C. v. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

408 S.W.3d 495, 2013 WL 1829824, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2013
Docket08-12-00088-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 408 S.W.3d 495 (C. v. 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
C. v. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, 408 S.W.3d 495, 2013 WL 1829824, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5325 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment terminating a mother’s parental rights to her six children. The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (TDFPS) sought termination of both the mother’s and the father’s parental rights. After a bench trial, the court found TDFPS presented clear and convincing evidence establishing that Appellant:

knowingly placed or knowingly allowed the [children] to remain in conditions or surroundings which endanger the physical or emotional well-being of the [children];
engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the [children] with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical or emotional well-being of the [children];
used a controlled substance, as defined by Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, in a manner that endangered the health or safety of the child, and:
(i) failed to complete a court-ordered substance abuse treatment program; or
*497 (ü) after completion of a court-ordered substance abuse treatment program, continued to abuse a controlled substance;

See Tex.Fam.Codb Ann. § 161.001(D), (E), (P)(West Supp.2012). The trial court also found that it was in the best interest of the children to terminate the parental relationship. The trial court did not terminate the rights of the father and he is not a party to this appeal.

On appeal, C.V. challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the best interest finding. She concedes that the evidence was sufficient to satisfy the three statutory predicates. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Foundational Premise

We begin with the fundamental premise that children need stability, security, consistency, and continuity. These common threads of a child’s well-being relate not only to physical caretaking but also to psychological parenting. When the threads are woven into daily life, the fabric called family swaddles the child and promotes physical and emotional growth. Threads left dangling often unravel into chaos. And that word — chaos—is repeatedly found throughout the record here.

The Parents

C.V. and E.G. are the biological parents of all six children and have been together for approximately fifteen years. The record reflects, however, that C.V. was married to another man, J.H., on July 27, 2004 and never divorced him. C.V. claimed at trial that the marriage was immigration-related and that she considered E.G. her common law husband. In any event, E.G. was adjudicated the father of all of the children.

The Children

For clarity and ease of reference, we will refer to the children by number rather than extended sequential initials. As we will discuss more thoroughly below, the children were removed in December 2009. The final hearing on the merits began June 1, 2011 and was tried in piecemeal fashion until closing arguments on January 6, 2012. During the trial, the children celebrated birthdays and different witnesses testified to different ages of the children depending upon the dates of their testimony.

Child 1 was nine years old when trial began and was living in her fifth foster home. She was eleven years old by the time the trial concluded. Her current clinical therapist, Irene Cadena, testified that the child suffers from anxiety, depression, nightmares, and outbursts of anger. She has a history of self-harm by cutting and has been hospitalized due to outrageous anger, which involved hitting and kicking walls. The child’s initial therapist, Mara Hernandez, described the girl’s severe aggression, assaultive behavior, severe emotional problems, sexualized behavior, and lack of boundaries. She is unable to follow instructions, respect limits, or abide by social order, and she shows no empathy for the feelings of others. Consequently, she has been medicated and hospitalized at University Behavioral Hospital in El Paso at least five times. Her most recent hospital stay lasted four weeks. Child l’s sexual behavior involves pole dancing, inappropriately rubbing against other children, and acting out sexually against a sofa. She told Hernandez that she had observed her cousins’ sexual actions and had witnessed her mother engage in sexual relations at a cantina in Juarez. She made an *498 outcry of molestation by her cousin and her uncle to her mother, but C.V. apparently did not believe her. On the other hand, she also alleged sexual abuse by one of her foster fathers which was disbelieved by the foster mother. Child 1 described a crowd of people at the family home who repeatedly “fought” and “hit each other.” She related incidents of domestic violence in the family home to her foster mother and expressed fear that visitors in the home were affiliated with gangs. Cadena also addressed the issue of family violence, reciting that the child observed physical violence and she and her siblings would hide under the bed. When asked whether these incidents would negatively affect the children, Cadena emphatically answered yes. When asked, “How?” she replied:

Well, usually children that come from homes where there’s been violence, physical violence, or any type of abuse, particularly physical violence, they will enter another relationship just like that, because they feel that violence is part of love.

Cadena specifically mentioned that the girl needs stability. She lacks trust “because she has never had that trust or nurturing from her mother.” Child 2 was seven years old when trial began. He has been diagnosed with ADHD and aggression, and has significant psychological and behavioral issues. He was prescribed multiple psychotropic medications and on four occasions, his foster mother took him to University Behavioral Hospital due to his suicidal thoughts, threats to others, and self-harm. The latest hospitalization lasted for six days and Dr. Moreira diagnosed him as bipolar. The foster mother explained that most of Child 2’s behavioral problems occurred before and after visits with his mother, but she acknowledged this behavior could be related to his wanting to stay with her. Child 2 was placed in a residential treatment center about 70 miles from Lubbock in July 2011 because he was having idealizations of killing the foster parents and foster siblings. His clinical psychologist, Dr. Felix Carreon, noted that the boy described in graphic detail how he would kill or mutilate his foster parents if they crossed him. Dr. Carreon conducted two psychological evaluations, one in March 2010 and the second in July 2011. These tests revealed anxiety, depression, anger, and disruptive behavior. He was diagnosed with temper deregulation disorder with depression and an Axis I diagnosis of neglect of a child. While Dr. Carreon opined that the boy improved in his functioning while in foster care, he admitted that the child’s psychological testing results showed a deterioration between the two test settings with regard to social adaptive behaviors and adjustments.

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408 S.W.3d 495, 2013 WL 1829824, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-v-v-texas-department-of-family-and-protective-services-texapp-2013.