Filed 6/27/16 In re Jordan W. CA2/7
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 SEVEN


In re JORDAN W., a Person Coming                                     B266856
Under the Juvenile Court Law.
                                                                     (Los Angeles County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. CK93386)

LOS ANGELES COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
FAMILY SERVICES,

         Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.

M.W.,

         Defendant and Appellant.



         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Emma
Castro, Juvenile Court Referee. Affirmed.
         Amy Z. Tobin, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
         Mary C. Wickham, County Counsel, R. Keith Davis, Acting Assistant County
Counsel, and Peter Ferrera, Principal Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
                                        _________________________
       On July 20, 2015 the juvenile court sustained a supplemental petition pursuant to
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Welfare and Institutions Code section 387 and removed then-three-year-old Jordan W.,
who had previously been declared a dependent child of the juvenile court pursuant to
section 300, subdivision (b), from the physical custody of his mother, M.W. On appeal
M.W. contends substantial evidence does not support the court’s finding that its prior
order allowing Jordan to remain in her custody under the supervision of the Los Angeles
County Department of Children and Family Services (Department) was ineffective in
protecting the child. We affirm.
                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       1. The August 2013 Dependency Petition and the September 16, 2013 Home-of-
          Parent-Mother Order
       The Department received a referral regarding M.W. and Jordan in July 2013,
indicating M.W. was homeless after being asked to leave her transitional housing. The
referral alleged M.W., who was only 19 years old, used her welfare payments to buy
marijuana instead of food and clothing. It was also reported that Jordan had been with
M.W. when she stole clothes and food at a big-box store. When contacted by the
Department, M.W. admitted she smoked marijuana and said she was homeless but
staying with friends; she declined to identify the friends or provide their addresses. The
children’s social work observed Jordan to be clean, well-groomed and appropriately
dressed; he appeared to be attached to M.W. and happy in her care.
       On August 19, 2013 the Department filed a nondetention petition to declare two-
year-old Jordan a dependent child of the juvenile court pursuant to section 300,
subdivision (b), alleging there was a substantial risk he would suffer serious physical
harm as a result of M.W.’s inability to provide regular care due to her use of illicit drugs
and mental and emotional problems. After initially requesting a contested jurisdiction
hearing, M.W. pleaded no contest on September 16, 2013 to an amended petition that
alleged she had an unresolved history of marijuana use that periodically rendered her

1
       Statutory references are to this code unless otherwise indicated.
                                               2
incapable of providing Jordan with regular care and supervision. The amended petition
as sustained also alleged, in connection with M.W.’s prior involvement with the
Department, remedial services had “failed to resolve family problems in that mother
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failed to regularly participate in services to address such issues.”
       In its jurisdiction/disposition report the Department stated Jordan was developing
at a normal rate and was doing well physically and emotionally. M.W. was living with
Jordan at the maternal grandmother’s home, as she had done sporadically since the
child’s birth. Jordan appeared to be well-cared for and safe in the home. However,
M.W. had advised the Department she would not quit smoking marijuana, which she
claimed calmed her down. (At this point she had no medical marijuana recommendation
                   3
from a physician.) M.W. told the Department she had an adult supervising Jordan when
she smoked but would not provide any details of his care. The Department also reported
M.W. had been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) but
had stopped taking the prescribed psychotropic medication because she did not believe it
helped her. In a subsequent interview before the jurisdiction/disposition hearing M.W.
reported she no longer smoked marijuana regularly because her ADHD symptoms had
lessened.



2
        M.W. was 17 years old when she gave birth to Jordan. The month after his birth
the Department received a referral alleging general neglect and caregiver absence and
incapacity based on M.W.’s marijuana use. M.W., who was herself a dependent child of
the court, entered into a voluntary family reunification contract with the Department,
agreeing to place Jordan in foster care. A section 300 petition was filed seven months
later because M.W., who remained in a probation placement following a threat to one of
her teachers, could no longer provide on-going care for Jordan. M.W. apparently
complied with her case plan, and the petition was dismissed without prejudice several
months later.
3
       Health and Safety Code section 11362.5, subdivision (b)(1)(B), part of the
Compassionate Use Act of 1996, provides the Act is intended “[t]o ensure that patients
and their primary caregivers who obtain and use marijuana for medical purposes upon the
recommendation of a physician are not subject to criminal prosecution or sanction.”
                                              3
       After sustaining the amended section 300 petition, the court declared Jordan a
dependent child of the court and ordered he remain released to M.W.’s custody under the
Department’s supervision. The court ordered family maintenance services, including
M.W.’s participation in individual counseling to address the negative effects of marijuana
use, mental health well-being, coping with family dynamics and being a single parent.
M.W. was also ordered to provide four consecutive clean, random drug tests and to attend
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a parenting course.
       2. The Judicial Review Hearings
       M.W. was arrested for shoplifting while Jordan was in her care in January 2014.
She was convicted of theft, placed on probation and required to serve two days in jail.
The Department reported for the section 364 judicial reviewing hearing in March 2014
that M.W. was once again homeless. M.W. indicated she was living with friends, family
members and occasionally in a hotel. There was no support from her family. Jordan was
considered to be safe in M.W.’s care. However, M.W. admitted she periodically smoked
marijuana and was testing only sporadically: She had nine no-shows and two positive
tests. M.W. insisted Jordan was not present when she used marijuana. M.W. also had
not completed a parenting class or enrolled in individual counseling. The court found
continued jurisdiction was necessary.
       At the judicial review hearing in September 2014 the Department reported that
M.W. continued to be homeless. M.W. had again been arrested in April 2014 based on a
warrant for an unpaid ticket and yet again in July 2014 for assault. She said Jordan had
stayed with a friend in April and with family members during her time in custody in July.
M.W. missed eight scheduled drug tests during this period. The Department’s efforts to
help with housing were unsuccessful; it had assisted M.W. with childcare, which Jordan


4
       M.W. identified Marcus R. as Jordan’s father, reported she was unaware of his
whereabouts and stated she had had no recent contact with him. At the initial
dependency hearing Marcus R. was found to be an alleged father only. At the disposition
hearing the court declined to order any services for him.
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attended on a daily basis with no problems reported. The Department remained positive
about the quality of M.W.’s care for Jordan. The court found continued jurisdiction was
necessary. A third judicial review hearing was scheduled for March 24, 2015.
       At a meeting with Department personnel in October 2014, M.W. refused, in a rude
and confrontational manner, to provide details about the individuals she claimed were
caring for Jordan while she was in custody or was otherwise unavailable to supervise
him. Asked about reports she was engaging in prostitution, M.W. simply said she was no
longer involved in it. (Material submitted by the Department with its report for the
March 2015 judicial review hearing disclosed that M.W. had been arrested on charges
relating to prostitution in July 2014, was convicted and sentenced to 10 days in jail. She
had again been arrested for prostitution in September 2014, convicted and sentenced to
24 months’ probation and 10 days in jail.) As for her nonappearance at scheduled drug
tests, M.W. insisted her letter was never called.
       For the March 24, 2015 judicial review hearing the Department reported that
M.W. continued to be homeless, again stating she lived with friends, family members and
sometimes hotels. She would not provide the Department any addresses, frustrating the
Department’s ability to evaluate the safety of those residences for Jordan. By this time
M.W. had obtained a medical marijuana recommendation, but she would not reveal the
nature of the medical condition being treated. She continued to use marijuana and
refused to comply with court-ordered testing or to enroll in individual counseling or a
parenting program. The Department recommended the termination of family
maintenance services.
       3. The Section 387 Proceedings
       On March 20, 2015, several days before the scheduled review hearing, the
Department sought and received authorization to detain Jordan from M.W. The
section 364 hearing was continued, and the Department filed a section 387 petition on
Jordan’s behalf, alleging the previous disposition had not been effective to protect him
because of M.W.’s unresolved marijuana use and her failure to comply with the juvenile

                                              5
court’s orders to participate in parenting and counseling programs or to submit the
required four clean drug tests. The supplemental petition also specifically alleged that on
October 22, 2014 and November 24, 2014 M.W. had been under the influence of
marijuana while Jordan was in her care and supervision.
       In an interview prior to the contested hearing on the section 387 petition, M.W.
acknowledged she smoked marijuana on a regular basis, declared her intention to
continue to smoke marijuana for the foreseeable future and insisted she was able to
provide proper care and supervision for Jordan while using marijuana. Information
submitted by the Department demonstrated that M.W. had been inconsistent in her
visitation with Jordan subsequent to his removal from her custody, missing many
appointments and arriving late to others. (The Department reported M.W. had been
uncooperative and verbally abusive when attempts had been made to assist her with
visitation.) The monitor who supervised visits described M.W. as inattentive, more
engaged with phone calls and text messages than interested in interacting with Jordan.
       M.W. did not appear in court on the date set for the contested section 387 hearing.
Her counsel confirmed she had provided M.W. with notice of the hearing date; the court
denied a request to continue the hearing. Jordan’s counsel urged the court to sustain the
Department’s supplemental petition.
       The court sustained the petition in its entirety. The court expressed its concern as
to how uncooperative M.W. had been with the social workers attempting to assist her and
found her failure to comply with any of the orders made at the disposition hearing in
September 2013 troubling. The court noted that M.W.’s recommendation for medical use
of marijuana had not been submitted as evidence at the section 387 hearing, but
explained, in any event, “even though a parent may have a right in the State of California
to smoke marijuana with a medical marijuana license, it does not mean that a parent can
smoke marijuana while caring for a child of tender years, age three . . . and that the child
will be safe in that parent’s care.” The court found that M.W. had been smoking
marijuana on a continuing basis while Jordan was under her supervision and in her care,

                                              6
not crediting M.W.’s unsubstantiated claim that she only used marijuana when Jordan
was with a babysitter—a claim the court stressed was inconsistent with M.W.’s own
statement that she was able to provide adequate care for the child while smoking
marijuana.
       Proceeding to disposition, the court terminated its prior home-of-parent-mother
order, removed Jordan from M.W.’s custody and placed him in the care of the
Department for suitable placement. The court ordered the Department to provide M.W.
with family reunification services and directed M.W. to participate in individual
counseling to address appropriate parenting and the effects of chronic marijuana use on
such parenting. The Department was instructed to continue to assist M.W. with
transportation and in her efforts to find housing. Visitation was to be monitored, at least
two times per week for three hours each visit.
                                       DISCUSSION
       When the Department seeks to change the placement of a dependent child from a
parent’s care to a more restrictive placement, such as foster care, it must file a section 387
petition. (In re F.S. (2016) 243 Cal.App.4th 799, 808; In re T.W. (2013) 214 Cal.App.4th
1154, 1161; see Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.560(c).) The petition must allege facts that
establish the court’s previous disposition order was ineffective (§ 387, subd. (b); In re
F.S., at p. 808), but it need not allege any new or additional grounds for dependency
because the juvenile court already has jurisdiction over the child based on its findings on
the original section 300 petition. (In re T.W., at p. 1161; In re A.O. (2010)
185 Cal.App.4th 103, 110.) If the court finds the factual allegations are true by a
preponderance of the evidence, it conducts a disposition hearing to determine whether
removing custody is appropriate pursuant to the same procedures as apply in an original
disposition hearing. (In re F.S., at p. 808; In re H.G. (2006) 146 Cal.App.4th 1, 11; see
Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.565(e) [requirement for bifurcated hearing on a subsequent or
supplemental petition].) “‘The ultimate “jurisdictional fact” necessary to modify a
previous placement with a parent or relative is that the previous disposition has not been

                                              7
effective in the protection of the minor.’” (In re A.O., at p. 110.) We review the juvenile
court’s jurisdiction and disposition findings for substantial evidence. (In re T.W., at
p. 1161.)
       M.W. advances a two-pronged challenge to the juvenile court’s section 387
findings. First, she contends whatever issues may exist with respect to her ongoing use
of marijuana and her unstable living situation, Jordan was well cared for and not at any
substantial risk of harm. Second, she insists that, between the court’s initial disposition
order on September 16, 2013, which allowed Jordan to remain in M.W.’s custody, and
Jordan’s removal on March 20, 2015, virtually nothing had changed with respect to her
life or parenting ability that would permit a different conclusion as to her willingness and
ability to keep Jordan safe and healthy. The evidence at the section 387 hearing,
described above, belies both of these contentions.
       As this court held in In re Kadence P. (2015) 241 Cal.App.4th 1376, 1385 and
In re Christopher R. (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 1210, 1220, a finding of substance abuse by
a parent of a child under six years old is prima facie evidence of that parent’s inability to
provide regular care resulting in a substantial risk of harm. (Accord, In re Drake M.
(2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 754, 767.) As is true in ruling at disposition on a section 300
petition, in evaluating a section 387 petition and the evidence that the prior order
allowing the child to continue to reside with his or her parent was ineffective in
protecting the child, the court need not wait until the child is seriously abused or injured
to remove the child from the endangering home environment. (See In re Joel H. (1993)
19 Cal.App.4th 1185, 1200-1201 [actual abuse is not the test under section 387 for
modifying a previous placement; “the goal is to protect the child from some perceived
danger or actual harm”]; see also In re Christopher R., at p. 1216; In re N.M. (2011)
197 Cal.App.4th 159, 165.)
       To be sure, M.W.’s history of marijuana use and her repeated avowals to continue
to use it even after the juvenile court had sustained the section 300 petition in September
2013 was a primary theme throughout these dependency proceedings. Nonetheless, prior

                                              8
to the section 300 jurisdiction hearing, M.W. had insisted she no longer regularly smoked
marijuana because her ADHD symptoms had lessened. That was apparently the basis for
the court’s initial disposition order that she provide four consecutive clean, random drug
tests: Testing would make no sense if the court and the Department understood that
M.W. intended to continue to use marijuana. In addition, although M.W. admitted she
had resumed using marijuana after the home-of-parent-order at the disposition hearing, in
connection with the judicial review hearings in March and September 2014 and the
hearing scheduled for March 2015, she repeatedly asserted that Jordan was not in her care
while she smoked marijuana. In light of M.W.’s persistent refusal to identify the
individuals she claimed were supervising Jordan during those times (or, for that matter,
when she was in custody for the various criminal offenses she committed between the
filing of the original section 300 petition and the hearing on the section 387 petition), the
credibility of that contention was highly suspect. But until the section 387 hearing there
was no allegation by the Department, and no finding by the court, that M.W. chronically
smoked marijuana while Jordan was in her care and supervision. Ample evidence
supported that finding, not previously part of the court’s evaluation of Jordan’s safety in
M.W.’s care. Together with the undisputed fact that M.W. refused to participate in any
court-ordered programs, the finding M.W. used marijuana while purportedly caring for
her three-year-old child was more than adequate to sustain the section 387 petition and to
order Jordan’s removal from M.W.’s custody even though the child had not yet suffered
any physical harm as a result of M.W.’s substance abuse. (See § 300.2 [“The provision
of a home environment free from the negative effects of substance abuse is a necessary
condition for the safety, protection and physical and emotional well-being of the child.
Successful participation in a treatment program for substance abuse may be considered in
evaluating the home environment.”].)




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                                    DISPOSITION
      The juvenile court’s July 20, 2015 order is affirmed.




                                                PERLUSS, P. J.


      We concur:



             SEGAL, J.



             BLUMENFELD, J.*




*     Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
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