In re RYLEI S., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.
B316877
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION SEVEN
Filed 7/18/22
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION; (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 21LJJP00113A)
LOS ANGELES COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. NATASHA S., Defendant and Appellant.
Lelah S. Fisher, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Dawyn R. Harrison, Acting County Counsel, Kim Nemoy, Assistant County Counsel, and Stephen Watson, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Rylei S. was declared a dependent child of the juvenile court on June 14, 2021 and removed from her parents, Natasha S. and Philip A., after the court sustained an amended petition pursuant to
The Department does not dispute it violated the requirements of section 224.21 and rule 5.481(a)(4).2 And it concedes the error requires reversal under the governing harmless error standard we articulated in In re Antonio R. (2022) 76 Cal.App.5th 421 and In re Y.W. (2021) 70 Cal.App.5th 542. Nonetheless, the Department has not stipulated to a remand to allow it to comply with ICWA and related California law, as it has done in numerous appeals pending in this division, thereby avoiding the “unnecessary delay” it asserts our decisions create. Instead, the Department contends this court‘s 14-year-old decision in In re H.B. (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 115, which involved harmless error analysis prior to the Legislature‘s 2018 amendments to California law expanding a child protective agency‘s investigative obligations, cannot be reconciled with our more recent decisions considering harmless error under current law. Then, misapplying the rationale of In re H.B., the Department argues its
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The Department filed the
At the March 11, 2021 arraignment hearing the court, referring to Natasha‘s ICWA form, stated, “Based on the form, the mother‘s indicating she may have Cherokee heritage on the maternal grandfather‘s side and the maternal grandmother is the one who has the information. So the Department is asked to inquire of the maternal grandmother about possible Indian heritage. If the notice requirements are triggered, the Department‘s to provide notice, appropriate notice.”3 Although not included in the reporter‘s transcript of the proсeedings, the minute order for March 11, 2021 stated the order regarding notice was not conditioned on the results of the Department‘s inquiry: “DCFS is to notice the Indian tribes to determine if this case falls within [ICWA].” The minute order also stated the court ordered the Department to contact the Bureau of Indian Affairs and to include the notices and any responses in the report for the next court hearing.
In the jurisdiction/disposition report filed April 14, 2021 the Department stated ICWA “does or may apply.” According to the report, on March 17,
The jurisdiction/disposition report stated efforts to interview Natasha about possible Indian ancestry were unsuccessful. However, elsewhere the report summarizes the dependency investigator‘s interview with Natasha regarding the allegations in the
At the jurisdiction hearing on April 29, 2021, after the Department‘s counsel directed the court to the brief summary of the interview with Rylei‘s maternal grandmother in the jurisdiction/disposition report, the court stated, “The Department is not required to interview the maternal grandmother any further. I just need the results of the notices that were sent.” The court did not address the adequacy of the Department‘s efforts to interview any of Rylei‘s other maternal relatives.
On May 25, 2021 the Department filed a last minute information report for the court, attаching an April 27, 2021 letter from the United States Department of the Interior stating the notice provided by the Department contained insufficient information to determine any tribal affiliation for Rylei. The letter also stated, “[W]hen additional information becomes available, please forward the Notice to the appropriate Tribe(s).” No copies of any notice to, or response from, the Cherokee Tribe were submitted.
At the June 14, 2021 disposition hearing, after stating “notices were sent out over 60 days ago,“—without seeing those notices or reviewing their
Natasha filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
1. ICWA and the Duties of Inquiry and Notice
ICWA and governing federal regulations (
To ensure Indian tribes may exercise their rights in dependency proceedings as guaranteed by ICWA and related state law, investigation of a family member‘s belief a child may have Indian ancestry must be undertaken and notice provided to the appropriate tribes. (
In addition,
If those inquiries result in reason to know the child is an Indian child,5 notice to the relevant tribes is required. (
“The duty to develop information concerning whether a child is an Indian child rests with the court and the Department, not the parents or members of the parents’ families.” (In re Antonio R., supra, 76 Cal.App.5th at p. 430; accord, In re Benjamin M. (2021) 70 Cal.App.5th 735, 742 [“the agency has a duty to gather information by conducting
2. The Department Failed To Adequately Investigate Rylei‘s Possible Indian Ancestry
Regardless of a parent‘s response concerning his or her possible Indian ancestry on the ICWA-020 Parental Notification of Indian Status form or when questioned by the court at the initial appearance, if, as here, a child has been detained and placed in the temporary custody of a child protective agency,
contact) аny other member of Natasha‘s family who might have information concerning Natasha‘s understanding the maternal grandfather may have Cherokee ancestry. Indeed, even though Natasha was interviewed in April 2021 about the allegations of violence and substance abuse in the dependency petition, it appears no effort was made to inquire further about the basis for her report of possible Cherokee ancestry on the ICWA-020 form, let alone to reconcile that statement with the social worker‘s comment in the ICWA-010(A) form that Natasha had provided no information indicating Indian ancestry. As the Department‘s appellate counsel essentially concedes, the Department failed to satisfy its duty of inquiry under
But this is
under
The Department completely failed to satisfy any of these duties. Not only was there no contact with any extended family members other than the
Responsibility for the errors and omissions here does not rest solely with the Department. The juvenile court also erred in failing to ensure the Department had satisfied its duties of inquiry before finding ICWA did not apply to the proceedings. (
3. The Department‘s and Juvenile Court‘s Failures To Comply with Section 224.2 Were Not Harmless Error
For obvious reasons, the Department does not suggest it complied with its duty of inquiry under
As the Department recognizes, we have previously rejected this argument, holding an offer of proof is not required to demonstrate prejudice in the context of
But this aрpeal does not involve a mother who said she was not aware of any possible Indian ancestry. Here, the Department failed to conduct further inquiry as required by
Apparently recognizing the futility of this argument, elsewhere in its brief the Department suggests not simply that some affirmative representation of the child‘s Indian status by a parent is required befоre we reverse a no-ICWA finding made without an adequate investigation, but that the parent should be required to come forward with information sufficient to establish the child is in fact an Indian child. The Department asserts, “Considering the purpose of the ICWA and the definition of ‘Indian child,’ it is unreasonable to conclude that a parent may not know they are a registered member of a Federally recognized Indian tribe or that their family is an intact Indian family deserving of protection.”8
The Department‘s assumption as to what a parent should know overlooks recent findings on the impact this country‘s decades-long efforts to
California Attorney General‘s Bureau of Children‘s Justice, “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 pаrents 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.” (Id. at p. 28, fns. omitted.) For this reason, the Legislature in 2018 added new
In yet another challenge to our harmless error analysis in ICWA inquiry cases, the Department observes that in In re Y.W., supra, 70 Cal.App.5th 542, “this Court failed to reconcile its contrary decision in In re H.B., supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 122.” The Department is correct In re H.B. was not
The absence of In re H.B., supra, 161 Cal.App.4th 115 from the Department‘s brief and then our opinion in In re Y.W. is understandable. Rather than citing In re H.B., the Department relied on In re Rebecca R. (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th 1426, in which the court of appeal found harmless the child protective agency‘s failure to document the results of a court-ordered ICWA-related inquiry, stating the father “should have mаde an offer of proof or other affirmative representation that, had he been asked, he would have been able to proffer some Indian connection“—language we cited in In re H.B., at page 122. Our opinion in In re Y.W. addressed In re Rebecca R. at some length and explained why, given the Department‘s failure to comply with the expanded duties of inquiry imposed in 2018 by
It is that significant difference betweеn the limited state law obligation to ask a parent about possible Indian ancestry that existed in 2005 and 2006 when the pertinent events took place in In re H.B., supra, 161 Cal.App.4th 115,11 and the far broader duties of inquiry the Department failed to satisfy in 2020 and 2021, that belies the Department‘s contention our decision in In re H.B. is somehow fatally inconsistent with our more recent decision (and may well explain why the Department omitted any reference to In re H.B. in its briefing in In re Y.W.). In its filing before the jurisdiction/disposition hearing on June 29, 2005 in In re H.B., the Department reported the mother had been interviewed and said she had no American Indian ancestry. (Id. at p. 119.) At the jurisdiction hearing in that case, the mother‘s first appearance in the proceedings, the juvenile court did not ask the mother whethеr her
former rule 1439(d)(3) (now
Here and in In re Y.W., supra, 70 Cal.App.5th 542, in contrast, the errors were the Department‘s nearly complete failure to make the additional inquiries of extended family members now required by
likely to be meaningful in determining whether the children involved were Indian children—whether the information ultimately showed they were or established they were not. Because we do not know what we do not know, nothing more in the way of prejudice need be shown.
Finally, the Department incorrectly contends our recent decisions effectively apply the doctrine of structural error in the guise of the constitutionally required harmless error analysis for violаtions of state law. (See
A simplistic hypothetical—similar to one we discussed in a prior opinion—will illustrate the point: A child‘s mother submits an ICWA-020 form indicating she may have Indian ancestry through the maternal grandfather but states she has no additional information. The child protective agency interviews the maternal grandfather; several, but not all of his four siblings; and the maternal grandfather‘s surviving parent, none of whom indicates the family has any Indian ancestry. The failure to interview the grandfather‘s remaining siblings would certainly be harmless absent some additional unusual circumstance. The difference between this extreme example and the case at bar (and the facts in In re Y.W. and In re Antonio R.) is that the hypothetical agency, unlike the Department, made a genuine effort to investigate the child‘s Indian status by complying in good faith with the mandate of
Our harmless error analysis thus parallels that adopted by the Supreme Court in In re Manzy W. (1997) 14 Cal.4th 1199, which involved a juvenile court‘s failure to declare a wobbler offense either a misdemeanor or a felony in accordance with
In
to make a meaningful and thorough inquiry regarding Rylei‘s possible Indian ancestry, including interviews with extended family members and any other persons who may reasonably be expected to have information regarding the child‘s tribal membership or eligibility for membership and contact with the Cherokee tribe or any other tribes that may have such information. If that information establishes a reason to know an Indian child is involved, notice in accordance with
DISPOSITION
The June 14, 2021 disposition order is conditionally affirmed. The cause is remanded to the juvenile court for full compliance with the inquiry and notice
PERLUSS, P. J.
We concur:
SEGAL, J.
FEUER, J.
Notes
We deny the Department‘s motion to dismiss the appeal as frivolous. In that motion the Department notes that neither minute order indicates Natasha raised an ICWA issue at the December 14, 2021 or the June 14, 2022 hearing. Of more significance, however, is that, notwithstanding the Department‘s and the juvenile court‘s “affirmative and continuing duty to inquire” whether Rylei may be an Indian child, neither minute order nor the Department‘s reports indicate the Department, which conceded in its respondent‘s brief that it failed to comply with its duty of inquiry, made any effort to correct its error, let alone notified the juvenile court that it needed to do so.
