[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *127
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *128 OPINION
Mаria G. (Mother) and Jorge A. (Father) appeal from August 21, 2007 jurisdiction and dispositional orders declaring their teenage son Jorge G. to be a dependent of the juvenile court pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section
Jorge gave DCFS various reports of his age, from age 13 (with a birth date in December 1993), to age 17 (with a birth date in December 1989). Jorge admitted that he lied about his age because hе believed that being younger would "fast track" his immigration status once he was in protective custody. Jorge also stated that he sometimes lied about being older, with a 1989 birth date, so he would be able to work more. He produced a document from 2004, which the juvenile court characterized as a "civil registry, not a birth certificate," which listed his birth date in December 1993. Jorge first told DCFS that he had the document altеred, but later told DCFS that when Mother and his stepfather went to register him, Mother told them he was born in 1991, but a secretary wrote down 1993. The paternal aunt in Mexico initially told DCFS that Jorge was born in 1990, but later told DCFS that he was born in 1991. When the parents were interviewed by telephone in July 2007, Father told DCFS that Jorge was born in December 1992, but then Mother got on the telephone and corrected Father to say that Jorge was born in Dеcember 1991. According to bone age X-rays obtained by DCFS in April 2007, Jorge's skeletal age was consistent with that of a 17 year old, plus or minus 15.4 months.
According to Jorge, when he was young, his parents sold drugs and would hide drugs on his person because the police would not search him. His parents also placed a gun to his head and used him as a hostage when they robbed people on trains. His parents hit and slapрed Jorge with a water hose, cables, wooden blocks and whatever was around. According to the paternal aunt, the parents would give Jorge pills to make him fall asleep so he would not cry.
After his parents were incarcerated, Jorge lived briefly with his paternal aunt. The paternal aunt told DCFS that Jorge spent some time in a Mexican child welfare agency, but he was treated badly аnd "I think Jorge just left." The paternal aunt could not care for Jorge because life in Mexico was difficult and she was taking care of her six children. Jorge stated that he received some assistance from the Mexican child welfare agency, but "there are no records." Jorge lived on the streets in Mexico until he made his way to the United States for the first time in November 2004. Jorge was caught by United States immigrаtion officials and deported about four times; he told immigration officials he was 18 years old and they believed him. The last time he crossed the border, he went to Phoenix and then Las Vegas, where he worked "side jobs by getting picked up in front of Home Depot" and also worked in a restaurant. He saved some money and came to Los Angeles, *130 where he stayed at the Rescue Mission, then Angel's Flight, and then Frеedom House, which serves youths ages 14 to 17.
At the detention hearing in April 2007, attorneys were appointed to represent the parents. Jorge told the court that he was born in 1991 and would be 16 in December 2007. The court set a pretrial resolution conference for May 29, 2007. In May 2007, DCFS filed declarations of due diligence regarding the efforts to locate the parents. The declarations detailed unsuccessful searches for the parents in the United States even though DCFS suspected that the parents were incarcerated in Mexico. On May 29, 2007, the juvenile court continued the matter to July 19, 2007, and ordered DCFS to exercise due diligence to locate the parents in prison in Mexico. Jorge was ordered into counseling.
On July 19, 2007, DCFS filed a first amended petition alleging that Jorge was a dependent of thе juvenile court under section 300, subdivisions (a), (b), and (g), based on the parents' hitting Jorge with various objects and giving him pills for him to fall asleep; the parents' failure to provide him with care, supervision, and the necessities of life due to their incarceration; the parents' history of drug abuse; and the parents' emotional abuse by forcing Jorge to participate in their criminal activities.
According to an intеrim review report filed on July 19, 2007, DCFS attempted to mail notices of the July 19 hearing on the petition to the parents on July 3, 2007, by certified mail-Federal Express, but the Federal Express agent in Mexico indicated that he would not be able to deliver the documents to the parents in prison.
On July 10, 2007, a DCFS investigator interviewed the parents by telephone about the allegations of the first amended petition. The pаrents denied hitting Jorge and denied involving him in their criminal activities, but they both admitted robbing people to feed their family and using marijuana in the past. Mother stated that she expected to be released from prison in eight months.
Father told DCFS that if Jorge "wants to stay over there it's fine. He's big. He is going to make his own decision." Father also stated that he and Mother "want the best for him. I appreciate everything you've done for him. We can't do anything we are poor this is why we are in prison." Father told DCFS that he had a relative in Tijuana and Father could obtain his telephone number; Father also had an uncle that lived in the United States, but Father did not know in which city. According to Father, Jorge telephoned Father in January 2007, but Father also claimed that "[w]e haven't known anything about him in over one year." *131
According to proоfs of service, DCFS sent the parents copies of the first amended petition and notice of the July 19, 2007 hearing on July 10, 2007, by first class mail, addressed to them in prison. At the hearing on July 19, the juvenile court found that the notice was not proper because it did not state that DCFS was recommending the parents receive no reunification services. Counsel for the parents did not waive defects in the notice. The matter was trailed to August 21, 2007, for adjudication and a contested disposition hearing. On August 1, 2007, DCFS sent notices of the August 21 hearing to the parents in prison by first class mail.
At the August 21, 2007 hearing, counsel for the parents argued for dismissal of the petition on the ground that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction over Jorge because his legal residence was not in the United States. The parents' counsel questioned Jorge's credibility and whether Jorge was a minor; they also asserted that if he was a minor, the Mexican child welfare authorities should take care of Jorge, not DCFS. The juvenile court reasoned, "I only need one of three things and one of the three is that [Jorge] was found in L.A. County. So, I have proper venue and jurisdiction."2 The juvenile court found proper notice, determined Jorge was born in 1991, sustained the allegations of thе first amended petition, removed Jorge from his parents' custody, and ordered family reunification services. The parents, through their respective counsel, appealed from the August 21, 2007 orders.
We agree with DCFS that the juvenile court had temporary emergency subject matter jurisdiction under Family Code section
"The Act `is the exclusive method of determining the proper forum in custody disputes involving other jurisdictions and governs juvenile dependency proceedings.' . . . [¶] We are not bound by the juvenile court's findings regarding subject matter jurisdiction, but rather `independently reweigh the *132
jurisdictional facts.'" (In re A. C. (2005)
Family Code section
"The finding of an emergency is to be made only after an evidentiary hearing, although the juvenile court can detain the child before that hearing." (A. C., supra,
After independently weighing the jurisdictional facts, we conclude that the juvenile court properly invoked temporary emergency jurisdiction on the ground that Jorge was a minor and that he was abandoned within the meaning of Family Code section
The determination that Jorge was born in December 1991 is supported not only by the bone age X-ray, but by the statements of Mother and Jorge's paternal aunt. Even if we assume his date of birth is Decеmber 1990, as first stated by the paternal aunt, Jorge will not turn 18 until December 2008. And because his parents admitted that they were incarcerated and that *133
they were unable to care for him at that time, we conclude that Jorge was abandoned within the meaning of the Act. The parents point to Father's statement to DCFS that relatives, one in Tijuana and one somewhere in the United States, could possibly carе for Jorge. But Father admitted having a telephone conversation with Jorge in January 2007, when Jorge was living on his own, and Father did not thereafter call those relatives or make any provisions for Jorge's care or supervision. The weight of the evidence supports the invocation of the juvenile court's temporary emergency jurisdiction. Were we to find no subject matter jurisdiction, Jorge would be lеft without any source of protection. Accordingly, the juvenile court had subject matter jurisdiction and personal jurisdiction over Jorge. But the "[assumption of emergency jurisdiction does not confer upon the state exercising emergency jurisdiction the authority to make a permanent custody disposition." (In re C. T. (2002)
But as explained below, the juvenile court did not have personal jurisdiction over the parents and the August 21, 2007 jurisdiction and dispositional orders must be reversed as to them.
B. Personal Jurisdiction and Notice
Inasmuch as DCFS does not contend that the parents voluntarily submitted to the authority of the court or made a general appearance, compliance with the statutes governing service of process is essential to establish the court's personal jurisdiction over them. (FloveyorInternat., Ltd. v. Superior Court (1997)
We reject the contention of DCFS that issuеs of personal jurisdiction and notice were waived because the parents were each represented by counsel below, and their counsel appeared and did not raise the issue of inadequate notice. The cases cited by DCFS are inapposite because they do not deal with the issue of personal jurisdiction. In In re Joseph E.
(1981)
The Hague Service Convention applies to juvenile dependency cases brought under section 300. (In re Alyssa F. (2003)
"The Hague Service Convention was `intended to provide a simpler way to serve process abroad, to assure that defendants sued in foreign jurisdictions would receive actual and timely noticе of suit, and to facilitate proof of service abroad.'" (Alyssa F., supra,
Service of process by ordinary mail does not perfect service in Mexico; nor does service by first class mail or leaving a telephone message with a parent who was not present at the detention hearing constitute adequate service of notice of the jurisdiction and dispositional hеarings under section 291, subdivision (e)(1). (AlyssaF., supra,
We conclude that service on the parents was not proper under either Mexican or California law. Accordingly, the defective service renders all subsequent proceedings void, even if the party had actual notice of the proceedings. (Alyssa F., supra,
DCFS admits, and we agree, that there are no cases which apply a harmless error analysis to insufficient notice under the Hague Service *135
Convention. Nevertheless, DCFS urges that we apply the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard of prejudice here, citing our opinion in In reJ.H. (2007)
In Burda Media, the defendant, served in France under the Hague Service Convention, appealed from the denial of his motion to vacate a default judgment on the ground that it was void for lack of personal jurisdiction. The Second Circuit held that the failure of France's Ministry of Justice to return a formal certificate confirming service was not fatal to effective service because the plaintiff filed police reports confirming service of process, which served the purpose of the certificate, and the defendant failed to prove that he did not receive the summons. (Burda Media, supra,
Although we agree with the parents that the jurisdiction and dispositional orders must be vacated, we do not agree that the first amended petition must be dismissed. Courts have held that notwithstanding improper service under the Hague Service Convention, "there is no need to dismiss this case without first providing a reasonable opportunity to accomplish such proper service." (Trask v. Service Merchandise Co., Inc.
(D.Mass. 1991)
Vogel, J., and Rothschild, J., concurred.
Family Code section
