Corrales v. Department of Family & Protective Services

155 S.W.3d 478, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 10384, 2004 WL 2634166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 2004
Docket08-04-00026-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 155 S.W.3d 478 (Corrales v. 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
Corrales v. Department of Family & Protective Services, 155 S.W.3d 478, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 10384, 2004 WL 2634166 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Justice.

This is an accelerated appeal pursuant to Texas Family Code section 263.405(a). See Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 263.405(a)(Ver-non 2002)(since September 1, 2001, an appeal from a final order terminating the parent-child relationship and appointing another as managing conservator is accelerated and governed by the rules for accelerated appeals in civil cases). The Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of Zulema Frias and Ricardo Corrales as to three of their five children. The jury found that the parent-child relationship should be terminated and named the Department as managing conservator. On appeal, the parents complain of evidentiary error and the failure of the court to appoint the maternal grandmother as managing conservator. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Frias and Corrales began living together in 1997 and married in January 2000. Their first child, Jason, was born with physical problems including blindness and mental retardation. He tested positive at birth for alcohol and cocaine. When he was released from the hospital, Frias’s mother, Maria Elena Olivas, took him home with her. She was responsible for his oxygen machine and heart monitor. Frias eventually relinquished her parental rights to Jason and Olivas adopted him.

The three children at issue are David Justin Frias, Ricardo Con-ales, Jr., and Joylin Zulema Corrales. Justin was born with pallet problems causing a speech impediment. Olivas cared for him from the time he was six or seven months old. She has cared for Ricardo, Joylin, and Jeremiah, the youngest child, since birth. The case involving Jeremiah was still pending at the time of trial, and he was living with Olivas.

Corrales is in jail in Juarez, Mexico for possession of heroin. He has been in and out of jail five times during the marriage *482 and is scheduled for release in December 2005. It was his intention that Olivas care for the children while he was incarcerated.

Frias testified she has been using drugs for nine years, is addicted to cocaine, and had used cocaine as recently as three weeks before trial. She admitted that she used drugs during her pregnancies. Both her husband and her mother were aware of her drug use and Olivas had been taking care of the children because of it. Frias claimed that she did not use drugs in front of her children. She described her withdrawal symptoms as anxiety, vomiting, diarrhea, and insomnia, and she acknowledged that she was unable to care for the children in that condition. Frias also admitted that she had been arrested numerous times for theft, driving while intoxicated, family disturbance, and prostitution.

The Department began its investigation in March 2001 because of an allegation that Olivas’s boyfriend, Manuel Payan, had physically abused Ricardo. Georgina Estrada Martinez, an intake investigator for the Department, was unable to determine whether the abuse occurred. The child suffered no injuries and was unable to verbalize what had happened due to a speech impediment and developmental delay. But Martinez did conclude that Frias had neglected to properly supervise Justin and Ricardo to the extent that the home was not an appropriate environment for them. Payan was arrested for assaulting Frias and for injury to a child. A sixty-day protective order banned Payan from the home. Martinez informed Corrales about the circumstances, but he wanted the children placed with Olivas or an aunt and expressed no concern about the domestic violence in the home.

Martinez also met with Frias and noticed fresh track marks on her arms. Fri-as was pregnant with Joylin at the time. She was using cocaine every other day and had received no prenatal care. Martinez also spoke to Olivas, who confirmed Frias’s drug usage. Frias was placed in a drug treatment program. Justin was placed with Olivas while Ricardo was placed with Frias’s sister Annabelle. Olivas was instructed that Frias should not be in the home. The case was then assigned to John Estrada in the family preservation unit at the Department.

Estrada testified that he had tried to preserve the family for a year and a half during which he had concerns about the children’s well being due to their mother’s drug use. Frias and Olivas were offered a number of services including drug treatment, day care for the children, referrals to the Texas Workforce Commission, and assistance with housing. They ultimately terminated the day care service because it was too difficult to get all the children downstairs from the grandmother’s second floor apartment to be picked up. Frias lived with her mother off and on and would visit the children when she was not living there. Despite the Department’s instructions, Olivas allowed Frias ready access to the children.

In August 2002, Estrada conducted a routine home visit and found the three children alone with Frias. She appeared to be anxious, hung over, under the influence of drugs, and aggressive. The children appeared to be taking care of themselves. The house was in disarray and there were knives on the kitchen table within reach of the children. Frias told him she had used cocaine the night before and had been involved in an altercation. She explained she was watching the children because Olivas had taken Jason to register for school. The children were removed from their grandmother and placed in foster care. Estrada believed that caring for four children under eight years of age was a handful for one person. *483 These circumstances were even more difficult because one of the children was blind and mentally retarded. Estrada testified that Olivas had contacted him because she felt overwhelmed.

Frias testified that she wanted the children placed with Olivas if parental rights were terminated because she wanted to continue to see them. The children loved their grandmother and would cry when they were taken back to the foster home. Frias claimed her mother took good care of the children whereas they had experienced problems in foster care. Joylin suffered from diaper rash and was neglected when the foster mother’s grandchild came to stay. Ricardo was beaten and always had some kind of injury. Justin was scolded and punished by the foster mother and was now hyperactive and on medication. He had been in the first grade but was put back into kindergarten. Frias complained to the case worker about the foster care.

She also described the children’s interaction with their other siblings at their grandmother’s house. Jason loved the children and would cry when the visits ended. The children would also ask for Jason. She admitted that four of her brothers and sisters had a drug-related criminal history, but her eleven nieces and nephews had spent time with the children.

Case worker Eunice Buendia asked the jury to terminate the parental rights and to appoint the Department as managing conservator. She saw problems with allowing the grandmother to parent the children. Two homes studies were negative. Olivas could not read or write. She was still dating Payan. She minimized her children’s drug usage. She already cared for a special needs child who was blind and mentally retarded.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.3d 478, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 10384, 2004 WL 2634166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrales-v-department-of-family-protective-services-texapp-2004.