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Date: 08-12-2014

Case Style: In re A.R. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court

Case Number: B251957

Judge: Rubin

Court: California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Eight on appeal from the Superior Court, Los Angeles County

Plaintiff's Attorney: John F. Krattli, County Counsel, and Sarah Vesecky, Deputy County Counsel, for
Respondent.

Defendant's Attorney: Frank H. Free, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Appellant.

Description: Mother A.R. appeals from the juvenile court order that declared her two daughters
dependents of the court based on mother’s failure to provide for the children. We reject
mother’s contention that there was insufficient evidence to support that order and
therefore affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In September 2012 Ontario police pulled over a car driven by father J.R., who was
under the influence of both methamphetamine and alcohol. In addition to drugs and open
alcohol containers, the police found J.R.’s daughters – seven-year-old A.R. and five-yearold
C.R. – in the car. The two girls were not wearing seat belts. In October 2012 the Los
Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) filed a petition
with the juvenile court alleging that the minors were dependents of the court because
father had the children with him when he drove while intoxicated and because father’s
substance abuse prevented him from providing the girls with proper care. (Welf. & Inst.
Code, § 300, subd. (b).)1
The petition alleged that the whereabouts of mother A.R. were unknown2 and a
DCFS report noted that mother had been absent for more than two years. Mother was
located soon after in Reno, Nevada, where she was living with another man and
expecting another child. DCFS filed a first amended petition alleging that the minors
were at risk due to domestic violence in the home, mother’s history of drug use and
mental illness, and mother’s failure to provide for the children.
After the minors each accused father of sexual abuse, a second amended petition
was filed based on those claims. The mental illness and domestic violence allegations
were eliminated, and the case went to hearing as to mother solely on allegations related to
her drug use and failure to provide for the children.
1 All further section references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
2 In order to avoid confusion, we will refer to mother A.R. as mother and to
daughter A.R. by her initials.
3
Mother admitted to a long history of drug abuse, including methamphetamine,
cocaine, marijuana, LSD, and opiates. She and father got high together, but entered
sobriety programs and stayed clean for a few years before relapsing. Mother claimed that
father beat her often and she used make-up to conceal the resulting cuts and bruises. The
beatings got worse and on one occasion father struck mother while she was holding C.R.,
causing mother to drop the child. Father then began to kick mother and stomp her head.
She called the police but recanted when father accused her of beating him and the police
said they would take the children from both parents. Father stalked mother and
threatened to kill her, and mother said he “scares the hell out of me.”
Mother took the girls and left father in December 2009, but when he kept asking to
see the girls she agreed to drop them off for a visit at the home of father’s cousin. When
father kept the girls, mother called the police, who told her there was nothing they could
do absent a custody order that prohibited father from keeping the girls. Soon after, father
agreed to let mother see the girls if she paid him $150 per week. She did so briefly but
stopped because she could not afford it. The “girls were not being fed,” mother said, so
she took them out to eat and buy them clothes. In April 2010, however, father took off
with the girls and mother was unable to find him.
Mother said she did not ask the family law court to grant her custody of the
children because she did not know about that court. She admitted that she waited two
weeks before calling the police and that she provided nothing for the girls’ support after
father took off with them. She also admitted that she knew father had a significant
substance abuse history and left the minors in his care.
Mother admitted she was bipolar and had stopped taking her medication because
she was pregnant. She was willing to undergo a psychiatric evaluation and promised to
cooperate with mental health services. Mother also claimed she was now sober, was
participating in substance abuse counseling and consistently tested clean for drug use.
She and her fiancé both worked and she also planned to file for divorce from father.
The minors were in foster care, where they were happy and doing well. Both
children were angry at mother for abandoning them with father and refused to see her.
4
Because the minors exhibited anger and anxiety and feared returning to their parents,
mental health treatment was required before conjoint therapy with mother could be
considered.
The trial court sustained the sex abuse and drug-related allegations against father.
It dismissed the drug use allegation against mother because she was now sober, but
sustained the allegation that she failed to provide for the minors. The court found that
mother left the minors with father despite her knowledge of father’s drug use and then
made minimal efforts to regain custody. The trial court noted that this was not a case
where the “girls [were] being appropriately cared for by the father, no issues with respect
to drugs or alcohol.” At a later dispositional hearing the court removed the minors from
the parents’ custody, denied reunification services to father, approved monitored
visitation for mother, and ordered conjoint counseling between mother and the minors.
DISCUSSION
1. Mother’s Contentions
Under section 300, subdivision (b), the juvenile court may assume jurisdiction
when a child “has suffered, or there is a substantial risk that the child will suffer, serious
physical harm or illness, as a result of the failure or inability of his or her parent or
guardian to adequately supervise or protect the child, or the willful or negligent failure of
the child’s parent or guardian to adequately supervise or protect the child from the
conduct of the custodian with whom the child has been left, or by the willful or negligent
failure of the parent or guardian to provide the child with adequate food, clothing, shelter,
or medical treatment . . . .”
The petition alleged that mother had “failed to provide the children with the basic
necessities of life, including but not limited to food, shelter, clothing, and medical care,
thereby endangering the children’s physical and emotional health and safety and places
the children at risk of physical and/or emotional harm.” Mother contends there was no
evidence that father failed to provide the children with adequate food, shelter, clothing, or
5
medical care. As a result, she contends there was insufficient evidence that her
abandonment of the children either caused them to suffer such harm or posed a risk that
such harm would occur in the future. Instead, any harm they suffered was due solely to
father’s conduct in driving with them while intoxicated and through his acts of sexual
abuse.
2. Because Jurisdiction Was Proper Based on Father’s Conduct We Need Not
Consider Whether It Was Also Proper Based on Mother’s Conduct
Because the juvenile court assumes jurisdiction of the child, not the parents,
jurisdiction may exist based on the conduct of one parent only. As a result, we need not
consider jurisdictional findings based on the other parent’s conduct. (In re I.A. (2011)
201 Cal.App.4th 1484, 1491.) However, we may exercise our discretion to reach the
merits of the other parent’s jurisdictional challenge in three situations: (1) the
jurisdictional finding serves as the basis for dispositional orders that are also challenged
on appeal; (2) the findings could be prejudicial to the appellant or could impact the
current or any future dependency proceedings; and (3) the finding could have
consequences for the appellant beyond jurisdiction. (In re Drake M. (2012)
211 Cal.App.4th 754, 762-763.)
Respondent contends that the general rule applies and that we should therefore
affirm based on the uncontested jurisdictional findings made against father. Mother’s
opening appellate brief did not anticipate this issue and she did not file a reply brief to
challenge application of the general rule in this case. Mother does not challenge the
dispositional orders in this case and her failure to address the issue means that she has not
suggested any legal or practical consequences that might flow from this finding either
within or outside the dependency proceedings. (In re. Drake M., supra, 211 Cal.App.4th
at p. 763.) We therefore affirm the jurisdictional order.
6
3. We Alternatively Conclude That the Jurisdictional Order Is Supported By
Substantial Evidence3
A. Mother Waived the Issue Whether Substantial Evidence Supports
Jurisdiction Based on Her Failure to Provide
As noted above, jurisdiction is proper under section 300, subdivision (b) when a
parent’s failure to provide their child with adequate food, clothing, shelter, or medical
treatment causes or presents a substantial risk of serious physical harm. DCFS was
therefore required to show: (1) the requisite neglect by mother; (2) causation; and
(3) serious physical harm or a substantial risk of such harm. (In re J.O. (2009)
178 Cal.App.4th 139, 152 (J.O.).) The third element includes a showing that the requisite
risk of harm still exists at the time of the jurisdictional hearing. (Ibid.)
The court in J.O., supra, 178 Cal.App.4th 139, assumed jurisdiction over three
teen-aged children after finding that: (1) their mother had used excessive disciplinary
force and had used a pin and a knife to scrape off marks from one child’s skin that she
believed were tattoos; and (2) mother’s boyfriend had sexually abused the same child.
Jurisdiction was also assumed because the presumed father had been absent and had
failed to provide for the minors’ needs under section 300, subdivision (b). The J.O. court
reversed the jurisdictional finding against the father because there was no “causal nexus”
between his failure to provide for the minors’ needs and the physical harm inflicted by
mother and her boyfriend. That conduct, the court held, was not caused by father’s
abandonment or failure to provide support. (J.O., at p. 152.)

Relying on J.O., mother contends that her admitted failure to provide for the
minors’ needs during her absence did not cause their primary harm: father’s acts of
sexual abuse and the risk he created by driving with the girls in his car while under the
influence of drugs and alcohol. We review the dependency court’s jurisdictional findings
under the substantial evidence standard of review. As a result, we must review the entire
record and, after resolving all conflicts in favor of respondent and drawing all reasonable
3 Our holding regarding the substantial evidence issue is a separate and independent
alternative basis for affirming the jurisdictional order.
7
inferences in support of the judgment, determine whether the findings are supported by
substantial evidence. (In re Veronica G. (2007) 157 Cal.App.4th 179, 185.)
Unlike J.O., there is evidence in this case that the minors did not receive required
medical care and were not always provided food and clothing. Mother testified that
father was not feeding the girls and that she began buying food and clothing for them
after she stopped paying father to let her see them. She also fails to mention DCFS
reports that both girls had cavities and that C.R. needed extensive dental work, including
oral sedation for a tooth fracture, 11 pulpotomies with steel crowns, and three fillings.
This evidence could support a finding that father failed to provide food, clothing, and
medical care that caused or posed a substantial risk of serious physical harm to the girls,
and that mother’s failure to provide was a contributing factor.
Mother failed to set forth and discuss this evidence. She was not free to ignore
facts that support the judgment and her sufficiency of the evidence challenge is therefore
waived. (Gombiner v. Swartz (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 1365, 1374.)
B. There Was Sufficient Evidence Regarding Mother’s Failure to Protect the
Minors From Father’s Conduct
Jurisdiction is also proper under section 300, subdivision (b) when a parent fails to
supervise or protect their children from the conduct of the custodian with whom the
children were left. Pointing to the trial court’s finding that this was not a case where the
children were left with someone who cared for them appropriately and that mother left
the girls with father despite her knowledge of his drug problems, respondent contends
that jurisdiction was proper on this basis.
We agree that there was ample evidence to support such a finding. Mother
admitted that she knew about father’s long-standing history of substance abuse. Because
father frequently beat her, she clearly knew that he was violent and physically abusive.
During one incident, father knocked mother to the ground while she was holding C.R.,
causing the girl to fall as well. He stalked and threatened mother and she was by her own
admission scared to death of him. In one DCFS report she admitted that she “knew
8
something like this would happen.” Despite this, she gave up trying to see the girls after
one unsuccessful request for help from the police and moved out of state, where she
started a new family with another man.
We recognize that mother was justifiably in fear of father, but that should have
motivated her to take more steps to regain custody of her children. She never fully
acknowledged that her efforts to regain custody of the children were half-hearted at best.
We also recognize that mother was coming to terms with her mental health and substance
abuse problems. Even so, her ultimate success remained for future determination. These
factors supported a finding that mother still might not be able to adequately protect the
minors.4
Unanswered is whether such findings were proper given the allegation made
against mother – that she failed to provide food, shelter, clothing, and medical treatment
to the minors. Mother did not file a reply brief to challenge the Department’s assertion,
so we treat the issue as waived.
We alternatively hold that such a finding was proper. Although mother frames the
issue as one of substantial evidence, the evidentiary gaps she identifies are actually
present in the pleadings, which, as framed, do not allege that mother’s failure to provide
caused the minors physical harm or posed a risk of such harm. In short, she is actually
attacking the sufficiency of the pleadings, which could have been done by way of a
motion akin to a demurrer. (In re Jessica C. (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 1027, 1036
(Jessica C.); In re Nicholas B. (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 1126, 1136.)
The Jessica C. court considered an appeal by the father in a dependency case,
against whom jurisdiction was asserted under section 300, subdivision (d) for sexual
abuse. Father contended the petition was insufficient because it alleged that his daughter
reported sexual abuse, not that such abuse occurred. The Court of Appeal rejected that
argument, pointing to the fact that dependency pleadings are drafted by social workers,
not lawyers. If a petition does not provide proper notice of the factual allegations
4 Not to mention the fact that the children were angry at mother and did not want to
see her at all.
9
supporting jurisdiction, the parents may demur. If they do not, and instead proceed to
litigate the case on its merits, any pleading deficiencies are waived. (Jessica C., supra,
93 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1036-1038.) The Court of Appeal affirmed because there was
sufficient evidence that father sexually abused his daughter. (Id. at p. 1038.)
Mother was on notice of the failure-to-protect issue by way of a DCFS report,
which stated that she failed to take sufficient steps to regain custody of the minors,
thereby allowing father to create a “detrimental and dangerous living environment”
leading to neglect and sexual abuse by the father. She did not object when being
questioned by DCFS about her knowledge of father’s drug abuse, a topic that appears
irrelevant to her alleged failure to provide food, clothing, and other necessities. Nor did
she object when counsel for DCFS argued that jurisdiction was proper because she left
the children with father despite her knowledge of his violent behavior and drug abuse.5
In short, mother did not challenge the sufficiency of the pleadings, was on notice
that failure to protect was an issue, and did not properly object or did so far too late to
preserve the issue. We therefore deem waived any objections to the juvenile court basing
its jurisdictional finding on the failure-to-protect component of section 300,
subdivision (b). (In re Javier G. (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 453, 458-459; In re Athena P.
(2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 617, 627-628; Jessica C., supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 1037.)
5 Mother did object later when the DCFS lawyer extended that argument to father’s
acts of sexual abuse, contending that the argument was irrelevant to the allegations
against mother. The trial court overruled that objection, stating that it had heard “the
evidence and the court will make its own assessment in terms of the evidence.” We
believe this objection came too late. Even so, it did not extend to the risks posed by
father’s substance abuse, as to which no objection was raised.
Mother’s counsel also argued that it was “outrageous” for DCFS to argue failure
to protect when it had not been alleged. This was not an objection or request for relief
based on the state of the allegations and, in any event, it also came too late.

Outcome: The juvenile court’s jurisdictional order is affirmed.

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