B. D. and S. P. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2020
Docket03-20-00118-CV
StatusPublished

This text of B. D. and S. P. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (B. D. and S. P. D. v. Texas Department of Family and 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
B. D. and S. P. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-20-00118-CV

B. D. and S. P. D., Appellants

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE 453RD DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY NO. 19-0743, THE HONORABLE DAVID JUNKIN, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants B.D. (Father) and S.P.D. (Mother) are the parents of “Lisa” and

“Alan.”1 Father also has two older children—“Charles” with mother “Wendy,” and “Karla” with

mother “Ellen.” The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services filed petitions seeking

conservatorship of all four children in March 2019, and the three separate proceedings were

consolidated into one case, which was heard by a jury in January 2020. The jury determined that

Mother’s parental rights to Lisa and Alan and Father’s rights to all four children should be

terminated, and the trial court signed a decree consistent with that verdict. Both Mother and

Father appealed. Mother challenges certain rulings by the trial court and the sufficiency of the

evidence supporting the jury’s findings on statutory grounds and best interest. Father’s

1For the sake of the children’s privacy and for clarity, we refer to the parents as “Mother” and “Father” and to the children and other involved individuals by pseudonyms. See Tex. Fam. Code § 109.002(d); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8. appointed attorney has filed a brief concluding that his appeal is frivolous, see Anders v.

California, 386 U.S. 738, 744 (1967), and Father has since filed a pro se brief making several

arguments. Because we agree that Father’s appeal is frivolous and because we overrule

Mother’s issues, as explained below, we will affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

Father was married to Wendy, and their son Charles was born in Minnesota in late

2004. In 2005, while married to Wendy, Father had a daughter, Karla, with then-fifteen-year-old

Ellen. Wendy and Father divorced, and Father moved to Texas, where he met Mother in 2005

and married her in 2006. Charles, who was diagnosed as autistic, came to live with Father in

Texas when he was about seven and stayed there until his removal by the Department in 2019.

Karla visited Texas during the summers of 2011 and 2012. In November 2012,

she made an outcry of sexual abuse, and Ellen and her family sought help from Minnesota Child

Protection Services. Minnesota CPS records and videotapes of Karla’s interviews were

introduced into evidence and reflect that Karla said that she did not want to go back to Father and

that he had “kissed her on the lips with his tongue and that it was their secret,” touched her

genitals and breasts with his hand, touched her mouth and genitals with his penis, and “put his

penis inside of her.” She described an incident in which Father’s “private was on [Karla’s]

private” and he moved “up, down, up, down, up, down.” She further stated that white “stuff”

from Father’s “private” went on the ground and on her back. She said that she was “too afraid to

talk” and that Father’s actions made her “think ick.” Minnesota CPS determined that Father had

sexually abused Karla, but when Father appealed, the determination was overturned on

jurisdictional grounds because the abuse occurred in Texas.

2 After Karla’s outcry, Ellen attempted to stop Father from having visitation, which

led to a lengthy custody dispute in which Father sought full custody. In 2016, while the custody

case was still pending, Karla made another outcry about the 2012 abuse, saying that on multiple

occasions he had “brought her into his bedroom and made her suck on his penis and inserted his

penis into her vagina” and that she “was always afraid when [Mother] would have to leave to go

to work.” Karla told her therapist that “my dad fucked me and nobody did anything about it.”

Karla also reported that Father had “lots of swords and she is afraid he is going to come up here

and kill her family and take her.” Karla reported that she did not think Mother knew about the

abuse and that she feared Father would also sexually abuse her siblings. Karla said that Texas

authorities were informed about the abuse but that Father was never charged.2 Mother testified

that she did not know the details but that she knew of Karla’s outcries through Father, who

claimed Ellen had coached Karla. She also said that she did not have contact information for

Ellen, who she called “a drug addict” who “habitually lies about everything.”

Meanwhile, Lisa was born in 2011 and Alan was born in 2016. Mother believed

Lisa was autistic, explaining that for “as long as I can remember when she was little,” she had

exhibited “unusual behavior” like “trouble making eye contact,” banging her head when

frustrated, and having difficulty sitting still or staying focused. She testified that doctors raised

concerns about developmental delays when Lisa was about two years old and that she was

evaluated when she was four. Mother first testified that she thought Lisa had been diagnosed

with ADHD and autism but then later said she had been told that Lisa did not have a current

2 In 2017, Minnesota CPS received an email from a detective in Texas saying the case had been closed because “there is not enough to corroborate [Karla’s] story. It appears this case, along with other cases filed are due to a custody battle.” 3 autism diagnosis. She said Lisa had a “504 Plan” starting in kindergarten, providing

accommodations similar to those given to Charles.

Mother testified that in pre-kindergarten, Lisa began having bed-wetting issues

and exhibiting “sexualized behavior,” “rubbing herself” on furniture or the floor. Mother

testified that she learned that autistic children would exhibit “rhythmic and comforting

behavior,” called “stimming,”3 and that she believed Lisa’s repetitive rubbing was stimming.

Mother testified that she and Lisa “talked at length about how that wasn’t appropriate behavior

and she shouldn’t be doing it” and that “those things were private.”

Lisa continued to exhibit masturbatory behavior in kindergarten during the 2017-

2018 school year. Deanna N., Lisa’s kindergarten teacher, testified that “daily, mostly

throughout the year” Lisa would do “certain movements [that] were not appropriate for a little

kid to be doing.” Ms. N. said that Lisa’s behavior was abnormal for her age and that she

repeatedly raised her concerns to Mother, who told Ms. N. to “just remind [Lisa] to stop” and

“would let me know that she was taking [Lisa] to the doctor and that it was either a yeast

infection or [urinary tract infection] and they were addressing it with some yogurt.” However,

Lisa’s behavior continued throughout the year and “never cleared up.” Ms. N. testified that she

reported the behavior to the principal and the school counselor, and she said that the principal

reported the behavior to the Department, but no action was taken.

Mother testified that when Lisa’s kindergarten teacher talked to her about it and

“recommended ruling out anything physical,” Mother “took her to the doctor to make sure it

wasn’t a UTI or yeast infection. She said it wasn’t. We thought it might be behavioral and we

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