Adams v. Texas Department of Family & Protective Services

236 S.W.3d 271, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 1367, 2007 WL 529654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 2007
Docket01-06-00243-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 236 S.W.3d 271 (Adams v. Texas Department of Family & Protective Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Texas Department of Family & Protective Services, 236 S.W.3d 271, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 1367, 2007 WL 529654 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRY JENNINGS, Justice.

In this accelerated appeal, 1 appellant, Kay Adams, challenges the trial court’s decree, entered after a bench trial, terminating her parental rights to her two minor children. In four issues, Adams contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s findings that (1) she knowingly placed or knowingly allowed her children to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered their physical or emotional well-being; 2 (2) she engaged in conduct or knowingly placed her children with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered their physical or emo *273 tional well-being; 3 (3) she has a mental or emotional illness or a mental deficiency which renders her unable to provide for the physical, emotional, and mental needs of her children; 4 and (4) termination of her parental rights was in the best interest of the children. 5

We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

In September 2004, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“DFPS”) took temporary custody of Adams’s two minor children, who were living with Adams at the Houston Area Women’s Shelter, after Adams made a false call for emergency assistance. After officers responded to the call, Adams volunteered to be admitted to the Ben Taub Psychiatric Ward. DFPS subsequently filed its petition to terminate Adams’s parental rights to her two children. 6

During the trial, Adams testified that Shazizz Mateen is the father of both children and she had two pregnancies prior to the births of the two children. Her first pregnancy, which occurred in her late teens, ended upon a “self inflicted gunshot wound” to her stomach, which she described as a suicide attempt. At the time that she inflicted the gunshot wound, Adams was not aware that she was pregnant. Her second pregnancy ended in a “voluntary termination.” Adams has criminal convictions for unlawfully carrying a weapon and misdemeanor theft. Since 1999, she has moved residences approximately twelve times, living for periods of time in Galveston, Houston, and Louisiana.

While pregnant with the older child, Adams was living with Mateen, and he would physically abuse her. The domestic violence continued “off and on” after the child was bom, and Adams called for emergency assistance several times. After the second child’s birth, Adams and Ma-teen separated. Adams explained that although the children were in the house during the episodes of physical abuse, they never witnessed Mateen strike or abuse her. She stated that Mateen was in jail because he sexually assaulted her.

Adams further testified that she felt as though she had made progress during the one and one-half of a year that her children had been in foster care pending the trial. Although she was not stable at the time of trial, she told the trial court that she was “getting there” and “doing the best to [her] ability.” She stated that her monthly income was about six or seven hundred dollars and, if her children were returned to her, she would “go ahead and make sure that every requirement is met, to go ahead and make sure that day care is set up, anything that [DFPS] is requiring for [her] to have been and be in place with no questions asked.” Adams admitted that she has a mental illness, but she wanted her parental rights not to be terminated so that she could have more time to “step up to the plate.”

Mandi Norris, a clinical psychologist, testified that she began serving as Adams’s individual therapist on December 14, 2004. Based on a psychological evaluation provided to Norris, she expanded Adams’s treatment goals to include addressing her history of “psychotic symptoms,” “working to help her develop im *274 proved coping skills,” and improving “her parenting skills and trying to work with her in identifying her risk factors for parenting issues, parenting problems, and developing psychotic symptoms.” Adams had been inconsistent in attending therapy sessions, making it difficult to monitor her psychological functioning.

Norris explained that Adams, who had been diagnosed with “Psychotic Disorder NOS,” had not accepted her mental illness and that acceptance of a mental illness is a necessary first step in making progress. Although Adams had “made some progress in acknowledging that she has had some psychotic episodes,” she still “had some delusional beliefs” and “tactile hallucinations.” While under Norris’s treatment, Adams was hospitalized three times during a ten-month period. First, in January 2005, she was hospitalized “on a mental health warrant because she was found running into the street and claiming that she was having electricity running through her body.” Then, on June 24, 2005, she was hospitalized after she was found standing still in traffic as if she were in a trance, and finally, on October 28, 2005, she was hospitalized when family members were concerned that “[s]he had reportedly stopped taking her psychotropic medication regimen and she had stopped taking care of her hygiene.”

Norris further testified that she was concerned because Adams’s psychiatric symptoms had not stabilized over the course of her treatment and Adams’s most recent psychiatric hospitalization may have been precipitated by Adams’s discontinuing her medication regimen. Norris explained that it is very important for a person with symptoms like Adams’s “to be very consistent in adhering to them medication regimen.” To Norris’s knowledge, Adams was supposed to be taking various medications to treat psychotic and depressive symptoms. She explained that when such an individual stops taking their medication, she is susceptible to the reoccur-rence of psychotic symptoms. Further complicating the matter, Adams had denied to Norris that she had had psychotic symptoms in the past. Norris testified that she would have concerns about someone with these types of symptoms caring for children.

In her most recent therapy report provided to DFPS, Norris indicated that Adams had made “minimal” to “moderate” progress in reaching her stated treatment goals. In regard to several goals specifically relating to Adams’s parenting failures, the report indicated that Adams had made “minimal” progress. Adams had “great difficulty understanding how her psychological functioning and some of the decisions that she made stemming from her psychological problems could affect the children.” Moreover, she did not seem to understand the impact it had on the children and felt as though she had been a “very good mother.” Based on Adams’s recent hospitalizations, Norris expressed concern over Adams’s failure to regularly attend therapy and whether she was complying with her medication regimens. Norris explained that Adams was not in a position at the time of trial to care for her children based on her recent and past history of psychotic symptoms and psychiatric hospitalizations.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W.3d 271, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 1367, 2007 WL 529654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-texas-department-of-family-protective-services-texapp-2007.