G. A. v. Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 2012
Docket01-11-00565-CV
StatusPublished

This text of G. A. v. Department of Family and Protective Services (G. A. v. 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
G. A. v. Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 29, 2012.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-11-00565-CV

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In re G.A., a minor

On Appeal from the 314th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2009-06989J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) took conservatorship of G.A. (“G.”) and instituted a proceeding to terminate the parental rights of her father.  A jury found that: (1) the father knowingly placed or knowingly allowed G. to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered her physical or emotional well-being; (2) the father engaged in conduct or knowingly placed G. with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered G.’s physical or emotional well-being; (3) the father failed to comply with a court order that prescribed the actions necessary for the father to regain custody of G.; and (4) termination of the parent-child relationship between the father and G. is in G.’s best interest.  See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (O) (West 2008).  The trial court entered judgment on the jury’s verdict.

The father appeals, contending that the trial court erred in terminating his parental rights because the evidence is factually insufficient to support the jury’s findings.  He further contends that the trial court’s extension of time to adjudicate the termination suit beyond one year violates his due process rights.  Finding no error, we affirm. 

Background

Events leading to the Department’s suit

          In 2007, the father, who admitted to recreational use of marijuana, entered his second guilty plea to a marijuana possession charge after he was apprehended with a small amount of marijuana and over $5,000 in cash.  As an immigrant with prior criminal convictions, the father came under the scrutiny of federal immigration officials.  The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE) began proceedings to deport the father to his home country of Lebanon.  

          In late 2008, the father began dating S.L.  S.L. became pregnant with G. in early 2009.  S.L., a drug abuser, admitted to using cocaine and marijuana, as well as prescription pain medications, including alprazolam and hydrocodone.  By then, she already had an extensive history with the Department, first as the child of a drug-addicted mother and later as a drug-addicted mother herself, charged with neglect of the three children she had given birth to before becoming pregnant with G.[1]  Early in the father’s relationship with S.L., the Department was providing family-based services to S.L. to monitor her and assist in the care of her son, N.

The father provided S.L. with housing and cash during their relationship.  His income came from various sources, including a number of rental properties, construction work, and Houston Chronicle sales.  At trial, the father valued his rental properties at $1.5 million, an amount significantly higher than the approximately $30,000 appraised value of his properties recorded in county tax records.  The father’s records show that he has used more than one Social Security number, and the amount of income reported on his federal income tax return was a fraction of the amount of income he testified to at trial.

In March 2009, while pregnant with G., S.L. tested positive for cocaine, alprazolam, and opiates.  She entered a drug abuse treatment program.  She left eight-year-old N. with G’s father.  One day, the father left N. “with neighbors,” and N. disappeared.  S.L. reported N.’s disappearance to the Department.  N. was later found with his father, a drug addict who had recently been released from jail and was not authorized to have access to N. 

          The Department took custody of N. after this incident.  When the Department interviewed G.’s father about the circumstances that led to N.’s disappearance and removal from the home, the father denied his relationship with S.L.  He claimed that they were “just dating.”  When N. first came into the Department’s custody, he had regular visits with his mother and G.’s father.  The worker observing the visits became concerned by G.’s father’s apparent inability or unwillingness to control his anger and N.’s strongly negative emotional reaction in the aftermath of the visits.  N. disclosed in counseling that he was afraid of G.’s father, and that the father had hit him on two separate occasions.  In a supervised visit following N.’s outcry, the father kept saying to him, “Why you telling people I hit you? I didn’t hit you.  Why you keep saying—making statements that I’m the one that attacked you?”, until the boy was reduced to tears.   Shortly after this incident, the Department ended the family visits.  Ultimately, S.L.’s parental rights over N. were terminated.

          In the meantime, S.L. had left the drug treatment program when N. disappeared in March 2009.  She relapsed into drug use.  She tested positive for benzodiazepine and opiates with cocaine during prenatal visits.  In July, when S.L. was six-and-a-half months pregnant with G., she arrived at the emergency room complaining of labor pains.  She admitted to recent drug use, and was evaluated for a possible overdose.  Doctors admitted her to the hospital and advised her to remain for twenty-three hours for monitoring to ensure that her unborn child, G., was out of danger.  Just five hours after she was admitted, however, G.’s father arrived. 

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