Opinion
By appeal and by petition for writ of habeas corpus, Noeline P. (the mother) challenges the order terminating her parental rights (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 366.26) to her daughter, Meranda P. 1 On her appeal and in her petition, the mother contends the termination order was wrongly entered because it was the inevitable product of a collection of erroneous orders—detention, jurisdiction, disposition and review—that preceded it. According to the mother, when the superior court made each of these prior orders she was either wrongly denied counsel or was incompetently represented by appointed counsel. We will conclude the mother is barred from raising, by her appeal, the propriety of the orders antedating the termination order and from collaterally attacking, by her petition for writ of habeas corpus, the termination order or the orders antecedent to it. We will therefore affirm the juvenile court’s termination order and deny the mother’s habeas corpus petition. We will also decline the mother’s request that we treat her appeal as a petition for extraordinary relief.
*1147 I.
In September 1994, the Stanislaus County Superior Court, sitting as the juvenile court, adjudged Meranda, bom June 5, 1994, a juvenile dependent under section 361. The mother was unrepresented by counsel at the detention hearing and thereafter throughout the first 12 months of the reunification period; she had informed the court at the initial detention hearing that she did not want counsel.
The mother was a teenager with a history of substance abuse. Both she and Meranda had tested positive for methamphetamine when Meranda was bom. At the September 1994 dispositional hearing, the court ordered Meranda removed from parental custody and approved a reunification plan for the child’s parents. The reunification plan focused on the mother’s substance abuse. It required her to: (1) complete a substance abuse evaluation and follow the recommendations of the counselor; (2) submit to drug testing on a random basis, as required by the substance abuse program; and (3) attend “NA/AA” meetings as required by the substance program. The plan also addressed the mother’s need to provide a clean, healthy, and safe home for Meranda; the mother was to cooperate with a teaching homemaker and to attend and successfully complete a parenting program.
Between the dispositional hearing and the six-month review hearing (§ 366.21, subd. (e)), the mother had not maintained contact with her social worker, kept the social worker apprised of her whereabouts, or begun any reunification program. In addition, the mother infrequently visited with Meranda, even though weekly visits were authorized. When she did visit with the child she refused to hold the baby or pay attention to her needs or well-being. The mother did not personally attend the review hearing.
At the six-month review hearing, the juvenile court found that (1) reasonable services had been offered and made available but neither parent had satisfied the reunification plan, and (2) return of Meranda to either of her parents would pose a substantial risk of detriment to the child. The juvenile court therefore continued Meranda’s out-of-home placement with her paternal grandparents and the provision of reunification services to the parents.
During the second six-month period, the mother gave birth to another child. While pregnant with this child, the mother appeared for an assessment appointment at the First Step Perinatal Substance Abuse Program. She attended some of the orientation groups offered by the Program, but appeared resistant to services. In April 1995, First Step dismissed the mother from the program because of her spotty attendance and apparent unwillingness to fully participate.
*1148 The mother did little else to comply with the reunification plan, and she made no serious effort to establish a parental bond with Meranda. No social worker had any contact with the mother until a few weeks before the 12-month review hearing. The parents’ whereabouts had been unknown for the majority of the preceding year. The parents were reported to have said that if Meranda could not be with them, then they would rather she be with the paternal grandparents.
On the day of the 12-month review hearing, the department of social services took Meranda’s infant brother into protective custody due to an apparent lack of proper medical care. The department also recommended that the court terminate services with respect to Meranda and refer her case for permanency planning. The mother attended the hearing and asked the court to extend her additional time for reunification and drug rehabilitation.
The court took the matter under submission pending the detention hearing in the dependency proceeding involving the mother’s newborn son. At the August 11, 1995, detention hearing in that second proceeding, the mother said she wanted a court-appointed lawyer. The court appointed counsel for the mother in both proceedings. It also ordered another six months of reunification services with respect to Meranda.
During the last six months of reunification, the mother reappeared at the First Step program and attended a few orientation groups between August and early October 1995. According to the program administrators, the mother seemed isolated, withdrawn and unmotivated. She did not participate in the services nor did she appear to have any insight into the consequences of her behavior. The program recommended to a social worker that the mother enter a residential treatment facility for teen substance abusers. The paternal grandmother obtained information for the mother about a nearby center which offered such services, but the mother was not interested in enrolling.
In January 1996, the mother was assessed for the Reality Program, a 28-day in-patient substance abuse program. She failed to qualify, however, because she denied she had a drug or alcohol problem. The mother did nothing else to further reunification. She saw Meranda on approximately 10 occasions after the last court hearing; with the exception of a Christmas visit, the mother usually stayed 10 minutes or less.
At the 18-month review hearing the mother testified she was willing to enter the Reality Program. She understood that before she could be reevaluated for Reality, she would have to attend a series of “NA” (Narcotics *1149 Anonymous) meetings. She said she wanted “a fighting chance” to regain custody of Meranda and appreciated the need to deal with her substance abuse. When asked why she waited so long to accept treatment, the mother blamed: (1) the Reality Program because it would not accept her until she turned 18; (2) her husband because he had not shared with her certain information her mother-in-law had obtained about the residential treatment program for teenagers; and (3) the teacher at First Step who, according to the mother, did not like her.
The court found: (1) the mother had received reasonable services but had made only minimal progress towards reunification; and (2) return of Meranda to parental custody would create a substantial risk of detriment to the child’s physical and emotional well-being. The court therefore terminated reunification services and set the matter for a section 366.26 hearing (.26 hearing) in May 1996. The court also gave the mother notice of her right to seek writ review of these orders.
At the .26 hearing, it was undisputed that Meranda was adoptable and that her paternal grandparents wished to adopt her. The mother testified she had occasionally visited with Meranda and expressed her opposition to the selection of a permanent plan of adoption. The mother’s counsel urged the court to select guardianship over adoption as the permanent plan, based on the mother’s recent efforts to rehabilitate herself.
The court terminated the mother’s parental rights to Meranda, finding by clear and convincing evidence that Meranda was adoptable and that the severance of the mother’s rights would not be detrimental to the child.
The mother filed a timely notice of appeal in June 1996. On November 1, 1996, the mother filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus.
II.
A.
Dependency appeals are governed by section 395, which provides in relevant part: “A judgment in a proceeding under Section 300 may be appealed from in the same manner as any final judgment, and any subsequent order may be appealed from as from an order after judgment; but no such order or judgment shall be stayed by the appeal, unless, pending the appeal, suitable provision is made for the maintenance, care, and custody of the person alleged or found to come within the provisions of Section 300, and unless the provision is approved by an order of the juvenile court. The *1150 appeal shall have precedence over all other cases in the court to which the appeal is taken.”
This statute makes the dispositional order in a dependency proceeding the appealable “judgment.”
(In re Eli F.
(1989)
B.
The mother contends the entire dependency proceeding for Meranda was defective from its inception. To support this complaint she makes two specific points: (1) she was deprived of her constitutional and statutory 2 rights to counsel at the detention hearing and thereafter until the 18-month review hearing, and (2) she was deprived of her constitutional and *1151 statutory 3 rights to the effective assistance of trial counsel at and following the 18-month review hearing. These contentions call into question the propriety of the orders regarding Meranda made at each of the hearings which preceded the .26 hearing. The mother did not file an appeal from any of these appealable orders, and the time within which to do so has long since passed. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 2.) Nor did the mother petition this court for extraordinary writ review of the order setting the .26 hearing entered at conclusion of the 18-month review hearing. (See § 366.26, subd. (/).)
Nevertheless, the mother maintains we are required to address her claims on their merits. She points out what she believes are several valid arguments an appointed counsel could have made at the hearings where she was unrepresented. She also says her appointed counsel was incompetent because he did not question at the 18-month review hearing the sufficiency of the reunification services she received. According to the mother, had any of these arguments been advanced on her behalf one or more of the interim orders would have been in her favor and the termination order would never have been entered. She also asserts her failure to raise her representational claims by means of a timely appeal from the disposition order or from a subsequent interim order was itself the result of the lack or inadequacy of counsel. In the mother’s estimation, all “these deprivations and failures tainted the entire termination process” and render her claims about the absence and inadequacy of counsel cognizable on her appeal from the termination order.
C.
The principle—which for convenience we will identify as the “waiver rule”—that an appellate court in a dependency proceeding may not inquire into the merits of a prior final appealable order on an appeal from a later appealable order is sound. We decline to carve out an exception to it here even though the issues raised involve the important constitutional and statutory rights to counsel and to the effective assistance of counsel.
1.
Enforcing the waiver rule against the mother’s representational claims does not infringe her due process rights. Three elements must be assessed in order to determine “ ‘what due process requires’ for fundamental fairness, specifically, ‘the private interests at stake, the government’s interest, and the risk that the procedures used will lead to erroneous decisions.’ ”
*1152
(In re Sade C.
(1996)
The present case emphatically proves this thesis. A reversal based upon an error, whatever its nature, that occurred at the detention hearing would require the juvenile court on remand to literally commence the dependency anew, thereby adding at minimum another 14 months to the duration of the proceeding on top of the 20 or so months (excluding the time the case spends in this court) which have elapsed since the detention hearing. (See
Adoption of Alexander S.
(1988)
Moreover, the risk that a parent will be erroneously deprived of his or her rights if the waiver rule is applied is diminished by two factors. First, that a parent lacked counsel or had the services of incompetent counsel does not mean the parent was in fact harmed as a consequence. Neither the absence nor the blunder of appointed counsel alone entitles the parent to obtain the
*1153
appellate relief he or she seeks. With respect to a parent’s assertion of a violation of the statutory right to representation or the statutory right to adequate representation, the parent must also show “it is ‘reasonably probable ... a result more favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the error.’ ”
(In re Kristin H.
(1996)
*1154
Second, we recognize that “[a] parent who is unable to present an adequate defense from the outset may be seriously disadvantaged later.”
(In re Emilye
A. (1992)
In addition, there are “precise and demanding substantive and procedural requirements” which the petitioning agency must fulfill before it can propose termination. At the dispositional hearing, the agency must show by the enhanced standard of clear and convincing evidence that removal of the child is necessary. (§361, subd. (b).) At the interim review hearings, the agency has the burden of showing by a preponderance of evidence that the return of the child to the parent would be detrimental to the child and that reasonable reunification services have been provided. (§§ 366.21, subds. (e) & (f), 366.22, subd. (a).) Before reunification can be terminated, the agency must establish by a preponderance of evidence that it would be detrimental to return child to the parent. (§§ 366.21, subd. (f), 366.22, subd. (a).)
Also, independent judicial review of the case is mandated at least every six months during the reunification period and a myriad of positive findings are required with respect to every critical pre-permanency planning decision. (§§ 366.21, 366.22.) “The number and quality of the judicial findings that are necessary preconditions to termination convey very powerfully to the fact finder the subjective certainty about parental unfitness and detriment required before the court may even consider ending the relationship between natural parent and child.” (Cynthia D. v. Superior Court, supra, 5 Cal.4th at pp. 255-256.)
*1155 Last, the relevant statutes provide for early and complete notification to the parent of every stage of the proceedings during the entire course of the dependency. The agency must demonstrate its due diligence at the outset when a parent cannot be found. (§§311, subd. (a), 361.5, subd. (b)(1).) When a parent is located;
“The child dependency statutory scheme requires parents be notified of all proceedings involving the child. (§ 302, subd. (b).) When a social worker, police officer or probation officer takes a child into protective custody, that person must immediately inform the parent and provide a written statement which explains the parent’s procedural rights and the preliminary stages of the dependency investigation and hearing. (§ 307.4, subd. (a).)
“The parent must also be notified of the detention hearing and given a copy of the dependency petition ‘if the whereabouts of each parent. . . can be ascertained by due diligence . . . .’ (§311, subd. (a).) If it appears the parent cannot read, notice may be given orally. (§311, subd. (a).) The parent must be informed of the conditions under which the child will be released, the hearings which may be required, the right to counsel, the privilege against self-incrimination and appeal rights. (§ 307.4, subd. (a).) The parent must also be notified of each review hearing by mail or personal service. (§ 366.21.)” (In re Raymond R. (1994)26 Cal.App.4th 436 , 440 [31 Cal.Rptr.2d 551 ], italics added.)
Notification to the parent must also be given about the time and place of the .26 hearing and of the right to have counsel at such proceeding. (§ 366.23.)
By referring to these statutes we do not mean to trivialize or understate in the slightest the critical role in ensuring an accurate and just decision played by a capable appointed counsel for the parent. (See
In re Emilye A., supra, 9
Cal.App.4th at pp. 1709-1710.) We fully recognize that an error unfavorable to the interests of the parent during the course of a dependency may be “irremediable.”
(In re Sade C., supra,
2.
In addition to finding no due process violation, we believe there are other important reasons for enforcing the waiver rule against the mother’s
*1156
representational claims. First and foremost, as we explained above, disregarding the rule would subvert the predominant interests of the child and the state in finality and reasonable expedition. (See
In re Sade C., supra,
Next, authorizing parents to attack final appealable orders by means of an appeal from a subsequent appealable order would sabotage the apparent legislative intention to expedite dependency cases and subordinate, to the extent consistent with fundamental fairness, the parent’s right of appeal to the interests of the child and the state.
7
(See
In re Marilyn H.
(1993)
Finally, failing to apply the waiver rule would insert an element of illogic into the law and subvert the Legislature’s intent, evident in section 366.26,
*1157
subdivision
(I),
to restrict appeals challenging orders setting a .26 hearing. (Cf.
In re Arturo
A.,
supra,
D.
Our conclusion that the waiver rule should apply to the instant appeal is conceptually consistent with other cases which have held that claims relating to the right to, or the inadequacy of, parental counsel may be surrendered by inaction. Thus, courts have ruled that: (1) the statutory right to counsel (§ 317, fn. 2,
ante)
imposes no duty upon the juvenile court to appoint counsel for an indigent parent when that parent has not made any request for counsel
(In re Ebony W.
(1996)
In this case, the mother neither asked for counsel nor expressed any discontent with appointed counsel in the juvenile court; in fact, at the detention hearing she said she did not want a lawyer.
10
She then squandered four different opportunities to complain to this court about any representational problems she believed she had. She could have appealed from the disposition order, the six-month review order, and the twelve-month review order. (§ 395;
Steve J.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Even if she could not articulate a legal issue such as right to counsel or ineffective assistance, she obviously knew that she did not have custody of Meranda. If she felt the loss of custody was improper for whatever reason, she had ample opportunity to express her concerns. Nonetheless, she made not the slightest effort to inform the social worker or the juvenile court that she wanted counsel, was unhappy with counsel at or after the 18-month review hearing, or disputed or was unsatisfied with, and desired appellate review of, any order entered prior to the termination order. Instead, she chose to remain silent throughout the juvenile court proceedings.
E.
Neither of the cases relied upon by the mother,
In re Diana G.
(1992)
*1159
We regard
Diana G.
as a case where the court reached the merits of the argument concerning inadequate counsel simply for purposes of efficiency. There were other issues properly before the court on the appeal from the termination order. Also, when
Diana G.
was published in November 1992, the state Supreme Court had granted review in
In re Matthew C.
(Cal.App.) to decide if then section 366.26, subdivision (k), precluded, on appeal from a termination order, the review of issues decided when the juvenile court set the .26 hearing.
11
(See
In re Matthew C., supra,
Lassiter, relied upon in Diana G. and mentioned often by us in this opinion, had nothing to do with whether otherwise final appealable dependency orders may be challenged by way of an appeal from a termination order when the issues raised with respect to those final earlier orders entail claims of ineffective assistance or denial of counsel. Although Lassiter v. Department of Social Services, supra, 452 U.S. at pages 20-24 [101 S.Ct. at pages 2156-2158], concerned an appeal from an order terminating a mother’s rights, the sole issue decided by the Supreme Court was whether due process entitled an indigent mother to the assistance of counsel at the termination hearing. (Id. at pp. 20-24 [101 S.Ct. at pp. 2156-2158].)
In
Brittany S.,
the appellate court ruled that a parent’s failure to seek writ relief under former section 366.26, subdivision (k), from an order setting a .26 hearing did not preclude review, by an appeal from the subsequent termination order, of a finding, essential to the order setting the .26 hearing, that the parent received adequate reunification services.
(In re Brittany S., supra,
F.
All the reasons we have given persuade us not to put aside the waiver rule when the parent, on appeal from a termination order, raises representational
*1160
issues with respect to an earlier final appealable order. We therefore will not inquire into the propriety of the findings made or orders issued by the juvenile court at the detention, jurisdictional, dispositional, 6-month, 12-month and 18-month hearings, even though the mother may have been unrepresented or may have received inadequate legal assistance at the 18-month review hearing or thereafter. In the last analysis, at some point the interests of a parent, and therefore the correction of purported error which operates to the detriment of the parent, must give way to the interest of the child in a stable, secure, long-term, continuous home environment. Under California’s dependency statutes, this moment arrives when the juvenile court terminates reunification and sets a permanency planning hearing.
(In re Sade C., supra,
Because the mother’s appeal from the termination order does not present any issue concerning the validity of the juvenile court’s findings of adopt-ability and lack of detriment made at the .26 hearing, we will affirm the order terminating the mother’s parental rights.
III.
A.
Perhaps because she apprehends the impact of the waiver rule on her appeal, the mother collaterally attacks the termination order by means of her petition for writ of habeas corpus, which is supported by several declarations. In her petition she advances the same claims of lack of counsel and ineffective assistance of counsel that she raised in her briefs on her appeal from the termination order. Leaving nothing to chance, the mother also asks us to treat her appeal, if we find it defective, as a petition for writ of mandate
*1161
(see
In re Paul E.
(1995)
B.
We will not issue an order to show cause on the mother’s habeas corpus petition. First, the Legislature has expressly prohibited the collateral dispute of a termination order. Section 366.26, subdivision (i), reads in full: “Any order of the court permanently terminating parental rights under this section shall be conclusive and binding upon the minor person, upon the parent or parents and upon all other persons who have been served with citation by publication or otherwise as provided in this chapter. After making such an order, the court shall have no power to set aside, change, or modify it, but nothing in this section shall be construed to limit the right to appeal the order.” 12
This statute forbids alteration or revocation of an order terminating parental rights except by means of a direct appeal from the order. (See
In re Ronald V.
(1993)
Second, there is the rule of law, reaffirmed by the Supreme Court less than a decade ago, that “habeas corpus may not be used to collaterally attack a final nonmodifiable judgment in an adoption-related action where the trial court had jurisdiction to render the final judgment.”
(Adoption of Alexander S.,
supra, 44 Cal.3d at pp. 867-868.)
13
In Alexander S., supra,
*1162
The Supreme Court reversed and discredited the appellate court’s “creative use of habeas corpus.”
(Adoption of Alexander S., supra,
We find Alexander S. controlling here. The termination order is now a final, statutorily (§ 366.26, subd. (i)) nonmodifiable order, issued by a court with subject matter jurisdiction over the cause finding Meranda adoptable, terminating the mother’s rights and freeing the child for adoption by a third person. In our view, the order, and the .26 hearing from which it came, were “adoption-related.”
Another appellate court in this state has applied
Alexander S.
in a situation equivalent to the one now before us. In
In re Issac J., supra,
Third, the rationale which supports our holding that the waiver rule should be enforced on the mother’s appeal from the termination order applies equally to the mother’s habeas corpus petition. The now paramount interests of the child in a stable, secure, long-term, continuous home environment and the associated interest of the state in reasonable expedition and finality, which have overcome the parent’s interests in maintaining the family relationship, would be no less subject to subversion by a habeas petition than they would be by a direct appeal. In fact, an attack on a termination order by a habeas petition carries the potential for considerably greater damage to the interests of the child and the state because the time for filing of such a petition is not strictly constrained in the same manner as is the filing of an appeal.
C.
The mother makes a number of other arguments to support the writ relief she seeks. None are convincing.
The mother takes the position
Alexander S.
does not apply because it arose out of a parent’s voluntary relinquishment of the minor and not, as here, out of an involuntary deprivation of custody brought about at the instigation of the state. We do not see anything in
Alexander S.
which restricts its application to voluntary surrenders of dependent children or which intimates the Supreme Court rested its holding upon the particularities of the relinquishment statutes then in effect.
(Adoption of Alexander S., supra,
44 Cal.3d at pp. 866-868.) Instead, the court determined habeas corpus was not available in all situations “ ‘[wjhere a parent seeks custody of a child living with another.’ ”
15
(
The mother next contends the use of a habeas corpus petition to raise representational issues has been approved, citing
In re Kristin H., supra,
Failing also is the mother’s argument that overturning the termination order would be in Meranda’s best interest because the mother is now capable of providing adequate care for Meranda’s younger brother. This contention proves the worth of section 366.26, subdivision (i), and the rule of
Alexander S.\
to agree with the mother would authorize the upsetting of termination orders—and in some instances subsequent adoptions—weeks, months and perhaps even years after the fact. Neither the child nor the law can wait for a parent to decide, at leisure, when he or she will accept in full the responsibilities of parenthood.
(Cynthia D.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
We additionally do not agree with the mother, or with the opinion in
Mauro B.
v.
Superior Court
(1991)
The basis for the mother’s contention and Mauro's holding derives from the Supreme Court’s explanation in
Alexander S.
of the many procedural flaws it had found in the Court of Appeal opinion under review. As a part of this exposition the
Alexander S.
court said that in the absence of some special circumstances “ ‘constituting an excuse for failure to employ [the appellate] remedy,’ ” such as a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, “ ‘the writ will not lie where the claimed errors could have been, but were not, raised upon a timely appeal from a judgment.’ ”
(Adoption of Alexander S., supra,
The mother further maintains (1) the order terminating her rights is neither final nor unmodifiable because she filed a timely notice of appeal, and (2) all dependency orders, by reason of the provisions of section 388, are modifiable until an adoption actually occurs.
16
First, there is neither authority nor reason to allow a parent to file what is nothing more than a bogus appeal
*1166
from a termination order in order to preserve the right to present a habeas corpus petition challenging the order. Second, the availability of section 388 to a parent to secure a change in a dependency order is limited by section 366.26, subdivision (i), which prohibits modification of an order terminating parental rights except by a direct appeal.
(In re Ronald V., supra,
Last, the mother’s attempt to distinguish her situation from that of the parent in Alexander S. is ineffectual. She claims reunification would be the likely result in this case and not the “additional delay, uncertainty and potential harm to the prospective adoptee” of concern to the Supreme Court in Alexander S. However, the record provides no such assurance. Instead, the record reflects Meranda has had virtually no contact with the mother since the child was two months old and she does not know the mother as her birth mother. 17
Disposition
The order terminating the mother’s parental rights to Meranda is affirmed. The request to treat the appeal as a petition for extraordinary relief is denied. The petition for writ of habeas corpus is denied.
Vartabedian, J., and Buckley, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 12, 1997.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise stated.
Section 317 provides in relevant part:
“(a) When it appears to the court that a parent ... of the minor desires counsel but is presently financially unable to afford and cannot for that reason employ counsel, the court may appoint counsel as provided in this section.
“(b) When it appears to the court that a parent... of the minor is presently financially unable to afford and cannot for that reason employ counsel, and the minor has been placed in out-of-home care, or the petitioning agency is recommending that the minor be placed in out-of-home care, the court shall appoint counsel, unless the court finds that the parent. . . has made a knowing and intelligent waiver of counsel as provided in this section.
n
“(d) The counsel appointed by the court shall represent the parent, ... at the detention hearing and at all subsequent proceedings before the juvenile court. Counsel shall continue to represent the parent. . . unless relieved by the court upon the substitution of other counsel or for cause. The representation shall include representing the parent ... in termination proceedings and in those proceedings relating to the institution or setting aside of a legal guardianship.”
Section 317.5 provides in relevant part: “(a) All parties who are represented by counsel at dependency proceedings shall be entitled to competent counsel.”
The parent has a “liberty interest... in the care, custody, and management of’ his or her child.
(Santosky
v.
Kramer
(1982)
This can be a perplexing, sometimes insoluble, issue in a dependency. (See
In re Arturo
A.,
supra,
An indigent parent in a state-initiated dependency, which is civil in nature, has no general right under either the federal or the state Constitution to the assistance of appointed trial counsel at every stage of the proceeding.
(Lassiter
v.
Department of Social Services, supra,
452 U.S. at pp. 31-32 [
There is no constitutional right to an appeal; the state may therefore “restrict, change, withhold or even abolish” it
(In re Taya C.
(1991)
In pertinent part, section 366.26, subdivision (l), provides: “(1) An order by the court that a hearing pursuant to this section be held is not appealable at any time unless all of the following applies:
“(A) A petition for extraordinary writ review was filed in a timely manner.
“(B) The petition substantively addressed the specific issues to be challenged and supported that challenge by an adequate record.
“(C) The petition for extraordinary writ review was summarily denied or otherwise not decided on the merits.
“(2) Failure to file a petition for extraordinary writ review within the period specified by rule, to substantively address the specific issues challenged, or to support that challenge by an adequate record shall preclude subsequent review by appeal of the findings and orders made pursuant to this section.”
California Rules of Court, rule 39. IB, which implements section 366.26, subdivision
(l),
prescribes numerous, successive time limits for completing the steps involved in the writ process. The purpose of these constraints is to enable the reviewing court to expeditiously evaluate the propriety of the findings and orders made by the juvenile court in setting a .26 hearing before that hearing takes place.
(Karl S.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In re Laura H.
(1992)
In her second child’s case, the mother did request appointment of counsel.
Former section 366.26, subdivision (k), provided:
“An order by the court directing that a hearing pursuant to this section be held is not an appealable order, but may be the subject of review by extraordinary writ.”
Prior to 1994, this language appeared in subdivision (h) of section 366.26.
By contrast, habeas corpus has been found to be available to question a modifiable child custody order.
(In re Wren
(1957)
In
Ex parte Miller, supra,
The court in
Alexander S.
identified “six separate subcategories [of child custody cases] where habeas corpus has been allowed. First, it may be used to enforce an existing right to physical custody established by prior order.
(In re Richard M.
(1975)
Section 388 provides:
“Any parent or other person having an interest in a child who is a dependent child of the juvenile court or the child himself through a properly appointed guardian may, upon grounds of change of circumstance or new evidence, petition the court in the same action in which the child was found to be a dependent child of the juvenile court or in which a guardianship was ordered pursuant to Section 360 for a hearing to change, modify, or set aside any order of court previously made or to terminate the jurisdiction of the court. The petition shall be verified and, if made by a person other than the child, shall state the petitioner’s relationship to or interest in the child and shall set forth in concise language any change of circumstance or new evidence which are alleged to require such change of order or termination of jurisdiction.
“If it appears that the best interests of the child may be promoted by the proposed change of order or termination of jurisdiction, the court shall order that a hearing be held and shall give prior notice, or cause prior notice to be given, to such persons and by such means as prescribed by Section 386, and, in such instances as the means of giving notice is not prescribed by such sections, then by such means as the court prescribes.”
The mother also maintains the department has conceded in its briefing that habeas corpus relief is appropriate. We find no such concession, but even if one existed we would not accept it.
