Filed 3/23/16 In re D.W. CA1/3
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION THREE


In re D.W., a Person Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.


ALAMEDA COUNTY SOCIAL
SERVICES AGENCY,
         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   A145286
v.
                                                                     (Alameda County
U.S.,                                                                Super. Ct. No. OJ10016173)
         Defendant and Appellant.



         U.S. (Mother), mother of five-year-old D.W., appeals from the juvenile court’s
jurisdictional and dispositional orders placing D.W. with his father, D.W. (Father), with
family maintenance services to Father, and no services to Mother. She contends the court
erred in denying her services. Alameda County Social Services Agency (the Agency)
argues the appeal must be dismissed as moot because it is now informally providing
Mother with services.1 The Agency alternatively argues the orders should be affirmed


         1
        The Agency requests that we consider postjudgment evidence that shows it is
now providing Mother with informal services, and argues the appeal is moot in light of
this new development. Mother opposes the request and argues the appeal is not moot
because the juvenile court’s order denying her services “still stands.” We agree that the
Agency’s act of informally providing services without a court order does not render the
instant appeal moot. Further, because the postjudgment evidence was not before the

                                                             1
because there was no error. We address the merits of Mother’s appeal and affirm the
orders.
                         FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
                                       Original petition
          An original dependency petition was filed on December 28, 2010, alleging that
newborn baby D.W. was at substantial risk of serious harm due to Mother’s refusal to
bond with him, and because of her mental health history and lack of support system. The
petition further alleged that Mother had failed to bond with D.W.’s half sibling, T.M., and
that her parental rights to T.M. had been terminated.
          According to the detention report, Mother was in foster care as a minor, from 1994
until she was emancipated in 2005. Beginning in 2006, she was involved with child
welfare services as the mother of T.M. There were several substantiated reports of
general neglect of T.M. and a substantiated report that she physically abused T.M.
Mother did not cooperate with informal or reunification services during T.M.’s
dependency case, and her parental rights to T.M. were terminated.
          The detention report stated that Mother did not appear to be bonding with D.W.
She declined to have him in the hospital room overnight and had attended only five
prenatal appointments during her pregnancy. Father was present at the hospital the day
after D.W. was born and signed a Declaration of Paternity form. His name was to appear
on D.W.’s birth certificate, and he was willing and able to provide for D.W.
          As to Mother’s mental health history, an evaluating psychiatrist believed, “based
on his observation of [Mother’s] disorganized thinking where she wanders from thought
to thought,” that “there is a possible psychosis.” She had been involuntarily held under
Welfare and Institutions Code, section 5150,2 in August 2007, and her moods were often


juvenile court and no extraordinary circumstances are presented, we deny the Agency’s
request. (In re Zeth S. (2003) 31 Cal.4th 396, 400, 405; In re Robert A. (2007)
147 Cal.App.4th 982, 990.)
       2
         All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
otherwise stated.


                                               2
volatile. A social worker observed Mother displaying obsessive compulsive behaviors
such as taking very long showers several times a day, repeatedly washing her hands, and
being particular about the type of cup and toothbrush she used. Mother did not appear to
understand why the Agency needed to be involved, and declined referrals to the Healthy
Start Program.
       On December 29, 2010, the juvenile court ordered D.W. detained and granted the
Agency discretion to release him to Father.
       According to a January 11, 2011 jurisdictional and dispositional report, D.W. was
doing very well in Father’s care. Father was working hard to establish services for D.W.
and had followed through with every referral he had been given. He had a criminal arrest
record dating back to 1997 for theft and drug related charges, and it appeared he had
spent some time in prison for his crimes. His last arrest, which did not result in charges
being filed, occurred in 2004. He had two children from a previous relationship and
shared custody of them. He was employed, lived in a three-bedroom apartment rental,
and had a large extended family network and a solid support system. The Agency
believed D.W. “will do just fine” in Father’s care, and that no further Agency
intervention was necessary. It recommended that jurisdiction be established, that custody
orders be made maintaining D.W. with Father, and that the case be dismissed. Mother
had not been in contact with the Agency, had not asked for visitation, and had not
expressed an interest in parenting D.W. Father reported that Mother brought cereal for
D.W. and had been in contact with him regarding D.W.’s well being.
       At a February 4, 2011 jurisdictional and dispositional hearing, the juvenile court
adopted the Agency’s recommendations. It found true the allegations of the petition,
removed D.W. from Mother’s custody, ordered him placed in Father’s custody with full
legal and physical custody to Father, and dismissed jurisdiction. The court awarded
supervised visits to Mother.
                                     Current Petition
       The Agency filed a new petition on February 4, 2015, alleging D.W. was at
substantial risk of serious harm because witnesses observed Mother hitting him multiple


                                              3
times in the head and body, causing bruising above the right corner of his right eye, two
abrasions on his forehead, and an abrasion on the back of his neck. Mother appeared to
be under the influence of a stimulant, as she was “very animated with rapid speech,
struggling to keep still, hand/body movements were continuous and ‘very hyperreflexic,’
could not stop licking her lips and moving her jaw, suffering from ‘involuntary
twitching,’ [and] dilated pupils.” She was arrested and charged with child abuse (Pen.
Code, § 273, subd. (d)) and was in jail in Richmond, California. D.W. was with Mother
at the time because Father had left him with her for approximately two months while he
lived in a men’s shelter that could not accommodate children. D.W. appeared to be
developmentally delayed in his speech as he was not able to speak in complete sentences.
The petition further alleged that Mother’s parental rights to D.W.’s half-sibling, T.M.,
had been terminated.
       A February 5, 2015 detention report stated that D.W. was living in a foster home.
According to a police report, witnesses observed Mother hitting D.W. while he was in his
stroller, causing him to fall onto the sidewalk. She continued striking D.W. in his head
and body, five to ten times, as he lay on the sidewalk. Police arrived and noted that
Mother appeared to be under the influence of a stimulant. Mother admitted she was
treating D.W. inappropriately and went too far, but denied abusing him. Father was
living in a men’s shelter that did not accommodate children, and was on the wait list for a
family unit. Father said he allowed Mother to care for D.W. for the past two months
because of his living situation, and because he lacked daycare during working hours. He
did not think Mother would hurt D.W. D.W.’s godmother told the Agency that D.W. had
been staying with Mother and that Father was not D.W.’s primary caregiver. She said
that Mother “may come across as being under the influence” even though she is not. In
“all the years she has known [Mother],” she had not seen Mother using drugs. The
godmother believed Mother had developmental issues and might benefit from Regional
Center Services. The godmother wished to be considered for placement, and said there
was a maternal aunt who also wished to be considered. The Agency recommended that
D.W. remain in foster care until Father obtained family housing.


                                             4
       Mother was incarcerated and did not appear at the February 5, 2015 detention
hearing. The juvenile court ordered D.W. removed from his parents’ custody, granted the
Agency discretion to release D.W. to Father, and scheduled a jurisdictional and
dispositional hearing for February 19, 2015.
       According to a February 19, 2015 jurisdictional report, Father still lacked housing
that could accommodate D.W. but had a meeting with his counselor scheduled that day to
determine if he could move into a family unit. The Agency recommended that the court
take jurisdiction and continue disposition. Mother did not appear at the hearing and the
matter was continued.
       According to a March 6, 2015 dispositional report, the Agency recommended that
D.W. be placed out of the home, with family reunification services to Father and no
reunification services to Mother. The Agency was unable to place D.W. with Father
because Father had not yet obtained family housing. It recommended that D.W. remain
in foster care until Father obtained proper housing, or until a relative placement was
approved. A social worker who observed a visit between Father and D.W. believed
Father was appropriate at the visit and that supervised visits were therefore unnecessary.
The social worker also reported that when she saw Father at a bus stop after the visit and
offered him a ride, he smelled of marijuana, which led her to believe he smoked
marijuana after the visit, on his way to the bus stop. The Agency set forth in the report
some issues it faced while trying to set up visits for Father. The Agency recommended
no services for Mother due to her physical discipline of D.W., her history of using
corporal punishment on T.M., and the fact that her parental rights to T.M. had been
terminated.
       Both parents contested the Agency’s recommendations, and a contested
jurisdictional and dispositional hearing was scheduled for May 21, 2015. In an
addendum report, the Agency stated that Father was temporarily living in a motel and
that CalWorks Housing Program was going to pay for the motel stay for as long as it was
needed, and thereafter assist him with rent, deposit, and furnishings once he moved into
an apartment. Based on the new living situation, the Agency placed D.W. with Father on


                                               5
March 28, 2015, and referred him to therapy, child care, and other services. Mother had
been convicted of two misdemeanor counts of battery (Pen. Code, § 242) and assault
(Pen. Code, § 240) stemming from her abuse of D.W. The Agency recommended that
D.W. be placed with Father, with family maintenance services to Father and no services
to Mother.
       Mother testified at the May 21, 2015 jurisdictional and dispositional hearing. She
acknowledged she was found guilty of assault and battery against D.W. but denied hitting
him. She said she was struggling to strap D.W. into his stroller when he resisted by
kicking and moving her hands away. She testified that Father provided a home for D.W.
but that she had also spent practically every day with D.W. since 2011, until she was
arrested on February 2, 2015. In 2013, D.W. lived with Father and she saw him everyday
for four or five hours a day. In 2014, D.W. lived with Father, and she saw him everyday,
from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. In 2015, D.W. stayed with Mother on the weekdays, and she
would take him to Father to visit when Father was able to care for him. D.W. also spent
some weekends at his godmother’s house. At the time of the hearing, Mother was living
in a shelter. She had not made an effort to see D.W. since being released from jail but
wished to see him again and to spend more time with him. Her understanding of the
previous custody order was that she could have visitation with D.W. as frequently as she
wanted with Father’s permission. She did not recall whether the visits had to be
supervised.
       Mother acknowledged that T.M. was removed from her care and that her parental
rights to T.M. were terminated. She believed the allegation as to T.M. was that she “tried
to shove food down [T.M.’s] throat,” when in fact, she was “just trying to feed her some
real food.” She testified she never received any reunification services in T.M.’s case.
She did not know why D.W. was removed from her care in 2010, except that she was told
she was “not holding [him] right in the hospital and some other stuff.” She had not taken
a parenting class on her own since the conclusion of T.M.’s case. She had not engaged in
individual or family counseling. She had not followed any medication regiment, had not
been in substance abuse treatment, and had not been evaluated for mental health-related


                                             6
issues. When asked whether she would take a parenting class if the Agency asked her to
take one, she responded, “But I didn’t abuse my child or hit him.” When asked whether
she would take a parenting class if ordered by the court to do so, she stated she would, if
it allowed her increased visitation with D.W. When asked whether she would undergo a
psychological evaluation if ordered by the court to do so, she responded, “I don’t think
that’s necessary.” She testified she had trouble “visualizing things” and was receiving
supplemental security income for the condition, which she understood was a learning
disability.
       The juvenile court found true the allegations in the petition as amended, i.e., that
D.W. was a child described by section 300, subdivisions (a), (b), and (j). Before ruling
on disposition, the court asked the parties “to focus their remarks on bypass and” and
expressed its concern “that there may be a significant bond” between Mother and D.W.,
“for better or for worse.” “The mother’s initial examination taught us all that I think the
minor and the mother have been spending more time together than was contemplated
back in 2011. That’s an appropriate consideration for the Court in considering whether
or not best interest would cause the Court to direct that services be provided to the mother
even in a Family Maintenance situation despite adequate proof of supporting bypass.”
       The Agency stated it was recommending “Family Maintenance with the father”
and that Mother was therefore “not entitled to reunification services.” The Agency stated
it would not offer her services because “two bypass provisions apply”—section 361.5,
subdivisions (b)(10) and (b)(11). The Agency further stated, “although she has spent
time with him, her actions on that day show that it is perhaps not in [D.W.’s] best interest
to be with his mother and that the Family Maintenance relationship with the father is
more important to [D.W.] at this time.” Minor’s counsel concurred that “the provision of
child welfare services would be futile,” based on her unwillingness to participate in
services, and because she did not appear to understand what she had done wrong.
Counsel recommended therapeutic visits, stating, “Even without informal child welfare
services, visitation can be arranged by the Agency to maintain that relationship.”



                                              7
       Father’s counsel noted that D.W. is very bonded with Mother; he called her
mommy and mom and always asked for her. Counsel believed Mother was “not a lost
cause” and should be “given another opportunity to parent her child.” Mother’s counsel
also noted that Mother had been very active in parenting D.W. and had a relationship
with him. Counsel stated, “It is probably in [D.W.’s] best interest to get all of the help
that he can get for his mother so that relationship can be as healthy as possible. So we
would urge the Court to make a finding that [Mother] is entitled to services; and most
importantly from [her] standpoint, she wants her visitation with her child to be as liberal
as the Court can see its way clear to grant.”
       The Agency’s attorney stated in rebuttal: “The Agency joins in minor’s counsel’s
argument regarding whether services would be in the best interest of [D.W.] considering
the mother’s lack of beginning to participate in these services. If the problems that are
leading to removal do deal with a cognitive delay or mental health issue and the mother
continues to deny receiving treatment for that issue, it would not be in [D.W.’s] best
interest to provide services.”
       The juvenile court ordered D.W. placed with Father with family maintenance
services for Father. It stated, “I do find that there is clear and convincing evidence that
reunification services should be denied to the mother . . . pursuant to Section 361.5
subdivision (b)(11). [¶] The parental rights of the mother were terminated as to a half
sibling . . . and [D.W.] is being removed from the custody of the mother who has not
made a reasonable effort to treat the problems that led to the removal of the half-sibling.”
The court ordered that “visits begin with therapeutic visits arranged through and by the
Agency as part of the minor’s case plan.” The court then stated, “I will indicate also for
the record that I considered whether there was a best-interest exception that might apply.
I was concerned about the amount of time that the minor spent with the mother; but from
the information that I gleaned, I cannot conclude that even with the amount of time that
they spent together that the best interest exception would cause the Court to order
something different concerning services to the mother. I have no information about the



                                                8
quality of the care that was provided during those time periods.” The court scheduled a
future family maintenance review hearing for October 29, 2015. Mother timely appealed.
                                        DISCUSSION
       Mother contends the juvenile court erred in denying her services. Specifically, she
asserts the court lacked authority to deny services under section 361.5, which applies to
situations in which a child is removed from both parents, and that it should instead have
evaluated the issue of services under section 362, which applies to situations in which a
dependent child remains in the custody of a parent. She argues that under section 362,
she was entitled to services. We conclude the court improperly stated it was denying
services under section 361.5, but that the error was harmless as the record supports the
denial of services to Mother.
       Section 361.5, subdivision (a), provides that unless certain exceptions apply,
“whenever a child is removed from a parent’s . . . custody, the juvenile court shall order
the social worker to provide child welfare services to the child and the child’s mother and
statutorily presumed father or guardians.” “Child welfare services” include both
reunification services and family maintenance services. (In re Pedro Z. (2010)
190 Cal.App.4th 12, 19–20 (Pedro Z.).) Section 361.5 applies only when the child has
been removed and placed in out-of-home care, not when the child is placed with a parent.
(Id. at p. 19 [§ 361.5’s provision for family reunification “does not apply when, at the
disposition hearing, a child does not enter foster care, but is returned to a parent”];
Bridget A. v Superior Court (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 285, 303 [when a child remains in
the home of a parent, the proper form of child welfare services is family maintenance
services, not reunification services].) This is because, when a child is safely in the
custody of one parent, “the court is not concerned with reunification, but with
determining whether continued supervision is necessary in the family home.” (In re
Gabriel L. (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 644, 650.)
       When a child is adjudged a dependent but is placed in the custody of a parent, the
applicable statutory provision is section 362, subdivision (c), which provides: “If a child
is adjudged a dependent child of the court, on the ground that the child is a person


                                              9
described by Section 300, and the court orders that a parent . . . shall retain custody of the
child subject to the supervision of the social worker, the parents . . . shall be required to
participate in child welfare services or services provided by an appropriate agency
designated by the court.” The services referred to in section 362 are not reunification
services, but family maintenance services, which are provided “in order to maintain the
child in his or her own home.” (§ 16506; Pedro Z., supra, 190 Cal.App.4th at pp. 19–20.)
Section 362, by its terms, vests the juvenile court with discretion to order whatever
family maintenance services it deems “necessary and proper,” including counseling and
education programs. (§ 362, subd. (d).) This language affords the court “broad
discretion to determine what would best serve and protect the child’s interests and to
fashion its dispositional order accordingly.” (In re A.E. (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 1, 4;
In re A.L. (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 138, 145.) In reviewing an order for abuse of this
broad discretion, we view all the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of
the court’s ruling. (In re Natalie A. (2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 178, 186–187.) We affirm
the order unless no rational trier of fact could determine that the juvenile court’s order
advanced the best interests of the child. (Ibid.)
       Here, the applicable statutory provision was section 362, not section 361.5,
because the juvenile court adjudged D.W. a dependent of the court and placed him in
Father’s custody, with family maintenance services. (In re A.C. (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th
636, 650 [“if minors remain in the custody of a parent, section 361.5 plays no role”].)
Thus, the court erred when it stated it was denying “reunification services” to Mother
under section 361.5, subdivision (b)(11),3 due to her failure to reunify with D.W.’s half
sibling and her failure to make a reasonable effort to treat the problems that led to the half


       3
         Section 361.5, subdivision (b)(11), provides that “[r]eunification services need
not be provided to a parent . . . when the court finds, by clear and convincing evidence,”
“[t]hat the parental rights of a parent over any sibling or half sibling of the child had been
permanently severed, and this parent is the same parent described in subdivision (a), and
that, according to the findings of the court, this parent has not subsequently made a
reasonable effort to treat the problems that led to removal of the sibling or half sibling of
that child from the parent.”


                                              10
sibling’s removal. Instead, the court should have exercised its discretion under section
362 in determining whether to order any “necessary and proper” services to Mother that
would “best serve and protect [D.W.’s] best interests.” (In re A.E., supra,
168 Cal.App.4th at p. 4.)
       The juvenile court’s reference to the bypass provision of section 361.5, however,
was harmless error because the record, as a whole, supports the conclusion that the court
also properly determined, more generally, that ordering services to Mother would not be
in D.W.’s best interests. First, the court expressed its concern regarding a possible
“significant bond” between Mother and D.W. It acknowledged Mother had spent more
time with D.W. than was contemplated in 2011, and that this was an “appropriate
consideration for the Court in considering whether or not best interest would cause the
Court to direct that services be provided to the mother even in a Family Maintenance
situation despite adequate proof of supporting bypass.”
       Second, during argument, all parties addressed whether services would be in
D.W.’s best interests. For example, although the Agency relied on the bypass provisions
of section 361.5 in arguing that services to Mother should be denied, it also argued that
despite the amount of time Mother had spent with D.W., “her actions on that day [that
resulted in misdemeanor convictions for assault and battery for Mother] show that it is
perhaps not in [D.W.’s] best interest to be with his mother and that the Family
Maintenance relationship with the father is more important to [D.W.] at this time.” The
Agency also argued that services would not be in D.W.’s best interests considering
Mother’s lack of willingness to participate in services and her refusal to receive treatment
for any possible cognitive delays or mental health issues. Minor’s counsel concurred that
“the provision of child welfare services would be futile,” based on Mother’s
unwillingness to participate in services, and because she did not appear to understand
what she had done wrong. Father’s counsel and Mother’s counsel both argued that D.W.
was bonded with Mother and that it was in his best interest for her to receive services so
that they could have a healthy relationship.



                                               11
       The record reveals that the juvenile court considered all of these arguments and
evaluated whether it was in D.W.’s best interests to order services for Mother. The court
stated it had considered the amount of time D.W. had spent with Mother, and whether
“there was a best-interest exception that might” justify an order for services to Mother. It
then stated that based on the limited information it had received regarding the quality of
care that Mother provided to D.W. during the time they had spent together, it did not
believe that the best interests of D.W. warranted a “different” “order . . . concerning
services to the mother.” In light of Mother’s failure to reunify with D.W.’s sibling, her
inability to recognize her issues, her indicated unwillingness to participate in certain
services, and the limited information that was presented regarding the quality of care she
provided to D.W. and the bond they shared, it is not reasonably probable the result would
have been different had the court exercised its broad discretion under section 362 instead
of section 361.5.4 (See In re Celine R. (2003) 31 Cal.4th 45, 50 [an error is harmless
when “it is not reasonably probable the result would have been different had the court
[not erred]”.)
                                       DISPOSITION
       The jurisdictional and dispositional orders are affirmed.




       4
        Mother asserts, “Should this court allow the introduction of post-hearing
developments, it must consider” the fact that an order for services has become “even
more critical” now, due to incidents that have occurred since disposition. We decline to
address such new evidence. (In re Zeth S., supra, 31 Cal.4th at pp. 400, 405; In re Robert
A., supra, 147 Cal.App.4th at p. 990.) “[D]ependency cases by their nature are not static,
and, because circumstances can change dramatically, the court must make its orders
based on the circumstances existing at the time of the hearing.” (In re K.B. (2009)
173 Cal.App.4th 1275.) We expect the juvenile court will issue any orders as appropriate
based on information available to it at the time future hearings take place.

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                                 _________________________
                                 McGuiness, P.J.


We concur:


_________________________
Pollak, J.


_________________________
Siggins, J.




A145286




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