Opinion
— This case presents the issue of whether declaratory relief is available in juvenile dependency cases in the context of a child welfare agency not complying with statutory time requirements for the filing of supplemental petitions.
Fourteen-year-old Claudia E. and her half sister, two-year-old Chloe H., sought declaratory relief after the Imperial County Department of Social Services (Department) twicе removed them from the home of their mother, J.E., without timely filing a supplemental petition under Welfare and Institutions Code 1 section 387. The juvenile court denied the children relief, ruling that the children had not exhausted their remedies. The children appeal. J.E. and Eric O., the alleged father of Claudia, join in and adopt the children’s arguments. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.200(a)(5).) 2
FACTS
On March 27, 2006, the Department took Claudia and Chloe into protective сustody after police arrested J.E. and Chloe’s father, Albert H., for domestic violence and resisting a police officer.
3
The Department filed dependency petitions on behalf of Claudia, then 12 years old, and Chloe, then
The juvenile court sustained the petitions as amended, declared Claudia and Chloe dependent children and removed them from parental custody. The court ordered J.E. and Albert to follow their case plans.
Because Claudia wanted to live with her mother and J.E. complied with her reunification services, the Department returned the children to her before the six-month review hearing. At the review hearing, the court placed Claudia and Chloe with J.E. under a family maintenance plan. Subsequently, the court allowed Albert to return to the home.
On June 4, 2007, at the 12-month review hearing, the court granted J.E. and Albert an additional six months of family maintenance.
However, on July 10 the Department filed a supplemental petition pursuant to section 387 on behalf of Claudia and Chloe, seeking to remove the children to a more restrictive placеment. The petition alleged that J.E. and Albert had resumed their drug abuse and domestic violence, and Albert was verbally abusive toward Claudia. Claudia and Chloe had been removed a week earlier and placed in separate foster homes. The detention hearing for the children was originally scheduled for July 11, eight days after they were removed, and the matter was continued for an additional day at J.E.’s request.
At the July 12 detention hearing, Claudia’s counsel informed the court that Claudia wanted to return home as soon as possible. The court ordered the children to be detained and remain in foster care.
On July 25 the court, at the request of the Department, dismissed the count involving J.E. in the supplemental petition and ordered Claudia and Chloe returned to her. The court noted J.E. had been doing well with her services since the time of the detention.
On Octоber 19 the Department filed a second supplemental petition (§ 387), alleging J.E. had a drug relapse and was not adequately caring for the children. Claudia and Chloe had been removed from J.E.’s custody four days earlier.
Also on October 22, counsel for Claudia and Chloe (hereafter children’s counsel) sought a declaration from the juvenile court under Code of Civil Procedure section 1060, that the Department’s procedure regarding the filing of supplemental petitions was illegal. The declaratory relief motion by children’s counsel alleged that the Department had a policy of filing petitions as much as a week after removal despite the statutory requirement that petitions be filed within 48 hours after removal. 4 The motion sоught “to end the controversy over what procedure is proper when a child is removed from one placement to a more restrictive placement. This issue is important and comes up on a regular basis. ... It is the Public Defender Office’s position that the social workers do not know the law regarding subsequent, supplemental and modification petitions. . . . [M]any of the social workers are of the erroneous bеlief that it is proper to remove a child to a more restrictive placement and then file a supplemental . . . petition a week or so later.”
The Department opposed the motion for declaratory relief. Although acknowledging the section 387 petition was filed late because it was not filed within 48 hours of the children’s removal, the Department argued below that a motion for declaratory rеlief under Code of Civil Procedure section 1060 is not available in juvenile court. The Department also pointed out that case law allows the juvenile court to proceed on a supplemental petition that is filed late.
On November 21 the court denied the motion for declaratory relief because “the proper remedy when the child is detained more than 48 hours before the filing [of the supplementаl petition] is a writ of habeas corpus, which wasn’t sought after in this case.” The court also said that to obtain declaratory relief “you need to exhaust any possible remedies and that would have been the writ of habeas corpus.” 5
Children’s counsel contends that the juvenile court erred by refusing to consider the motion for declaratory relief for an invalid reason — namely, there was no exhaustion of available remedies. We agree. Furthermore, we conclude declaratory relief is available in juvenile court if there is an actual controversy between the parties as required under the law.
Nature of Declaratory Relief
Declaratory relief is an equitable remedy, which is available to an interested person in a case “of actual controversy relating to the legal rights and duties of the respective parties . . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1060;
6
see
Dills
v.
Delira Corp.
(1956)
“The purpose of a declaratory judgment is to ‘serve some practical end in quieting or stabilizing an uncertain or disputed jural relation.’ ”
(Maguire v. Hibernia S. & L. Soc.
(1944)
The remedy of declarative relief is cumulative and does not restrict any other remedy. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1062.) Accordingly, “it is difficult to see how a good complaint for declaratory relief can be deemed insufficient because some other remedy is available.” (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (4th ed.
We find the juvenile court erred by rejecting the motion for declaratory relief on the sole basis that counsel had not exhausted any possible remedies.
The Department defends the court’s rationale for denying the declaratory relief motion on the basis that the court determined such relief was “not necessary or proper at the time under all the circumstances.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1061.) The Department’s argument presumes that habeas corpus was a more “effective” vehicle for the sought-after relief. (See
Filarsky
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Declaratory Relief in Juvenile Court
The Department has maintained that the juvenile court is not a proper forum for declaratory relief on two grounds: (1) Code of Civil Procedure section 1060, the statutory fountainhead for declaratory relief, does not apply to juvenile dependency proceedings; and (2) the juvenile court does not otherwise have the inherent power to grant declaratory relief.
With respect to the nonapplication of Code of Civil Procedure section 1060, the Department relies on
In re Chantal S.
(1996)
In our view, the Department has misread
Chantal S.
and the other cases it relies on, such as
In re Angela R.
(1989)
Recently in
In re Mark B.
(2007)
Dependency proceedings are part of a comprehensive statutory scheme geared toward expediency, largely to serve the dependent child’s best interests.
(In re Merenda R
(1997)
Here, where it is claimed that the Department allegedly has a lackadaisical or laissez faire practice of filing supplemental petitions that ignores the time requirements for filing supplementаl petitions to the detriment of school-age dependent children (see fn. 4,
ante),
declaratory relief by the juvenile court
Contrary to the Department’s position, the better view is that application of a statute outside the Welfare and Institutions Code (and not expressly made applicable) is
not
necessarily barred from dependency proceedings. Courts should determine whether the statute at issue is consistent with the overall purposes of the dеpendency system. (See
Chantal S., supra,
It is important to keep in mind that the observation in
Chantal S., supra,
In
In re Angela R., supra,
In
In re Jennifer R., supra,
14 Cal.App.4th at pages 711 to 713, this court held that Civil Code former section 4600 et seq. relating to custody and visitation in marriage dissolution cases did not apply in dependency cases.
In
In re Daniel S., supra,
In
In re Joshua G., supra,
Furthermore, regardless of the applicability of Code of Civil Procedure section 1060 to juvenile dependency proceedings, we find the juvenile court has the inherent power to issue declaratory relief in such proceedings. Under article VI, section 1 of the California Constitution, all courts have the inherent powers to enable them to carry out their duties and ensure the orderly administration of justice. (See
In re Amber S.
(1993)
In sum, we find the juvenile court has the authority to grant declaratory relief in a case such as this in which it is alleged that the Department has a policy of untimely filing supplemental petitions in contravention of statutory requirements. Moreovеr, on a case by case basis declaratory relief better serves the juvenile dependency system than habeas corpus relief — a time-consuming process that is inimical to the expedient processing of cases and one which most likely will be impractical in the crowded dependency system.
The question remains whether there was an actual controversy. Declaratory relief is not availablе unless there is a real dispute between parties, “involving justiciable questions relating to their rights and obligations.”
(Wilson v. Transit Authority
(1962)
Children’s counsel sought declaratory relief because the Department did not timely file the section 387 supplemental petitions. In the first instance, the supplemental petition was not filed until a week after the children were removed. In the second instance, the supplemental petition was not filed until the fourth day after the removal. Putting aside quibbling by appеllate counsel over semantics, the law is clear that, when a child is removed from parental custody, the child welfare agency must file a petition within 48 hours of the removal. (§§ 311, 313, 315; see also
Cynthia D. v. Superior Court
(1993)
However, children’s counsel raised another point by alleging the Department has a policy of filing supplemental petitions in a tardy fashion— sometimes as late as a week after the removal. Department has denied any such policy. This constitutes an actual controversy. “An action for declaratory relief lies when the parties . . . dispute whether a public entity has engaged in conduct or established policies in violation of applicable law.”
(Alameda County Land Use Assn.
v.
City of Hayward
(1995)
The order denying the motion for declaratory relief is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the juvenile court for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
The petition of respondent Imperial County Department of Social Sеrvices for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 27, 2008, S165098.
Notes
Statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise specified.
Eric, who did not file a notice of appeal and is appearing here as a respondent, also requests that this court review the allegedly inadequate services afforded to him below. (§ 316.2.) We will not further address this request because as a respondent Eric lacks standing to assign error in this appeal concerning declaratory relief sought by the children. This issue may properly be raised in the juvenile court in the first instance.
Albert is not a party to this appeal.
Children’s counsel also filed a motion for an order to transport Claudia to her school of origin; this motion alleged the Department had violated Education Code section 48853 by insisting Claudia attend school in Calexico rather than her school of origin, Brawley Union High Schоol, which she had been attending since the beginning of the school year. This issue is now moot because the Department subsequently allowed Claudia to attend her school of origin. However, before that occurred, Claudia missed a week of school.
The court relied on
Los Angeles County Dept. of Children’s Services v. Superior Court
(1988)
California Cоde of Civil Procedure section 1060 provides in pertinent part: “Any person ... who desires a declaration of his or her rights or duties with respect to another .. . may, in cases of actual controversy relating to the legal rights and duties of the respective parties, bring an original action or cross-complaint in the superior court for a declaration of his or her rights and duties .... He or she may ask for a declaration of rights or duties, either alone or with other relief; and the court may make a binding declaration of these rights or duties, whether or not further relief is or could be claimed at the time. The declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, and the declaration shall have the force of a final judgment. The declaration may be had before there has been any breach of the obligation in respect to which said declaration is sought.”
The law is also clear that the detention hearing must be held within one day of the filing of the petition, excluding nonjudicial days. (§ 315.)
