Cal.Rules of Court, Rule 5.664
California Codes
California
Rules of Court
Title 5. Family and Juvenile Rules
Division 3. Juvenile Rules
Chapter 12. Indian Child Welfare
Act
Rule
5.664. Indian Child Welfare Act (25 U.S.C. § 1901 et seq.)
(a)
Definitions; 25 U.S.C. §
1903
As
used in this rule, unless the context or subject matter
otherwise requires:
(1)
"Indian child" means an unmarried person under the age of
18 who:
(A)
Is a member of an Indian tribe; or
(B)
Is eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and is
the biological child of a member of an Indian tribe.
(2)
"Indian child's tribe" means:
(A)
The Indian tribe in which the child is a member
or is eligible for membership; or
(B)
In the case of an Indian child who is a
member of or eligible for membership in more than one
tribe, the Indian tribe with which the Indian child has
more significant contacts.
(3)
"Indian custodian" means any Indian person who has:
(A)
Legal custody of an Indian child under tribal law or
custom, or under state law; or
(B)
Temporary physical care, custody, and control of an Indian child
whose parent or parents have transferred custody to that person.
(4)
"Parent of an Indian child" means the biological parent of
an Indian child or any Indian person who has lawfully
adopted an Indian child, including adoptions under tribal law or
custom. (This definition does not include a non-Indian adoptive
parent or an unwed alleged father where paternity has not
been determined or acknowledged.)
(5)
"Custody" means legal or physical custody or both as provided
under state law or tribal law or custom.
(6)
"Indian tribe" means any tribe, band, nation, or other organized
group or community of Indians eligible for services provided to
Indians by the Secretary of
the Interior because of their status as Indians, including any
Alaskan Native Villages as defined by section 1602(c) of title
43 of the United States Code.
(7)
"Extended family" means those persons defined by the law or
custom of the Indian child's tribe or, in the absence
of such law or custom, an adult grandparent, aunt, uncle,
brother, sister, sister-in-law, brother-in-law, niece, nephew, first or second cousin,
or stepparent of the Indian child.
(8)
"Child custody proceeding" means and includes a proceeding at which
the court considers foster care placement, appointment of a guardian,
termination of parental rights, preadoptive placement, or adoptive placement.
(9)
"Foster care placement" means any temporary placement from which a
child may not be removed by the parent or Indian
custodian on demand, including a shelter care home, a foster
home, or an institution or the home of a guardian
or conservator.
(10)
"Qualified expert witness" means a person qualified to address the
issue of whether continued custody by a parent or Indian
custodian is likely to result in serious physical or emotional
damage to the child. Persons most likely to be
considered such experts are:
(A)
A member of a tribe with knowledge of Indian family
organization and child rearing;
(B)
A lay expert with substantial experience in Indian child and
family services and extensive knowledge of the social and cultural
standards and child-rearing practices of Indian tribes, specifically the child's
tribe, if possible;
(C)
A professional person with substantial education and experience in Indian
child and family services and in the social and cultural
standards of Indian tribes, specifically the child's tribe, if possible;
or
(D)
A professional person having substantial education and experience in the
area of his or her specialty.
(11)
"Act" means the Indian Child Welfare
Act (25 U.S.C. §§
1901-1963).
(12)
"Tribal court" means a court with jurisdiction over child custody
proceedings, identified as a Court of Indian Offenses, a court
established and operated under the code or custom of an
Indian tribe, or any other administrative body of a tribe
that is vested with authority over child custody proceedings.
If applicable, the tribal court has met the requirements for
resumption of jurisdiction over child custody proceedings as approved by
the Department of the Interior.
(b)
Applicability of rule; 25 U.S.C. §§
1911, 1912
This
rule applies to all proceedings under section 300 et seq.
and to proceedings under section 601 and section 602 et
seq. in which the child is at risk of entering
foster care or is in foster care, including detention hearings,
jurisdiction hearings, disposition hearings, reviews, hearings under section 366.26, and
subsequent hearings affecting the status of the Indian child.
(c)
Jurisdiction; 25 U.S.C. §
1911
(1)
If the Indian child resides or is domiciled on an
Indian reservation that exercises exclusive jurisdiction under the act over
child custody proceedings, the petition under section 300 must be
dismissed.
(A)
If the Indian child is temporarily off a reservation that
exercises exclusive jurisdiction, the juvenile court must exercise temporary jurisdiction
if there is an immediate threat of serious physical harm
to the child.
(B)
Absent extraordinary circumstances, temporary emergency custody must terminate within 90
days, unless the court determines by clear and convincing evidence,
including the testimony of at least one qualified expert witness, that
return of the child is likely to cause serious damage
to the child.
(C)
The child must be returned immediately to the parent or
Indian custodian when the emergency placement is no longer necessary
to prevent serious harm to the child.
(2)
If the Indian child is not domiciled or residing on
a reservation that exercises exclusive jurisdiction, the tribe, parent, or
Indian custodian may petition the court to transfer the proceedings
to the tribal jurisdiction, and the juvenile court must transfer
the proceedings to tribal jurisdiction unless there is good cause
not to do so.
(A)
Either parent may object to the transfer.
(B)
The tribe may decline the transfer of the proceedings.
(3)
If the tribe does not intervene or the tribal court
does not request transfer to tribal jurisdiction, the court should
proceed to exercise its jurisdiction regarding the Indian child under
section 300 et seq., in accordance with the procedures and
standards of proof as required by both juvenile court law
and the act.
(d)
Inquiry
The
court, the county welfare department, and the probation department have
an affirmative and continuing duty to inquire whether a child
for whom a petition under section 300, 601, or 602
is to be, or has been, filed is or may
be an Indian child.
(1)
In juvenile wardship proceedings, if the probation officer believes that
the child is at risk of entering foster care or
is in foster care, he or she must ask the
child, if the child is old enough, and the parents
or legal guardians whether the child may be an Indian
child or may have Indian ancestors.
(2)
In dependency cases, the social worker must ask the child,
if the child is old enough, and the parents or
legal guardians whether the child may be an Indian child
or may have Indian ancestors.
(3)
At the first appearance by a parent or guardian in
any dependency case, or in juvenile wardship proceedings in which
the child is at risk of entering foster care or
is in foster care, the parent or guardian must be
ordered to complete Parental
Notification of Indian Status (Juvenile Court) (form JV-130).
(4)
The circumstances that may provide probable cause for the court
to believe the child is an Indian child include, but
are not limited to, the following:
(A)
A person having an interest in the child, including the
child, an Indian tribe,
an Indian organization, an officer of the court, or a
public or private agency, informs the court or the county
welfare agency or the probation department or provides information suggesting
that the child is an Indian child;
(B)
The residence of the child, the child's parents, or an
Indian custodian is in a predominantly Indian community; or
(C)
The child or the child's family has received services or
benefits from a tribe or services that are available to
Indians from tribes or the federal government, such as the
Indian Health Service.
(e)
Petition
(1)
Section 1(l)
or 1(m) on either the initial or an amended Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version One) (form JV-100) or section 1(i) or 1(j) of the initial
or an amended Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version Two) (form JV-110) must be checked if the county welfare department
knows or has reason to know that the child may
be a member of or eligible for membership in a
federally recognized Indian tribe or if there is reason to
believe the child may be of Indian ancestry, as appropriate.
(2)
Section 1(m) or 1(n) on either the initial or an
amended Juvenile
Wardship Petition (form JV-600) must be checked if the county probation department
knows or has reason to know that the child may
be a member of or eligible for membership in a
federally recognized Indian tribe or if there is reason to
believe the child may be of Indian ancestry, as appropriate.
(3)
If section 1(l)
of the Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version One) (form JV-100) or section 1(i) of the Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version Two) (form JV-110) or section 1(m) of the Juvenile
Wardship Petition (form JV-600) is checked, or if, on inquiry, or based
on other information, the court has reason to know the
child may be an Indian child, the court must proceed
as if the child were an Indian child and must
proceed with all dependency and wardship hearings, observing the Welfare
and Institutions Code timelines while complying with the act and
this rule.
(A)
A determination by the identified tribe or tribes that the
child is or is not an Indian child is definitive.
(B)
If no particular tribe can be reasonably identified, a determination
by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) that the child
is not an Indian child is definitive.
(4)
If section 1(m) of the Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version One) (form JV-100) is checked and section 1(l)
is not, or section 1(j) of the Juvenile
Dependency Petition (Version Two) (form JV-110) is checked and section 1(i) is not,
or if section 1(n) of the Juvenile
Wardship Petition (form JV-600) is checked and section 1(m) is not, notice
of the proceedings to the Bureau of Indian Affairs and
further inquiry regarding the possible Indian status of the child
are the only requirements.
(f)
Notice; 25 U.S.C. §
1912
If
there is reason to know that an Indian child is
involved, the social worker or probation officer must send Notice
of Involuntary Child Custody Proceedings for an Indian Child (Juvenile
Court) (form JV-135) to the parent or legal guardian and Indian
custodian of an Indian child, and the Indian child's tribe,
in accordance with Welfare and Institutions Code section 224.2.
(g)
Determination of status; 25 U.S.C. §
1911 (Welf. & Inst. Code, §
360.6(c))
Determination
of tribal membership or eligibility for membership is made exclusively
by the tribe.
(1)
A tribe's determination that the child is or is not
a member of or eligible for membership in the tribe
is conclusive.
(2)
Information that the child is not enrolled in the tribe
is not determinative of Indian child status.
(3)
The tribe must be a federally recognized tribe, group, or
community as defined by the Bureau of Indian Affairs of
the Department of the Interior as eligible for services provided
to Indians by the Secretary of the Interior because of
their status as Indians, including any Alaskan Native Villages as
defined by section 1602(c) of title 43 of the United
States Code.
(4)
Absent a contrary determination by the tribe, a determination by
the BIA that a child is or is not an
Indian is conclusive.
(5)
The Indian Child Welfare
Act applies when a tribe determines that an unmarried minor
is:
(A)
A member of an Indian tribe; or
(B)
Eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and a biological
child of a member of an Indian tribe.
(h)
Proceedings after notice; 25 U.S.C. §
1911
If
it is determined that the act applies, the juvenile court
hearing must not proceed until at least 10 days after
those entitled to notice under the act have received notice.
If requested, the parent, Indian custodian, or tribe must
be granted a continuance of up to 20 days to
prepare for the proceeding. The tribe may intervene at any
point in the proceeding.
(1)
An indigent parent and an indigent Indian custodian have a
right to court-appointed counsel.
(2)
All parties, including the parent, Indian child, Indian custodian, and
tribe, and their respective attorneys, have the right to examine
all court documents related to the dependency case.
(i)
Required procedures, findings, and orders for foster care placement and
guardianships; 25 U.S.C. §
1912
The
court may not order foster care placement of an Indian
child, or establish a guardianship of an Indian child, unless
the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that continued
custody with the parent or Indian custodian is likely to
cause the Indian child serious emotional or physical damage.
(1)
Testimony by a qualified expert witness is required.
(2)
Stipulation by the parent or Indian custodian or failure to
object may waive the requirement of producing evidence of the
likelihood of serious damage only if the court is satisfied
that the party has been fully advised of the requirements
of the act and has knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived
them.
(3)
Failure to meet non-Indian family and community child-rearing standards, or
the existence of other behavior or conditions that meet the
removal standards of section 361, will not support an order
for placement absent the finding that continued custody with the
parent or Indian custodian is likely to cause serious
emotional or physical damage.
(4)
In addition to the findings required under section 361, in
order to place an Indian child out of the custody
of a parent or Indian custodian, the court must find
that active efforts have been made to provide remedial services
and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the breakup of the
Indian family, and that these efforts were unsuccessful. Stipulation
by the parent or Indian custodian or failure to object
may waive the requirement of this finding only if the
court is satisfied that the party has been fully advised
of the requirements of the act and has knowingly, intelligently,
and voluntarily waived them.
(A)
The court must consider all available information regarding the prevailing
social and cultural conditions of the Indian child's tribe.
(B)
Efforts to provide services must include attempts to use the
available resources of extended family members, the tribe, Indian social
service agencies, and individual Indian caregivers.
(j)
Placement of an Indian child in a foster care placement;
25 U.S.C. §
1912
If
it is determined that the act applies, the court may
not order foster care placement of an Indian child unless
the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that continued
custody with the parent or Indian custodian is likely to
cause the Indian child serious emotional or physical damage.
(1)
Testimony by a qualified expert witness is required.
(2)
Stipulation by the parent, Indian custodian, or tribe or failure
to object may waive the requirement of producing evidence of
the likelihood of serious damage only if the court is
satisfied that the party has been fully advised of the
requirements of the act and has knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily
waived them.
(3)
If it is determined that the act applies, failure to
meet non-Indian family and child-rearing community standards, or the existence
of other behavior or conditions that meet the removal standards
of section 361, will not support an order for placement
absent the finding that continued custody with the parent or
Indian custodian is likely to cause serious emotional or physical
damage.
(k)
Standards and preferences in placement of an Indian child;
25 U.S.C. §
1915
Foster
and adoptive placements of Indian children must follow a specified
order in the absence of good cause to the contrary.
Placement standards must be the prevailing social and cultural
standards of the Indian community in which the parent or
extended family member resides, or with which the parent or
extended family member maintains social and cultural contacts. The
foster or preadoptive placement must be in the least restrictive
setting, within reasonable proximity to the Indian child's home, and
capable of meeting any special needs of the Indian child.
(1)
In a foster or preadoptive placement, preference must be given
in the following order:
(A)
To a member of the Indian child's extended family;
(B)
To a foster home licensed or approved by the Indian
child's tribe;
(C)
To a state- or county-licensed or certified Indian foster home;
or
(D)
To a children's institution approved by the tribe or operated
by an Indian organization and offering a program to meet
the Indian child's needs.
(2)
In an adoptive placement, preference must be given in the
following order:
(A)
To a member of the Indian child's extended family;
(B)
To other members of the Indian child's tribe; or
(C)
To other Indian families.
(3)
An Indian child may be placed in a non-Indian home
only if the court finds that a diligent search has
failed to locate a suitable Indian home.
(4)
The court may modify the preference order only for good
cause, which may include the following considerations:
(A)
The requests of the parent or Indian custodian;
(B)
The requests of the Indian child;
(C)
The extraordinary physical or emotional needs of the Indian child
as established by a qualified expert witness; or
(D)
The unavailability of suitable families based on a diligent effort
to identify families meeting the preference criteria.
(5)
The burden of establishing good cause for the court to
alter the preference order is on the party requesting that
a different order be considered.
(6)
The tribe, by resolution, may establish a different preference order,
which, absent good cause, must be followed if it provides
for the least restrictive setting.
(7)
The preferences and wishes of the Indian child and the
parent must be considered, and weight given to a consenting
parent's request for anonymity.
(l) Active efforts; 25 U.S.C. §
1912
In
addition to the findings required under section 361, in order
to place an Indian child out of the custody of
a parent or Indian custodian, or to issue orders under
section 366.26, the court must find that active efforts have
been made to provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed
to prevent the breakup of the Indian family, and that
these efforts were unsuccessful.
(1)
The court must consider the prevailing social and cultural conditions
of the Indian child's tribe.
(2)
Efforts to provide services must include attempts to use the
available resources of extended family members, the tribe, Indian social
service agencies, and individual Indian caregivers.
(m)
Termination of parental rights; 25 U.S.C., §
1912
The
court may not terminate parental rights to an Indian child
unless there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt that continued
custody by the parent or Indian custodian
is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage
to the child.
(1)
The evidence must be supported by the testimony of a
qualified expert witness.
(2)
Stipulation by the parent or Indian custodian or failure to
object may waive the requirement of producing evidence of the
likelihood of serious damage only if the court is satisfied
that the party has been fully advised of the requirements
of the act and has knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived
them.
(3)
Consent to a voluntary termination of parental rights, relinquishment of
parental rights, or consent to adoption must be executed in
writing and recorded before a judicial officer of competent jurisdiction.
The court must certify that the terms and consequences
of the consent were explained in detail, in the language
of the parent or Indian custodian, and fully understood by
the parent or Indian custodian. If confidentiality is requested
or appropriate, the consent may be executed in chambers.
(4)
In order to terminate parental rights to an Indian child,
the court must find that active efforts have been made
to provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent
the breakup of the Indian family, and
that these efforts were unsuccessful. Stipulation by the parent
or Indian custodian or failure to object may waive the
requirement of this finding only if the court is satisfied
that the party has been fully advised of the requirements
of the act and has knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived
them.
(n)
Petition to invalidate orders of removal or termination of parental
rights; 25 U.S.C., §
1914
If
it is determined that the act applies, the Indian child,
a parent, an Indian custodian, or the child's tribe may
petition any court of competent jurisdiction to invalidate a foster
placement or termination of parental rights.
(1)
If the Indian child is a dependent child of the
juvenile court or the subject of a pending petition, the
juvenile court is the only court of competent jurisdiction with
the authority to hear the petition to invalidate the foster
placement or termination of parental rights.
(2)
If a final decree of adoption is set aside, or
if the adoptive parents voluntarily
consent to the termination of their parental rights, a biological
parent or prior Indian custodian may petition for a return
of custody of the Indian child.
(A)
The court must grant the petition for return unless there
is a showing that return is contrary to the best
interest of the Indian child.
(B)
The hearing on the petition to return must be conducted
in accordance with the act and the relevant sections of
this rule.
(o)
Post-hearing actions; 25 U.S.C., §
1916
Whenever
an Indian child is removed from a foster home or
institution for placement in a different foster home, institution, or
preadoptive or adoptive home, the placement must be in accordance
with the act and the relevant sections of this rule.
(p)
Record keeping; 25 U.S.C., §
1951
(1)
After granting a decree of adoption of an Indian child,
the court must provide
the Secretary of the Interior with a copy of the
decree and other information needed to show:
(A)
The name and tribal affiliation of the Indian child;
(B)
The names and addresses of the biological parents;
(C)
The names and addresses of the adoptive parents; and
(D)
The agency maintaining files and records regarding the adoptive placement.
(2)
If a biological parent has executed an affidavit requesting that
his or her identity remain confidential, the court must provide
the affidavit to the Secretary of the Interior, who must
ensure the confidentiality of the information.
CREDIT(S)
(Formerly
Rule 1439, adopted, eff. Jan. 1, 1995. As amended,
eff. Jan. 1, 1997; Jan. 1, 1999; Jan.
1, 2001; Jan. 1, 2005. Renumbered Rule 5.664
and amended, eff. Jan. 1, 2007. As amended, eff. Feb. 23, 2007.) |