in Re D.C., J.C. III, J.C., and J.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 2020
Docket05-19-01217-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re D.C., J.C. III, J.C., and J.C. (in Re D.C., J.C. III, J.C., and J.C.) 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 D.C., J.C. III, J.C., and J.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED and Opinion Filed March 4, 2020

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-01217-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF D.C., J.C. III, J.C., AND J.C., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 256th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DF-12-06457

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Burns, Justice Whitehill, and Justice Schenck Opinion by Justice Whitehill

In this parental rights termination case, the trial court terminated Mother’s rights to four

children based on the jury’s findings that

• Family Code § 161.001(b)(1)(D) (dangerous conditions or surroundings) was satisfied and termination was in the children’s best interest,

• Family Code § 161.001(b)(1)(E) (dangerous conduct) was satisfied and termination was in the children’s best interest,

• Family Code § 161.001(b)(1)(O) (failure to comply with court order) was satisfied and termination was in the children’s best interest, and

• Mother did not prove the Family Code § 161.001(d) (excused non- compliance) defense by a preponderance of the evidence.

On appeal, Mother challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support

these findings, but she did not preserve any factual sufficiency challenges in the trial court, nor did

she preserve legal sufficiency challenges to the § 161.001(b)(1)(O) finding, the best interest findings, or the § 161.001(d) finding. Because those findings suffice to support the judgment, we

affirm. However, we vacate the § 161.001(b)(1)(D) finding because it is supported by legally

insufficient evidence. Thus, we affirm the judgment as modified.

I. BACKGROUND

We draw these facts from the trial evidence and the clerk’s record as appropriate.

A. Events Before This Termination Case

Mother gave birth to a daughter, D.C., in May 2010, and a son, J.C. III, in July 2011.

The next year, the State sued to establish their father’s parent–child relationship and to

compel him to pay child support.

In March 2015, Mother birthed twins, a boy and a girl, each with the initials J.C. When

Mother and the twins left the hospital they went to the residence of Mother’s friend Nicole

Armstrong. Armstrong’s daughter, Anastasia Mason, testified that Mother left about three days

later, leaving the twins with Armstrong. According to Mason, the twins stayed with Armstrong

from then on, except for one overnight visit with Mother.

In April 2017, the Department received a referral that D.C. and J.C. III were suffering from

physical neglect and neglectful supervision, including that they were not eating and were dirty and

homeless.

Six months later, D.C. and J.C. III’s case was assigned to Melanie LaCour, a CPS family

based safety service worker. Family based safety services is a CPS program that works with

parents to try to keep children in the home.

LaCour testified that when she got the case Mother was homeless and had previously left

D.C., J.C. III, and the twins to stay with Armstrong. Mason, however, testified that Mother did

not leave D.C. and J.C. III with Armstrong permanently until March or April 2018.

–2– According to LaCour, CPS knew from prior cases that Mother had a history of substance

abuse. LaCour offered Mother individual counseling, substance abuse treatment, and random drug

testing. Mother completed most of the individual counseling, and she failed to complete it only

because the Department’s contract with that counselor ended. Mother submitted to some, though

not all, of the requested drug tests, and she tested positive for cocaine and marijuana. She did not

do the substance abuse counseling. The Department requested a psychological evaluation, but

Mother did not submit to it while LaCour had the case.

Although the Department helped Mother seek housing, by January 2018 she was facing

eviction for nonpayment of rent. That month, Mother told LaCour and her supervisor that she

planned to move to Colorado with her children to be with a friend “who was part of the Mexican

cartel.”1

The Department subsequently filed this case.

B. Events During This Case

1. Events Leading to Foster Care

In June 2018, the Department (i) sued to terminate Mother’s and Father’s parental

relationships with the twins and (ii) moved to modify in the 2012 case seeking to terminate the

parents’ relationships with D.C. and J.C. III. Ultimately the suits were consolidated and tried

together in August 2019.

An August 24, 2018 temporary order required Mother to participate in (i) individual

counseling, (ii) parenting classes, (iii) random drug testing, (iv) a psychological evaluation, and

(v) a psychiatric evaluation. It also authorized Mother to have weekly supervised visits with the

children.

1 Mother denied saying that she had a friend in Colorado who had been with the Mexican cartel.

–3– CPS caseworker Blonde Web was assigned to the case from September 6, 2018, to June 3,

2019. She testified that the children were initially placed with Armstrong and Mason and that the

court ordered that the children remain with Armstrong.

The night of September 6, 2018, Web learned that D.C. and J.C. III had been removed from

their school and their whereabouts were unknown.

The next day, Web and LaCour went to Mother’s house. They found a car sitting in the

driveway with a Hispanic family inside and “marijuana was coming out of the car.”

Then Mother emerged from the house. Mother and her boyfriend were angry, and police

officers were summoned. Web testified that Mother said that “she went and got her children to

show CPS that she can remove her children any time feel [sic] she feels like it.” Eventually the

police took the children to a CPS office.2 The children were going to be returned to Armstrong,

but then CPS learned that Armstrong had failed a drug test.3 So at that point all four children were

removed and placed in foster care.

2. Mother’s Noncompliance with Court Orders and Other Misconduct

Web testified that Mother failed to comply with the court-ordered services in several

respects. Specifically, Mother was discharged from two individual counseling providers for

nonattendance. She finally started participating in individual counseling in May 2019 when CPS

found her a counselor who would visit Mother in her home. Mother made three appointments to

have her psychological evaluation and did not appear for any of them. And she did not appear for

any of the monthly drug tests that Web requested of her.

Additionally, at trial Mother admitted to using marijuana in January, February, and March

2019. She also admitted that she had not submitted to random drug testing. When asked why not,

2 Mother testified that the police told her that she could keep the children, but instead she “politely gave them back.” 3 There was also evidence that Mother said in open court that Armstrong used marijuana, but it is not clear when this happened. The record suggests it was around August 2018.

–4– she first answered, “I just haven’t,” and then explained that she would have gotten fired for leaving

her job for a drug test.

Furthermore, Mother acknowledged that she lived “[a] lot” of different places in 2018. She

moved into a house for which the monthly rent was $3,500, and then she moved out three or four

months later.

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Bluebook (online)
in Re D.C., J.C. III, J.C., and J.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dc-jc-iii-jc-and-jc-texapp-2020.