in Re A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B. A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., and M.M.B.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 26, 2014
Docket01-14-00322-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B. A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., and M.M.B. (in Re A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B. A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., and M.M.B.) 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
in Re A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B. A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., and M.M.B., (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion issued September 26, 2014.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00322-CV ——————————— IN RE A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., AND M.M.B., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2013-01651J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

B.B. and H.I., a father and mother, appeal the trial court’s termination of

their parental rights to their children. Each contends that the evidence is legally

and factually insufficient to support the findings that they engaged in conduct that

endangered the physical or emotional well-being of the children. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 161.001(1)(E) (West 2014). They further contend that the evidence

is legally and factually insufficient to support the finding that either parent allowed

the children to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered the

children’s physical or emotional well-being. See id. § 161.001(1)(D). Finally,

they contend that the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that

termination of their parental rights is in the children’s best interest. We hold that

legally and factually sufficient evidence supports the trial court’s findings; we

therefore affirm the terminations.

Background

In early March 2013, the parents had five children under six years of age,

and the mother was in late pregnancy of a sixth child. Eleven-month-old H.B. was

their youngest child. H.B. could crawl and pull herself up by holding onto

furniture, but she could not yet walk independently. One day, the mother noticed

that H.B. was having difficulty breathing before putting her down for a nap. When

the mother returned an hour and forty minutes later, she discovered that H.B. was

not breathing. She woke the father and brought him to H.B. The father told the

mother that H.B. was dead. The mother called 911.

Patrol officers from the Houston Police Department arrived at the family

home in response to the call. The mother led them to the bedroom, where officers

found H.B.’s body. The right side of the baby’s torso, her right thigh, and her right

2 forearm had several large burned areas; someone had covered the areas with a

pasty whitish substance. The burns were so bad that the deeper layers of flesh

were exposed.

The burns occurred four days before H.B.’s death. Through an interpreter, 1

the parents initially told police that the mother had been away using the bathroom

when one of the other children pulled a pot of boiling water from the range and

spilled it onto the H.B., who was crawling in the kitchen. In a later version of the

story, the baby was crawling and bumped into the range, causing the pot of boiling

water to fall from the stove and splash onto the baby. The baby’s injuries were not

consistent with the latter explanation. The police questioned one of the older

children; her answers also were inconsistent with the baby’s injuries.

The officers further questioned the mother, and she again changed her story,

explaining that one of the other children had ignited a paper napkin within the open

oven and set the baby’s clothing on fire. Neither HPD nor CPS found the

proffered explanations plausible.

The father insisted that he was not home when H.B. was burned. He told

investigators that the mother told him about the incident over the telephone.

According to the father, the mother said that when she returned from the bathroom,

H.B.’s clothes were on fire. When the father arrived at home, he was surprised to

1 The parents are from Somalia and speak little English.

3 see such a large burn on H.B. He asked the mother how H.B.’s clothes caught on

fire, but she only cried and did not give him an explanation.

The father bought cocoa butter lotion to treat the burns. A family friend

provided acetaminophen capsules to the father. The mother mixed an unspecified

amount of powdered acetaminophen into the cocoa butter lotion and applied the

mixture to the burns. The father stated that he did not know that the mother put

acetaminophen in the lotion. A bowl containing the lotion-acetaminophen mixture

was found in the baby’s room. The officers also found 50 or 60 empty gel

capsules, a large, half-empty bottle of 500-milligram acetaminophen capsules, and

an opened bottle of over-the-counter cough syrup. The parents denied giving the

baby the cough syrup.

Before H.B.’s injury, the parents had taken their children to the doctor for

other ailments and checkups. The parents had taken H.B. to the doctor a few

months earlier for breathing problems and a cough. But, the parents explained,

they did not seek medical treatment for H.B.’s burns because their knowledge of

medicine was “wasn’t that good” and they were fearful of what might happen if

medical personnel knew that the child had been burned. The mother testified that

she feared that the child who lit the paper napkin on fire would be in trouble, and

she was afraid if the authorities learned about the incident, her children would be

taken away.

4 Dr. P. Gumpeni, an Assistant Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for Harris

County, provided expert testimony concerning the baby’s autopsy, and the trial

court admitted photographs of the child demonstrating the severity of the burns.

The baby’s blood showed an extremely high level of acetaminophen. The blood

also contained bromphenaramine, dextromethorphan, and dextrorphan, the active

ingredients in the over-the-counter cough syrup. The autopsy revealed that the

cause of the baby’s death was acute acetaminophen toxicity with liver failure

following unexplained scald burns. In his opinion, the failure to seek medical

attention for the baby constituted medical neglect. The death was ruled a

homicide. 2

According to his testimony, the baby had second- to third-degree burns

covering about 15 percent of her body. Dr. Gumpeni further testified that the baby

had bronchial pneumonia, consistent with an acute infection and most likely the

result of the burns. In Dr. Gumpeni’s opinion, a reasonable person would have

promptly obtained medical treatment for a child with these severe burns. The

doctor further opined that, if the baby had received medical treatment for the burns,

then she would not have died.

The Child Protective Services’ investigator testified that the parents’ home

appeared clean and well cared-for. The surviving children appeared clean and

2 The mother is currently under felony indictment alleging injury to a child.

5 well-fed, but the investigator testified that they were withdrawn and

uncommunicative. The two oldest children refused to be interviewed by the HPD

detectives, the CPS investigator, or the interviewer at the Children’s Assessment

Center. The children’s older cousin told the CPS investigator that the children

rarely speak with him either.

CPS took the surviving children into custody and placed them with their

maternal grandparents. After the mother gave birth to M.B. in April 2013, CPS

also took her into custody and placed her in foster care. By the time of the trial,

CPS had identified a friend of the family who was willing and able to care for her,

and the trial court ordered her to be placed with the friend.

The mother testified at the termination trial that H.B. sustained the burns

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in Re A.M.B., S.M.B., A.M.B., F.M.B. A/K/A F.B., S.M.B. A/K/A S.M., and M.M.B., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amb-smb-amb-fmb-aka-fb-smb-aka-sm-and-mmb-texapp-2014.