In re Samantha F., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. RIVERSIDE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SOCIAL SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. John F., Defendant and Appellant.
E080888 (Super.Ct.No. INJ2100356)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION TWO
2/22/24
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
See Concurring and Dissenting Opinion
Reversed and remanded.
Deanna L. Lopas, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Minh C. Tran, County Counsel, and Teresa K.B. Beecham and Catherine E. Rupp, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
* Pursuant to
John F. (father) appeals from orders terminating parental rights over his young daughter Samantha F. He argues the Riverside County
We publish part of this opinion intending to add two points to the ongoing discussion about the required scope of that inquiry, currently under review by our Supreme Court in In re Ja.O. (2023) 91 Cal.App.5th 672 (Ja.O.), review granted July 26, 2023, S280572. Specifically, we address the meaning of the terms “protective custody” and “temporary custody” as they are used in our dependency statutes, and the application of federal law to the ICWA inquiry. This analysis provides additional reasons, beyond those persuasively articulated in In re Delila D. (2023) 93 Cal.App.5th 953 (Delila D.), review granted September 27, 2023, S281447, and similar cases, why the Legislature did not intend the initial ICWA inquiry to differ depending on whether the child was removed from parental care with or without a warrant.
I. BACKGROUND
Samantha was born in 2021 and has three older siblings who are not involved in this appeal. During the dependency, mother and father repeatedly denied that Samantha had any Indian heritage. The record does not specify whether the department asked any other relatives about Samantha‘s possible Indian heritage.
In December 2021, the department took Samantha into protective custody pursuant to a warrant based on evidence she was endangered by maternal neglect and paternal criminal activity. During its investigation, the department learned that an older half sibling had stopped attending school and allegedly was “hanging out with” a 20-year-old man. Another older half sibling reported father was violent towards mother, including while she was pregnant with Samantha. Mother also told the department she had a history of intimate partner violence, including from father, and she was concerned father was using methamphetamine. Father at first denied any criminal history or drug
The department petitioned under
substance abuse. At the detention hearing, the juvenile court detained Samantha from mother and father. Paternal grandparents and a paternal aunt attended that hearing.
At the February 2022 jurisdiction/disposition hearing, the court sustained all the allegations in the amended petition and ordered reunification services for both parents. Mother, father, and three paternal relatives attended the hearing.
In March 2022, the department placed Samantha with her paternal grandmother. After nearly another year of reunification services, on February 28, 2023, the court adopted the department‘s recommendation and terminated father‘s parental rights. Father appealed.
II. ANALYSIS
Father argues the department failed to conduct a sufficient initial inquiry into Samantha‘s Indian heritage because it did not include extended family members. The department argues its initial inquiry duty did not include asking extended family about Indian heritage because Samantha was initially removed by warrant. We agree with father.
A. Recent ICWA Initial Inquiry Caselaw
ICWA establishes minimum national standards “for the removal of Indian children from their families and the placement of such children in foster or adoptive homes which will reflect the unique values of Indian culture.” (
Indian child. (
The initial duty expands under subdivision (b) of section 224.2 when a child is removed from their home, because such removal increases the possibility of “involuntary out-of-home placement” of Indian children. (
2018, ch. 833, § 5.) The Judicial Council revised
Opinions from our division disagree on whether that rule of court correctly interprets the statute by requiring the department to inquire of extended family members in every case where a child is removed from home. In re Robert F. (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 492 (Robert F.), review granted July 26, 2023, S279743, held the statute requires the department‘s inquiry to include extended family members only when the child is taken into custody without a warrant. Robert F. reached that conclusion by following the concurring opinion in In re Adrian L. (2022) 86 Cal.App.5th 342, 357-358 (Adrian L.). Adrian L., in turn, reached that conclusion by limiting the phrase “placed
concurrence‘s view that “[a] department that takes a child into protective custody pursuant to a warrant does so under
Unlike these cases, Delila D., supra, 93 Cal.App.5th 953, found Robert F.‘s statutory interpretation “contrary to both the letter and spirit of Assembly Bill 3176.” (Delila D., at p. 962.) Delila D. reasoned that because
(2023) 96 Cal.App.5th 377; In re Jerry R. (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 388; In re V.C. (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 251; In re L.B. (2023) 98 Cal.App.5th 512.)
This conflict in authority is under review by our Supreme Court, with Ja.O. as the lead case. We find Delila D.‘s thoughtful discussion of the statutory language and legislative history persuasive and adopt its reasoning and conclusions.
We also conclude there are at least two other reasons for rejecting Robert F. beyond those discussed in Delila D. First, Robert F. misconstrues “protective custody” as exclusive of “temporary custody” in categorizing children removed by warrant as not in temporary custody before their detention hearing.
B. The Terms “Protective Custody” and “Temporary Custody” Refer to All Children in Pre-Detention Custody
“Temporary custody” is the term used in
detention hearing. Children removed by warrant under
Children can be placed in temporary custody two other ways. In some circumstances, a peace officer may take a minor into “temporary custody” without a warrant and contact the department to “assume custody” of the child. (
both under the statutes and in practice. The
The Robert F. line of cases from our court, however, prompts us to say more. Under that line of cases, “children in protective custody under
In dependency proceedings, children removed without a warrant are also described as being in “protective custody.” Indeed, article 7 of the
that authorize removals without warrants, the authority must inform the parents that the child “has been taken into protective custody.” (
Thus, as the term is used in
In this vein, though article 7 contains all its sections under the heading “temporary custody and detention,” it still refers to “protective custody” to include children in custody without a warrant. A medical examination is
Interpreting “protective custody” as a status exclusive of “temporary custody” also creates discord with other provisions. For example,
by Assembly Bill No. 3176 (Stats. 2018, ch. 833, § 19), obviously applies to all children in pre-detention custody, and it uses the term “temporary custody.” That subdivision requires quick contact of tribes where they may have exclusive jurisdiction over a removed child. It requires that “[i]f a county social worker takes or maintains an Indian child into temporary custody under subdivision (a), and . . . knows or has reason to believe,” the child is domiciled on a reservation, or is a ward of a tribal court, the department must “notify the tribe that the child was taken into temporary custody no later than the next working day” (
Yet another provision provides parental notification procedures for “custody pursuant to this article” that would not sensibly be read to exclude those brought into custody by warrant. (
report accounting for the circumstances causing the child to be taken into “temporary custody.” (
“Temporary custody” is also used outside article 7 in ways that would lead to absurd results if interpreted as exclusive of “protective custody.” For example, the dependency statutes regulate how a minor in “temporary custody” can be housed with adults. (
In addition, Department of Social Service (DSS) regulations indicate how the terms “temporary custody” and “protective custody” are applied in practice. Though revised extensively after Assembly Bill 3176 in 2018, those regulations use the term “temporary custody” for when a child has been involuntarily removed from parents. (See DSS Regs. 31-131.10; 31-135.12; 31-135.4; 31-136.31.) They contain no separate procedures for handling children removed by warrant and without a warrant. Nor do they contain any separate procedures for “protective custody.” All children awaiting their detention hearing are treated as in “temporary custody.” In fact, the regulations contain
only one use of the term “protective custody,” and it uses the term for all children in dependencies. A regulation states that when a social worker receives information that a child in “temporary custody” is in the exclusive jurisdiction of a tribe, the social worker is to notify the tribe. (DSS Reg. 31-136.31.) The regulations then require the agency to advise the tribe “that the child has been taken into protective custody.” (DSS Reg. 31-135.235, italics added.) That these regulations use “protective custody” for all children in temporary custody further confirms that they are not exclusive categories.
Moreover, in the statement of reasons issued in promulgating the rules, DSS referred to children as being in “temporary protective custody,” and said the regulation was amended to conform “to the 2018 amendments made to WIC sections 305.5 and 306.” (Initial Statement of Reasons for DSS Reg. 31-136.31.) The Legislature also used that combined term—“temporary protective custody“—when it enacted
In all, it is hard to imagine that when the Legislature enacted Assembly Bill 3176 in 2018 it could have had in mind a construction of the statute
protective custody warrant are not in “temporary custody” under
C. The Role of Federal Law
In our view, no deep look at federal law is needed to understand our Legislature‘s decision to require that departments inquire of a child‘s extended family as part of the initial inquiry into whether a child being removed from parents is Indian. Federal guidance recommends that states inquire of extended family in emergency proceedings, consistent with our Legislature‘s decision.
At the heart of the Adrian L. concurrence, however, is an erroneous claim that federal ICWA law counsels for inquiries into extended family only when a child is
removed without a warrant. Permeating the concurrence is a misunderstanding of how federal ICWA law applies to the removal of Indian children from their parents before a dependency petition is filed. The concurrence reasons that under federal law, only a warrantless removal of an Indian child constitutes an “emergency removal.” It then uses this purported federal distinction to support its view that
There is no room for any such distinction in federal law. Any pre-petition removal of an Indian child in a dependency case is an “emergency removal.”
Under ICWA, there are only two ways an Indian child can be removed from their parents and placed with another custodian: in a “child-custody proceeding” or in an “emergency proceeding.” (
1. Child-Custody Proceedings and Emergency Proceedings Under ICWA
In ICWA, Congress sought to protect Indian children and promote the “stability and security of Indian tribes and families” by establishing minimum standards “for the removal of Indian children from their families” and the placement of those children in homes that would reflect the values of Indian culture. (
ICWA defines a “child-custody proceeding” to include an action that could require the placement of an Indian child in a foster home or institution. (
In a California dependency case where an Indian child is removed from her parents before a petition is filed, it is impossible to comply with that notice requirement around the time of removal. A detention hearing on the removal is required soon after the child is taken from the parents, well before 10 days have passed. (See
warrant—and learns then that the child is Indian, there is not enough time to give 10 days’ notice to the child‘s tribe
But, of course, federal law does permit the pre-petition removal of an Indian child in a California dependency case. Congress wished to ensure states could act temporarily to protect Indian children when ICWA‘s child-custody case procedures cannot be met. “[N]othing in this [child-custody proceedings subchapter]” of ICWA should prevent state authorities from performing an “emergency removal” of an Indian child from the parents. (
of an emergency proceeding only if the child faces ‘imminent physical damage or harm.‘” (U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Guidelines for Implementing the Indian Child Welfare Act (Dec. 2016), C.2, p. 23 (BIA Guidelines) <https://www.bia.gov> [as of Feb. 21, 2024].) Accordingly, under California law, a court can detain an Indian child at a detention hearing only upon a showing that detention is necessary to prevent imminent physical damage or harm. (
Federal law, then, makes a “distinction between the requirements for emergency proceedings and other child-custody proceedings.” (Interior Dept. Rules, 81 Fed. Reg. at 38779; see
include any of the listed information should not result in denial of the petition if the child faces imminent physical damage or harm.“].)
The length of an emergency proceeding is limited by two things. First, it “immediately terminates” if there is no longer “imminent physical damage or harm to the child.” (
Second, federal regulations require “some kind of time limit on the length of an emergency proceeding,” so ICWA protections are not “evaded by use of long-term emergency proceedings.” (Interior Dept. Rules, 81 Fed. Reg. at 38817.) At that point, the state must make the ICWA showing necessary for a child-custody proceeding. (See
In short, all pre-petition removals of Indian children in dependency cases are emergency removals that fall squarely into this complex federal and state law scheme. There is no room for viewing removals by warrant as some other kind of proceeding.
2. Initial Inquiry Under Federal Law
Though the ICWA statute and its procedures about “child-custody proceedings” and “emergency proceedings” apply only if an Indian child is removed, there is one part of ICWA procedure that applies in any case where a child is being removed from his parents: the inquiry to determine whether the child is an Indian child.
The federal regulations “clarify the minimum Federal standards” governing implementation of the ICWA. (
The BIA Guidelines provide “examples of best practice” for states. (BIA Guidelines “Purpose of These Guidelines,” at p. 4.) The BIA Guidelines state it is “critically important” to inquire into whether the child is Indian as soon as possible, and it places the duty on state agencies as well as courts. (BIA Guidelines B.1, p. 11.)
Initial inquiry of extended family is mentioned in federal law only in the BIA guidance on emergency proceedings and only once. In interpreting the regulation that lays out the standards for emergency proceedings (
3. The Adrian L. Concurrence‘s Error Relating to Emergency Removal
The Adrian L. concurrence fails to understand that all California pre-petition removals of Indian children are emergency removals under ICWA. The Adrian L. concurrence argues that under “federal ICWA law . . . a removal under
But the distinction the concurrence purports to rely on does not exist in the federal statutes, regulations, or guidance. As described above, federal law provides exactly two authorized ways to remove an Indian child from parents, either (1) through an Indian “child-custody proceeding” while meeting the full standards in ICWA, including 10 days’ notice to the tribe and expert testimony per
If a child is identified as Indian, any way that the child is removed pre-petition in a California dependency case must satisfy the emergency
There is no room in the federal scheme for the Adrian L. concurrence‘s interpretation of the removal of an Indian child by warrant as being neither a “child-custody proceeding” nor an “emergency proceeding.”
The Adrian L. concurrence‘s primary reason for reading federal law the way it does is that a removal by warrant “under
This reasoning is precisely backwards. Under federal law, in both circumstances (warrant or not) the pre-petition removal of an Indian child must satisfy the federal emergency removal standard. In either situation (warrant or not), the agency may (or may not) be able to show at the detention hearing that the standard is met.
It is true that the
The Adrian L. concurrence also observes that the BIA guidance characterizes emergency removals as “‘without court authorization‘” (Adrian L., supra, 86 Cal.App.5th at pp. 362-363), yet a warrant is court authorization. The BIA‘s description of emergency removals as lacking court authorization is no more than a reflection of the state procedures the BIA focused on in 2016 (before pre-petition removals by warrant were authorized in California), as removal by warrant is nowhere mentioned in the ICWA regulations or BIA guidance. (See Interior Dept. Rules, 81 Fed. Reg. at 38794 [citing § 305, a warrantless removal provision, in fashioning the federal regulations].) For an emergency proceeding removing an Indian child, a court needs to make several findings, including the “imminent physical damage or harm” finding and others (
In sum, the Adrian L. concurrence misinterprets the BIA Guidelines to suggest a distinction between removals by warrant and removals without a warrant. Federally, inquiring of extended family is a recommended practice for identifying Indian children in “emergency situations,” appearing only in a BIA Guideline interpreting the regulation about emergency proceedings,
Finally, it may be that the source of our Legislature‘s decision to impose an “extended family” inquiry in
A few months after the report, Assembly Bill 3176 was introduced in the Assembly Human Services Committee. (Hearing before Assem. Human Services Com. introducing Assem. Bill 3176 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) Apr. 18, 2018, 2:30:00-2:38:00 <https://www.assembly.ca.gov/media/assembly-human-services-committee-20180410> [as of Feb. 21, 2024]; see In re S.S. (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 694, 699 (S.S.) [“The 2018 amendment originated in a 2017 report by the California ICWA Compliance Task Force.“]). Delia Sharpe, executive director of the bill‘s sponsor, the California Tribal Families Coalition, sat with the author and testified that her organization was “a successor organization to the California ICWA Compliance Task Force.” (Hearing before Assem. Human Services Com. introducing Assem. Bill
4. The Department‘s Error Is Not Harmless
We conclude that the department did not satisfy its duty of inquiry, and that the error was not harmless.
There is no question the department failed to ask certain readily available extended family members about the Samantha‘s potential Indian heritage. Many of Samantha‘s paternal relatives were heavily involved in her dependency and thus well known to the department. The paternal grandparents attended the detention hearing and Samantha was placed with them for a time. Three paternal relatives—two aunts and an uncle—appeared for the jurisdiction and disposition hearing, and one of those aunts also appeared for the detention hearing. Later, the department placed Samantha with a paternal aunt, who became her prospective adoptive parent. Nevertheless, there is no evidence of the department asking these relatives whether Samantha may be an Indian child. Nor did the department ask any maternal relatives other than mother herself.
Under these circumstances, the ICWA error was prejudicial. When an appeal concerns “the agency‘s duty of initial inquiry, only state law is involved. Where a violation is of only state law, we may not reverse unless we find that the error was prejudicial.” (Benjamin M., supra, 70 Cal.App.5th at p. 742, italics omitted.) There is a split of authority among the Courts of Appeal regarding the standard for evaluating whether an ICWA inquiry error was prejudicial. (See In re K.H. (2022) 84 Cal.App.5th 566, 611-618 [summarizing the various approaches].) Our Supreme Court has granted review on the issue in In re Dezi C. (2022) 79 Cal.App.5th 769, review granted September 21, 2022, S275578.
Accordingly, we must remand with instructions for the court and the department to complete the ICWA inquiry.
5. The Dissent
The dissent‘s view is that our Legislature intended different ICWA initial inquiry duties for children removed from their parents with a warrant and those removed without one. This means that if a child is removed without a warrant, the Department will, for the rest of the dependency, have an inquiry duty to ask extended family members whether the child is Indian. But if on the same day a different child is removed by warrant, the Department will have no such initial inquiry duty.
By contrast, our view is that the Legislature intended every child removed from their parents in a dependency to be subject to the same initial inquiry; whether the child is removed by warrant has no connection to the inquiry required. This is not “disparate treatment” of children. (Dis. & conc. opn. of Fields, J., post, at p. 7 (Dis).) Quite the opposite. Moreover, we believe our view aligns with federal ICWA‘s standards, as ICWA requirements for the removal of an Indian child are unaffected by whether a warrant is used. Our view also aligns with
Before legislation authorizing pre-petition warrants in
The dissent disagrees with section II.B of this opinion, claiming it “fails to show . . . examples demonstrating that ‘temporary custody’ can sometimes refer to custody gained by virtue of a warrant.” (Dis., post, at p. 6.) However, as that portion of the opinion explains, the Legislature used the term “temporary custody” to describe children taken into protective custody by warrant. For instance,
The dissent disagrees with the way we interpret “the conditional language of
The dissent posits that “longstanding principles of law” mean the conditional language “if A, then B” must be interpreted to mean “if and only if A, then B.” That is, the dissent takes the position that conditional statements like the one found in
But this is reading into the statute a logical operator that does not appear there. “If-then” statements are not equivalent to “if and only if-then” statements. Consider a supermarket chain‘s rule that “if a customer purchases liquor at the checkout counter, the clerk has a duty to inquire as to his or her age.” Consider further that at a particular market clerks sometimes bring internet orders to customers in the parking lot. Does the conditional language preclude the market from interpreting the supermarket chain‘s rule to mean that the clerk also has a duty to check the age of liquor purchasers receiving their groceries in the parking lot? Of course not, as the context makes clear. The obvious concern of a supermarket is the age of the liquor purchaser, not whether that purchase happens to be at the checkout counter. Interpreting the rule as authorizing age-checks “only if” a purchase is at the checkout counter would undermine the purpose of the rule—to make sure underage people cannot buy liquor.
In the same way, ICWA and its federal and state laws and regulations are concerned with what happens when Indian children are removed from their parents, not whether the removal happens to be performed by warrant.
D. Section 388 Petition
1. Additional Background
Before the jurisdiction/disposition hearing, father told the department he had a long history of methamphetamine abuse and had started using again in 2019. He at first hid the use from mother, but the two of them eventually used together until mother became pregnant with Samantha. Father said he briefly stopped using after Samantha was born, but that he and mother started using together again, up through one week before the children were detained.
In December 2021, both parents took a hair follicle drug test and tested positive for methamphetamine. Father also tested positive for amphetamine. Later that month, father tested positive for only marijuana.
In the months following the jurisdiction/disposition hearing father reported he was homeless. During that time, mother was living with maternal grandmother. As of May 31, 2022, father had only attended four of 16 domestic violence classes and his enrollment was terminated for excessive absences. Father had not enrolled in individual counseling and stopped attending his substance abuse program. His substance abuse program enrollment was terminated, though the counselor reported father was testing clean and participated when there. The department could not confirm whether father was enrolled in parenting classes. Father was, however, mostly consistent in his visitation, both in person and remotely.
Before the six-month review hearing, the department recommended terminating father‘s reunification services. The court continued the hearing to allow father to contest that recommendation.
In September 2022, the court held the continued six-month status review hearing, where it terminated reunification services as to Samantha for both parents. The court ordered the department to refer father for a hair follicle drug test “forthwith.”
On January 10, 2023, father requested the department financially help him obtain more services. The same day, he filed a
Judge Susanne Cho continued the
Despite having been ordered to refer father for a hair follicle test “forthwith,” the department did not attempt to contact father for over a month. A social worker tried calling father on February 16 to learn information relating to the
On February 23, five days before the
Both the evidentiary hearing on the
After tentatively conveying willingness to grant the continuance, the court reversed course, citing In re B.C. (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 129 for the proposition that she had discretion to deny any oral request for a continuance for lack of showing of good cause. It agreed with minor‘s counsel that it did not believe father could meet his burden under
Father then requested to testify to the changed circumstances under oath. The court denied this request as well: “[t]he problem with that . . . is because your request for a continuance was not noticed to all parties, that the [d]epartment doesn‘t have the social worker or any of the records available to contest father‘s statement [or] adequately prepare for cross-examination.” The court also noted that father could have obtained independent drug testing of his own to prove that he was clean and sober and did not, despite having the burden under
The court proceeded immediately to the
2. Analysis
Under
For example, in Lesly G. parents petitioned under
In that case the reviewing court interpreted the trial court‘s ambiguous ruling as a
finding that the petition satisfied the parents’ burden of making a prima facie showing, so
the parents were entitled to an evidentiary hearing. (Lesly G., supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at
p. 913.) Further, the reviewing court held the juvenile court had erred by failing to hold
an evidentiary hearing, even though one had been calendared. It noted that the juvenile
court “neither took testimony nor received documentary evidence, and it denied the
petition without affording counsel an opportunity to argue the merits of the petition,”
before concluding that “[i]n short, it provided no hearing whatsoever.” (Id. at p. 915.)
Thus, the juvenile court‘s procedures did not “comport[] with due process or with the
statutory mandate of
This case is similar to Lesly G. If anything, the case for reversal and remand is
stronger here than in Lesly G. First, the court‘s initial order on the
In any event, the department argues, the second judge did not have to hold an evidentiary hearing because she summarily denied the petition herself, overriding the previous judge‘s ruling. This argument is unavailing. Though courts usually have the power to correct their own prejudgment errors or reconsider interim rulings, “if the reconsideration is accomplished by a different judge . . . the general rule is just the opposite: the power of one judge to vacate an order made by another judge is limited.” (In re Alberto (2002) 102 Cal.App.4th 421, 427 (Alberto).) “This is because the state Constitution, article VI, section 4 vests jurisdiction in the court, “. . . and not in any particular judge or department . . . ; and . . . whether sitting separately or together, the judges hold but one and the same court.” ” ” (Ford v. Superior Court (1986) 188 Cal.App.3d 737, 741.) In short, a superior court “though comprised of a number of judges, is a single court and one member of that court cannot sit in review on the actions of another member of that same court.” (People v. Woodard (1982) 131 Cal.App.3d 107, 111.) “If the rule were otherwise, it would be only a matter of days until we would have a rule of man rather than a rule of law.” (People v. Scofield (1967) 249 Cal.App.2d 727, 734.) This rule applies in both civil and criminal contexts, and even applies when the second judge is seeking to correct a perceived or actual error in the first order. (Alberto, at p. 427 [“For one superior court judge, no matter how well intended, even if correct as a matter of law, to nullify a duly made, erroneous ruling of another superior court judge places the second judge in the role of a one-judge appellate court.“].) Accordingly, once the first judge found father stated a prima facie case and ordered an evidentiary hearing, the second judge did not have the power to contradict that order and summarily deny the petition herself.
We therefore conclude the second judge‘s decision to summarily deny father‘s
petition, or otherwise fail to hold an evidentiary hearing, did not comport with due
process. “[B]ecause we reverse the order denying appellant‘s petition for failure to
comport with due process, we must also reverse the order under
III. DISPOSITION
We reverse the order terminating father‘s parental rights and vacate the court‘s
finding that ICWA does not apply. We remand the matter to the juvenile court with
directions to afford father an evidentiary hearing on his
We also direct the court and the department to comply with the inquiry provisions
of ICWA and of
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
RAPHAEL J.
I concur:
McKINSTER Acting P. J.
[In re Samantha F., E080888]
FIELDS J., Concurring and Dissenting.
I fully concur in the majority‘s decision in this case except its determination adopting the reasoning and holding of this court‘s decision in In re Delila D. (2023) 93 Cal.App.5th 953, review granted September 27, 2023, S281447 (Delila D.), regarding the scope of the ICWA inquiry required in this case. I continue to agree with and follow this court‘s decisions on the ICWA inquiry question in In re Robert F. (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 492, review granted July 26, 2023, S279743 (Robert F.), In re Ja.O. (2023) 91 Cal.App.5th 672, review granted July 26, 2023, S280572 (Ja.O.), and In re Andres R. (2023) 94 Cal.App.5th 828, review granted November 15, 2023, S282054 (Andres R.).
Thus, while I concur with that portion of the majority opinion holding that “the juvenile court erred by refusing to allow father to testify or present evidence in support of his petition for reinstatement of reunification services” and remanding “for an evidentiary hearing on father‘s petition” (Maj. Opn., p. 2, fn. 2), I respectfully dissent to that portion of the majority opinion reversing the juvenile court‘s determination that adequate ICWA inquiry occurred in this case. I also briefly address the majority opinion‘s explanation of the scope of the terms “protective custody” and “temporary custody” and its view of the “application of federal law to the ICWA inquiry.” (Maj. Opn., p.2.)
The ongoing dispute regarding the appropriate scope of initial inquiry under
ICWA arises from the different interpretations by various courts of
This court‘s decision in Robert F. held that this expanded duty of inquiry applies
“only when a child is placed in temporary custody under
Delila D. came to that decision, in part, by concluding that ”
Delila D. also emphasized that ”
I am particularly persuaded by Andres R.‘s examination of Delila D.‘s view on the
conditional language of
I respectfully believe that this view, espoused by Delila D., is inconsistent with
longstanding principles of law. When a law requiring that something be done is
conditional upon some other act or determination occurring first, the required act comes
into play only if the condition is met. (See In re Zachary G. (1999) 77 Cal.App.4th 799,
806-807) [“The conditional language of
Similarly, here, the conditional language of
According to the majority opinion, “there are at least two other reasons for
rejecting Robert F. beyond those discussed in Delila D.” (Maj. Opn., p. 8.) First, the
majority opinion concludes that ”Robert F. construes the terms ‘temporary custody’ and
‘protective custody’ in a manner inconsistent with their uses in the dependency statutes.”
(Maj. Opn., p.8.) Second, the majority opinion concludes that Robert F.‘s view that
federal ICWA law supports its determination regarding the scope of inquiry under
Temporary Custody and Protective Custody Distinctions. The majority opinion
finds “unconvincing” the distinction between “temporary custody” and “protective
custody” made by Robert F. and its progeny, which conclude that ”
The majority points out, for example, that “when an authority ‘takes into
temporary custody’ a minor under the sections (
Finally, I respectfully disagree with the majority‘s view, consistent with Delila D.,
that children taken into protective custody pursuant to a warrant and later transferred to a
social worker are placed in temporary custody under
Application of Federal ICWA law and Guidelines. The majority opinion criticizes the view of federal law set in various decisions of this court and as set forth in the concurring opinion in In re Adrian L. (2022) 86 Cal.App.5th 342 (Adrian L.). (Maj. Opn., p. 24, fn.10.) I continue to agree with and follow this court‘s view on the application of federal law to the initial ICWA inquiry as set forth in Robert F., Ja.O., and Andres R.
According to the majority opinion, “[f]ederal guidance recommends that states inquire of extended family in emergency proceedings, consistent with our Legislature‘s decision.” (Maj. Opn., p.15.) I agree. In my view, however, the views expressed in Robert F., Ja.O., and Andres R. are consistent with the federal guidelines when the removals are without a warrant.
In discussing the federal law and guidelines on the subject, the majority opinion
notes that, “[i]nitial inquiry of extended family is mentioned in federal law only in the
BIA guidance on emergency proceedings and only once.” (Maj Opn., p. 22.) The
majority opinion refers to section C.7 of the BIA Guidelines, which recommend “that the
State agency ask the family and extended family whether the child” is or may be an
Indian child “as part of the emergency removal and placement process. (BIA Guidelines
C.7, p. 28, italics added.)” (Maj. Opn., p. 22.) The majority then says, “[t]he BIA‘s
description of emergency removals as lacking court authorization [without a warrant] is
no more than a reflection of the state procedures the BIA focused on in 2016 (before pre-
petition removals by warrant were authorized in California), as removal by warrant is
nowhere mentioned in the ICWA regulations or BIA guidance. (See Interior Dept. Rules,
81 Fed. Reg. at 38794 [citing
The BIA Guidelines—and
FIELDS J.
