In Re Dolly A.
In Re Dolly A.
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 197 OPINION
Defendant Robert A. appeals from an order declaring his daughter, Dolly, a dependent child of the court (Welf. Inst. Code, §
A petition filed March 3, 1983, alleged that Dolly was residing in a home unfit by reason of depravity because of sexual molestation by defendant. (Welf. Inst. Code, §
On three occasions the jurisdictional hearing in the dependency matter was continued at defendant's request. On April 18, 1983, defendant moved for an order requiring Dolly to submit to a psychiatric evaluation. On the same day, defendant also moved to continue the dependency proceeding pending completion of his trial on the criminal charges, and also moved for an order granting him discovery of various school, medical, law enforcement and social agency records. All three motions were denied on April 19, 1983.
On April 20, 1983, the jurisdictional hearing was held. Defendant submitted his case on the probation report. The petition, as amended to allege that the acts of molestation had occurred "on or about, during and between the months of Nov. 1982 and Feb. 1983," was found to be true.
At the dispositional hearing held on May 19, 1983, Dolly was put in the custody of her mother under the supervision of a probation officer. The court also ordered that she was to have no contact with defendant.
Welfare and Institutions Code section
Defendant argues that, in this instance, none of the three itemized factors were present. In April 1983, Dolly was living with her mother. From the time of defendant's arraignment, he was prohibited by court order from visiting Dolly. Likewise, beginning April 6, 1983, there was an order of the juvenile court providing that Dolly was to remain with her mother and "to have no contact with [her] father." Thus, when the court denied defendant's request for a continuance on April 19, Dolly was living with her mother in the same home as she had been since her parents separated some six months after her birth. The sole change in her living arrangement was that she would no longer pay bimonthly visits to defendant. Defendant contends that under these circumstances, Dolly was neither undergoing a temporary placement nor living in an environment any less stable than that in which she had spent virtually all of her life. Likewise, he argues, the prompt resolution of her custody status was also irrelevant since Dolly was still in the primary care of her mother and the delay until the criminal matter was to be heard would have been no more than "six to ten weeks. . . ."
At the hearing on the motion to continue, Dolly's counsel apparently conceded that none of the factors specifically set out in section
While it is entirely plausible that the victim of a sexual assault would dread having to testify about the assault and would be especially uncomfortable about accusing her father, it is difficult to know whether a seven-year-old child would be caused great anxiety by such a prospect or by potential delay in giving her testimony. Arguably, the worst injury that a continuance could have caused Dolly would have been the risk that after six to ten weeks she would have been unable to recall the assaults precisely; *Page 200 hence, assuming that such assaults had in fact occurred, Dolly's inability to testify to them might well result in a continuation of defendant's visitation rights, with the possibility of future molestation by him.
Here, counsel for the minor conceded that none of the specific factors to be given "substantial weight" under Welfare and Institutions Code section
Defendant argues that his interest as "a parent in the companionship, care, custody and management of his [child] is a compelling one, ranked among the most basic of civil rights." (In re B.G. (1974)
In seeking the continuance, defendant argues that despite Welfare and Institutions Code section 355.7, which provides that the testimony of a parent in a proceeding brought under Welfare and Institutions Code section
Defendant also raises the alternative argument that, even if Welfare and Institutions Code section 355.7 was not abrogated by Proposition 8, if he were to give testimony at the dependency hearing, he would, in effect, give the district attorney's office a "deposition" or preview of what his testimony at the criminal trial was likely to be. Thus, he argues, the prosecuting authorities would thereby be given the opportunity, otherwise unavailable to them, to depose a criminal defendant prior to trial on the criminal charges. *Page 201
Faced with these unpalatable possibilities should he take the stand in the juvenile court proceeding, defendant contends he had no choice but to submit the dependency determination on the probation report. As the court informed defendant, that decision to submit was tantamount to conceding his custody rights: "My understanding submitting it on the probation report is that you [defendant] are having a court trial, and you're almost a hundred percent certain if you submit it on the probation report that the court will sustain the petition."
In this instance, where denial of a continuance forced defendant to elect between giving up his right not to be deposed as a criminal defendant and his right to testify on his own behalf in the proceeding to deprive him of custody of his daughter, we find it was an abuse of discretion to deny the continuance. The risk of possible injury to Dolly's interests was relatively slight, whereas the infringement upon defendant's rights was a clear and serious danger. Accordingly we remand for a new jurisdictional hearing.
Penal Code section
Defendant contends that the juvenile court erred in finding that Penal Code section
It is clear from the legislative history of section
(3) The crucial issue here, then, is not the fact that Dolly is a child, but whether a dependency proceeding is civil or criminal in nature. The answer to that question turns upon whether we view a dependency action from the vantage point of the parent or that of the child. There is authority for the view that a dependency proceeding is a "true civil cause, comparable in essentials to a child custody controversy between parents, except that the controversy is not between parents but one between a parent (or parents) and the state as parens patriae." (In reRobinson (1970)
However, from the vantage point of the parent, especially a parent who is facing the loss of future contact with his child because of the alleged "depravity" of his own behavior, the dependency proceeding is more nearly criminal in nature. "In most dependency matters the focus is against the parent and the prospect faced is the drastic result of loss of his child. Although legal scholars may deemphasize the adversary nature of dependency proceedings and characterize the removal of the child from parental custody as nonpunitive action in the best interests of the child, most parents would view the loss of custody as dire punishment." (Lois R. v. Superior Court (1971)
(2b) Here, defendant faced not only loss of custody of Dolly, but also criminal charges, both punitive actions arising from the same alleged acts *Page 203 of molestation.5 Because the dependency proceeding was, in this instance, more nearly criminal than civil, we conclude that the trial court correctly refused to permit a psychiatric examination of Dolly.
Juvenile courts, like all other courts, possess inherent power to order discovery. (Joe Z. v. Superior Court (1970)
Defendant argues that broad discovery, such as that available in civil matters, should be permitted in dependency hearings. Whatever the merit of that contention, the argument is unsupported by current law or by the theory of juvenile practice which seeks the speedy and informal resolution of dependency cases. (Welf. Inst. Code, § 350.) Here, defendant was not seeking information which was available to the district attorney but unavailable to him. Nor did he make any particularized claims of how the information he sought was relevant to the current inquiry, other than to argue generally that this case involved a "long history of family disputes, court hearings. . . ." Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion in refusing to grant the discovery order.
The orders are reversed and the matter remanded to the juvenile court for a new jurisdictional hearing.
Kline, P.J., and Smith, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In Re Dolly A., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. Robert M. Weigel, as Chief Probation Officer, Etc., and v. Robert A., And
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published