(Cite
as: 82 Cal.App.4th 1337)
In
re JULLIAN B., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court
Law. SACRAMENTO
COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
JOSETTE
B., Defendant; NORTH FORK RANCHERIA, Intervener and Appellant.
No.
C034955.
Court
of Appeal, Third District, California.
Aug.
14, 2000.
[Opinion
certified for partial publication. [FN*]
]
FN*
Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 976(b) and 976.1,
this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of
part III.
SUMMARY
In a dependency proceeding, the juvenile court rejected the placement
preference order set forth in the Indian Child Welfare Act
(25 U.S.C. § 1901
et seq.), which would have favored placing the subject minor
with his maternal great-uncle, and instead permitted the county department
of health and human services to place the minor with
a non-Indian family. (Superior Court of Sacramento
County, No. JD213202, Kenneth G. Peterson, Judge, and Peter Helfer,
Juvenile Court Referee.)
The Court of Appeal reversed the order of the juvenile
court insofar as that court found that the county department
of health and human services had met its burden of
establishing good cause to place the minor outside the preferences
of the Indian Child Welfare Act; in all other respects,
the court affirmed. The court held that it was error
for the juvenile court to rely on the disability imposed
by Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4
(limitation on placement of child with person who has been
convicted of crime), since none of the agencies involved had
considered whether a waiver might have been appropriate given the
facts concerning the personal history of the minor's great-uncle. The
court held that in order to establish good cause to
avoid the act's placement preference where the applicant has a
disabling criminal conviction, the agency must request a waiver under
Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4,
subd. (d)(3), or explain why, based on the merits of
the case and subject to review for abuse of discretion,
it did not do so. If a waiver is requested
and denied, the record must establish that the Director of
the Department of Social Services exercised sound discretion in denying
the waiver and must set forth the reasons therefor. (Opinion
by Hull, J., with Davis, Acting P. J., and Callahan,
J., concurring.) *1338
HEADNOTES
Classified
to California Digest of Official Reports
(1)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Tribe's Authority Over Preferences.
Although 25 U.S.C. § 1915(c),
part of the Indian Child Welfare Act, authorizes an Indian
tribe to adopt a resolution altering the order of preference
in the placement of Indian children, it does not allow
a tribe to designate a specific placement.
(2)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Effect on State Agency's Discretion.
Where the Indian Child Welfare Act (25 U.S.C. § 1901
et seq.) does not apply, the state or local agency
charged with making adoptive placements has exclusive authority to make
placement decisions for the child, reviewable only for abuse of
discretion. However, in the case of an Indian child, the
agency's discretion is confined and guided by the act, and,
if the agency selects a placement that does not comport
with the preferences of the act, it must justify its
decision by establishing good cause for refusal to do so.
These limitations carry forward the policies the act seeks to
achieve.
(3)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Congressional Intent.
Because Congress found that state agencies and courts were, in
part, responsible
for the problems identified by the Indian Child Welfare Act
(25 U.S.C. § 1901
et seq.), Congress sought by the act's provisions to require
a state to consider and respect the special circumstances of
Indian families when determining the placement of Indian children during
custody proceedings. The point of the act is to limit
state agency discretion by requiring consideration of those family and
cultural characteristics that are peculiar to the tribal society and,
where possible, to place an Indian child in an Indian
community. The provision allowing departure from the preferences stated in
the act on the basis of good cause (25 U.S.C.
§ 1915(a))
was designed to provide the courts with some flexibility in
the placement of the child.
(4)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Effect on State Agency's Discretion--Where Prospective Parent Has
Suffered Conviction.
The goals of the Indian Child Welfare Act (25 U.S.C.
§ 1901
et seq.) and the disqualifying provisions of Welf. & Inst.
Code, § 361.4
(limitation on placement of child with person who has been
convicted of crime), are not incompatible. The act limits an
agency's discretion in selecting a permanent placement for an Indian
child. Thus, the agency must search diligently for a placement
that falls within the preferences of the act and may
reject a preferred placement only on a showing of *1339
good cause. Where a prospective adoptive parent has suffered a
criminal conviction that brings the person within Welf. & Inst.
Code, § 361.4,
or where the adoptive household includes
such a person, good cause may exist to reject a
placement preferred by the act. However, the agency must either
ask for a waiver of the disqualification or adequately support
its reasons for not doing so if failure to request
a waiver results in a placement that contravenes the act's
preferences. In turn, where a waiver is requested, the Director
of the Department of Social Services may not unreasonably deny
such exemption.
(5)
Delinquent, Dependent, and Neglected Children § 59--Dependent
Children--Permanency Planning--Assessment of Prospective Adoptive Parents.
Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, §§ 35180,
35181 (assessment of adoptive applicants), do not, in themselves, contain
provisions requiring rejection of any particular applicant. The regulations only
reiterate and amplify the kinds of information required to be
in the assessment report prepared for the Welf. & Inst.
Code, § 366.26,
hearing. Rejection of an applicant must be the result of
the social worker's evaluation of the information gathered pursuant to
statute and regulation. Thus, evidence of mere compliance in gathering
the information according to the regulations is insufficient to establish
the existence of good cause to reject the placement. Of
course, failure to follow the regulations could be evidence of
a lack of good cause.
(6)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Effect on State Agency's Discretion--Where Prospective Parent Has
Suffered Conviction--Waiver of Limitation.
The juvenile court erred in finding good cause to reject
the placement preference order set forth in the Indian Child
Welfare Act (25 U.S.C. § 1901
et seq.) and to permit the county department of health
and human services to place the subject minor with a
non-Indian family, where the court relied largely on the disability
imposed by Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4
(limitation on placement of child with person who has been
convicted of crime), even though none of the agencies involved
considered whether a waiver might have been appropriate given the
facts concerning the personal history of the adoption applicant (the
child's maternal great-uncle). In order to establish good cause to
avoid the act's placement preference where the applicant has a
disabling criminal conviction, the agency must request a waiver under
Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4,
subd. (d)(3), or explain why, based on the merits of
the case and subject to review for abuse of discretion,
it did not do so. If a waiver is requested
and denied, the record must establish that the Director of
the Department of Social *1340
Services exercised sound discretion in denying the waiver and must
set forth the reasons therefor.
[See 10 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1989)
Parent and Child, §§ 348,
702.]
(7)
Indians § 1--Indian
Child Welfare Act--Effect on State Agency's Discretion--Where Prospective Parent Has
Suffered Conviction--Waiver of Limitation--Authority to Grant or Deny.
The plain language of both Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4,
subd. (d)(3), and Health & Saf. Code, § 1522,
subd. (g)(1), places squarely on the Director of the Department
of Social Services the responsibility for waiving the application of
Welf. & Inst. Code, § 361.4,
which would otherwise preclude placement of a child with a
person who has been convicted of a crime. The Legislature
has made no provision for delegation of this duty outside
the department. Only the director is uniquely positioned to ensure
uniform statewide application of the grant or denial of exemptions.
Such uniformity prevents forum shopping by prospective adoptive parents and
licensees.
COUNSEL
California Indian Legal Services, John A. Maier, Jay B. Petersen,
Stephen V. Quesenberry and Michael S. Pfeffer for Intervener and
Appellant.
No appearance for Defendant.
Robert A. Ryan, Jr., County Counsel, and Renaldo P. Carboni,
Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
HULL,
J.
In this appeal we address the impact of the preference
requirements of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) [FN1] on
the exercise of discretion by state or local agencies when
placing Indian children in adoptive homes.
FN1
See 25 United States Code section 1901 et seq.
The mother and the minor are members of the North
Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians of California (the Tribe). The
Tribe appeals from the ruling of the juvenile court finding
good cause to reject the placement preference order set forth
in the ICWA and permitting the Sacramento County Department of
Health and Human Services (DHHS) to place the minor with
a *1341
non-Indian family. [FN2] (25 U.S.C. § 1915(a).)
We reverse the order of the juvenile court, in part,
and remand for further proceedings.
FN2
The prospective adoptive father is said to be one-eighth Cherokee,
but nothing in the record indicates he is an Indian
within the meaning of the ICWA, i.e., a "person who
is a member of an Indian tribe ...." (25 U.S.C.
§ 1903(3).)
Accordingly, we conclude the prospective adoptive family does not fall
within the preferences listed in the ICWA.
Facts
DHHS removed the 17-month-old minor from his mother's custody in
April 1999 due to her history of substance abuse and
a current arrest for driving under the
influence. The mother is a member of the Tribe. The
minor is the youngest of eight children, all of whom
have been adopted or otherwise placed out of the mother's
custody. Based upon expert opinion and the social worker's assessment,
the court denied services to the mother in June 1999
and set a Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 hearing.
(All undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions
Code.) The Tribe appeared at the jurisdictional/dispositional hearing and requested
the minor be placed in conformity with the ICWA.
The assessment for the section 366.26 hearing, filed in October
1999, stated the social worker had contacted the Tribe and
the Tribe had identified the minor's maternal great-uncle, Mr. S.,
as an appropriate extended family member with whom to place
the minor. However, the social worker believed there was good
cause not to place the minor with Mr. S. because
(1) he was 71 years old and had not identified
anyone to care for the minor if he became incapacitated;
(2) he had a history of two criminal convictions adjudged
20 to 30 years earlier, the first for driving under
the influence and the second for vehicular manslaughter factually based
on an accident in which an infant died; (3) he
continued to use alcohol after the manslaughter conviction and until
1985 when his medical condition required abstinence; (4) his sole
"support system" was Ms. D., his 48-year-old girlfriend who parented
both their son and her
daughter from a prior relationship; and (5) the children raised
by Mr. S. and Ms. D. had serious problems with
their own children, including developmental delays of Ms. D.'s daughter's
children due to the daughter's use of alcohol while she
was pregnant. The Tribe did not identify any other relative
or tribal member as a prospective adoptive placement.
The social worker had investigated without success several other possible
placements, including the homes of the minor's siblings, in search
of a nontribal Indian family placement. In the assessment, the
social worker asked for a continuance to locate an adoptive
placement for the minor.
On October 27, 1999, the court conducted a section 366.26
permanent plan hearing. At the hearing the court denied the
social worker's request for *1342
a continuance, terminated parental rights, bifurcated the question of placement
and set a further hearing for November 30, 1999, to
address the issue of placement. DHHS was ordered to continue
to assess placement alternatives, and the parties were ordered to
file points and authorities regarding the issues to be decided
at the November 30 hearing.
Thereafter, DHHS filed its memorandum of points and authorities. The
department argued it had exclusive authority to place the minor,
subject only to review for abuse of discretion. In its
memorandum, the Tribe disagreed and asserted that the ICWA controlled
placement decisions. The Tribe argued that once
it had designated an extended family member's home for placement
of the minor, DHHS was required to place the minor
according to that designation unless DHHS could show, by clear
and convincing evidence, good cause not to do so.
In an appearance progress report filed prior to the November
30 hearing, DHHS documented further search efforts for a suitable
Indian family. DHHS had located a young, active couple whom
DHHS believed would be a good match for the minor.
The husband was one-eighth Cherokee and was willing to connect
the minor with the minor's own Indian heritage. DHHS recommended
placement of the minor in this prospective adoptive home.
The Tribe responded with a home study prepared by a
tribal representative which concluded Mr. S. and Ms. D. were
an appropriate adoptive placement. The two had been together since
1973 and considered themselves married according to their Indian traditions.
The tribal study contradicted information in the social worker's report,
particularly in the areas of parenting and the health and
well-being of the children and grandchildren of Mr. S. and
Ms. D. The study detailed important tribal interests, noting that
Mr. S. speaks the tribal language, has been a responsible
member of the community for many years, is in good
health and active despite his years and that he and
Ms. D. participate in tribal activities. The tribal study noted
that Fresno County previously had placed
minor relatives in the home of Mr. S. and Ms.
D. while Ms. D.'s sister was in an alcohol recovery
program.
At the hearing on December 7, 1999, DHHS addressed the
application of section 361.4, which bars placement by DHHS of
a minor with a person who has been convicted of
a crime, and addressed whether a waiver of the provision
was available. DHHS represented that "in previous cases [DHHS] has
contacted the state director of Social Services regarding this [type
of] waiver. The state department's position is that they do
not grant waivers and that they will grant a county
the authority to waive. Sacramento County is not accepting that
responsibility to grant a waiver under the [sic]
section *1343
361.4." DHHS observed that the Director of the Department of
Social Services (DSS) and the county were "at an impasse."
DHHS also objected to the Tribe's home study as hearsay
and not approved under state regulation (Cal. Code Regs., tit.
22, § 35181).
The social worker informed the court Mr. S.'s manslaughter conviction
occurred in September 1960, i.e., 40, not 20 to 30,
years earlier as reported previously. The social worker also stated
she relied on the state regulation governing the information required
to be in an assessment of the prospective adoptive family
in rejecting Mr. S. and Ms. D. as persons with
whom the minor should be placed. The social worker believed
Mr. S. would not pass a home study because
(1) he has a felony conviction which involved the death
of an infant even though the conviction was long ago;
(2) Mr. S. failed to rehabilitate and continued to drink
after the accident; (3) Mr. S. just laughed when questioned
about his parenting practices; and (4) there was no indication
Mr. S. would be an active parent.
The Tribe argued that the normal discretion of DHHS to
place a child is constrained by the ICWA and that
DHHS had to follow the statutory placement preference absent good
cause to do otherwise. The Tribe contended DHHS had the
burden to show by clear and convincing evidence that the
distant felony conviction and other facts constituted good cause to
deny the extended family placement but had not done so.
The Tribe also noted it had adopted a resolution which
designated Mr. S. and Ms. D. as the preferred placement
and stated they were married under tribal law. The tribal
representative explained that Mr. S. laughed in response to the
social worker's questions about his parenting style because he was
embarrassed by the question, which Mr. S. interpreted as asking
for self-criticism. Critical self-judgment is not part of the tribal
culture.
The referee took the matter under submission and issued a
written ruling on December 20, 1999.
In the ruling, the referee accepted the Tribe's home study
as a home study rather than a mere report. The
referee found placement decisions were not within
the exclusive control of DHHS and that DHHS was required
to establish good cause to alter the ICWA preferences. The
referee found that DHHS had, by clear and convincing evidence,
met its burden to show good cause why the statutory
preference should be "modified" by showing that Mr. S. had
a felony conviction and that the application of section 361.4,
which bars placement of the minor with Mr. S., had
not been waived. The court also found that Mr. S.
"may" not pass a home study and would be considered
unsuitable on that basis too. *1344
The referee denied as untimely the Tribe's request for a
separate hearing to consider whether DHHS had made a diligent
search for an Indian home but found, in any event,
that DHHS had done so.
Counsel for the Tribe was informed on January 3, 2000,
that, in response to a faxed copy of the court's
order sent to DHHS on December 20, 1999, DHHS had
moved the minor to the prospective adoptive home it had
located previously.
The Tribe filed an application for rehearing pursuant to section
252. The juvenile court denied the rehearing on the ground
the Tribe lacked standing to bring the application as it
was not a party enumerated in section 252.
Discussion
I.
The
Indian Child Welfare Act and Its Relation to Other Statutes
The Tribe contends the court erred in finding good cause
to permit the minor to
be placed in a non-Indian home. The Tribe asserts that,
absent good cause to the contrary, its designation of a
placement is controlling under the ICWA and must be followed
by DHHS. The Tribe argues the court erroneously found good
cause to avoid the preference because the finding was partially
premised on DSS's refusal to exercise its discretion to waive
the disqualifying provisions of section 361.4. It argues that, had
DSS considered the circumstances of Mr. S.'s felony convictions and
waived the provisions of section 361.4, the statutory impediment to
placement of the minor with Mr. S. would have been
overcome and the minor could then have been placed in
accordance with the ICWA.
We begin with a discussion of the ICWA since it
controls, in large part, the placement decision in this matter.
Based on findings that Indian children are a vital resource
to the continued existence and integrity of Indian tribes and
that the states, when exercising their jurisdiction over Indian child
custody proceedings, "have often failed to recognize the essential tribal
relations of Indian people and the cultural and social standards
prevailing in Indian communities and families," Congress enacted the ICWA
to "protect the best interests of Indian children and to
promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families
...." (25 U.S.C. §§ 1901,
1902.) In enacting the ICWA, Congress intended to establish standards
for removal and placement of Indian children which would "reflect
the unique
values of Indian culture ...." (25 U.S.C. § 1902.)
*1345
Thus, "[i]n 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." (25 U.S.C. § 1915(a).)
(1)(See
fn. 3)This
order of preference may be altered by tribal resolution. [FN3]
(25 U.S.C. § 1915(c).)
FN3
The Tribe argues that its resolution designating Mr. S. and
Ms. D. as an appropriate adoptive placement constitutes such a
resolution. Since Mr. S., and his tribal wife, Ms. D.,
are members of the minor's extended family they already enjoy
first preference under the statute. Thus, the tribal resolution does
not constitute a change in the order
of placement preferences but constitutes instead an attempt to designate
a specific placement. The ICWA does not authorize the Tribe
to do the latter, and section 1915(c) of title 25
of the United States Code, authorizing resolutions changing the order
of preference, is inapplicable to this discussion.
The
tribe also appears to rely on language in the statute
relating to "least restrictive placement." (25 U.S.C. § 1915(b).)
This language is appropriate
for foster care placement but has no application to adoptive
placements, since restrictive placement such as group homes and treatment
centers are not adoptive placements.
"The standards to be applied in meeting the preference requirements
of [25 United States Code section 1915] shall be the
prevailing social and cultural standards of the Indian community in
which the parent or extended family resides or with which
the parent or extended family members maintain social and cultural
ties." (25 U.S.C. § 1915(d).)
The essential features of ICWA placement preferences and standards are
set forth in California Rules of Court, rule 1439(k). The
rule lists some of the factors that may support a
finding of good cause, including "the unavailability of suitable families
... meeting the preference criteria." (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
1439(k)(4)(D).) An Indian child may not be placed in a
non-Indian home unless "the court finds that a diligent search
has failed to locate a suitable Indian home." (Cal. Rules
of Court, rule 1439(k)(3).)
(2)
Where the ICWA does not apply, the state or local
agency charged with making adoptive placements, in this case DHHS,
has exclusive authority to make placement decisions for the child,
reviewable only for abuse of discretion. (Department
of Social Services v. Superior Court
(1977) 58 Cal.App.4th 721, 733-734
[68 Cal.Rptr.2d 239]; Los
Angeles County Dept. of Children, etc. Services v. Superior Court
(1998) 62 Cal.App.4th 1, 9-10 [72 Cal.Rptr.2d 369].) However, as
the language of the ICWA demonstrates, in the case of
an Indian child, the agency's discretion is confined and guided
by the provisions of the ICWA and, if the agency
selects a placement which does not comport with the preferences
of the act, it must justify its decision by establishing
good cause for refusal to do so.
As noted, these limitations on the agency's decision are set
forth in the statute and carry forward the policies the
ICWA seeks to achieve. *1346
(3)Because
Congress found that state agencies and courts were, in part,
responsible for the problems identified by the statute, Congress sought
by the statute's provisions to require a state to consider
and respect the special circumstances of Indian families when determining
the placement of Indian children during custody proceedings. (Mississippi
Choctaw v. Holyfield
(1989) 490 U.S. 30, 45 [109 S.Ct. 1597, 1606-1607, 104
L.Ed.2d 29, 44].) The point of the ICWA is to
limit state agency discretion by requiring consideration of those family
and cultural characteristics which are peculiar to the tribal society
and, where possible, to place an Indian child in an
Indian community. (Id.
at pp. 35-37 [109 S.Ct. at pp. 1601-1602, 104 L.Ed.2d
at pp. 38-39].) The good cause provision is designed to
provide the courts with some
flexibility in placement of the child. (Matter
of Custody of S.E.G.
(Minn. 1994) 521 N.W.2d 357, 362; In
re Alicia S.
(1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 79, 89 [76 Cal.Rptr.2d 121].)
In some cases, other statutes affect the placement decision. Under
state law, before placing any child in a home, the
agency must conduct a criminal record check. (§
361.4, subd. (b).) If the check reveals that the individual
with whom the child may be placed may have a
criminal record and the agency still intends to place the
child in that home, the agency must conduct a fingerprint
clearance check. (§
361.4, subd. (d)(1).) "If the fingerprint clearance check indicates that
the person has been convicted of a crime that would
preclude licensure under Section 1522 of the Health and Safety
Code, the child shall not be placed in the home."
(§
361.4, subd. (d)(2).) However, "[u]pon request from a county, the
Director of Social Services may waive the application of this
section pursuant to the standards established in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (g) of Section 1522 of the Health and Safety
Code. The director shall grant or deny the waiver within
14 days of receipt of the county's request." (§
361.4, subd. (d)(3).)
Health and Safety Code section 1522 requires a criminal background
investigation of those who apply for licenses or permits to
operate community care facilities. It provides, in part: "If the
State Department of Social Services
finds that the applicant ... has been convicted of a
crime other than a minor traffic violation, the application shall
be denied, unless the director grants an exemption pursuant to
subdivision (g)." (Health & Saf. Code, § 1522,
subd. (a)(1).)
Subdivision (g)(1) of Health and Safety Code section 1522 says:
"After review of the record, the director may grant an
exemption from disqualification ... if the director has substantial and
convincing evidence to support a reasonable belief that the applicant
and the person convicted of the crime, if other than
the applicant, are of such good character as to justify
issuance of the license or special permit ...." *1347
(4)
The goals of ICWA and the disqualifying provisions of section
361.4 are not incompatible. The ICWA limits the agency's discretion
in selecting a permanent placement for an Indian child. Thus,
the agency must search diligently for a placement which falls
within the preferences of the act and may reject a
preferred placement only on a showing of good cause.
Where a prospective adoptive parent has suffered a criminal conviction
that brings the person within the provisions of section 361.4,
or where the adoptive household includes such a person, good
cause may exist to reject a placement preferred by the
act. However, in light of the purposes underlying the ICWA
and its mandate, the agency must either ask for a
waiver of the disqualifying
provisions of section 361.4, or adequately support its reasons for
not doing so if failure to request a waiver results
in a placement that contravenes the ICWA preferences. In turn,
in cases where a waiver is requested, the Director of
DSS may not unreasonably deny such exemption, for to do
so would necessarily frustrate goals the ICWA is intended to
achieve.
II.
The
Hearing in This Matter
In this case, DHHS selected a non-Indian adoptive placement, having
concluded there was no suitable placement within the preferences of
the ICWA. DHHS relied upon both the assessment prepared for
the section 366.26 hearing and the later progress report to
establish good cause and to establish that it had been
diligent in its search for a placement preferred by the
act. (5)(See
fn. 4) DHHS
also relied on the state regulations which set forth in
detail the information that must appear in the assessment and
how the assessment should be conducted. (Cal. Code Regs., tit.
22, §§ 35180,
35181.) [FN4]
FN4
These regulations do not, in themselves, contain provisions requiring rejection
of any particular applicant. The regulations only reiterate and amplify
the kinds of information required to be in the assessment
report prepared for the section 366.26 hearing. (§§
366.21, 366.22.) Rejection of an applicant must be the result
of the social worker's evaluation
of the information
gathered pursuant to statute and regulation; thus, evidence of mere
compliance in gathering the information according to the regulations is
insufficient to establish the existence of good cause to reject
the placement. Of course, failure to follow the regulations could
be evidence of a lack of good cause.
The regulations require "at least 3 separate face-to-face contacts with
each applicant for the purpose of interviewing the applicant for
the assessment." (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, § 35181,
subd. (a).) At least one interview must occur in the
home and additional interviews may occur if necessary. (Cal. *1348
Code Regs., tit. 22, § 35181,
subd. (a)(2)(A) & (2)(E).) The record discloses that the social
worker's assessment of Mr. S. as a prospective adoptive parent
was based on a single interview which occurred in the
social worker's office.
The written assessment, although sparse, contains some of the required
information, i.e., identifying information, blood relationship to the child, information
on others living in the home, medical information and criminal
history. All of the information in the assessment appears to
be gathered from the interview itself. The assessment does not
reveal an independent criminal screening, medical reports or references as
required by the regulation. (Cal.
Code Regs., tit. 22, § 35181,
subd. (b)(9), (11) & (12).)
In rejecting Mr. S.'s application, the social worker considered his
personal characteristics and current functioning as well as his reported
criminal background, his commitment and capability of meeting the minor's
needs, his support system, his plans for care of the
minor in the event he should become incapacitated and his
ability to assume permanent responsibility for the care of the
child. [FN5]
FN5
We note, in passing, that should Mr. S. be incapacitated,
the minor could be placed with Ms. D., who is
a tribal member and thus falls within the placement preferences
of the ICWA.
The social worker expressed concerns about Mr. S.'s age, his
inability to suggest a person who could care for the
minor if he became incapacitated, his prior conviction for vehicular
manslaughter of a child when he was driving under the
influence, his failure to rehabilitate for many years after the
accident, his health and his lack of support system which
consisted only of Ms. D. The report does not, however,
assess any of these factors in light of "the prevailing
social and cultural standards of the Indian community in which"
Mr. S. resides. (25 U.S.C. § 1915(d).)
At the hearing, the social worker reiterated that the felony
conviction involving the death of an infant, coupled with Mr.
S.'s failure to rehabilitate and the dearth of information about
his own parenting skills, justified rejection of his application to
adopt the minor.
The juvenile court also had before it the Tribe's assessment
of Mr. S. that contained detailed information about Mr. S.'s
support system, his importance as a tribal member and his
rehabilitation from alcohol abuse. The Tribe's assessment accounted for the
cultural aspects of the Indian community. The tribal assessment also
appeared to meet some of the social worker's objections to
Mr. S. as a placement although, as far as we
can tell from the record, the social worker did not
review her position in light of the new *1349
information. As a result, the conclusions and some of the
facts in the Tribe's assessment conflicted with those of the
social worker.
If this case required only a resolution of conflicting facts,
our inquiry into the finding of good cause would be
different. (Cf. In
re Angelia P.
(1981) 28 Cal.3d 908, 924 [171 Cal.Rptr. 637, 623 P.2d
198]; In
re Steve W.
(1990) 217 Cal.App.3d 10, 16 [265 Cal.Rptr. 650].) However, the
case requires more and we must look further.
(6)
The critical factor to the social worker and the court
was the existence of Mr. S.'s felony conviction since, even
if the other concerns of the
social worker were calmed by the Tribe's information, the statutory
bar to placement in the absence of an exemption made
an extensive assessment of Mr. S. as an adoptive placement
a pointless exercise. [FN6]
FN6
It is likely that this fact explains the somewhat cursory
assessment by the social worker, who was aware of the
problems involved in securing such an exemption.
On this record, the court found that the DHHS had
met its burden of showing good cause to modify the
preference stating: "Welfare and Institutions Code [s]ection 361.4 is a
specific Legislative command that certain placements not occur unless waivers
are granted. Although remote, the convictions of [Mr. S.] are
serious and in
the absence of a waiver,
the Legislature has directed No placement is to be made.
Here
no waiver has been granted and therefore the Department of
Health and Human Services is prohibited from placing
[the
minor]
with
[Mr.
S.]
This
alone constitutes good cause."
(Italics added, all capitalized words in original.)
The Tribe's complaint, well-founded, is that the court denied the
preferred placement based on the disability imposed by section 361.4
even though none of the agencies involved considered whether a
waiver may have been appropriate given
all the facts of Mr. S.'s personal history.
Specifically, DHHS apparently decided not to request a waiver because
DSS's "position is that they do not grant waivers ...."
DHHS recognized that DSS "will grant a county authority to
waive" but "Sacramento County is not accepting that responsibility ...."
On this record, DHHS did not decide to forego a
request for a waiver due to its own determination that
the request would be without merit, but because, in its
view, the request would be administratively futile regardless of merit.
[FN7] *1350
FN7
As noted, according to DHHS, the Director of DSS does
not grant waivers but will allow a county to do
so. On this record we cannot determine whether that means
the director simply will not accept applications for waiver or
that waivers are invariably denied regardless of the circumstances of
the individual case. This lack of clarity is of no
moment, however, because either position by the director is an
abuse of discretion. (See Sunset
Drive Corp. v.
City
of Redlands
(1999) 73 Cal.App.4th 215, 222 [86 Cal.Rptr.2d 209]; Richards,
Watson & Gershon v.
King
(1995) 39 Cal.App.4th 1176, 1180 [46 Cal.Rptr.2d 169].)
Thus, insofar as this record demonstrates, no one in authority
considered whether
the statutory disability that Mr. S. suffered by virtue of
his conviction on serious charges 40 years earlier should be
waived based on "substantial and convincing evidence" (Health & Saf.
Code, § 1522,
subd. (g)(1)) which would "support a reasonable belief that [Mr.
S.] ... [is] of such good character as to justify"
(Health & Saf. Code, § 1522,
subd. (g)(1)) removing the disability imposed by section 361.4, subdivision
(d)(2).
We hold that, in order to establish good cause to
avoid the placement preference of the ICWA where the applicant
has a disabling criminal conviction, the agency must request a
waiver pursuant to section 361.4, subdivision (d)(3), or explain why,
based on the merits of the individual case and subject
to review for abuse of discretion, it did not do
so. If a waiver is requested and denied, the record
must establish that the Director of DSS exercised sound discretion
in denying the waiver and must set forth the reasons
therefor. Anything less frustrates the purpose of the ICWA.
We add what may be obvious. The director's waiver of
the disability is not by itself dispositive of the placement.
It remains the juvenile court's responsibility to decide whether there
is good cause to avoid the preferences of the ICWA
and to determine a placement that is in the best
interest of the minor.
In anticipation of further proceedings in this matter, we requested
supplemental
briefing on the question whether the Director of DSS could
delegate the statutory authority to grant a waiver. In response
to our request, both parties submitted briefs contending the plain
language of the statute confers exclusive authority on the Director
of DSS to determine whether, under the guidelines of Health
and Safety Code section 1522, subdivision (g)(1), an exemption should
be granted.
We agree with this analysis. (7)
The plain language of both Welfare and Institutions Code section
361.4, subdivision (d)(3), and Health and Safety Code section 1522,
subdivision (g)(1), places responsibility for waiving the application of section
361.4 squarely on the Director of DSS. [FN8] The Legislature
has made no provision for delegation of this duty outside
the DSS. At least one reason for restricting the power
to grant exemptions to the director is immediately apparent. As
DSS is the ultimate overseeing authority for approval of community
care licenses and adoptive placements, the *1351
director is uniquely positioned to ensure uniform statewide application of
the grant or denial of exemptions. Such uniformity prevents "forum
shopping" by prospective adoptive parents and licensees. Statewide oversight also
prevents what appears to be a discrepancy between counties in
placing minors in the home of Mr. S. if the
information in the tribal assessment that Fresno County placed Ms.
D.'s sister's children in the home is correct.
[FN9]
FN8
We express no opinion on the question of whether the
director may delegate to an employee whose actions are overseen
by the director the actual task of reviewing and acting
upon requests for exemptions.
FN9
After the date this opinion was filed, the court received
and filed a letter brief prepared by the Attorney General's
office on behalf of DSS. Pointing out that DSS was
not a party to the underlying action, the brief was
submitted "(1) to provide the court with further information about
the Department's and Sacramento County Department of Health and Human
Services' ('DHHS') prior interaction concerning the interpretation and implementation of
section 361.4; (2) to explain the tremendous impact and burden
of its decision on the Department; and (3) to respectfully
request the [c]ourt to either withdraw its decision from publication,
or reconsider its decision on its own motion and accept
further briefing from the Department to aid in the [c]ourt's
decision on rehearing."
We
have read and considered the letter brief and have concluded
that nothing set forth therein, including specifically the department's reading
of section 361.4, subdivision (d)(3), calls into question our interpretation
of the statute. The department's request that we reconsider our
decision on our own motion is denied.
III. [FN*] The
Tribe's Other Contentions
FN*
See footnote, ante,
page 1337.
. . . . . . . . . .
.
Disposition
The order of the juvenile court is reversed insofar as
the court found DHHS met its burden to establish good
cause to place the minor outside the preferences of the
ICWA. On that issue alone the case is remanded for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In all other respects,
the orders of the juvenile court are affirmed. Appellant shall
receive its costs on appeal.
Davis, Acting P. J., and Callahan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 11, 2000,
and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
*1352
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