(Cite
as: 122 Cal.App.4th 626, 19 Cal.Rptr.3d 155)
Court
of Appeal, Fifth District, California.
FRESNO
COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, Petitioner,
v.
The
SUPERIOR COURT of Fresno County, Respondent;
Lily
G. et al., Real Parties in Interest.
No.
F045698.
Sept.
21, 2004.
**157
Phillip S. Cronin, County Counsel, and Howard K. Watkins, Deputy
County
Counsel, for Fresno County Department of Children and Family Services,
Petitioner.
Kimball Sergeant, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Lily G., Real Party In interest.
John L. Dodd, Tustin, under appointment by the Court of
Appeal, for Rhiannon H., Real Party In Interest.
OPINION
VARTABEDIAN, Acting P.J.
*631
In March 2004, respondent Fresno County Superior Court, sitting as
a juvenile court, terminated parental rights to half sisters, one-year-old
Rhiannon and three-year-old Lily. Rhiannon is an Indian child within
the meaning of the Indian Child Welfare Act (25 U.S.C.
§ 1901
et seq.; ICWA); she is eligible for membership in the
federally recognized Cold Springs Rancheria of the Mono Indians (tribe).
Lily, although also of Native American descent, is not an
Indian child under ICWA. While termination was undisputed at the
March proceedings, the children's placement was hotly contested. The tribe,
joined by Fresno County Department of Children and Family Services
(the department) and the children's mother, petitioned the juvenile court
to place the children with an Indian family, selected by
the tribe in accordance with ICWA's
placement *632
preference (25 U.S.C. § 1915)
and approved by the department.
[FN1] **158
The children's attorney objected, claiming there was "good cause" under
ICWA not to follow the placement preference. Following an evidentiary
hearing, the juvenile court agreed with the children's attorney and
denied the tribe's petition. The court further ordered that if
the department thereafter wished to exercise its discretion to change
the children's placement, it must first explain to the court
why the change would not be a gross violation of
its discretion.
FN1.
25 U.S.C. section 1915 provides in pertinent part:
"(a)
In any adoptive placement of an Indian child under State
law, a preference shall be given, in the absence of
good cause to the contrary, to a placement with (1)
a member of the child's extended family; (2) other members
of the Indian child's tribe; or (3) other Indian families.
"(b)
Any child accepted for foster care or preadoptive placement shall
be placed in the least restrictive setting which most approximates
a family and in which his special needs, if any,
may be met. The child shall also be placed within
reasonable proximity to his or her home, taking into account
any special needs of the child. In any foster care
or preadoptive placement, a preference shall be given, in the
absence of good cause to the contrary, to a placement
with-- "(i)
a member of the Indian child's extended family;
"(ii)
a foster home licensed, approved, or specified by the Indian
child's tribe;
"(iii)
an Indian foster home licensed or approved by an authorized
non-Indian licensing authority; or
"(iv)
an institution for children approved by an Indian tribe or
operated by an Indian organization which has a program suitable
to meet the Indian child's needs."
The department appealed. (Welf. & Inst.Code, § 395).
[FN2] It thereafter filed a petition for writ of mandamus
in order to expedite review of its appellate claims and
elected to proceed by writ petition rather than appeal. According
to the department, the juvenile court erroneously found "good cause"
to overcome ICWA's placement preference. The department also contests the
court's order regarding the exercise of the department's posttermination placement
discretion as an improper invasion of its discretion and improper
shifting of the burden of proof. Attorneys for the children
as real parties in interest assert that the court properly
found good cause and did not infringe on the department's
placement discretion. On review of the merits, we conclude the
juvenile court acted properly and will deny writ relief.
FN2.
All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code
unless otherwise indicated.
With regard to "good cause," we hold ICWA neither expressly
or impliedly restricts the superior court in its good cause
evaluation to the considerations contained in federal guidelines. Rather, Congress
explicitly intended to provide state courts with flexibility in determining
the placement of an Indian child. Due to the importance
ICWA attaches to its placement preference, we further hold any
party claiming a good cause exception to the placement preference
bears the burden of proof and a good cause finding
is subject to a substantial evidence standard of review. As
to the juvenile court's *633
order regarding the exercise of the department's posttermination placement discretion,
we hold under section 366.3, the department still bore the
burden of establishing the appropriateness of the children's posttermination placement.
PROCEDURAL
AND FACTUAL HISTORY
In late January 2003, Christopher H. inflicted serious physical harm
on his seven-month-old daughter, Rhiannon. The child sustained injuries consistent
with "shaken baby syndrome," including a skull fracture, cerebral edema,
brain and retinal hemorrhages, significant seizure activity, and bruising.
The mother reasonably should have known her daughters were at
risk of serious harm in Christopher H.'s care due to
his violent history and ongoing substance abuse. For her part,
the mother also had a substance abuse problem that contributed
to her inability to adequately protect her children. The couple's
**159
ongoing domestic violence further exposed the children to an unsafe
environment.
Due to the serious nature of her injuries, Rhiannon was
hospitalized for approximately one month. In the meantime, the department
initiated dependency proceedings (§
300, subd. (a) & (b)) as to Rhiannon and later
also as to her 21-month-old, half sister Lily. Although the
mother left Lily with a maternal relative when Rhiannon's injuries
came to light, the department intervened when that relative tested
positive for drugs. The department placed Lily in foster care.
A few days later, upon Rhiannon's hospital release, the department
placed her in the same foster home with Lily. The
two girls have lived there ever since. The foster family
is not of Native American heritage.
In March 2003, the juvenile court declared Rhiannon an Indian
child entitled to ICWA protection. The tribe, of which Christopher
H. was a member, had requested notice of and recognition
in the dependency proceedings as to Rhiannon. The court would
later determine that ICWA did not apply to Lily. She
is a San Gabriel Mission Indian (TongvaTribe) which is not
federally recognized.
The juvenile court exercised its dependency jurisdiction over Rhiannon and
Lily in late April 2003. At the time, the department
was investigating and the tribe supported Rhiannon's paternal grandparents as
a prospective placement for both children. However, due to Rhiannon's
medically fragile state, her need for one-on-one care and the
girls' sibling attachment, a court-appointed special advocate recommended and the
court ordered that the children remain in their current placement.
In late May 2003, the juvenile court conducted its dispositional
hearing which representatives of the tribe, in addition to counsel
for the other parties, *634
attended. The court adjudged both Rhiannon and Lily dependent children,
removed them from parental custody and denied reunification services to
the mother and Rhiannon's father (§
361.5, subd. (b)(5) & (6)) as well as to Lily's
alleged father (§
361.5, subd. (a)). It in turn set a section 366.26
hearing for October 1, 2003 to select and implement a
permanent plan for the children.
On the issue of placement, one of the tribe's representatives
proffered its council's May 2003 formal resolution stating that Rhiannon
should be placed with the paternal grandmother. If the paternal
grandmother was not selected, the resolution stated that the tribal
council had established a priority list of extended family members.
That priority list was neither made a part of the
resolution, nor were its contents disclosed on the record. County
counsel, on the
department's behalf, sought to clarify that Rhiannon's medical condition prevented
"any quick move" on relative placement under ICWA. Counsel also
acknowledged "this may very well be a case where it
is appropriate to veer from [the ICWA] placement preference." The
juvenile court added if the department's eventual placement recommendation were
not according to the ICWA preference, the tribe would have
the right to try the issue. The court also gave
the department discretion to change the children's placement upon 10
days' notice as a result of the "disability of the
minor."
As it turned out, the department did not approve the
paternal grandmother for placement. Among the reasons cited were her
disbelief that her son could harm Rhiannon and that Rhiannon
had actually suffered the diagnosed injuries. The department next assessed
other immediate paternal relatives before pursuing extended family members interested
in placement. The immediate relatives, however, **160
as the court would later remark, were not "passing live
scans."
In mid-September 2003, Sheila E., a tribal council member whose
husband by tribal custom and tradition was Rhiannon's third or
fourth cousin, requested placement of Rhiannon and Lily. The department
immediately sent Mrs. E. the criminal background check documentation to
begin a placement evaluation. Although the E. family had been
approved for some time to care for Native American foster
children in another county, they had to be re-assessed by
the department
because "the information utilized by one county can not use
[sic
] by another county for these types of assessments."
It was against this backdrop that the department prepared its
original adoption assessment and recommendation for the October 1st section
366.26 hearing. The department reported it was likely the children
would be adopted if parental rights were terminated. Moreover, a
preliminary evaluation showed the children's foster parents of approximately seven
months were suitable and *635
committed to adopting them. At that point, the children's foster
parents constituted the only family whom the department found eligible
to adopt Rhiannon and Lily.
As of October 1st, the department had been unable to
locate the mother for notice purposes. Because her whereabouts were
unknown, a 90-day continuance of the section 366.26 hearing to
early January 2004 was necessary in order to publish notice.
In the meantime, Lily was exhibiting signs of stress requiring
mental health treatment. Following her initial detention in February 2003,
Lily, both passively and actively, resisted following rules and suffered
night terrors. She also masturbated at times, reporting that her
stepfather did this to her. Consistent parenting by the foster
parents and a tapering off of family visits appeared to
help Lily's behavior. Then, following a visit with Rhiannon's paternal
grandmother in October 2003, Lily again had night terrors, displayed
renewed
oppositional behaviors, and masturbated. The oppositional behaviors included "anger, defensiveness,
bad mouthing others and yelling." She began weekly therapy in
November. Lily's therapist reportedly described the child as exhibiting behaviors
suggestive of sexual abuse. Although Lily continued to struggle with
managing her feelings and behaviors, she did show improvement through
therapy.
At the continued section 366.26 hearing in January 2004, the
department requested yet another continuance, which the juvenile court granted.
The department reported it needed more time to submit expert
testimony required under ICWA. At the January proceeding, Ms. E.
also identified herself as having been approved to "take the
girls." A tribal representative explained the tribe currently recommended that
at least Rhiannon be placed with the E. family. As
the representative explained, "we did get one family [Mr. and
Mrs. E.] who has passed everything: The home inspection, the
background and everything." [FN3]
The court acknowledged the preference for a placement within the
tribe but stated its reluctance to disrupt the children's placement
given that they had been in the same home for
close to a year and the risk of attachment disorder.
The tribal representative argued the children were young enough to
start a bond with another family. The court granted a
request by the children's attorney that they not be moved
without further order of court.
FN3.
According to evidence later introduced, the department determined in mid-December
2003 that the E. family was eligible for placement of
Rhiannon and Lily.
**161
Apparently unbeknownst to the juvenile court and minors' counsel, the
department had already begun discussions with the tribe for transitioning
the children to the E. home. Following the January hearing,
the department *636
prepared to implement its transition plan of introducing the children
to Mr. and Mrs. E. through supervised visitation and gradually
increasing their contact towards a goal of placing the children
with the E. family.
Having learned of the department's plan, minors' counsel brought a
successful ex-parte motion to prohibit the introductory visits pending the
section 366.26 trial. In response, the tribe moved to formally
intervene in the dependency proceedings and vacate the ex parte
order for lack of notice. It also petitioned (§
388) to immediately start regular visitation with the E. family
towards a goal of placing both girls or at least
Rhiannon with them.
For its part, the department lodged an addendum report dated
February 18, 2004, identifying Mr. and Mrs. E. as the
children's prospective adoptive parents and describing the favorable results of
the department's preliminary assessment of the couple. Also, according to
the addendum report, it was in the
children's best interest to reside in the same home. They
appeared to share a significant bond; separating them would be
severely detrimental to the emotional and psychological well-being of both
children.
Attached to the department's addendum report was a declaration of
ICWA expert and social worker, Morning Star Myers. In Myers's
professional opinion, reasonable and active efforts have been provided to
the parents, return of the children to parental custody would
create a substantial risk of detriment to their safety, and
a permanent plan of adoption would be in the children's
best interests. Myers concluded by further recommending both children be
transitioned over a 90-day period for placement purposes to the
identified tribal home. She, however, did not explain the basis
for her placement recommendation.
Also attached to the February 18 addendum report was a
letter from Rhiannon's pediatric neurologist, Dr. Steven Ehrreich. According to
Dr. Ehrreich, although Rhiannon made excellent developmental progress since her
initial placement with her foster parents, her long-term neurological prognosis
was currently guarded. He added it would be in her
best interest to continue to receive the consistent care and
medical follow-through that was being provided in her current foster
home.
A February 2004 letter from Lily's therapist was also attached.
In it, the therapist described "extreme and inappropriate behaviors" on
Lily's part before the
start of therapy and the success she had achieved in
significantly decreasing those behaviors and symptoms. The therapist credited the
"decrease to Lily's stable environment, teaching and reinforcing appropriate behaviors."
It was the therapist's belief that if Lily were to
be removed from her current home, "it would be detrimental,
upsetting, and thus additional stress, adjustment and probable return of
her symptoms."
*637
At a February 18, 2004 hearing, the juvenile court granted
the tribe's requests to intervene and vacate the no-visitation order.
On the tribe's section 388 petition, the department and the
mother's counsel requested the relief sought by the tribe be
issued not only on behalf of Rhiannon, but also as
to Lily because the two were to be adopted as
a sibling group. Counsel for the tribe later expressly stated
there was no objection to amending the section 388 petition
to include Lily.
**162
The children's attorney requested the court continue any hearing on
the tribe's petition pending an attachment assessment of both children
with the current care providers. The children's attorney cited the
recent letter from Lily's therapist. Counsel for the tribe objected,
citing ICWA, noting the therapist was not speaking as to
Rhiannon, and claiming the children did not have any attachment
disorder and could easily form healthy attachments to other care
providers.
The juvenile court permitted a supervised visit between the children
and Mr. and
Mrs. E. pending the next hearing date. It also authorized
the attachment study of the children and their current care
providers as well as between the children. It further agreed
with the department that the attachment study should address whether
a transition would be detrimental to the children in terms
of an attachment disorder.
In yet another addendum report filed in February 2004, the
department detailed a positive visit between the children and Mrs.
E. that occurred February 20th. However, when a department social
worker contacted the foster mother three days later regarding the
children's behavior after the visit, the foster mother stated both
children had night terrors and had been very clingy. Attached
to the latest addendum report was a memorandum from a
marriage family therapist/social worker describing in greater detail the children's
recent behavior. Following the February 20th visit, Lily exhibited anxiety
through regression on earlier toilet training issues and masturbation. Her
sleep pattern was also briefly disrupted. She was angry, disrespectful
and defiant. She also broke out in hives after the
visit and displayed clingy behaviors. Lily broke out in hives
once before following a home visit in January by the
ICWA specialist. Lily was able to tell her foster mother
she felt sad and did not want to leave the
foster home. As for Rhiannon, she had not previously shown
any obvious symptoms of distress or anxiety. However, after the
January visit of the ICWA specialist, she suffered "significant night
terrors" and was currently
showing more clingy behaviors and a repeat of the night
terrors.
According to an attached department narrative, the family therapist/social worker
and the department's social worker drew conflicting inferences about *638
the children's reactions. The department's social worker was under the
impression the girls had a similar anxiety reaction to all
strangers. The marriage family therapist/social worker disagreed, stating the girls
were only reacting to those persons who were from prospective
placements.
The court authorized another visit between the children and the
E. family pending receipt of the assessment and further hearing.
That second visit occurred February 26 and, according to a
subsequent department narrative of it, was positive.
In early March, Michael Healy, a licensed marriage and family
therapist, submitted his written bonding study of both children and
their foster parents. In his report, Healy described an interaction
method that he used to observe the interactions between the
foster parents and the children as well as his actual
observations. He concluded with his opinions that: the children had
a health attachment towards their foster parents and shared a
positive parent-child relationship; and the children would be greatly harmed
if this relationship would be terminated. Due to an oversight
in the department's referral to Healy, the therapist was not
asked to address and therefore did not comment on **163
the sibling relationship.
[FN4]
FN4.
Contrary to the department's claim and insinuation at oral argument,
the juvenile court did not order Healy to address the
sibling bond and thus the therapist was not somehow at
fault for not discussing the sibling bond.
At a March 10th hearing, the juvenile court acknowledged receiving
Healy's report. The department sought a supplemental report to address
whether the transition it proposed would be detrimental as well
as to address the sibling relationship. The court responded it
was not inclined to order continued visitation between the children
and the E. family. The tribe argued Healy's report did
not rise to the level of good cause under ICWA
to deviate from the placement preference. The children's attorney objected
to a supplemental report and requested a no-movement order without
further hearing. She then voiced a concern that if the
parties proceeded with the section 366.26 hearing and the court
terminated parental rights, the department could "just move them."
County counsel replied:
"the
Department's position is that if and when the Court terminates
parental rights, it does place the child in the exclusive
care, custody and control of the Department for selection of
an adoptive placement, and at that time the Department
would have the authority to make the placement decision."
She added:
"I
think the Court needs to think long and hard about
what's happening here, because the Department's reasoned decision as an
adoptive agency is that the children should be adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. [E.]."
*639
In response, the court sought to clarify the department's stance:
"You
are essentially saying, after the .26, whatever this Court says,
no matter what my order, the Department is going to
do what they want to do?"
After renewing her claim that the department had a reasoned
adoptive analysis, county counsel conceded "[i]f you want to read
it with that kind of spin on it, yes, Your
Honor." County counsel also pointed out the department would pursue
its transition plan as long as it did not appear
over the course of time to be detrimental to the
children.
Following further debate, the court confirmed the case for trial
and ordered Healy's presence. The juvenile court finally conducted the
contested hearing on March 25, 2004.
At the March 25th hearing, the court placed the burden
of proof on the children's counsel to contest the placement
preference, proposed by the tribe in its section 388 petition
and endorsed by the department and the mother. When the
children's counsel replied she was satisfied with Healy's report, the
court stated it had some questions and commenced its own
examination of the report's
author.
[FN5]
FN5.
Contrary to yet another claim made at oral argument, the
record does not reveal that the court placed the burden
of proof on the department or the tribe.
Healy testified the children and the foster parents shared a
healthy attachment. He rejected a notion urged by the department
that the children's attachment was an anxious one. He added
that in light of the neglect and abuse to which
the children were previously exposed, their healthy attachment to the
foster parents was "very critical" to their well-being. If pulled
away from that healthy attachment, it would create psychological problems
for each child. In this regard, Healy disagreed with the
department's position that the fact there was a healthy attachment
**164
would increase the children's ability to form another healthy attachment
if they were placed in a different home.
Lily in particular was at a high risk of developing
an attachment disorder due to the symptoms of posttraumatic stress
she displayed. To remove Lily would exacerbate her posttraumatic symptoms
and could affect her relationships with whomever the new caretaker
was. "It is a matter of not being able to
trust that person." As the court questioned Healy about these
risks in the short term,
the therapist volunteered he had "a hard time separating long-term
from short-term. I think it can continue. I don't see
it, like, just, you know, three or six months of
this. I could see it happening for quite some time
those symptoms, because she is already--is exhibiting those [symptoms]."
*640
On the subject of transitioning the children over a period
of months to another placement, Healy testified consistency was more
important to reducing the trauma involved. The more consistent contact
the children had with their current care providers the less
likely it was they would experience trauma. The therapist cited
two examples of more consistent contact. The first would be
where a child has a healthy attachment with two parents
and one parent leaves that child's life; the child would
still have the remaining parent and could most likely have
an easier time adjusting because they have some consistency. As
a second example, Healy hypothesized if the foster parents "were
to be sort of a visiting or noncustodial parent." The
important element was that the children not be totally removed
from the one or two persons, in this case, the
foster parents, with whom they had a primary attachment which
Healy characterized as the "most important."
In addition, there was a high probability that even with
a transition plan in effect, Lily would develop an attachment
disorder. Although it was possible for some children to transition
from one healthy attachment to another over a period of
time, in Lily's case, her posttraumatic stress symptoms indicated she
would
not be able to transition. Healy concluded his testimony by
citing a recent example leading him to believe Lily was
still traumatized. The day before, Lily drew a picture of
a man pointing a gun at her as she was
lying on the floor surrounded by blood. Healy's impression was
the man was either the child's father or the mother's
boyfriend.
In closing argument on its petition, the tribe asked the
court to follow both ICWA and California relative placement preferences
and place the children with the E. family.
[FN6] After the matter was submitted, the court denied the
tribe's section 388 petition. It found that in the case
of Lily, she had extraordinary emotional needs and her high
risk of an attachment disorder amounted to good cause and
therefore an exception to following the ICWA placement preference. As
to Rhiannon, the court found conflicting preferences, on the one
hand, a state preference for maintaining a sibling relationship and,
on the other hand, the ICWA placement preference and observed
it was not willing to separate the two children.
FN6.
Counsel for the tribe asked the court to follow the
spirit of ICWA and treat Lily as an Indian child
even though her tribe was not federally recognized.
The juvenile court next proceeded to the issue of permanent
planning. It was undisputed
the children were adoptable. However, the children's attorney once again
expressed her concern that assuming the court terminated parental rights,
it should admonish the department that were it to move
the children for adoption placement, **165
the court would find an abuse of discretion based on
the lengthy trial that had just concluded. Recalling its earlier
debate with county counsel, the court agreed. Following additional argument
by the *641
department and the tribe against such an admonition, the court
ruled that if the department wished to exercise its discretion
to move the children, it would need to show why
that would not necessarily be a gross violation of its
discretion. The court then made the requisite findings under ICWA
to terminate parental rights.
DISCUSSION
Good
Cause Exception
As mentioned at the outset, the department challenges the juvenile
court's "good cause" finding to overcome ICWA's placement preference. The
department contends ICWA recognizes only limited criteria for a good
cause determination, none of which existed in this case. It
further argues the court erred, among other reasons, because it
purportedly did not consider the department's transition plan for changing
the children's placement.
ICWA establishes minimum federal standards, both procedural and substantive, governing
the removal of Indian children from their families. (In
re Alicia S.
(1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 79, 81, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121.) The most
important substantive requirement imposed on state courts is that of
25 United States Code section 1915(a), which, absent "good cause"
to the contrary, mandates that adoptive placements be made preferentially
with (1) members of the child's extended family, (2) other
members of the same tribe, or (3) other Indian families.
(Mississippi
Choctaw Indian Band v. Holyfield
(1989) 490 U.S. 30, 36, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 104 L.Ed.2d
29.) 25 United States Code section 1915(b) states a similar
preference for any Indian child accepted for foster care or
preadoptive placement, in the absence of good cause to the
contrary. In this way, ICWA seeks to protect the rights
of the Indian child as an Indian and the rights
of the Indian community and tribe in retaining its children
in its society. (Mississippi
Choctaw Indian Band v. Holyfield, supra,
490 U.S. at p. 37, 109 S.Ct. 1597.)
Although Congress defined numerous
terms for ICWA purposes at the outset of the act (see 25 U.S.C. § 1903),
it did not define the phrase "good cause" as used in 25 United
States Code section 1915 (Section 1915). Nevertheless, according to ICWA's
legislative history, Congress, by its use of the term "good cause,"
explicitly intended to provide state courts with flexibility in determining
the placement of an Indian child. (In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at p. 89, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121; In
re Robert T. (1988)
200 Cal.App.3d 657, 663, 246 Cal.Rptr. 168.)
Federal
Guidelines
Despite
Congress's intentional decision not to define good cause, the department
contends federal guidelines and state rules of court establish *642
limited criteria for a good cause determination that did not exist in
this case. Specifically, the department cites section F.3 of Department
of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs Guidelines for State Courts;
Indian Child Custody Proceedings (44 Fed.Reg. 67584 (Nov. 26, 1979);
hereafter Guidelines) and rule 1439(k)(4) of California Rules of
Court.
Section F.3 of the Guidelines states:
"(a)
For purposes of foster care, preadoptive or adoptive placement, a
determination of good cause not to follow the order of
preference set out above shall
be based on one or more of the following considerations:
**166
"(i) The request of the biological parents or the child
when the child is of sufficient age.
"(ii)
The extraordinary physical or emotional needs of the child as
established by testimony of a qualified expert witness.
"(iii)
The unavailability of suitable families for placement after a diligent
search has been completed for families meeting the preference criteria."
(Emphasis added.)
California Rules of Court, rule 1439(k)(4) sets forth the identical
considerations as the Guidelines for a good cause determination but
distinguishes
itself from the Guidelines in that the rule does not
restrict the court to only those considerations, i.e., "[t]he court
may modify the preference order only for good cause, which
may
include the following considerations...." (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 1439(k),
emphasis added.)
As alluded to earlier, the juvenile court made an effort
to apply these considerations by finding Lily had extraordinary emotional
needs based on therapist Healy's testimony. The department nevertheless takes
exception to the court's finding as incomplete because there was
no independent good cause shown under the Guidelines and the
rule of court as to Rhiannon. Given the distinction between
the Guidelines' use of mandatory language and the rule of
court's use of permissive language, however, it appears the department's
more precise argument is the juvenile court erred because it
had to find good cause as to Rhiannon within the
limited considerations set by the Guidelines. We disagree with the
department's premise and conclude there was no legal error in
this regard.
First, the Guidelines are not binding on state courts. (Guidelines,
Introduction, supra;
In re Michael G.
(1998) 63 Cal.App.4th 700, 714, 74 Cal.Rptr.2d 642.) As the
Department of the Interior explained in its Introduction, the Guidelines
were
"not
intended to *643
have binding legislative effect. Many of these guidelines represent the
interpretation of the Interior Department of certain provision
of the Act." (Guidelines, Introduction, supra.)
Second, the courts, not the Interior Department, have the primary
responsibility for interpreting "good cause" as used in Section 1915.
Thus, section F.3 of the Guidelines should be given important
but not controlling significance. (Guidelines, Introduction, supra,
citing Batterton
v. Francis
(1977) 432 U.S. 416, 424-425, 97 S.Ct. 2399, 53 L.Ed.2d
448.) In its Introduction, the Interior Department acknowledged that some
portions of ICWA expressly delegated to the Secretary of the
Interior responsibility for interpreting statutory language while "primary responsibility for
interpreting other language used in the Act, however, rests with
the courts that decide Indian child custody cases." (Guidelines, Introduction,
supra.)
Notably, as an example of language the courts have the
primary responsibility for interpreting, the Introduction cited the term "good
cause" as used in section 1915. (Guidelines, Introduction, supra.)
In other words, section F.3 of the Guidelines is the
Interior Department's considered opinion and recommendation, not a mandate to
state courts. As the Interior Department further noted, courts "are
free to act contrary to what the Department has said
if they are convinced that the Department's guidelines are not
required by the statute itself." (Guidelines, Introduction, supra.)
Under these circumstances, we are not persuaded by the department's
reliance on In
the Matter of C.H.
(2000) 299 Mont. 62, 997 P.2d 776 in which the
Montana Supreme Court
strictly applied section F.3 of **167
the Guidelines as though it was mandatory.
Third, because Congress explicitly intended to provide state courts with
flexibility in determining the placement of an Indian child (In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at p. 89, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121; In
re Robert T., supra,
200 Cal.App.3d at p. 663, 246 Cal.Rptr. 168), we conclude
ICWA neither expressly nor impliedly restricts the superior court in
its good cause evaluation to the three considerations contained in
section F.3 of the Guidelines. In this regard, we endorse
the position expressed in California Rule of Court, rule 1439(k)
that a court's good cause determination to overcome ICWA's placement
preference "may
include the ... considerations [contained in the Guidelines]." (Italics added.)
Standard
of Review
The children contend we should
review the juvenile court's good cause finding for abuse of discretion
because that decision was in fact a denial of *644
the tribe's section 388 petition to change their placement. [FN7]
Counsel for the children rely on settled California law that section
388 rulings, as well as custody rulings in general, are matters calling
for the juvenile court's exercise of discretion. (In
re Stephanie M. (1994)
7 Cal.4th 295, 318, 27 Cal.Rptr.2d 595, 867 P.2d 706.) The department
does not directly dispute abuse of discretion as the appropriate standard.
FN7.
Under section 388, a party may petition to modify a
prior dependency court order on grounds of change of circumstance
or new evidence. (§
388, subd. (a).) The petitioning party must also show that
the proposed change would promote the best interests of the
child. (§
388, subd. (b).)
The children's approach to the standard of review issue appears
overly simplistic. Yes, the tribe did pursue a section 388
petition to change the children's placement, and appellate courts routinely
review the ruling on such a petition for abuse of
discretion. However, even the juvenile court recognized that this was
not an ordinary section 388 proceeding in which the petitioning
party bears the burden of proof (see In
re Audrey D.
(1979) 100 Cal.App.3d 34, 43, 160 Cal.Rptr. 802). The tribe's
request to change the placement was based on ICWA and
its preference for placement with an Indian family. As previously
noted, the court appropriately placed the burden on the children's
counsel to establish good cause not to follow the preference.
Thus, the more accurate question is how should this court
review a good cause determination to overcome ICWA's placement preference.
On review, it appears the substantial evidence test is a
more appropriate standard to apply in reviewing
the juvenile court's good cause determination.
In In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at page 88, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121, this court
indirectly referenced but did not resolve the standard of review
question. At issue was the "existing Indian family doctrine" by
which some courts refused to apply ICWA unless an Indian
child was "being removed from an 'existing Indian family,' meaning
generally a family with a significant connection to the Indian
community" (id.
at p. 83, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121). We observed that Section
1915 permitted a court to depart from the statutory preferences
where good cause existed to do so and thus courts
applying the "existing Indian family doctrine" could reach the same
result without having to rely on a judicially created exception
to ICWA that appeared nowhere in the act itself. (In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 88-89, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121.)
In the course of our discussion, we noted that, without
an ICWA definition of good cause, published decisions had given
the term somewhat varying interpretations. **168
(In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at p. 88, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121.) Summarizing one
of those decisions, Matter
of Adoption of F.H.
(Alaska 1993) 851 P.2d 1361, 1363-1364, we mentioned the sister-state
court affirmed a good cause finding after acknowledging such a
determination was within the superior court's discretion. (In
re Alicia S., *645
supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at p. 88, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121.) [FN8]
As the issue
was not before us, we did not hold that a
good cause finding was subject to an abuse of discretion
standard of review.
FN8.
Other sister-state decisions mentioned in our discussion also resorted to
an abuse of discretion standard.
Both the abuse of discretion test and the substantial evidence
test entail considerable deference to the factfinding tribunal. (Pack
v. Kings County Human Services Agency
(2001) 89 Cal.App.4th 821, 838, 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 594.) The former
centers upon legal principles--whether, in light of the record, the
trial court's ruling falls within the permissible range of options
set by the legal criteria--while the latter centers upon evidentiary
proof--whether the trial court's factual conclusions are rationally supported by
record evidence. (Ibid.)
Given the prime importance under ICWA of placement of an
Indian child with an Indian family (Mississippi
Choctaw Indian Band v. Holyfield, supra,
490 U.S. at p. 36, 109 S.Ct. 1597), a court's
finding of good cause does not appear based in an
exercise of discretion. ICWA in this regard does not contemplate
a balancing of various competing interests (Pack
v. Kings County Human Services Agency, supra,
89 Cal.App.4th at p. 840, 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 594). Rather, a
court's finding of good cause amounts to an exception to
the rule preferring
placement of an Indian child with an Indian family. Thus,
it is not akin to a traditional custody decision under
California law in which a court balances competing claims. (In
re Stephanie M., supra,
7 Cal.4th at p. 318, 27 Cal.Rptr.2d 595, 867 P.2d
706.) Indeed, according to the congressional declaration of policy at
the outset of ICWA (25 U.S.C. § 1902),
ICWA is designed to protect the best interests of Indian
children.
"The
Congress hereby declares that it is the policy of this
Nation to protect the best interests of Indian children and
to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and
families by the establishment of minimum Federal standards for the
removal of Indian children from their families and the placement
of such children in foster or adoptive homes which will
reflect the unique values of Indian culture, and by providing
for assistance to Indian tribes in the operation of child
and family service programs." (25 U.S.C. § 1902.)
Based on the foregoing, application of a substantial evidence standard
to a good cause determination under section 1915 appears consistent
with and better protects the importance ICWA places on an
Indian family placement (Pack
v. Kings County Human Services Agency, supra,
89 Cal.App.4th at p. 840, 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 594). Review on
the basis of substantial evidence would ensure that a court's
good cause finding to overcome ICWA's preference will be rigorously
tested against the record. (Ibid.)
*646
Thus, we will apply to the juvenile court's good cause finding the
substantial evidence standard of review, which provides in juvenile dependency
cases that the power of an appellate court asked to assess the sufficiency
of the evidence begins and ends with a determination as to whether or
not there is any substantial evidence, whether or not contradicted, **169
which will support the conclusion of the trier of fact. (In
re Brison C. (2000)
81 Cal.App.4th 1373, 1378-1379, 97 Cal.Rptr.2d 746.) All conflicts
must be resolved in favor of the respondent and all legitimate inferences
indulged in to uphold the decision, if possible. We may not reweigh
or express an independent judgment on the evidence. (In
re Laura F. (1983)
33 Cal.3d 826, 833, 191 Cal.Rptr. 464, 662 P.2d 922.) In this regard,
issues of fact and credibility are matters for the trial court alone.
(In re Amy M.
(1991) 232 Cal.App.3d 849, 859-860, 283 Cal.Rptr. 788).
Substantial
Evidence of Good Cause
The
department's argument in this regard appears to be little more than a
concerted effort to have this court reweigh the evidence presented, something
we may not do. (In
re Laura F., supra,
33 Cal.3d at p. 833, 191 Cal.Rptr. 464, 662 P.2d 922.) Our review
of the record, as summarized above, discloses substantial evidence supporting
the juvenile court's good cause finding to overcome ICWA's preference
for placement of the children with an Indian family.
A.
The department first argues against the existence of a sibling
relationship as a
factor in determining good cause under ICWA. We disagree.
The fact that ICWA makes no mention of a sibling
exception to its placement preference is not persuasive. As we
previously observed, Congress by its use of the term "good
cause" explicitly intended to provide state courts with flexibility in
determining the placement of an Indian child. (In
re Alicia S., supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at p. 89, 76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121; In
re Robert T.
(1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 657, 663, 246 Cal.Rptr. 168.) In addition,
California dependency law recognizes that in order to preserve and
strengthen family ties when siblings have to be removed, they
should be placed together unless it would not be in
the best interest of one or more of the siblings.
(§
16002.) Our state's interest in preserving sibling relationships to the
extent possible appears neither to interfere nor to be incompatible
with federal and tribal interests; ICWA does not preempt the
court's consideration of a sibling relationship in evaluating good cause.
(See New
Mexico v. Mescalero Apache Tribe
(1983) 462 U.S. 324, 334, 103 S.Ct. 2378, 76 L.Ed.2d
611.)
Here, there was evidence, submitted by the department itself, that
separating Rhiannon and Lily would be detrimental to them. As
early as April 2003, *647
the record reveals the girls shared a sibling attachment. Later,
as the department reported in one of its many 2004
addendum reports, it was in the children's best interest to
reside in the same home. They appeared to share a
significant bond; separating them would be severely detrimental to the
emotional
and psychological well-being of both children.
To the extent the department contends the juvenile court subordinated
Rhiannon's needs to Lily's, it once again overlooked those portions
of the record that supported the court's decision. First, Lily
was not the only one exhibiting signs of stress. Since
the visit of the ICWA specialist, Rhiannon suffered significant night
terrors and displayed more clingy behaviors of late. Second, in
light of the neglect and abuse to which each child
was exposed, Rhiannon's as well as Lily's healthy attachment to
their foster parents was "very critical" to the girls' well-being.
Third, to separate the children from their foster parents would
create psychological problems for both children and pose great harm.
Fourth, according to Rhiannon's **170
neurologist, the child's long-term neurological prognosis remained guarded and it
was in her best interests to continue receiving the consistent
care and medical follow-through that her foster parents provided.
Lost in the department's rhetoric is the fact that this
case revolves around two very young children, each having special
needs and each attached to the other. Notwithstanding the importance
of the ICWA placement preference, each child's special needs, coupled
with the detriment posed by either removing the children from
their primary attachment or separating them, supported the juvenile court's
good-cause determination.
B.
The department also chastises the juvenile court for allegedly not
taking into consideration the plan developed by the department for
transitioning the children to the E. home. According to the
department, there was no evidence that its transition plan would
be detrimental to either child. At oral argument, the department
reiterated its claim that Healy never testified against its transition
plan. On review, we disagree with the department's characterization of
the record.
The department ignores Healy's testimony that consistency was more important
to Rhiannon and Lily than a gradual transition. In this
regard, both the juvenile court and county counsel stated for
the record, while Healy was on the stand, the terms
of the proposed transition. According to Healy, the more consistent
contact the children had with their current care providers, the
less likely they would experience trauma. The therapist cited examples
of more consistent contact, which were contrary to the department's
plan. *648
Further, according to Healy, the important element was that the
children not be totally removed from the one or two
persons, in this case, the foster parents, with whom they
had formed a primary attachment.
Also, Healy testified there was a "high probability" that even
with a gradual transition plan, Lily would develop an attachment
disorder. Lily was not like some children who could transition
from one healthy attachment to another. Her posttraumatic stress symptoms
indicated she would not be able to transition.
For the department to argue otherwise borders on callousness.
The department further argues the attachment disorder would not happen
under the transition plan because a change in the children's
placement would occur only if the transition was successful. However,
the department overlooks the evidence that both children, but particularly
Lily, were already exhibiting symptoms just with visitation.
Posttermination
Order On Any Change Of Placement
The department also contends the
juvenile court exceeded its authority after it terminated parental rights
by requiring the department, if it subsequently wished to change the children's
placement, to first explain why such a change would not be a gross violation
of its discretion. The department relies on the language of section
366.26, subdivision (j) and interpretative caselaw for the proposition
that once parental rights are terminated, it--not the court--has exclusive
authority and discretion over adoptive placements. While we have no quarrel
with either the statutory language or the decisions interpreting it, we
nevertheless disagree the court exceeded its authority under the circumstances
of this case.
California dependency law grants the juvenile court broad authority to
make any **171
and all reasonable orders for the care, custody and supervision
of dependent children. (§
362, subd. (a); In
re Robert A.
(1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 174, 188, 5 Cal.Rptr.2d 438.) The juvenile
court can and regularly does
delegate supervision of dependent children's custody to the department. In
this way, the department is the court's arm. (Ibid.)
However, in the normal course of dependency proceedings when appropriate
facts are brought to its attention, the juvenile court may
decide placement issues to the point of guiding and directing
the department when it takes a contrary position. (Ibid.)
However, once parental rights are terminated in a given dependency,
the department's role in a dependent child's custody and supervision
changes. According to section 366.26, subdivision (j),
"If
the court, by order or *649
judgment declares the child free from the custody and control
of both parents, or one parent if the other does
not have custody and control, the court shall at the
same time order the child referred to the State Department
of Social Services or a licensed adoption agency for adoptive
placement by the agency. However, no petition for adoption may
be granted until the appellate rights of the natural parents
have been exhausted. The
State Department of Social Services or licensed adoption agency shall
be responsible for the custody and supervision of the child
and shall be entitled to the exclusive care and control
of the child at all times until a petition for
adoption is granted.
With the consent of the agency, the court may appoint
a guardian of the child, who shall serve until the
child is adopted." (Emphasis added.)
Courts interpreting the emphasized language of section 366.26, subdivision (j)
have declared these words "clear." (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court
(1997) 58 Cal.App.4th 721, 733, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239; see also
Los
Angeles Dept. of Children Etc. Services v. Superior Court
(1998) 62 Cal.App.4th 1, 10, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 369.) The Legislature
has granted to the appropriate department or agency the exclusive,
meaning sole, custody, control and supervision of a child referred
for adoptive placement. (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court, supra,
58 Cal.App.4th at p. 733, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239; see also
Los
Angeles Dept. of Children Etc. Services v. Superior Court, supra,
62 Cal.App.4th at p. 9, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 369.)
Notwithstanding section 366.26, subdivision (j), the department's discretion regarding adoptive
and interim foster care placement is not unfettered. (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court, supra,
58 Cal.App.4th at p. 733, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239; see also
Los
Angeles Dept. of Children Etc. Services v. Superior Court, supra,
62 Cal.App.4th at p. 9, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 369.) The juvenile
court still retains jurisdiction over the child until, relevant to
this case, the child is adopted to ensure the adoption
is completed as expeditiously as possible and to determine the
appropriateness of the placement. (§
366.3, subds. (a), (d) & (e).) [FN9]
*650
Thus, the Legislature **172
has authorized the juvenile court to review the department's exercise
of discretion regarding posttermination placement. (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court, supra,
58 Cal.App.4th at p. 733, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239; see also
Los
Angeles Dept. of Children Etc. Services v. Superior Court, supra,
62 Cal.App.4th at pp. 9-10, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 369.) "In other
words, the court must assess whether [the department] acted arbitrarily
and capriciously, considering the minor's best interests." (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court, supra,
58 Cal.App.4th at p. 734, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239.)
FN9.
Section 366.3, subdivisions (a), (d) and (e) provide as follows:
"(a)
If a juvenile court orders a permanent plan of adoption
or legal guardianship pursuant to Section 360 or 366.26, the
court shall retain jurisdiction over the child until the child
is adopted or the legal guardianship is established, except as
provided for in Section 366.29. The status of the child
shall be reviewed every six months to ensure that the
adoption or legal guardianship is completed as expeditiously as possible.
When the adoption of the child has been granted, the
court shall terminate its jurisdiction over the child.... [¶]
... [¶]
"(d)
If the child is in a placement other than the
home of a legal guardian and jurisdiction has not been
dismissed, the status of the child shall be reviewed at
least every six months. The review of the status of
a child for
whom the court has ordered parental rights terminated and who
has been ordered placed for adoption shall be conducted by
the court.... The court shall conduct the review under the
following circumstances
"(1)
Upon the request of the child's parents or legal guardians.
"(2)
Upon the request of the child.
"(3)
It has been 12 months since a hearing held pursuant
to Section 366.26....
"(4)
It has been 12 months since a review was conducted
by the court.
"The
court shall determine whether or not reasonable efforts to make
and finalize a permanent placement for the child have been
made.
"(e)
... at the review held every six months pursuant to
subdivision (d), the reviewing body shall inquire about the progress
being made to provide a permanent home for the child,
shall consider the safety of the child, and shall determine
all of the following:
"(1)
The continuing necessity for and appropriateness of the placement."
In this case, immediately prior to its termination order, the
juvenile court decided there was good cause not to follow
ICWA's placement preference and denied the department's request to change
Rhiannon's and Lily's placement, a decision which we affirm. There
is no question but that the court had the requisite
authority and jurisdiction to make this ruling. In reaching its
decision,
the juvenile court essentially found it would be detrimental to
the children's well-being to change their placement. This is not
a case of the juvenile court improperly substituting its independent
judgment for that of the department.
Following the termination order, while the department has the discretion
to make a different placement, absent some change in the
children's circumstances, the department's decision to change the children's placement
in this case would necessarily be detrimental to the children.
In other words, for the department to so exercise its
discretion in light of the court's recent decision would be
facially arbitrary and capricious.
In addition, the department essentially had put the court on
notice that it would make its own placement decision once
rights were terminated, regardless of the court's decision. Such an
attitude strongly suggests that the department was more interested in
standing up to the court in some show of authority
rather than acting in the best interests of Rhiannon and
Lily.
Furthermore, under section 366.3 (see fn. 9, ante
), it remains the department's burden to establish the appropriateness
of the placement of a child freed for adoption. Thus,
we fail to see how the juvenile court improperly shifted
an evidentiary burden by directing the department to explain how
a change in the children's placement would not be an
abuse of its discretion.
*651
In conclusion and under the extraordinary circumstances of this case,
the juvenile court neither exceeded its authority nor improperly invaded
the department's **173
by ordering the department to come to court before moving
the children and explain why such a change would not
be an abuse of its discretion.
DISPOSITION
The petition for extraordinary writ relief is denied.
WE CONCUR: HARRIS and BUCKLEY, JJ.
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