In rе I.G., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. SHASTA COUNTY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. K.T., Defendant; I.G., Appellant.
No. C073603
Third Dist.
May 20, 2014.
226 Cal.App.4th 380
Donna Furth, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Appellant.
OPINION
NICHOLSON, Acting P. J.—Fourteen-year-old I.G. was detained from her mother‘s custody due to her mother‘s substance abuse and failure to supervise. I.G.‘s father was in prison for attempted murder and did not make any arrangements for the minor‘s care. I.G. proved to be a challenge for the juvenile court and Shasta County Health and Human Services Agency (Agency). She was defiant and uncooperative, used illegal drugs, refused to attend school, was a frequent runaway and threatened to run away from any group home in which she was placed. The juvenile court sustained the Agency‘s petition, declared I.G. a deрendent, found the parents had made no progress in overcoming the circumstances requiring out-of-home placement but, at the Agency‘s urging, returned I.G. to her mother‘s custody and terminated dependency jurisdiction.
I.G.‘s counsel, with the assent of her guardian ad litem, appealed on I.G.‘s behalf, contending the juvenile court erred in granting mother custody and terminating dependency because I.G. remained at risk and in neеd of supervision. We agree and reverse the juvenile court‘s orders returning the minor to her mother and terminating dependency jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND
I.G. was 14 years old when she came to the attention of the Agency in July 2012. She had just tested positive for THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the active ingredient in marijuana, after giving birth to a premature baby. The Agency filed a petition under
In October 2012, the Agency discovered that I.G.‘s mother was rarely home, and was using methamphetamine, abusing alcohol, and allowing drug
Mother moved out of the home and I.G.‘s maternal grandmother moved in to care for I.G.‘s siblings. I.G. told the social worker and her maternal grandmother that she could not live with her sister, O., and would refuse to follow rules, go to school or refrain from drugs if placed with the maternal grandmother. She said she wаnted to “live wherever and be a kid.” Finding I.G.‘s presence destabilized the home, the juvenile court ordered her detained from parental custody and placed in a level 12 group home until she stabilized. The court counseled her that she may benefit from a structured living environment which would allow her to stabilize and help her overcome her addiction to drugs. I.G. retorted to the court, “It‘s going to make me leave and make me mad.”
During her transport to the group home, I.G. jumped out of the vehicle and ran. She was later apprehended and placed with the maternal grandmother, despite the maternal grandmother indicating she was not willing to allow I.G. to live in the home. The juvenile court sustained the allegations in the
After several months in the maternal grandmother‘s home, I.G.‘s behavior improved and the Agency recommended the maternal grandmother serve as I.G.‘s guardian. A few weeks later, however, the recommendation was recanted due to referrals for general neglect and concerns regarding the mother staying in and using drugs in the garage. On one occasion, when police responded to a disturbance in the home, they discovered the maternal grandmother had nоt been home for two days. The police officer described I.G. as being aggressive and hitting people, acting erratically, and “being stupid.” Although the social worker suggested the officer charge I.G. with assault and transport her to juvenile hall, the officer decided to attempt to calm the situation instead. The following day, I.G. was argumentative and defiant to visiting case workers.
Four days later, the Agency filed an addendum stating: “Although the family dynamics are severely concerning . . . , all interventions have been unsuccessful. [I.G.] is highly defiant and the only placement resource available is an out of county group home. Even if [I.G.] was safely transported to such a facility, the likelihood of a runaway is great. The concern would then be an attractive young teen girl on the streets of an unfamiliar urban area, where her safety would be even at a greater risk than that of being in the care of her dysfunctional family. Based on the observed behavioral patterns of the mother, . . . coupled with [I.G.‘s] strong dislike for her mother, reunification services are unlikely to assist the family in being healthier or happier. It is likely that if dependency is dismissed, that the primary сaregiver will again be the maternal grandmother and the mother will continue her inconsistent and addictive behaviors.” The social worker indicated, however, that she was unable to locate the maternal grandmother. Nonetheless, the Agency‘s recommendation was that dependency be declared, custody given to the mother, and dependency dismissed.
...
The juvenile court declared I.G. to be a dеpendent child of the court. The court found neither parent had made any progress toward alleviating or mitigating the causes necessitating placement, specifically finding the mother continued to abuse illegal substances and failed to provide consistency or stability in parenting. The court further found that I.G. was a frequent runaway, that her use of illegal substances and oppositional, defiant, and assaultive behaviors made foster care unavailable to her, and that I.G. refused group home placement. After also finding that “mother . . . has agreed” that I.G. could live with the maternal grandmother, the court followed the Agency‘s recommendation, placed I.G. in the mother‘s legal and physical custody, and terminated dependency jurisdiction.
Subsequently, I.G.‘s reunification services and parental rights were terminated with rеspect to her baby, because she failed to (1) participate in services, (2) visit the baby, (3) eliminate the factors necessitating removal, and (4) maintain contact with the social worker or her attorneys.
DISCUSSION
The juvenile court has an equitable duty to protect the welfare of the children within its jurisdiction. (In re Christopher I. (2003) 106 Cal.App.4th 533, 557 [131 Cal.Rptr.2d 122].) By enacting
Here, the juvenile court detained I.G. and found continuance in the home would be contrary to her welfarе. Thereafter, the court concluded (1) allegations in the petition true, (2) I.G. fell within the juvenile court‘s jurisdiction as a child described by
“If a child is adjudged a dependent child of the court on the ground that the child is a person described by Section 300, the court may make any and all reasonable orders for the care, supervision, custody, conduct, maintenance, and support of the child, including medical treatment, subject to further order of the court.” (
It is a clear abuse of discretion to make findings that a minor is at risk in her home, yet return the minor home and terminate supervision and dependency. Furthermore, there are no statutory provisions authorizing such action.
When the juvеnile court finds there is or would be a substantial danger to the physical health, safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being of the minor if the minor were returned home, and there are no reasonable means to protect the minor without removal, removal is provided for by
Even if the juvenile court could find, at some point, that there was not a substantiаl danger to I.G.‘s physical health, safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being if she were returned home, the juvenile court, having found the minor to be a dependent child, would still be required to continue supervision and dependency until such time as continued supervision was no longer necessary for the minor‘s protection. (
We recognize that the Agency recommended, and the juvenile court implemented, this so-called “solution” because I.G. was threatening to run away from any placement other than placement with her maternal grandmother. But it is the juvenile court, not the dependent minor, that is charged with the statutory duty of making placement decisions in the minor‘s best interests. As I.G.‘s counsel argued, “drop[ping] the . . . system” and leaving the minor to manage her own protection and welfare is directly contrary to the оbligation of the court to protect children adjudged dependents.5
Unfortunately, this is not the first instance wherein a child protective agency and juvenile court, faced with an obstreperous child, essentially threw in the towel. Sacramento County was faced with similar circumstances in In re Natasha H. (1996) 46 Cal.App.4th 1151 [54 Cal.Rptr.2d 276] (Natasha H.). Natasha‘s father had died when she was 12 years old and she was living with her mother—a homeless heroin addict. (Natasha H., supra, at p. 1153.) Natasha was left to live with friends and, when one such friend was unable to care for her, the friend reported the situation to law enforcement. Natasha, who was having difficulty in school and with following rules, was declared a dependent child of the court. (Ibid.)
This court found the juvenile court in Natasha H. had exceeded its statutory authority in terminating Natasha‘s dependency status. (Natasha H., supra, 46 Cal.App.4th at p. 1153.) There, as here, it was clear the minor remained in need of continued supervision, as her parents were unwilling or unable to do so. (Id. at p. 1157.) As we have said, we recognize the challenge of helping an obstreperous child, but “[a]lthough the minor‘s mother may retain legal custody, from the record it is apparent the minor remains in need of supervision. . . . Obstinacy and defiance test the patience of adults charged with the tending to the needs of minor children. Under the trial court‘s reasoning the more obstinate the child the greater the justification for terminating jurisdiction. We disagree. As much as the minor might wish to be rid of court supervision, and as frustrating as her conduct might be to [the social services agency] and the court, her misbehavior and lack of cooperation do not justify termination of her dependency status absent extraordinary circumstances not present here that make it in her best interest to do so.”6 (46 Cal.App.4th at p. 1158, fn. omitted.)
Finally, we reject the Agency‘s attempt to distinguish I.G. from other minors, such as Natasha H., because she was also the minor-mother in a separate dependency case involving her premature baby. First, although a parent may choose to participate in proceedings, the cоurt does not take jurisdiction of, or have authority to directly control, a parent in a dependency
DISPOSITION
The juvenile court‘s orders returning the minor to her mother‘s custody and terminating the minor‘s status аs a dependent child are reversed, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings.
Hull, J., and Hoch, J., concurred.
