In re DELILA D., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. RIVERSIDE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SOCIAL SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. M.T., Defendant and Appellant.
E080389
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION TWO
July 21, 2023
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION; (Super.Ct.No. RIJ118579)
See dissenting opinion
Rich Pfeiffer, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Minh C. Tran, County Counsel, Teresa K.B. Beecham and Larisa R-McKenna, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
This case concerns a social worker‘s duty to inquire whether a child involved in a dependency proceeding “is or may be an Indian child” under the Indian Child Welfare Act (
Sponsored by a
At issue in this appeal is whether the initial inquiry encompasses available extended family members in every proceeding where a child is removed from home or in only those cases where the social worker takes temporary custody of the child without a warrant under exigent circumstances, as our court recently held in In re Robert F. (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 492 (Robert F.). In this case, the child was initially taken into the custody of the Riverside County Department of Public Social Services (the department) by protective custody warrant before being detained by the juvenile court and later removed at disposition. Reunification efforts failed, and the juvenile court ultimately terminated parental rights and freed the child for adoption. Relying on Robert F., the department argues that because the child wasn‘t initially removed from home without a warrant, the duty to interview available to extended family members never arose.
We conclude there is only one duty of initial inquiry, and that duty encompasses available extended family members no matter how the child is initially removed from home. Applying a narrower initial inquiry to the subset of dependencies that begin with a temporary removal by warrant frustrates the purpose of the initial inquiry and “den[ies] tribes the benefit of the statutory promise” of A.B. 3176. (In re S.S. (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 694, 711 (S.S.).) The goal of the initial inquiry is to determine whether ICWA‘s protections may apply to the proceeding, and the way a child is initially removed from home has no bearing on the question of whether they may be an Indian child. The holding of Robert F. is, in our view, contrary to both the letter and spirit of A.B. 3176.
Because the department in this case failed to ask the child‘s available extended family members whether the child has any Native American ancestry, we conditionally reverse the order terminating parental rights and remand for the juvenile court to direct the department to complete its investigation.
I
FACTS
The subject of this dependency is Delila D., whose mother, M.T. (mother), and father, M.D. (father), have a history of methamphetamine use and homelessness. Before this proceeding began, mother and father signed a caregiver‘s affidavit giving mother‘s friend, Amanda, permission to care for Delila. On January 22, 2021, the department received a referral alleging that Amanda‘s boyfriend was sexually abusing Delila and her half sibling. At the time, the half sibling was living with the maternal uncle, A.M. As part of her investigation, the social worker interviewed the half sibling and the maternal uncle, and both confirmed the allegations of sexual abuse.
On January 24, 2021, the social worker obtained a protective custody warrant for Delila, and the following day, the department placed her in a confidential foster home. Both mother and father denied having any Native American ancestry.
On January 27, 2021, the department filed a dependency petition on behalf of Delila, alleging she fell within the meaning of
In a jurisdiction and disposition report filed on February 18, 2021, the social worker listed the names and contact information of seven relatives she had attempted to notify about Delila‘s detention and interview about potential placement. She had received no response to the letters she had sent to the mailing addresses she had on file, and she was unable to reach any of the individuals by phone, as the numbers were either wrong or no longer in service.
On April 2, 2021, the juvenile court declared Delila a dependent under
Reunification efforts were unsuccessful for both parents, and on November 22, 2022, the court held a selection and implementation hearing at which it terminated parental rights and ordered adoption as Delila‘s permanent plan.
II
ANALYSIS
Mother challenges the order terminating parental rights on the ground the court‘s prior finding that ICWA does not apply lacks evidentiary support. She argues the department was required under
A. Inquiry and Notice Generally
Congress enacted ICWA in 1978 out of concern that “an alarmingly high percentage of Indian families are broken up by the removal, often unwarranted, of their children from them” by state agents who “fail[] to recognize the essential tribal relations of Indian people and the cultural and social standards prevailing in Indian communities and families.” (
ICWA effectuates this purpose by setting minimum federal standards state courts must follow in voluntary or involuntary custody proceedings involving Indian children. (Ibid.; see also In re T.G. (2020) 58 Cal.App.5th 275, 287 (T.G.).) “If the Indian child lives on a reservation, ICWA grants the tribal court exclusive jurisdiction over all child custody proceedings, including adoptions and foster care proceedings.
Involuntary state court proceedings to place an Indian child in foster care or terminate parental rights “are subject to especially stringent safeguards.” (Brackeen, supra, U.S. Lexis 2545, citing
Because ICWA applies to child custody proceedings involving an “Indian child,” procedural rules for determining whether a child qualifies as such are crucial to the statute‘s application. ICWA defines an Indian child as either 1) a member of a tribe or 2) a biological child of a member and eligible for membership. (
The federal regulations establish the minimum investigation a state must conduct into a child‘s possible status as an Indian child. However, ICWA allows states to require more thorough investigations, and it directs that where states do so, the higher state standard “shall apply.” (
B. Section 224.2 and the Initial Inquiry
Added by A.B. 3176, section 224.2 sets out, among other things, the duty of initial inquiry under California law.
In addition, rule 5.481 of the California Rules of Court, which the Judicial Council revised to implement section 224.2(b), states: “The party seeking a foster-care placement, . . . termination of parental rights, preadoptive placement, or adoption must ask the child, if the child is old enough, and the parents, Indian custodian, or legal guardians, extended family members, others who have an interest in the child, and where applicable the party reporting child abuse or neglect, whether the child is or may be an Indian child . . . .” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.481(a)(1) (rule 5.481).)2
Read together, these provisions impose on social workers a duty of initial inquiry that begins at first contact, lasts throughout the proceeding, and includes “but is not limited to” the reporting party, the child‘s parents and extended family members, and others who have an interest in the child, as those individuals become available during the case. In other words, the “duty to inquire begins with initial contact . . . and obligates the juvenile court and child protective agencies to ask all relevant involved individuals whether the child may be an Indian child.” (T.G., supra, 58 Cal.App.5th at p. 290, citing
As we‘ll explain, these provisions represent an expansion to the scope of a social worker‘s duty of initial inquiry.
C. A.B. 3176 Expanded the Scope of the Initial Inquiry
Codified in 2006 with the passage of Senate Bill No. 678 (2005-2006 Reg. Sess.), the duty of initial inquiry was originally set out in former section 224.3. (Stats. 2006, ch. 838 (S.B. 678); In re Isaiah W. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 1, 9.) That provision stated that juvenile courts and county welfare departments “have an affirmative and continuing duty” to inquire whether a child involved in a dependency proceeding is or may be
As we‘ve seen, under section 224.2, a social worker may no longer rely solely on the child‘s parents for information about possible Indian ancestry.
The legislative history of A.B. 3176 reveals that this amendment was “tribal in origin and purpose.” (S.S., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 699.) In November 2015, the California Department of Justice‘s Bureau of Children‘s Justice created the ICWA Compliance Task Force to gather empirical data on ICWA violations within the state and recommend changes to California‘s ICWA-implementing laws. (Cal. Health and Human Services Agency, Enrolled Bill Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 3176 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) prepared for Governor Brown (Aug. 31, 2018 & Sept. 4, 2018) p. 5 (Enrolled Bill Report).) Made up of tribal representatives and advocates, the task force was the first of its kind in California. (Ibid.)
The task force issued its report in 2017. Among other things, it recommended broadening the initial inquiry to include not just a child‘s parents, but their extended family members as well. (California ICWA Compliance Task Force, Report to the California Attorney General‘s Bureau of Children‘s Justice, 2017 [as of July 10, 2023], archived at https://perma.cc/NYF6-VPY9 (Task Force Report) at p. 26.) The report explained why relying on parents alone for the initial inquiry does not necessarily protect the rights of the tribe: “When parents are the sole target of the initial inquiry, it should be understood that there are a variety of reasons why relying on the parents does not necessarily protect the child‘s best interests, or the rights of the tribe. Parents may simply not have that information, or may possess only vague or ambiguous information. [¶] The parents or Indian custodian may be fearful to self-identify, and social workers are ill-equipped to overcome that by explaining the rights a parent or Indian custodian has under the law. Parents may even wish to avoid the tribe‘s participation or assumption of jurisdiction.” (Task Force Report, p. 28.)
As S.S. succinctly puts it, “California tribal leaders gathered narratives and data about the failure of implementation of the Act. They issued a report that generated the 2018 amendment: the Legislature embraced the tribal proposal swiftly and without opposition. The resulting law required [social workers] to ask ‘extended family members’ whether the child may be an Indian child.” (S.S., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 699.)
D. A.B. 3176 Imposed New Requirements for the Temporary Custody and Detention of Indian Children
In addition to expanding the scope of the initial inquiry, A.B. 3176 imposed new ICWA-related requirements for the temporary custody and detention of Indian children. As many of the legislative materials describing A.B. 3176 observe, the changes to the temporary custody and detention provisions were “intended to ‘conform [California law] to changes to federal regulations’ governing [ICWA].” (Assem. Com. on Human Resources, Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 3176 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) Apr. 10, 2018 Report, p. 1; Assem. Com. On Human Services, 3d reading as amended May 25, 2018, p. 1; Assem. Conc. in Sen. Amends., as amended Aug. 22, 2018, p. 1.)
In 2016, the federal government issued regulations applicable to emergency proceedings involving Indian children. The regulations defined an “emergency proceeding” as “any court action that involves an emergency removal or emergency placement of an Indian child,” which, under California law, includes the detention hearing under section 319. (
As the Enrolled Bill Report for A.B. 3176 notes, at the time of their issuance, these regulations represented “a departure from the existing application of ICWA in California, where the minimum federal standards often do not get applied until the dispositional hearing.” (Enrolled Bill Report, supra, p. 8.) To bring California law into compliance with the 2016 regulations, our Legislature made several amendments to the ICWA-related provisions in article 7 of the juvenile court law (
For example, A.B. 3176 added “Emergency proceeding” to the definitions in section 224.1 and defined the term as “the initial petition hearing held pursuant to Section 319.” (
If the child taken into temporary custody is an Indian child (or there is “reason to know” they are), various provisions added by A.B. 3176 apply to both social workers and the juvenile court. For example, leading up to the detention hearing, the social worker must make “active efforts” to prevent the emergency removal of the Indian child from their home and must submit a detention report containing more information than required for non-Indian children. (
As another example, at the detention hearing, a higher standard applies to the removal of Indian children than non-Indian children. A court may detain a non-Indian child based on a finding that “[t]here is a substantial danger to the physical health of the child or the child is suffering severe emotional damage, and there are no reasonable means by which the child‘s physical or emotional health may be protected without” detaining the child. (
As the legislative history of A.B. 3176 shows, the impetus for expanding the scope of the initial inquiry was different from the impetus for imposing the new ICWA-related requirements for temporary custody and detention. A tribal coalition prompted the expansion of the initial inquiry beyond parents, to include extended family members and others, whereas the 2016 federal regulations prompted the new temporary custody and detention requirements. (Enrolled Bill Report, supra, p. 8; see also S.S., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 696 [observing that the Legislature expanded the initial inquiry “at the behest of tribes“].)
E. The Department‘s Incomplete Initial Inquiry Requires Conditional Reversal
Here, the social worker failed to ask the maternal uncle whether Delila is or may be an Indian child, despite the fact he was available from the outset of the case and she spoke with him about other matters. Mother argues this failure is a violation of section 224.2(b)‘s clear mandate to make the initial inquiry of available extended family members. Relying on Robert F., the department argues the obligation to interview extended family members arises only in cases that begin with the child being taken into temporary custody without a warrant. The department argues that because Delila was taken into custody by protective custody warrant, the social worker was not required to interview the child‘s extended family members.
We agree with mother. As we‘ll explain, we conclude Robert F. misinterprets the language and purpose of section 224.2(b).
1. We decline to follow Robert F.
In Robert F., Robert‘s mother appealed the order terminating her parental rights on the same ground as mother does here: that the department failed to
To reach this conclusion, Robert F. interpreted the first sentence of section 224.2(b) as dictating the only circumstance under which the duty described in the second applies. Robert F. held that section 224.2(b) “requires a county welfare department to ask extended family members about a child‘s Indian status only if the department has taken the child into temporary custody under section 306.” (Robert F., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 504, italics added.) In addition, Robert F. concluded that section 224.2(b)‘s reference to temporary custody “pursuant to [s]ection 306” is limited to circumstances where the child is removed without a warrant. (Robert F., at pp. 500-501.)
We cannot join this reasoning for two reasons. First, we disagree that temporary custody under section 306 is limited to circumstances where the child is removed without a warrant. Section 306 authorizes a department to maintain a child in temporary custody both when the child has been taken from home by a social worker or police officer under exigent circumstances without a warrant (
When a child is removed by warrant, the taking is authorized by section 340, and the holding or maintaining in custody is authorized by
Regardless of whether a child is taken into custody by law enforcement and then delivered to the department, or is taken by the department directly, it is the maintaining in custody that triggers the need for a detention hearing. (See
In this connection, we think it significant that section 224.2(b) uses the phrase “placed into temporary custody” not “taken into temporary custody.” (
And, because the department, not law enforcement, is charged with conducting the ICWA investigation in a dependency proceeding, it simply makes more sense that section 224.2(b) would tie the initial inquiry to when the child is delivered to the department under
Moreover, we are not persuaded by Robert F.‘s justification for why the Legislature would exclude from the inquiry described in section 224.2(b) children
removed by warrant. Robert F. reasons the Legislature did so because it “intended to track federal guidelines for implementing ICWA,” which recommend initial inquiry of extended family members in “emergency removal situations” only. (Robert F., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at pp. 502-503.) The opinion concludes: “In short, in crafting the narrow inquiry duty in
However, this argument misconstrues the definition of an emergency removal under both the federal regulations and California law. Under both, the “emergency removal” is not the social worker‘s act of taking the child from home under exigent circumstances. Rather, the emergency removal is the court‘s order detaining the child at the detention hearing, regardless of how the child came to be in the department‘s custody leading up to that hearing. (See
Moreover, the federal guidelines simply recommend that social workers interview extended family members in emergency removal situations—they don‘t recommend that social workers do so only in such situations. (See U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Guidelines for Implementing the Indian
This brings us to our second reason for declining to follow Robert F. Even if its conclusion that
First,
Here, the obvious purpose of A.B. 3176 was to expand the scope of the initial inquiry beyond the parents. Nothing in the text of that amendment or its legislative history suggests an intent to apply the expanded inquiry in some cases but not others. Indeed, A.B. 3176 itself states that it amends existing law to “revise the specific steps a social worker . . . is required to take in making an inquiry of a child‘s possible status as an Indian child.” (Stats. 2018, ch. 833 (A.B. 3176), § 1.) Notably, the Legislature did not say those steps apply only in the subset of dependency proceedings that begin with warrantless removals. We think that if the Legislature intended to so limit the initial inquiry, it would have said so.
Third and perhaps most importantly, it simply doesn‘t make sense to apply different initial inquiries depending on how the child was initially removed from home, as that procedural happenstance has nothing to do with a child‘s ancestry.
For all these reasons, we conclude Robert F.‘s interpretation of
The costs of broadening the inquiry are slight, as departments are already required to identify and to contact extended family members for various reasons unrelated to ICWA during dependency proceedings. (See S.S., supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 702 [providing a list of examples of such provisions].) But the “payoff can be large for tribes, whose children carry their cultures into the future.” (Id. at p. 705.) “The inquiry required by the 2018 amendment is vital—literally: it can help keep cultures alive.” (Ibid.) And, because tribal knowledge and experience tell us “there is a chance extended family members may have otherwise-unavailable information the child has Indian ancestry,” the importance of interviewing such individuals when they are readily available cannot be overstated. (Ibid.)
We generally follow decisions of our own court, absent a compelling reason to depart. (Opsal v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1991) 2 Cal.App.4th 1197, 1204; see also Estate of Sapp (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 86, 109.) However, there are several considerations that compel us to depart from Robert F. First, that decision itself departed from earlier decisions of our court holding the duty of initial
2. The department‘s error was prejudicial
We conclude the department violated
The analysis regarding the other relatives listed in the jurisdiction and disposition report that the social worker tried to interview about placement is less straightforward. While it‘s clear the phone numbers the social worker had on file for them were not correct, we cannot say the same about the addresses. Also, it is possible the individuals would choose not to respond about placement but would respond to a question about Delila‘s ancestry. On remand, the juvenile court shall decide in the first instance whether to order the department to send inquiries to those addresses or try to obtain additional contact information about them from mother and the maternal uncle.
III
DISPOSITION
We conditionally reverse the order terminating parental rights and remand the matter to the juvenile court with directions to comply with the inquiry provisions of
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
SLOUGH
J.
I concur:
RAPHAEL
J.
[In re Delila D., E080389]
MILLER, J., Dissenting
I respectfully dissent to the majority opinion finding that remand is necessary in order for the Riverside County Department of Social Services (Department) to conduct further inquiry of the relatives of minor, Delila D. as to whether she is an Indian child pursuant to the guidelines of
A protective custody removal warrant under
“There is no federal duty to inquire of extended family members.” (In re A.C. (2021) 65 Cal.App.5th 1060, 1069.) The duty of inquiry under state law comes from
” ‘Under settled canons of statutory construction, in construing a statute we ascertain the Legislature‘s intent in order to effectuate the law‘s purpose. [Citation.] We must look to the statute‘s words and give them their usual and ordinary meaning. [Citation.] The statute‘s plain meaning controls the court‘s interpretation unless its words are ambiguous.’ ” (People v. Arias (2008) 45 Cal.4th 169, 177.) ” ’ “[I]f the statutory language is not ambiguous, then we presume the Legislature meant what it said, and the plain meaning of the language governs.” ’ ” (Melissa R. v. Superior Court (2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 816, 822.)
In Robert F., this court found that the plain language of
This court, in Robert F., followed the concurring opinion in In re Adrian L. (2022) 86 Cal.App.5th 342 (Adrian L.), a case involving a child being placed into protective custody pursuant to
Based on the plain language in
The majority states that it cannot follow Robert F.‘s reasoning because it disagrees that
A similar argument was rejected in Ja.O., another opinion authored by this court. In Ja.O., the mother argued that since
The majority also relies on the legislative history to insist that
Further, this argument also ignores the language of
MILLER
Acting P. J.
