Opinion
On May 18, 1971, Referee Benjamin Louie conducted a hearing on a petition filed by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services (the Department) under Welfare and Institutions Code section 600, subdivision (a), 1 to adjudge Vicki Lee R., the child of Lois R., a dependent child of the court. 2 No member of the Department or attorney representing the Department was present in court, but a Los Angeles County deputy probation officer was there. Lois R. was present with her attorney. The first witness in support of the petition, Phillip H. Perkins, was called to the stand. The record does not indicate by whom. Presumably it was by the probation officer since the record reveals it was she who called the Department’s second witness. After Mr. Perkins was sworn and before any questioning began, counsel for Lois R. objected to the referee’s asking the questions and structuring the case for the Department. The timing of this move suggests that there was an existing practice, of which counsel was aware, among referees of taking over this aspect of juvenile court hearings. Referee Louie overruled the objection and then asked the probation officer if she would like him to ask the questions. She replied affirmatively. Referee Louie interrogated Mr. Perkins, and, after cross-examination by counsel for Lois R., conducted a brief redirect examination. He also questioned a second witness *898 called by the probation officer in support of the petition. 3 Referee Louie conducted the cross-examination of Lois R.’s witnesses. Throughout the proceeding he made objections to questions asked and ruled on objections and motions made by Lois R.’s counsel. After the presentation of evidence, Referee Louie found the petition true, declared Vicki Lee R. to be a dependent child under section 600, subdivision (a), and set the date for a disposition hearing. 4 Lois R. (now to be designated petitioner) has petitioned this court for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondent juvenile court from taking any further action, including the conducting of a disposition hearing. 5
By examining the Department’s witnesses, cross-examining those of petitioner, and making objections to testimony of petitioner’s witnesses, Referee Louie virtually presented the Department’s case and countered petitioner’s case. Although some formality and use of adversary procedures is expected where the proceedings are, as here, contested, 6 Referee Louie’s course of action apparently is sanctioned by the Welfare and Institutions Code, which provides that the court 7 is to control the proceedings during the hearing 8 and that the role of the probation officer, who is to be present in court, is to furnish the juvenile court such information and assistance as it may require. 9 The duties of the probation officer in section 600 cases have *899 been delegated to the Department pursuant to section 576.5 by a November 12, 1968, minute order of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. (Minutes, vol. 914, pp. 431-434 at p. 434, Syn. 107.) We need not decide whether, in view of this delegation, the probation officer was authorized to act as the representative of the county in these proceedings.
However, if the type of conduct indulged in by Referee Louie is authorized by statute, we find that it nevertheless violates a parent’s rights to due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
The procedure employed here was condemned in a criminal law context in
Ruiz
v.
Delgado,
“Under the procedure in the Puerto Rico District Court the judge must alternate roles in rapid succession, or even assume both at once. Thus, when interrogating a witness he is examining for the people, but when listening to the answer to the question he has propounded, he is weighing it as judge, and at the same time considering what question, as prosecutor, to ask next. Correspondingly, when he listens to the answer to a question put by the defense, he must, as judge, impartially evaluate the answer, but, simultaneously, as prosecutor he must prepare the next question for cross-examination. The mental attitudes of the judge and prosecutor are at considerable variance. To keep these two personalities entirely distinct seems an almost impossible burden for even the most dedicated and fair-minded of men.” (P. 720.)
*900
The
Ruiz
court found support in
In re Murchison,
Ruiz
and
Murchison,
of course, involved due process in criminal trials, whereas dependency proceedings are civil and have been conducted without strict adherence to all the formalities of a criminal trial.
(In re Jones,
The United States Supreme Court’s declaration that “the admonition to function in a ‘parental’ relationship is not an invitation to procedural arbitrariness”
(Kent
v.
United States,
In most dependency matters the focus is against the parent and the prospect faced is the drastic result of loss of his child. Although legal scholars may deemphasize the adversary nature of dependency proceedings and characterize the removal of the child from parental custody as non-punitive action in the best interests of the child, most parents would view the loss of custody as dire punishment. As indicated, the section 600 petition is in a sense brought against the parents to deprive them of a valued right. This point was made in
In re Raya,
The parental right to have children and to the custody of those children is included among the liberties protected by the due process clause. “The concept of personal liberties and fundamental human rights entitled to protection against overbroad intrusion or regulation by government is not limited to those expressly mentioned in either the Bill of Rights or elsewhere in the Constitution, but instead extends to basic values ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty’ [citation] and to ‘the basic civil rights of man.’ [Citation.] Among such basic liberties and rights not explicitly listed in the Constitution are the right ‘to marry, establish a home and bring up children’ [citation]; the right to educate one’s children as one chooses [cita
*902
lions]; . . . and the right to privacy and to be let alone by the government in ‘the private realm of family life.’ [Citations.]”
(City of Carmel-By-The-Sea
v.
Young,
Petitioner had a right to the custody of her child of which she could not be deprived without an essential ingredient of due process, to wit, a fair hearing. (See
In re Gault, supra,
“[I]t is not merely of some importance but is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done.” (Hewart, Lord,
Rex
v.
Sussex Justices
(1924) 1 K.B. 256, 259. See
In re Gault, supra,
at p. 26 [
We are not suggesting that the juvenile court will not have the prerogative properly granted to trial judges of questioning witnesses to clarify pertinent matters or even of calling some witnesses. (See Evid. Code, § 775; People
v. Rigney,
If the probation and social services departments feel that the existing abilities of their personnel are such that they will be at a disadvantage when faced with legal counsel representing a parent or child in juvenile proceedings, they would be well advised to train staff members in hearing techniques, or to make arrangements to have counsel. Perhaps the Legislature should consider the advisability of creating a staff of attorneys to assist in the presentation of such matters so as to insure the complete impartiality of the juvenile court and referee both actually and in appearance.
Referee Louie was named as a party respondent by the petition. However, where the writ seeks to prohibit action by a tribunal, the respondent is the tribunal as such, not the judge or referee as a person. Accordingly, we have omitted his name from the title on this opinion and the petition as to him, is dismissed.
(Lawson
v.
Superior Court,
We grant the peremptory writ restraining respondent from taking further proceedings in the absence of a jurisdictional hearing conducted in accordance with this opinion.
Kaus, P. J., and Aiso, J., concurred.
Notes
Section 600 provides in part as follows: “Any person under the age of 21 years who comes within any of the following descriptions is within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court which may adjudge such person to be a dependent child of the court: (a) Who is in need of proper and effective parental care or control and has no parent and guardian, or has no parent or guardian willing to exercise or capable of exercising such care or control, or has no parent or guardian actually exercising such care or control.”
Hereinafter, all statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
The petition alleged that the “[m]inor has no parent or guardian actually exercising proper and effective parental care and control, and is in need of such care and control, in that: minor resides in the home of her mother, and since the school year, beginning September 14, 1970, minor has been absent 75 of 124 schools days without legal cause.”
Both witnesses were school officials who testified as custodians of school records relating to Vicki Lee R.’s absences from school.
Section 702 provides for a bifurcated hearing in section 600 proceedings. (Compare
In re Biggs,
Respondent and real parties in interest contend that prohibition is an improper remedy because there was an adequate remedy by appeal. However, the absence of another proper remedy was conclusively determined by this court when we granted an alternative writ.
(Musicians Union, Local No. 6
v.
Superior Court,
Section 680, quoted in footnote 8.
The referee is granted “the same powers as a judge of the juvenile court” in the hearing of cases by section 554.
Section 680 provides as follows: “The judge of the juvenile court shall control all proceedings during the hearings with a view to the expeditious and effective ascertainment of the jurisdictional facts and the ascertainment of all information relative to the present condition and future welfare of the person upon whose behalf the petition is brought. Except where there' is a contested issue of fact or law, the proceedings shall be conducted in an informal nonadversary atmosphere with a view to obtaining the maximum cooperation of the minor upon whose behalf the petition is brought and all persons interested in his welfare with such provisions as the court may make for the disposition and care of such minor.”
Section 581 provides in part as follows (1971 Supp.): “Except where waived by the probation officer, judge or referee and the minor, the probation officer shall be *899 present in court to represent the interests of each person who is the subject of a petition to declare such person to be a ward or dependent child upon all hearings or rehearings of his case, and shall furnish to the court such information and assistance as the court may require. If so ordered, he shall take charge of such person before and after any hearing or rehearing.”
The court also found support in
Wong Yang Sung
v.
McGrath,
339 U.S, 33 [
“Respondent’s attempt to equate the District Court practice with the right of questioning afforded a . . . trial judge falls far short of the mark. The . . . judge replaces neither the prosecutor nor counsel for the defense, but at most, supplements both. . . . The Commonwealth’s judge’s intervention is not ancillary. It is fundamental, and continuous throughout the trial. Even more important, he is primarily motivated to speak only on one side.”
(Ruiz
v.
Delgado, supra,
