California Court of Appeal Feb 3, 2026 No. E086687Unpublished
Filed 2/3/26 In re A.B. CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
In re A.B., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.
RIVERSIDE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SOCIAL SERVICES, E086687
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super.Ct.No. DPIN2200090)
v. OPINION
T.V.,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Susanne S. Cho, Judge.
Affirmed in part; conditionally reversed in part with directions.
Timothy O’Crowley, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
Minh C. Tran, County Counsel, Jamila T. Purnell, Chief Assistant County Counsel,
and Prabhath Shettigar, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
1
Defendant and Appellant Tameka V. (mother) appeals from orders of the Riverside
County juvenile court denying her petition to reinstate family reunification services
(Welf. & Inst. Code, § 388)1 and terminating her parental rights (§ 366.26) as to one of
her three children, A.B. (the child). The child’s alleged father died in 2021, when the
We will affirm the denial of the 388 petition and conditionally reverse the order
terminating parental rights for compliance with section 224.2 and California Rules of
Court, rule 5.481,2 California’s provisions designed to implement and enhance the federal
Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA; 25 U.S.C. § 1901 et seq.).
BACKGROUND
On October 24, 2022, when the child was six years old, officers from the Riverside
County Sheriff’s Department picked up the child and his 15-year-old half-brother, L.J.,
after mother had contacted law enforcement in the wee hours of the morning to report
that L.J. had taken the child from home the day before and were staying in a motel.
A social worker at the Riverside County Department of Public Social Services (the
Department) took the children into protective custody, and transported them to the
Department’s welcome center, in Beaumont, California. L.J. told the social worker that
he, the child, their 18-year-old half-sister J.V., and their mother lived with the maternal
grandmother until the maternal grandmother’s death (in December 2021). L.J. said
1 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise designated.
2 References to the rules are to the California Rules of Court.
2
mother had not been taking care of them well and he decided to go to a hotel and took the
child with him. It was not the first time that L.J. had left home with the child because he
did not feel mother was taking proper care of the child. When the social worker tried to
interview the child, L.J. told the child not to answer any questions. Later that day, the
children ran out of the welcome center and the staff lost sight of them as they ran through
a park across the street.
On October 26, 2022, the Department filed a juvenile dependency petition alleging
the children came within section 300.
I. Detention
The whereabouts of mother, the child, and L.J. remained unknown at the time of
the October 27, 2022, detention hearing. The juvenile court appointed counsel for the
missing parties, ordered a parent locator for mother, and issued “AWOL” (absent without
leave) warrants for the children with an order that they be detained and placed in the
Department's care once found. It granted the request of children’s counsel that the child
and L.J. be placed separately when found because the child does whatever L.J. tells him
to do, which compromises the child’s safety.
II. Jurisdiction and Disposition
At the detention hearing, the juvenile court set a jurisdictional hearing for
December 8, 2022, but on that date the whereabouts of the children remained unknown,
so the court ordered the Department to put the matter back on calendar when they were
located.
3
In February 2023, law enforcement personnel responded to a complaint of
trespassing and squatting, and found mother, half-sister J.V., and the child living in a
private property that had no running water or electricity, and had an excessive amount of
garbage both inside and outside. The Department took the child into custody and placed
him in a foster home.
In a report prepared in anticipation of the combined hearings on jurisdiction and
disposition set for March 13, 2023, the social worker noted that the child was adjusting
well in his placement and played well with the other children in the home. The foster
parents expressed concerns with the child’s ability to retain information and, although
there was no mention of behavioral issues while the child was awake, the foster parents
said he walked in his sleep, had night terrors, and would wake up screaming and banging
on the walls. The child had no recollection of the dreams or those behaviors when he was
awake.
The child had a visit with his mother and half-siblings J.V. and L.J. before the
jurisdiction/disposition hearings. Mother, who had been advised not to discuss anything
related to the case or placement and not to make any promises, repeatedly told the child
that L.J. would be leaving with the child to the child’s placement that night. The visit
ended traumatically for the child, who started screaming and sobbing when leaving the
visit and remained distressed for the duration of the trip back to his placement.
By the time of the March 13, 2023, combined hearings on jurisdiction and
disposition, mother had been arrested a second time and was incarcerated. The juvenile
4
court sustained an amended version of the juvenile dependency petition, which included
allegations that mother neglected the child, the child had left home with L.J. because they
could not find mother and she was not feeding the child, mother had a history of abusing
methamphetamine and cocaine, she had appeared under the influence when she was
found with the child in February 2023, and she was incarcerated and was not able to
provide for the continuous care and support of the child.
The child was adjudged a dependent of the court and removed from mother. The
court ordered family reunification services, including therapeutic services for the child,
individual counseling and parenting classes for mother and establishing the ability to
provide for the child and to secure safe and secure housing. The court ordered supervised
two-hour visits between the child and his half-siblings once each week and supervised
two-hour visits with mother every two weeks when she was no longer incarcerated. The
Department was authorized to increase visits if they were going well.
III. The September 2023 Six-Month Review Hearing
In August 2023 the Department prepared a status report in anticipation of the
September 13, 2023, six-month review hearing. Mother, who had a lengthy history of
convictions for various offenses, had been incarcerated between April and July 2023. She
characterized her criminal charges as misunderstandings and being in the wrong place at
the wrong time.
Once released from jail in July 2023 mother enrolled in psychiatric services but
had not yet attended an appointment and the Department was unable to verify that that
5
she had signed up. Mother said she had (i) completed a quick online parenting class but
was not sure it would be court approved and she needed $175 to print the certificate, and
(ii) that she had enrolled in a substance abuse program but did not provide verification of
enrollment or progress and refused to drug test because she did not think she had a drug
problem. She had found temporary housing through the Housing and Urban
Development Department but had not completed the paperwork necessary for obtaining
permanent housing. Mother faulted the housing counselor’s failure to advocate for her
and for requesting too many documents on short notice for the delay in getting a
permanent living space.
Mother’s visits were initially set to take place every two weeks but by the time of
status review report, she was allowed to participate in supervised weekly visits with the
child, J.V., and L.J. and those visits went well. By the time of the August 2023 status
report, she had failed to show up or cancel two of the five visits she was offered after she
got out of jail and, by the time of the September 2023 hearing, the child’s counsel noted
that she had missed the last several visits and that the child had started having tantrums
after visits.
The court ordered mother’s visits to return to every two weeks, found that the
Department had provided reasonable services and ordered services to be continued, and
set the matter for a 12-month review in December 2023.
6
IV. The January 2024 Contested 12-Month Review Hearing
By the time of the Department's December 2023 report for the 12-month review
hearing, mother had not yet secured permanent housing or a stable income, she refused to
participate in drug testing and had not completed services other than attending psychiatry
appointments. Mother continued to visit with the child and L.J. albeit inconsistently, and
she “remaine[d] appropriate” during visits. The Department recommended termination of
family reunification services and reduction in mother’s visits with the child. Mother set
the matter for a contested hearing.
While the contested hearing was pending, mother said she continued to use
controlled substances and provided the Department with a copy of certificate evidencing
completion of a six-hour parenting class on December 16, 2023. The program
development team advised that mother was not compliant with the bringing families
home program.
Mother did not appear at the January 10, 2024, contested hearing and her counsel,
who represented that he had tried to contact his client several times, objected to
termination of services. The child’s caretaker appeared and advised the court that the
child’s behavior was becoming so increasingly unbearable after visits with mother that
the caretaker no longer wanted to adopt the child or to become his guardian. The
caretaker said the child’s behaviors had evened out since not seeing mother during the
most recent four or five visits with the siblings but also expressed concern that L.J. had
made more than one threat to kidnap the child.
7
The juvenile court terminated mother’s family reunification services and decreased
her supervised visits to two hours once a month but, because the caretaker was not at that
time committed caring for the child permanently, the court did not set a section 366.26
permanent plan selection hearing but set the case for a section 366.3 postpermanency
status review hearing. Mother did not appeal.
V. The Postpermanency Status Review Hearings
The court held postpermanency status review hearings in the 20-month period
elapsing between the termination of reunification services and the selection of a
permanent plan.
In anticipation of the June 2024 status review hearing, the Department reported
that the child continued to have bi-monthly visits with his siblings, which he looked
forward to. Mother had not attended a visit with the child during the reporting period
(January-June) although she did have two short FaceTime conversations with the child
and L.J. during sibling visits. The child was still living with the same foster family, who
wished to continue caring for him but did not want to provide him with a permanent
home.
In December 2024, the Department advised the juvenile court that the child had
been placed with a matched prospective adoptive family on October 25, 2024. He had
adjusted well to his new surroundings, he was eating and sleeping well, had made friends
in his new school, and said he feels safe and comfortable with his new caretakers. No
behavioral concerns were reported at home or at school, and the child was actively
8
participating in therapy and developing coping skills, and was receptive to conversations
with the therapist surrounding adoption.
Mother had not maintained consistent contact with the Department and had not
visited the child in over a year. A November 2024 visit had been arranged for her, but she
ended up being arrested in October and charged with burglary and grand theft. At the
time of the Department's report, mother was being held at the Robert Presley Detention
Center and was scheduled for a drug court evaluation for December 19, 2024. While
incarcerated, mother wrote a letter to the Department asking for visits and the Department
reported that, if the child wished to see mother, it would arrange for monthly in person
jail visits for him.
Mother was present with counsel at the January 2025 review hearing. The
juvenile court authorized mother to have telephone visits with the child and monthly two-
hour in-person visits with authorization for those visits to be increased. The matter was
set for a section 366.26 permanent plan selection hearing on July 8, 2025, and the court
advised the parties that preservation of any right to appellate review of the court’s order
required them to seek an extraordinary writ. Mother did not file a notice of intent to file a
writ petition.
VI. Mother’s Section 388 Petition and the Permanent Plan Selection Hearing
In April 2025, the Department filed a permanent plan report. It described the
child’s prospective adoptive family, noted that they were willing and able to adopt the
child, that a close attachment had developed between the child and the family. The child
9
was too young to fully understand the concept of adoption, but he was clearly well-
bonded with the potential adoptive parents and said he wanted to stay in their home and
be cared for by them.
On May 7, 2025, the day before the permanent plan selection hearing was set to
begin, mother filed a section 388 petition requesting an order reinstating family
reunification services on the grounds that she had worked very hard to achieve stability
and sobriety, and because the child and L.J. are very bonded to her and they wanted the
family to be reunified.
A hearing on the petition was ordered for the next day but, because it had not been
placed on the calendar, the juvenile court found good cause to continue the permanent
plan hearing and put it and the petition on calendar for July 8, 2025. On July 8, mother
requested a continuance to permit time for preparation of a study to see how bonded
mother was with the child. The court indicated it would not find good cause to continue
the matter for the study because it did not think it was critical but noted mother would
have time to arrange for one because it was setting the section 388 petition for a contested
hearing on August 12, 2025, and trailing the hearing on the permanent plan for the same
date.3
In the course of presenting her arguments at the August 12, 2025 hearing, mother
requested a continuance because a bonding study scheduled for August 1 had not taken
3 At the July 8, 2025 hearing, the court ordered the juvenile clerk’s office to create a non-minor dependent case for L.J., who would be turning 18 years old on July 22, 2025.
10
place. The court did not explicitly rule on the request but proceeded with the hearing. It
denied mother’s section 388 petition and, upon finding by clear and convincing evidence
that the child was adoptable and likely to be adopted, it terminated mother’s parental
rights.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, mother argues that reversal of the order terminating her parental rights
is called for because the juvenile court abused its discretion (i) when it denied her request
to continue the section 366.26 hearing to permit rescheduling of a bonding study, and (ii)
when it denied her section 388 petition to reinstate family reunification services. Mother
also posits that the termination order should be conditionally reversed because the
Department did not adequately comply with the Indian child inquiry provisions set forth
in section 224.2 and rule 5.481.
A. The Denial of a Continuance To Permit Rescheduling of a Bonding Study
At the August 12, 2025, section 366.26 hearing, mother orally requested a
continuance, advising the court that a bonding study for mother and the child, which was
“basically scheduled” for August 1, had been cancelled at the last minute because the
child did not want to attend. Mother argues that the juvenile court abused its discretion
when it failed to continue the permanent plan selection hearing to permit rescheduling of
that study. We do not agree.
As relevant here, section 352 authorizes the juvenile court to continue a juvenile
dependency hearing upon a showing of good cause so long as the continuance is not
11
contrary to the minor’s interest. (§ 352, subd. (a)(1) & (2); Michael G. v. Superior Court
(2023) 14 Cal.5th 609, 632 (Michael G.).) In considering the minor’s interests, the court
is required to give substantial weight to the minor’s need for prompt resolution of his or
her custody status, to the need to provide children with stable environments, and to the
damage to a minor of prolonged temporary placements. (§ 352, subd. (a)(1); Michael G.,
supra, at p. 632.)
A party seeking a continuance is required to file and serve on the parties a written
notice of motion for the continuance at least two days prior to the date set for hearing,
together with affidavits or declarations detailing specific facts showing that a continuance
is necessary although the court may for good cause entertain an oral motion. (§ 352,
subd. (a)(3); rule 5.550(a)(4).)
The juvenile court’s denial of a continuance request is reviewed for an abuse of
discretion, and we will not disturb the lower court’s ruling unless it is arbitrary, capricious
or patently absurd and results in a manifest miscarriage of justice. (In re D.N. (2020) 56
Cal.App.5th 741, 756.)
Here, we do not find that the court abused its discretion when it proceeded with
the permanent plan selection hearing without continuing it a third time. Mother did not
file a written motion to continue the hearing set for August 12, 2025, as required by
section 352, subdivision (a)(3), and made no mention in the juvenile court of her lack of
compliance with the requirement. And, although the juvenile court did not make an
explicit ruling on mother’s oral request to continue the hearing, it did observe in
12
connection with its decision not to reinstate family reunification services that the child
understood termination of parental rights meant there would be no more visits and he was
“okay with that” because he doesn’t want visitation, and the court opined that dragging
out the proceedings would “just traumatize[] him further.”
Mother did not offer the trial court, nor mention in her briefs filed in this court,
any explanation why she did not comply with the requirement that she file a written
motion at least two days before the hearing. On appeal, she argues that the last-minute
cancellation of the bonding study arranged by her counsel constituted good cause for a
continuance because, without the study, she did not have the evidence she “needed to
demonstrate that despite limited visitation, [the child’s] bond to his mother was
substantial.” She posits the evidence was relevant both to the establishment of the best
interest component of her section 388 petition and the establishment of the “beneficial
relationship exception.”4 We are not persuaded.
Mother’s claims presuppose that the bonding study would necessarily have
concluded that the child was very bonded to her. She asserts that the study was necessary
(and suggests the result would reflect positively on the child’s relationship with her)
4 Mother’s mention of the “beneficial relationship exception” is likely a reference to section 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(B)(i), which authorizes the juvenile court to select a permanent plan other than adoption if the parent has established three elements by a preponderance of evidence: (i) the parent maintained regular visitation and contact with the child; (ii) the child has, and would benefit from continuing, a substantial, positive, emotional attachment to the parent; and (iii) termination of that relationship would be detrimental to the child even when balanced against the benefits of an adoptive home. (In re Caden C. (2021) 11 Cal.5th 614, 636–637.) Mother did not raise the exception at the permanent plan selection hearing.
13
because she cared for the child for six years prior to the commencement of the juvenile
dependency proceedings, that throughout the case the child always wanted to visit her
and he was sad when she missed visits, and, though the child was upset when mother did
not visit, he also had “anger acting out issues unrelated to his relationship with his
mother.” The record does not support those assertions.
It appears from the record that, until she died in December 2021, the maternal
grandmother provided the primary care of the child and that mother was a transient with
who had suffered several convictions for various offenses between 2015 and 2022. For
example, when the child was born, L.J. (then eight years old) and J.V. (then 12 years old)
lived with the maternal grandmother, who was their guardian. Mother moved in with the
family a month before giving birth to the child. When the child was two years old, the
maternal grandmother left the hospital against medical advice following hip replacement
surgery because she had to go home to care for the children. And, after the
grandmother’s death in December 2021, it appears L.J. became the child’s primary
caretaker because mother was not caring for the child properly.
Nor does the record support mother’s assertion that the child “always wanted to
visit” her. Rather, it shows that the child “inquired” as to visits with his mother and half-
sister J.V. shortly after being taken into custody but the child’s main concern was staying
close to L.J. as well as seeing J.V. In July 2025, shortly before the permanent plan
selection hearing, the child said he did not always want to visit mother, that he still felt
hurt about her never being there for him, and he was fine not having visits alone with her,
14
he did not like that mother told him that he had to go to the bonding study appointment,
and he refused to attend even when the social worker offered to stay with him for the
entire study.
Mother’s assertion that the child’s behavioral issues were unrelated to his
relationship with her is also not supported by the record. The foster parent who took care
of the child from February 2023 until the child was placed with an adoptive family in
October 2024, noted that the child’s anger outbursts were triggered by visits with mother
and that his behaviors evened out after mother failed to attend four or five visits in a row.
B. The Denial of Mother’s Section 388 Petition
Mother argues that reversal of the order terminating her parental rights is called for
because the juvenile court abused its discretion when it denied her section 388 petition
seeking reinstatement of family reunification services because the petition was supported
by facts in the record. She also claims the court improperly considered extraneous
evidence when making its decision to deny the petition.
Subdivision (a)(1) of section 388 provides in relevant part that a parent of a child
who is a dependent of the juvenile court may, upon grounds of a change of circumstances
or new evidence, petition the court to modify or set aside a previous order made by that
court. (In re R.M. (2025) 111 Cal.App.5th 119, 136 (R.M.).)
To obtain relief under section 388, the parent must establish two elements by a
preponderance of the evidence: (i) there has been a change in circumstances or new
evidence, and (ii) that the proposed change of order would be in the best interests of the
15
child. (In re A.A. (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 597, 611–612 (A.A.).) Generally speaking, the
parent must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the child’s welfare requires the
modification the parent is seeking. (Id., at p. 612.) The change in circumstances must be
substantial. (In re Ernesto R. (2014) 230 Cal.App.4th 219, 223.) In making its decision,
the court may consider the entire factual and procedural history of the case. (In re
Justice P. (2004) 123 Cal.App.4th 181, 189.)
And, in cases like the present one in which a section 388 petition is filed after
family reunification services have been terminated, the focus of the dependency
proceedings is no longer the parent’s interest in maintaining a relationship with the child
but rather the child’s interest in permanency and stability, a consideration the juvenile
court must recognize when considering a postservices petition. (In re J.C. (2014) 226
Cal.App.4th 503, 526–527 (J.C.).)
The petition is addressed to the discretion of the juvenile court, and its decision
will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion. (In re
Stephanie M. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 295, 318; A.A., supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 612.)
(i) Mother’s change of circumstances
Mother argues that the juvenile court erred when it found her circumstances had
not changed because after reunification services were terminated in January 2024 she had
addressed and changed “all the risk factors stated in the section 300 petition.”
After mother was released on bail on December 30, 2024, following her October
2024 arrest on charges of felony burglary and grand theft, she undertook to address the
16
issues and change the circumstances that led to the child becoming a dependent of the
juvenile court. The attachments to mother’s May 7, 2025 petition and the social worker’s
interviews with mother in June 2025 established that, beginning in January 2025, mother
enrolled in an intensive outpatient program to address her substance abuse issues, she
started attending appointments with a psychiatrist and receiving therapy and counseling,
took parenting classes, obtained housing through the Family Self Sufficiency Program
effective March 1, 2025, was involved in several support groups including AA and NA,
and though not employed, she planned to apply for an online truck driving school.
Mother’s substance abuse counselor confirmed that mother was consistently
participating in her program and, although mother was still “fresh” in her recovery, the
counselor believed there was a possibility of mother achieving long term sobriety.
At the hearing on the petition, the juvenile court recognized mother had recently
made efforts and had “kind of turned things around” after she posted bail in December
2024 but made clear that her progress since January reflected changing, not changed,
circumstances. The court also noted that the felony charges against mother were still
pending and she had a strike prior that was kind of recent, so her future and stability were
at risk.
While we commend mother’s efforts undertaken after her release from jail at the
end of December 2024, we do not find the juvenile court abused its discretion in finding
that her circumstances were changing but had not changed sufficiently to meet her burden
as to the first element of section 388.
17
(ii) The child’s best interests
The juvenile court also found mother had not met her burden to establish that the
child’s best interests would be served by providing mother with further family
reunification services well over a year after they had been terminated. It noted that the
child was nine years old, his case had been open for three years, mother had a pending
criminal case which put her future and stability at risk, and it would not be in the child’s
best interest “to reopen the case again and go back to square one.”
Mother argues that the juvenile court erred when it found it was not in the child’s
best interests to resume family reunification services well over a year after they had been
terminated because she had established that she had ameliorated the issues leading to the
child’s removal, the child had an unquestionably strong bond with L.J. and J.V., and
because he was bonded to mother. Mother’s arguments are unavailing.
As discussed ante, mother had made commendable efforts to address her issues
with drugs, unemployment, and housing in the seven or so months immediately before
the hearing on her section 388 petition. But providing additional time and services to her
with the hope she would not only achieve success in her drug program but also manage to
avoid a prison sentence with respect to her felony criminal charges is antithetical to
promoting the child’s interest in permanency and stability. (J.C., supra, 226 Cal.App.4th
at p. 527.)
18
We are unaware of any authority to support the proposition that the existence of a
bond between the child and his adult half-siblings support a parent’s section 388 seeking
resumption of family reunification services, and mother does not cite any.
With respect to mother’s claims that she shares a bond with the child, she repeats
her assertions that she was the child’s caretaker for six years prior to the dependency
proceedings, that the child always wanted to visit her, he was sad and upset when she did
not visit but had anger acting out issues unrelated to his relationship with mother. We
have already addressed those assertions ante, and found they were not supported by the
record.
What the record does reflect is that the child had bonded and developed a positive
relationship with his new family, he wanted to stay in their home and be cared for by
them, he was stable and excelling in the family’s care, and the family was committed to
adopting him.
Considering the lack of evidence of a strong mother-child bond and the evidence
demonstrating the child’s bond and positive relationship with his intended adoptive
parents against the backdrop of the child’s paramount need for permanence and stability,
we find the juvenile court properly exercised its discretion when it found the child’s best
interests would not be served by granting mother’s section 388 petition.
(iii) Mother’s Claim that the Juvenile Court Considered Extraneous Evidence
Mother claims her due process rights were denied when the juvenile court
considered extraneous evidence.
19
In support of her claim, she points to the following remarks the court made in the
context of describing the difficulties mother had been experiencing before she started
changing her circumstances, her pending criminal charges placed her future and stability
at risk:
“After the termination of services on January 10, 2024, you unfortunately still
were struggling out there, engaged in substance abuse, and homelessness, and criminal
behavior, which caused you to be accused in this courthouse in a felony case pending at
this time. The incident date was March of last year.
“Now, I don't know if the gentleman who was in the police report is the same
partner you have today. But I'm concerned that you have a pending a criminal case where
your future and stability are still at risk. We don't know what's going to happen yet on
that case. Because of the strike prior you have, I don't know if you are going to be able to
get a judge to strike the strike so that you can try to get probation. Because your strike is
kind of recent, and it's not that easy to get a judge to do that.
“Now, what you've done in the last few months makes a pretty strong case for a
judge to be able to do that, even though it's a recent strike. But it really doesn't provide
me with a lot of comfort in terms of proving up the first element of this motion today.”
Based on the court’s mention of a police report and the fact that a police report
was not entered into evidence, mother claims the court improperly “relied” on
information that had not been admitted into evidence but she does not say what the court
relied on it for.
20
Mother forfeited her claim because she did not object to the court’s mention of a
police report. (People v. Stowell (2003) 31 Cal.4th 1107, 1114 [it is a well-established
procedural principle that an appellate court will not consider claims of error that could
have been raised in the trial court but were not].) In all events, mother does not
explain—and we cannot fathom—how mother was prejudiced by the reference.
C. Compliance with California’s ICWA Inquiry Provisions
Mother argues that that the juvenile court did not exact the Department's full
compliance with the ICWA inquiry requirements set forth in section 224.2 and rule 5.481.
We agree.
(i) The Statutory Framework
ICWA was enacted by Congress to protect the best interests of Indian children and
to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families in child custody
proceedings, including juvenile dependency cases. (25 U.S.C. §§ 1902, 1903(1);
25 C.F.R. § 23.106 (2025).) To that end, California law imposes an affirmative and
continuing duty on the court and child services agencies such as the Department to
conduct ICWA inquiries to determine whether a child for whom a section 300 juvenile
dependency petition has or may be filed is or may be an Indian child, and to provide
information to tribes when there is a reason to believe or a reason to know the child is or
may be an Indian child. (§ 224.2, subd. (a); rule 5.481(a); In re Dezi C. (2024) 16 Cal.5th
1112, 1131–1133 (Dezi C.).)
21
California’s provisions governing the timing and scope of the Department's duties
of ICWA inquiry and notice (sometimes collectively referred to herein as Cal-ICWA) are
set forth in sections 224.2, 224.3, and rule 5.481. Section 224.2 provides in relevant part
that, if the Department takes a child into protective custody, it is required to ask the child,
the parents, extended family members, and others who have an interest in the child
whether the child is or may be an Indian child and where the child and parents are
domiciled. (§ 224.2, subd. (b)(1), formerly subd. (a), renumbered and revised without
requires the Department to include in its filings on an ongoing basis a detailed description
of all inquiries undertaken.
(ii) The Standard of Review
When the juvenile court has a well-developed record, it is afforded relatively
broad discretion in making the fact-specific determination that the child services agency
complied with the Cal-ICWA requirements. (Dezi C., supra, 16 Cal.5th at p. 1141.) We
will uphold the court’s finding that ICWA does not apply so long as the court’s
conclusions are supported by sufficient evidence and documentation in the record as
required by California law. (Ibid.)
If, however, a record is not well developed because inquiry was not properly
undertaken and reported as required, then the juvenile court’s discretion necessarily
becomes more limited. (Dezi C., supra, 16 Cal.5th at pp. 1141, 1151.) In those cases,
conditional reversal is required because, until the Department gathers, shares, and
22
documents the information required by Cal-ICWA, it is not possible to know what
information a properly conducted inquiry might reveal. (Id., at pp. 1136, 1152.)
(iii) The ICWA Inquiry Was Inadequate
Here, there is no mention in the record of any effort to determine if the child’s
deceased father may have had Native American ancestry. The Department posits that
ICWA’s definition of a parent “does not include an unwed father where paternity has not
been acknowledged or established,” and, therefore, ICWA does not apply in this case
because father’s name does not appear on the child’s birth certificate and, because no one
asked the trial court to make paternity findings, none were made. We disagree.
On August 29, 2023, the mother confirmed father’s paternity as to the child. But
there is no indication in the record that the Department asked mother, J.V., L.J., the child,
or any other readily available family member or interested person whether they had any
information about father’s ancestry or if they had contact information for any extended
family member or interested person who might have knowledge of father’s ancestry. The
record reflects only that J.V. denied any Native American ancestry on the maternal side of
the family, that mother denied that she had any Native American ancestry, and that, when
the child was seven years old, he denied having Native American ancestry. Accordingly,
conditional reversal of the order terminating parental rights is called for because the
juvenile court’s findings that ICWA did not apply to the proceedings were made without
an adequate inquiry having been made.
23
DISPOSITION
The juvenile court’s order denying mother’s section 388 petition is affirmed.
The juvenile court’s order terminating parental rights is conditionally reversed.
On remand, the court is instructed to order the Department (i) to comply with its duty of
inquiry by interviewing readily available family members, including extended family
members, and others who have an interest in the child who may have potentially
meaningful information about the child’s paternal ancestors; (ii) to provide the
information obtained to the pertinent tribes; and (iii) to provide the juvenile court with a
detailed description of all inquiries undertaken, and all information received pertaining to
the child’s Indian status.
If the juvenile court determines that ICWA does not apply, then the court shall
reinstate the orders. If the court determines that ICWA does apply, then it shall proceed
in conformity with ICWA and related California law.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS RAMIREZ P. J.
We concur:
McKINSTER J. FIELDS J.
24
AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court affirmed the denial of the mother's section 388 petition to reinstate reunification services and conditionally reversed the termination of parental rights due to the Department's failure to comply with ICWA inquiry requirements.
Issues
Did the juvenile court abuse its discretion by denying the mother's request for a continuance to reschedule a bonding study?
Did the juvenile court abuse its discretion by denying the mother's section 388 petition to reinstate family reunification services?
Did the Department fail to comply with the Indian child inquiry provisions under section 224.2 and rule 5.481?
Disposition. Affirmed in part; conditionally reversed in part with directions.
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“We will affirm the denial of the 388 petition and conditionally reverse the order terminating parental rights for compliance with section 224.2 and California Rules of Court, rule 5.481”
“The juvenile court’s denial of a continuance request is reviewed for an abuse of discretion”
“The petition is addressed to the discretion of the juvenile court, and its decision will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion.”