Opinion
Tоmmy E. appeals jurisdictional and dispositional orders declaring his two-year-old son Tommy E., Jr., a dependent child (Welf. & Inst. Code, 1 § 300, subd. (b)) and removing him from his home (§361, subd. (b)(1)).
The child was bom May 17, 1989, to the father and Loma M. When the parents separated in November 1990, the child remained with his father. On May 17, 1991, the father was arrested for abusing his live-in girlfriend and the child remained with the girlfriend. Released six days later, the father returned home to find the child would nоt eat, drink or get out of bed. On June 3, the father took the child to the hospital, accusing his girlfriend of giving the child drugs. A drug test on the child was negative. Dr. Pоnaman diagnosed the child as suffering “nonorganic failure to thrive.” On June 7, the juvenile court ordered the child detained. On August 2, after the parents submitted the matter on the social study, the court declared the child dependent and ordered the child detained in a foster hоme with discretion in the department of social services (Department) to place him with the mother upon approval of her new residence.
The father contends the jurisdictional and dispositional orders are not supported by the evidence.
I
The Department first contends the father waived his right to contest the jurisdictional findings on appeal, because he agreed to submit the *1237 jurisdictional determination on the information provided to the court in the social services report. (Cal. Rules of Court, 2 rule 1449(e).) The Department bases its position by equating a submission as described in that subdivision with the alternative plea of no contest and the admission permitted by that rule.
An admission that the allegations of a dependency petition are true effectively waives objectiоns to the technical sufficiency of the pleading.
(In re Rodger H.
(1991)
Although vigorously asserting its waiver argument in a preliminary motion to dismiss the aрpeal, in its responding brief and in oral argument at calendar, the Department failed to cite any of the abundant relevant decisional authority on this issue. Instead, it relied on case law and statutes which hold a party’s failure to object to evidentiary and рrocedural errors at trial effectively waives appeal of those issues. Its citations are accurate but inapрosite.
*1238 Although not presented in either its written motion to dismiss or appellate brief, the Department argued orally that its position аlso is supported by a plain reading of the court rules. That is, it argues rule 1449(e) sets out three permissible alternatives which would avoid entering a denial to the dependency petition and engaging in a contested hearing: admission, no contest or submission. The Depаrtment notes that rule 1449(f) states that upon either of these alternatives being elected the court shall make certain findings including “[t]he child is dеscribed under one or more specific subdivisions of section 300.” (Rule 1449(f)(8).) Further, it points out rule 1449(g) states: “After accepting an admission, plеa of no contest, or submission, the court shall proceed to disposition hearing under rules 1451 and 1455.” The Department asserts the nondisсretionary language in the cited subdivisions apply equally to submissions and to admissions, removing any jurisdictional factfinding responsibility from the court in both instances. However, this analysis not only would produce a result inconsistent with the historical treatment of submissions in criminal cases, it ignоres the significance of that part of rule 1449(e) which permits the parent to elect to “submit the jurisdictional determination to the сourt based on the information provided to the court, . . .” This language clearly distinguishes the effect of a submission from those admissions and no contest pleas which do not require the court to weigh the evidence submitted before determining jurisdiction.
Finally, our analysis comрorts with the representations provided by the juvenile court’s printed form which it had the father initial, sign and file as evidence of submission. This doсument, entitled “Statement Upon Submission of Report(s)—Dependency Petition” includes a pertinent printed paragraph initialed by the father as follows.
“2. I desire to have the court read the report(s) of the Social Worker (and any attachments thereto) аnd for the court to consider such report(s) (and attachments) as the only evidence in this matter. I understand that the court will not considеr any other evidence in deciding whether or not the Petition is true.”
In addition, in section 6 of that printed form states:
“I understand that I give up these trial rights if I allow the court to decide whether or not the Petition is true, solely on the basis of the Social Worker’s reports and any attachments thereto.” (Italics added.)
Moreover, the court’s admonishments at the time of the submission stated one of the potential consequences of the submission would be a true finding on the petition’s allegation.
*1239 Acсordingly, because we conclude the Department’s argument is incorrect on its general analysis of the pertinent law and on the facts underlying the submission in this specific case as defined by the court’s own printed form, we deny the motion to dismiss.
II, III *
Orders affirmed.
Kremer, P. J., and Froehlich, J., concurred.
