live with the Sheltons of Anchorage, Alaska. The Sheltons had provided day care to Daniel shortly after his birth, and Daniel considered them his “grandparents.” Daniel had already lived in Alaska with the Sheltons for two lengthy periods, once while mother worked in Libya and once while she was getting settled in San Francisco.
Daniel moved into the Sheltons’ Anchoragе home in July of 1995. On November 20, 1995, the court held a section 366.26 permanency planning hearing and selected guardianship as the permanent plan. The court appointed the Sheltons as Daniel’s legal guardians. According to a February 1996 progress report, Daniel was thriving in his placement with the Sheltons. He was doing well in his Anchorage school and had begun to build a trusting relationship with a therapist. Similarly, a six-month postpermanency planning review report, dated April 4, 1996, stated that Daniel was doing well in his placement with the Sheltons. The report noted Daniel’s behavior had improved, he rarely had temper tantrums, and he had learned not to “act out physically.” According to Daniel’s teacher and school principal, he was not having academic or behavioral problems at school. The report recommended Daniel remain in long-tеrm placement with the Sheltons. At the May 31, 1996, postpermanency planning review, the juvenile court found that returning Daniel to mother would create a substantial risk of detriment to the minor and continued the Sheltons’ guardianship.
On July 15, 1996, mother filed an “Ex Parte Request for an Order to Provide Continuing Discovery.” In a declaration attached to the request,
The Modification Petition
On October 15, 1996, mother filed a section 388 petition to modify the juvenile court order appointing the Sheltons as Daniel’s guardians. The petition alleged that Daniel’s behavior had continually deteriorated since he was placed with the Sheltons, and the State of Alaska had removed Daniel from the Sheltons’ home because of their inability to contrоl his erratic behavior. The petition stated Daniel was then currently on medication in a “Level 4 Therapeutic Treatment facility” in Anchorage, Alaska, which is the highest level of care for minors the State of Alaska allows. It further alleged that “[tjhere is no immediate prognosis for the return of the minor to the guardians from the treatment provider.” Mother asked the court to terminate the Sheltons’ guardianship and to return him to San Frаncisco where he could be placed in a proper therapeutic treatment facility.
In its response, the San Francisco County Department of Human Services (Department) produced evidence that contradicted many of the allegations in mother’s petition. In particular, the Department’s evidence showed Daniel’s behavior had not “continually deteriorated” since he had been living with the Shеltons; he had not been placed in the “the highest level of care for Minors” in Alaska, but was instead in a comprehensive residential treatment facility; and the prognosis for Daniel was that he would be returned to the Sheltons’ home.
The juvenile court denied the modification petition without holding an evidentiary hearing. The court concluded there was no prima facie case for modification. The court specificаlly stated: “I am finding it would not be in the best interests of the child to pursue the proposed change of order.”
This appeal followed. (§ 395.)
Discussion
A. The Court Was Not Required to Hold an Evidentiary Hearing on the Modification Petition. *
B. The Request for Continuing Discovery.
After briefing was completed in this case, we directed counsel to address whether we must dismiss the appeal to the extent it seeks review of the order denying continuing discovery on the ground the appeal is untimely. Mother’s counsel filed a letter brief in which he argued the discovery order was not separately appealable, and therefore should be reviewed in the appeal from the order denying the modification petition. At oral argument, counsel for the Department agreed the discovery order was not separately appealable, and therefore should be reviewed in the appeal from the order denying modification. Wе reject this concession. In our view, section 395 grants appellate jurisdiction to review an order denying continuing discovery rendered after “final judgment” in a section 300 proceeding. Because mother could have appealed that order, but did not, she has waived her right to attack it.
Preliminarily, we note the scope of a party’s right to appeal is completely a creature of statute.
(Cobb
v.
University of So. California
(1995)
Section 395 provides in pertinent part: “A judgment in a proceeding under Section 300 may be appealed from in the same manner as any final judgment,
and any subsequent order may be appealed from as an order after
Here, the juvenile court entered its dispositional order on February 15, 1994. The court made its order denying mother’s motion for continuing discovery .on July 31, 1996. Thus, that order was an order entered after judgment. Mother did not appeal from this order. Instead, mother filed a notice of appeal from the order denying her modification petition, on November 18, 1996, or more than three months after the court denied her discovery request. “An appeal from the most recent order entered in a dependency matter may not challenge prior orders for which the statutory time for filing an apрeal has passed.”
(In re Edward H.
(1996)
Citing
Lakin
v.
Watkins Associated Industries
(1993)
To our knowledge, no court has apрlied the limitation mother suggests here to appeals in a section 300 proceeding. To the contrary, the courts have stated: “Juvenile dependency law does not abide by the normal prohibition against interlocutory appeals. [Citation.] As previously noted,
all
postdispositional orders in juvenile dependency matters are directly appealable
without limitation,
except for post-1994 orders setting a section 366.26 hеaring.”
(In re Edward H., supra,
Mother has not cited, nor has our research revealed, a single juvеnile case where the courts have applied the test mother proposes. To the contrary, the
We have found only one possible limitation on the appellate court’s power to review postjudgment orders in a section 300 proceeding. In
In re Corey, supra,
In
In re Eli F., supra,
For her part, the Department’s counsel cited
In re Jeanette H.
(1990)
The Department’s counsel also cited
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Oppenheimer
(1960)
Finally, mother contends the “public interest” favors making orders denying continuing discovery nonappealable in juvenile dependency cases because this procedure would serve judicial economy. We note first that the “public interest” is debatable on this point. Had mother appealed the order denying her request for continuing discovery, and had that appeal resulted in affirmance, it is possible mother would have abandoned her quest to modify the guardianship order. This would ultimately have saved judicial time and resources. In any event, “. . . these considerations are policy matters within the legislative, not the judicial, domain.”
(In re Edward H., supra,
HI
Disposition
The October 31, 1996, order denying mother’s motion to modify the guardianship order (§ 388) is affirmed. The appeal is dismissed to thе extent it purports to challenge the July 31, 1996, order denying mother’s motion for continuing discovery.
Phelan, P. J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 5, 1998. and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 13, 1998.
Notes
Subsequent statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code, unless otherwise noted.
This is the fourth in a series of appeals and writs involving Daniel’s dependency. (See case Nos. A065667 & A064287 [nonpub. opn.], filed Fеb. 23, 1995 [affirming jurisdictional and dispositional orders]; No. A071251 [nonpub. opn.] filed Oct. 31,1995 [writ review upholding orders terminating reunification services and setting the matter for a section 366.26 hearing]; Nos. A070627 & A068481 [nonpub. opn.], filed June 5, 1997, rehg. granted June 26, 1997, opn. foil, rehg., filed. Aug. 15, 1997 [dismissing appeal from supplemental petition].)
See footnote, ante, page 661.
The entire statute provides: “A judgment in a proceeding under Section 300 may be appealed from in the same manner as any final judgment, and any subsequent order may be appealed from as from an order after judgment; but no such order or judgment shall be stayed by the appeal, unless, pending the appeal, suitable provision is made for the maintenance, care, and custody of the person alleged or found to come within the provisions of Section 300, and unless the provision is approved by an order of the juvenile court. The appeal shall have precedence over all other cases in the court to which the appeal is taken. [H] A judgment or subsequent order entered by a referee shall become appealable whenever proceedings pursuant to Section 252, 253, or 254 have become completed or, if proceedings pursuant to Section 252, 253, or 254 are not initiated, when the time for initiating the proceedings has expired. [1J] An appellant unable to afford counsel, shall be provided a free copy of the transcript in any appeal. HD The record shall be prepared and transmitted immediately after filing of the notice of appeal, without advance payment of fees. If the appellant is able to afford counsel, the county may seek reimbursement for the cost of the transcripts under subdivision (c) of Section 68511.3 of the Government Code as though the appellant had been granted permission to proceed in forma pauperis.”
Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1 states in relevant part: “(a) An appeal may be taken from a superior court in the following cases: [^] (1) From a judgment [with certain exceptions] . ... fiO (2) From an order made after a judgment made appealable by paragraph (1).”
See
Lakin
v.
Watkins Associated Industries, supra,
We note that, in criminal cases, Penаl Code section 1237, subdivision (b) specifically provides that a defendant may appeal “[f]rom any order made after judgment, affecting the substantial rights of the party.” Because the Legislature did not include a similar explicit limitation in section 395, it might be inferred that no such limitation was intended. However, as indicated, we need not decide that issue in this case because we conclude the order in this case did affect the substantial rights of the minor.
