Aimee Anderson v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 2007
Docket03-06-00327-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Aimee Anderson v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-06-00327-CV

Aimee Anderson, Appellant

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 146TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 209-029-B, HONORABLE RICK MORRIS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services sought to terminate

appellant Aimee Anderson’s parental rights, a jury found that her rights should be terminated, and

the trial court entered a decree to that effect. Anderson contends that the evidence is insufficient to

support a finding that termination is in the children’s best interest. We affirm the termination decree.

Factual Summary

Anderson is the mother of J.A., born in June 2002, and A.M., born in December 2004.

At the time of trial in May 2006, she was twenty-five years old. On February 25, 2005, a Department

caseworker, accompanied by two police officers, responded to a referral and went to the residence of Anderson and Valentino Morales, A.M.’s father and Anderson’s common-law husband,1 to check

on the welfare of J.A. and A.M. When the caseworker and the officers arrived, the children were

not there but were with their babysitter, Alice Wooley. Anderson contacted Wooley, who brought

the children home. The police officers testified that J.A. and A.M. appeared clean and healthy. The

caseworker and the police questioned Anderson and Morales, and Anderson admitted she had used

methamphetamine the day before and submitted to a drug test. During the interview, J.A. produced

a dollar bill that concealed a small bag of methamphetamine. The police then searched the residence

and found additional methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, $1,369 in cash, and a notebook

detailing a large number of drug transactions. Anderson testified that Morales sold drugs and that

she kept track of his transactions. She said that Morales, who was more than twice her age, was

“very dominant” and “had control over anything and everything that [she] did”; a drug-enforcement

agent testified that he believed Morales was “more in charge” of the drug dealing.

The children were removed from the home, but Anderson and Morales were not taken

into custody. Instead, Morales agreed to act as a confidential informant to help the police apprehend

others involved in methamphetamine distribution. In violation of this agreement, however, Morales

and Anderson continued to distribute and use drugs. Morales and Anderson were arrested on federal

drug charges on April 14, 2005, and Morales was sentenced to twenty years in federal prison. At the

time of trial, Anderson had pled guilty and was awaiting sentencing. She testified that her attorney

told her she had a chance of being placed on probation, but the drug-enforcement officer testified

that Anderson could expect to serve a minimum of ten years and was unlikely to receive probation.

1 Morales’s parental rights to A.M. were terminated in the same proceeding, as were the parental rights of J.A.’s father. Neither father is a party to this appeal.

2 Anderson testified that she first used a form of methamphetamine at age seventeen.

Her drug usage remained sporadic until 2004, when it increased to several times a week; she testified

that she stopped using while she was pregnant with A.M. She admitted that even after she was

confronted by the police and her children were removed from her care, she continued to use drugs.

In late May 2005, shortly after being released to await sentencing on the federal charges, Anderson

voluntarily checked herself into a ninety-day, in-patient drug rehabilitation program. She received

a certificate of completion on August 21, 2005, and at the time of trial, she had received her one-year

chip from Narcotics Anonymous, signifying that she had been sober and drug-free for one year.2 She

had ended her relationship with Morales and was engaged to be married to another man, whom she

began dating in late November 2005; at the time of trial, her fiancé was in the process of getting a

divorce. Anderson testified that although her fiancé was no longer involved in drug use, he had been

convicted of drug possession three times—he was first convicted of cocaine possession in about

1992, he served a five-year prison sentence for a second conviction, and then was convicted of

marijuana possession in 1998, four months after his release from prison; the marijuana conviction

was later “thrown out.” Anderson testified that she had fully complied with the Department’s service

plan. Among other things, she had completed parenting classes, attended counseling, obtained

housing, and secured employment. She had made all scheduled visits with her children since their

removal, although on occasion, the children were not made available at scheduled visits.

J.A. and A.M. were initially placed with Kiana Kanoa, Morales’s daughter and

A.M.’s half-sister. Kanoa and her husband returned the children to the Department’s care after about

2 In the year before trial and since her release from the rehabilitation program, Anderson had paid for and passed random drug tests administered every one to three weeks.

3 one month, however, because they could not care for the children financially. Kanoa testified that

they thought family members could babysit the children, but were later told that the children had to

be placed in certified daycare, which costs about $900 a month, and that the Department could not

give them any financial assistance. Kanoa said that after the children were returned to the

Department, a caseworker told her that daycare had been arranged that would not have cost the

Kanoas anything, but that the Kanoas could not retract their decision to give up the children. Kanoa

testified that “another issue” that caused her and her husband to return the children to the Department

was that Anderson and her father did not provide any of the monetary support they had promised.

The Department then placed the children with a foster family, where they have been since April

2005. Kanoa said that after it became apparent that she and her husband could not keep the children,

Anderson’s father did not contact the Kanoas to say he wanted to take the children.

Anderson testified that if she were sent to prison, she wanted the children placed with

her father, Tim Wallace. She initially hoped Kanoa could keep the children because they would be

closer to her. She testified that the Department refused to do a home study on Wallace and said she

was told that the Department would “only allow one home study for this case” and that she would

have to raise $600 to have a study done on her father’s home. When the Department noted that

Wallace had not filed a plea in intervention until two months before trial, Anderson said Wallace had

attended a hearing and spoken to a Department caseworker in April 2005, but had not gotten

anywhere; he also attempted to see the children during one visit, but was asked to leave. She agreed

when asked by the Department’s attorney whether, if her father had filed a petition in intervention

a year earlier, shortly after their removal, she and the Department “might not be here” in a

termination proceeding, but said, “I didn’t say it was the Department’s fault. But how am I supposed

4 to have a home study if nobody will order one? How am I suppose[d] to bring my dad in without

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