Filed 5/19/15 In re J.T. CA2/8
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION EIGHT


In re J.T., a Person Coming Under the
Juvenile Court Law.                                                  B258818

LOS ANGELES COUNTY                                                   (Los Angeles County
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND                                           Super. Ct. No. DK02676)
FAMILY SERVICES,

         Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.

V.N.,

         Defendant and Appellant.



         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. D. Zeke
Zeidler, Judge. Affirmed.

         Deborah Dentler, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.

         Mark J. Saladino, County Counsel, Dawyn R. Harrison, Assistant County Counsel,
Stephen D. Watson, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
                                       ________________________________
       Father V.N. challenges a juvenile court order asserting dependency jurisdiction
over his son, J.T. Father contends the evidence did not support a finding that at the time
of the jurisdiction hearing, J.T. was at substantial risk of suffering serious emotional
damage, within the meaning of Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision
(c).1 We affirm the juvenile court order.
                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       In November 2013, the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family
Services (DCFS) received a referral regarding then 10-year-old J.T. Mother and father
never married and are separated; at the time they shared custody of J.T. In September
2013, J.T. sent his therapist an e-mail informing her that father was trying to make him
tell lies during their conjoint therapy sessions. J.T. wrote: “Tomorrow I am supposed to
say that he didn’t do the bees and tell you that mama did. I’m also supposed to tell you
that he didn’t hit me either. I will say these things to you tomorrow to not get in trouble
with him. Please know from this e-mail that they are lies and that he did hit me a lot and
I saw him make the bee trap and know mama didn’t do it. I am under a lot of pressure
from him and I can’t take it anymore. Plz do not tell papa anything about this. PLZ
HELP!!”
       According to the therapist’s notes from a subsequent session with J.T. alone, J.T.
told her father wanted him to tell the therapist lies about mother. J.T. said father had
recently spit in J.T.’s food after J.T. made him angry. Father had also locked J.T. in a
closet and kept him there for 20 or 30 minutes while he (father) “talked bad about
[mother].” J.T. reported having nightmares. He only wanted to see father when someone
else was present. In late November 2013, J.T.’s therapist informed a DCFS social worker
that J.T. had told her he was afraid father might kill himself and J.T.




1     All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
otherwise noted.

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       DCFS filed a dependency petition with the following allegation:
       “In 2013, [father] emotionally abused [J.T.] by calling the child derogatory and
demeaning names. The father frequently spoke negatively of [mother] to the child.
On prior occasions, [father] coerced the child to make up false allegations of abuse
against [mother]. On a prior occasion, the father gave the child an Easter egg with bees
inside of the egg, and the mother is allergic to bees. On prior occasions, the father would
spit into the child’s food. The child does not want to reside in the father’s home and care,
and is afraid to be alone with the father, and reports fear that the father will kill him.
[J.T.] has become depressed, withdrawn and emotionally fragile, due to the father’s
ongoing emotional abuse of the child. Such ongoing emotional abuse of the child by the
father places the child at substantial risk of suffering serious emotional damage as
evidenced by severe anxiety, depression, withdrawal and untoward aggressive behavior
towards self and others.”
       The parents had previously litigated various custody disputes in family court.
In 2009, the parents sought the assistance of the family law court after they disputed
whether mother would be allowed to take J.T. to Australia. Subsequent family court
proceedings ensued. In April 2011, a DCFS investigation was opened after reports that
father was hitting J.T. According to a psychiatrist who interviewed father and J.T., father
denied hitting J.T. and said he only tapped him softly on the wrist for discipline. J.T., in
contrast, reported that father hit him hard on the back of the neck, yelled at him, and
threatened him, resulting in J.T. being very frightened of father. In May 2011, DCFS
closed the referral as unfounded.
       A custody evaluation pursuant to Evidence Code section 730 was completed in the
family law proceedings in April 2012. The evaluator interviewed the parents and J.T.
and also considered reports regarding an incident in April 2012. According to J.T., at the
end of a visit with father over the Easter holidays, father gave him a plastic Easter egg
with instructions to take it home and open it with mother. When mother and J.T. opened
the egg, they discovered it contained dead and live bees. Mother is allergic to bees. J.T.
reportedly became very upset and remained hysterical for over an hour. Father denied

                                               3
putting bees in the egg. The custody evaluator noted a DCFS social worker investigated
the incident and concluded there was no evidence to reach a conclusion about the bees or
evidence that J.T. was in danger. In the end, the evaluator was “not confident” about
whether J.T. or father had told the truth about the bees. However, the evaluator
concluded that regardless of who was responsible for the bees, “evidence . . . suggests
both parents have contributed to loyalty conflicts for J.T. However, [father’s] parenting
style, rigid demands, and resentments of [mother] appear to have contributed
significantly to the current status of his relationship with [J.T.] as much or more than
[mother’s] influence.”
       In a subsequent ruling, the family court concluded:
        “[Father’s] difficulties with his child are essentially of his own making based on
his parenting style and a certain inappropriate discipline which did not rise to the level of
abuse and does not place the child in any physical danger, exacerbated to [a] degree by
the child’s close and somewhat enmeshed relationship with his mother. Merely reducing
[father’s] time with the child would not relieve [J.T.’s] psychological burden and the only
true remedy is repair of his relationship with his father. [J.T.’s] somewhat justified
complaints and possible dramatic actions to eliminate his father from his life have not
been successful and he must now confront dealing with his father to attempt to improve
that relationship. [Father] must confront the focus of responsibility for the problems in
the relationship being on himself and his interaction with the child and with [mother].
With the help of a therapist as will be ordered by the court, and with a proper focus on the
issues raised by this court order and the report of [the custody evaluator], the court is
hopeful that the relationship will improve or at least [J.T.] and his father will find ways to
accommodate each other.”2



2       The court did not conclusively determine who was responsible for putting bees in
the Easter egg, although it explained it did not believe father did so. The court indicated
it could not “say with certainty” that J.T. was responsible, although it seemed the “most
likely possibility,” and was the conclusion of the DCFS social worker. In the end,
however, the court explained that if J.T. “went to such great lengths to implicate his
father, that is far more telling of his state of mind than his various complaints regarding
physical abuse.” Further, father’s contention that J.T. must have orchestrated the bee
incident to attempt to get the parents to work together was, to the court, “very telling
regarding [father’s] inability to correctly assess the nature of his relationship with his
child. What is implied is [father’s] denial of the reality as experienced by the child and
that in itself must be very frustrating for [J.T.]”

                                              4
         Yet, in interviews with DCFS in early 2014, J.T. told the social worker father
called him names, disparaged mother, screamed in the car, and used profanity. J.T. again
recounted the incident with the bees, and repeated that father spit in his food. He
indicated he did not want to live with father. He was afraid to be alone with father
because of everything that had happened. He also told the social worker he was very
depressed before but was now “a lot better.” As J.T. described it: “My dad has
emotionally abused me and tried to brainwash me to ruin my mom. I’m certain about
that.”
         The maternal grandfather recounted an incident in which father told the
grandfather, in J.T.’s presence, that mother was a “fucking liar.”3 The grandfather
reported J.T. cried when father arrived to pick him up for a visit. In an interview for the
detention report, the grandfather told the DCFS social worker he had seen J.T. “quiver at
the presence of his father.” The maternal grandmother confirmed that J.T. did not want
to leave with father for visits. However, J.T. had more recently told her he knew “how to
handle it,” and would just “give [father] what he wants.”
         At the July 2014 jurisdiction hearing, J.T. testified he was uncomfortable being
alone with father because of things father had done, including locking J.T. in a closet,
hitting him, and spitting in his food. J.T. also again recounted the bee incident. J.T. said
he did not trust living with father because he feared father would not “stop screaming” at
him. According to J.T., in the past father yelled at him and told him “to do things”; J.T.
was scared that father would hit him again as he had in the past. Regarding the closet
incident, J.T. believed it took place in 2013, and father kept him in the closet for 15 to 30
minutes. J.T. testified that while he was in the closet, father said “bad words about”
mother and repeatedly asked why J.T. did not tell the truth.




3        It appears from the record that this incident took place in 2009.

                                               5
       J.T. further testified about why he feared father might kill him and himself:
“I have made those statements because of the comment that he made one morning . . . .
‘You and I can’t survive while your mother lives.’ So I thought that, because my mom is
living, that he could kill me and him because he said, ‘You and I can’t survive,’ meaning
we can’t live while your mom is.” J.T. said he was very scared. He described father as
very unstable because he screamed, yelled, cried, spoke to J.T. “very aggressively” and
bad-mouthed mother. According to J.T., father often screamed at him while he drove to
their therapy sessions. J.T. would grow scared and anxious when visiting father.
He described his feelings:
       “I would get kind of sick to my stomach. I would get butterflies. I would be
thinking to myself, Why is he doing this? Why would I –why is he punishing me?
Because, to my belief, I hadn’t done anything wrong. . . . He would curse, say [mother]
lied, say she’s a thief. And . . . very aggressively scream about what she’s done to me . . .
. It would be, like, ‘Your mom,’ and then he would say a curse word, and then he would
switch the subject to something else about my mom.”
       J.T. also testified he had nightmares as recently as January or February 2014 about
father screaming, treating him badly, and saying bad things about mother.
       Father testified at the hearing. He denied ever calling J.T. demeaning or
derogatory names. He also denied screaming or yelling as J.T. claimed. According to
father, although there may have been raised voices, he could not “imagine any of the
things that [J.T.] has described occurring.” Father denied speaking negatively about
mother to J.T. He denied ever spitting in J.T.’s food or ever hitting J.T. except to gently
tap him as a corrective action. Father testified it was not easy “to be continuously falsely
accused of something that’s not true.”
       The juvenile court found J.T. to be a person described by Welfare and Institutions
Code section 300, subdivision (c). The court noted it found J.T. very credible and had
concerns regarding father’s testimony. The court further found by clear and convincing
evidence that remaining in father’s home would pose substantial danger to J.T.’s physical
health, safety, protection, or physical or emotional well-being, and there were no

                                              6
reasonable means other than removal to protect him. The court thus declared J.T. a
dependent under section 300, subdivision (c), removed him from father’s care, custody,
and control, and placed him home of mother under DCFS supervision. The court ordered
DCFS to provide mother with family maintenance services and father with “enhancement
services.” The court ordered father to participate in conjoint counseling with J.T., a
parenting education program, and individual counseling to address case issues. Father
was allowed monitored visits, at least one hour, at least once per week.
       Father timely appealed.
                                       DISCUSSION
I.     This Appeal is Not Moot
       During the pendency of this appeal the juvenile court terminated dependency
jurisdiction over J.T.4 DCFS contends the appeal is now moot. We disagree.
       “ ‘[W]here a judgment dismissing the dependency action is challenged on appeal
the case “is not moot if the purported error is of such magnitude as to infect the outcome
of [subsequent proceedings] or where the alleged defect undermines the juvenile court’s
initial jurisdictional finding.” ’ [Citations.] The ‘refusal to address [asserted]
jurisdictional errors on appeal by declaring the case moot has the undesirable result of
insulating erroneous or arbitrary rulings from review.’ [Citation.]” (In re Marquis H.
(2013) 212 Cal.App.4th 718, 724.) This principle is applicable here. Further, in
terminating jurisdiction, the juvenile court awarded mother sole legal and physical
custody of J.T. and mandated that father have monitored visits in a therapeutic setting.
These orders flowing from the jurisdictional finding continue to adversely affect father’s
parental rights. We therefore reject the argument that the termination of dependency
jurisdiction rendered the appeal moot. (In re J.S. (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 1291, 1295;
In re J.K. (2009) 174 Cal.App.4th 1426, 1431-1432.)




4       We granted the DCFS request that we take judicial notice of two minute orders
reflecting the termination of dependency jurisdiction and issuance of a custody order.

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II.    Substantial Evidence Supported the Jurisdiction Order
       Father contends there was insufficient evidence for the juvenile court to find J.T.
was a person described by section 300, subdivision (c). We disagree.
       “We affirm a juvenile court’s jurisdictional and dispositional findings if they are
supported by substantial evidence. [Citation.] ‘In making this determination, we draw all
reasonable inferences from the evidence to support the findings and orders of the
dependency court; we review the record in the light most favorable to the court’s
determinations; and we note that issues of fact and credibility are the province of the trial
court.’ [Citation.]” (In re A.J. (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 1095, 1103 (A.J.).)
       Under section 300, subdivision (c), the juvenile court may assert dependency
jurisdiction over a child when “the child is suffering serious emotional damage, or is at
substantial risk of suffering serious emotional damage, evidenced by severe anxiety,
depression, withdrawal, or untoward aggressive behavior toward self or others, as a result
of the conduct of the parent or guardian or who has no parent or guardian capable of
providing appropriate care.” “In a situation involving parental ‘fault,’ the petitioner
must prove three things: (1) the offending parental conduct; (2) causation; and (3) serious
emotional harm or the risk thereof, as evidenced by severe anxiety, depression,
withdrawal or untoward aggressive behavior.” (In re Alexander K. (1993) 14
Cal.App.4th 549, 557.)
       There was substantial evidence that father’s conduct placed J.T. at substantial risk
of suffering serious emotional damage. There was evidence that until DCFS intervened,
father routinely yelled at J.T., made negative comments about mother to J.T. or in his
presence, and subjected him to harangues about what father perceived to be J.T.’s
falsehoods. J.T. testified that father spit in his food and kept him in a closet for at least
15 minutes while he demanded that J.T. “tell the truth.” There was evidence that father
pressured J.T. to make certain statements during conjoint therapy sessions, causing J.T.
extreme emotional distress. In addition, J.T. reported father made comments suggesting
he, mother, and J.T. could not coexist; J.T. perceived these comments as threatening, so
much so that he feared father might kill himself and kill J.T.

                                               8
       In addition, there was evidence that as a result of father’s conduct, J.T. suffered
anxiety and distress. This emotional turmoil was evidenced by nightmares, his reportedly
emotional unwillingness to leave for visits with father, and visible fear in father’s
presence.
       Although father acknowledged J.T. had suffered stress due to the tension between
the parents, father denied engaging in any inappropriate conduct. He also denied
witnessing the emotional turmoil J.T. described. However, the juvenile court found J.T.
credible, and had “concerns” about father’s testimony. Given the evidence, and the trial
court’s resolution of conflicts in that evidence, the court could reasonably conclude
father’s behavior placed J.T. at substantial risk of suffering serious emotional damage.
(See In re Christopher C. (2010) 182 Cal.App.4th 73, 84-85 (Christopher C.) [substantial
evidence of risk of substantial emotional harm where parents coached children to make
allegations of sexual abuse and used them as “weapons in an ongoing familial fight”].)
       The relevant caselaw applying section 300, subdivision (c) supports this result on
appeal. Father relies on In re Brison C. (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 1373 (Brison C.), to
support his argument that the evidence was insufficient to support a jurisdictional finding.
In Brison C., the child was caught in the middle of a custody dispute between the parents.
Although he at one point reported nightmares, upset, confusion, gastrointestinal distress,
and was terrified of being forced to live with or visit his father, the court found the record
lacked significant evidence of behavior indicative of serious emotional damage, or risk of
serious emotional damage. (Id. at pp. 1377, 1380-1381.) The lack of risk of emotional
harm was due in part to the parents’ recognition that their past behavior was
inappropriate, and their commitment to changing their behavior. (Id. at p. 1381.)
       Other courts have distinguished Brison C. on its facts. For example, in A.J., the
mother falsely reported the father had raped and molested the child. DCFS also received
a referral, later revealed to be false, indicating the father had pushed the mother out of a
moving car while the child was in the car, and that the father had abducted the child.
(A.J., supra, 197 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1097-1098.) The child told a social worker her
parents argued and the mother usually started the argument, but she denied that the

                                              9
parents engaged in any physical violence. The child also told the social worker she heard
the mother threaten to get the father in trouble by making false allegations against him.
(Id. at p. 1098.) The mother’s family described her as unstable. (Id. at pp. 1099-1100.)
       Before the jurisdiction hearing, the mother left disparaging messages on the
father’s cell phone. She threatened to call the police and have the father arrested. (A.J,
supra, 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 1101.) The mother later obtained a temporary restraining
order from the family court that denied the father any visitation with the child. The
mother then attempted to have the police remove the child from the father’s home. The
child told police the mother was not supposed to be at the father’s house, and she did not
want to go with the mother. As a result of the incident, the child suffered several
nightmares, was afraid of the mother, and refused to visit her. (Id. at pp. 1101-1102.)
The juvenile court declared the child a dependent child, then terminated jurisdiction with
an award of sole physical custody to the father, joint legal custody, and monitored visits
for the mother.
       On appeal, the reviewing court found substantial evidence supported jurisdiction
under section 300, subdivision (c). The court noted the child experienced severe anxiety
and emotional damage because of the mother’s conduct, illustrated by her nightmares,
fear of the mother, and her belief that the mother was crazy. (A.J., supra, 197
Cal.App.4th at p. 1104.) The evidence established the child was at substantial risk of
suffering serious emotional damage from the mother’s abusive conduct, including her
repeated false accusations against the father, some of which the child heard, her
disparaging comments about the father, and the mother’s attempt to have the police
remove the child from the father’s custody under false pretenses. (Id. at p. 1104.) Unlike
the parents in Brison C., the mother had never recognized her inappropriate behavior or
expressed a willingness to change.5 (A.J., at pp. 1105-1106; see also Christopher C.,


5      The A.J. court also questioned the soundness of the conclusion in Brison C. that
the child displayed no signs of emotional damage. The A.J. court noted the child in
Brison C. “feared his father, had suicidal ideation if forced to visit or live with him, and
suffered nightmares. [Citation.] The conflict between his parents caused him ‘upset,

                                             10
supra,182 Cal.App.4th at p. 85 [distinguishing Brison C. on grounds that parents had
ignored the substantial risk of emotional damage to children caused by their conduct].)
Dependency jurisdiction and removal were appropriate.
       The A.J. court’s reasoning is instructive here; we find it more applicable to this
case than that of Brison C. As in A.J., here there was evidence father repeatedly made
negative statements about mother to J.T. He pressured J.T. to make false statements
during their therapy sessions. J.T. had written an emotionally distraught e-mail to his
therapist pleading for help. In addition, J.T., like the child in A.J., had experienced
nightmares, felt frightened by what he perceived as father’s unstable character, and
generally expressed fear of father. Further, as in A.J., and unlike the parents in Brison C.,
father denied any inappropriate behavior whatsoever. As in A.J., the juvenile court could
find, based on the evidence, that father’s conduct placed J.T. at substantial risk of serious
emotional harm. (See also In re Christopher C., supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at p. 85.)
       On appeal, father contends any alleged inappropriate conduct was in the past.
He asserts there was no evidence J.T. was at substantial risk of serious emotional harm at
the time of the jurisdiction hearing. We disagree. Several of father’s behaviors which
J.T. described appeared to have been ongoing, up to the time DCFS detained J.T. This
included father’s frequent yelling and negative statements about mother. In addition,
while no specific date was identified for the occasions on which father spit in J.T.’s food
or kept him in the closet, it was reasonable to infer from J.T.’s testimony that these were
relatively recent incidents. In addition, J.T.’s pleas for help to the therapist came in late
November 2013 and precipitated DCFS involvement. DCFS detained J.T. in December
2013; father’s interactions with J.T. were monitored after that point. Thus, the trial court
could reasonably conclude father’s conduct and the risk of emotional harm to J.T. was an
ongoing problem that had not been eliminated by the time of the jurisdiction hearing.




confusion and gastrointestinal distress.’ [Citation.]” (A.J., at pp. 1105-1106.) However,
the court in A.J. was not required to expressly disagree with Brison C. due to the factual
differences between the two cases, as explained above. (A.J., at p. 1106.)

                                              11
Indeed, J.T.’s testimony suggested his emotional state had improved only after DCFS
involvement, which led to monitored visits for father.
      We therefore affirm the juvenile court’s jurisdiction order.
                                     DISPOSITION
      The jurisdiction order is affirmed.




                                                         BIGELOW, P.J.
We concur:


                    RUBIN, J.




                    FLIER, J.




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