in Re H.D., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 2013
Docket01-12-00007-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re H.D., a Child (in Re H.D., a Child) 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 H.D., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 9, 2013

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00007-CV ——————————— IN RE H.D., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 310th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2010-52475

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants, M.D. and R.D., appeal the trial court’s termination of their

parental rights to their child, H.D. M.D., the mother, argues that the evidence was

legally and factually insufficient to support: termination of her parental rights

pursuant to Family Code section 161.001(1)(E), (F), and (O); the trial court’s

finding that termination of her parental rights was in H.D.’s best interest; and the appointment of the Department of Family and Protective Services (“DFPS”) as

H.D.’s conservator. R.D., the father, argues that the evidence was legally and

factually insufficient to support: termination of his parental rights pursuant to

Family Code section 161.001(1)(D), (F), and (O); the trial court’s finding that

termination of his parental rights was in H.D.’s best interest; and the appointment

of DFPS as H.D.’s conservator.

We affirm.

Background

M.D. is the mother of four children: an adult daughter; a teenage son, J.H.; a

teenage daughter, C.Y.; and her daughter with R.D., H.D. H.D. was born in 2007

and is the child who is the subject of this appeal. 1

On August 21, 2010, DFPS received a referral of physical abuse concerning

J.H. and H.D. According to documents filed by DFPS, the report of abuse stated

that M.D., J.H., and H.D. were kicked out of a trailer home two months prior to the

referral because of M.D.’s drug use and inability to pay rent, and the three of them

went to live with an unrelated man. The home where M.D. lived with J.H. and

H.D. was, according to the report, shared with seven unrelated adults and was

1 The trial court also terminated M.D.’s rights to her two other minor children, J.H. and C.Y. M.D. does not challenge the termination of her rights to J.H. and C.Y. The trial court also terminated the parental rights of C.Y.’s father, but he is not a party to this appeal.

2 “known as a drug haven.” The report alleged that “the adults that live in the home

steal a lot of vehicles and copper” and that they “use methamphetamine, cocaine,

and marijuana.”

DFPS and law enforcement subsequently investigated the home and

discovered, according to the DFPS file, that “methamphetamine was being

manufactured in the home in areas that are accessible to the two kids.” The DFPS

report also contained the following statements: M.D. is addicted to

methamphetamine; M.D. gave J.H. methamphetamine and smoked it with him in

front of H.D.; M.D. has given J.H. marijuana to smoke since he was seven years

old, and M.D. allowed him to smoke marijuana because of his diagnosis of bipolar

disorder; J.H., H.D., M.D. and two of the unrelated adult males living in the house

all slept in the same bed; H.D. made an outcry that one of those men touched her

between her legs; M.D. was aware of H.D.’s outcry but was fearful to contact law

enforcement because of her drug addiction and because she had warrants for her

arrest; and H.D. had bruises on her legs, but their origin was unknown.

On August 23, 2010, DFPS filed its original petition for protection of H.D.

and termination of M.D.’s and R.D.’s parental rights. A permanency plan and

progress report filed with the trial court on February 22, 2011 stated that DFPS

removed J.H. and H.D. from M.D.’s care on August 23, 2010. DFPS found C.Y.

in the care of her maternal uncle and discovered that there was an open

3 investigation concerning the uncle’s alleged sexual abuse of C.Y. That

investigation had been opened on May 27, 2010. The progress report further stated

that M.D. “and other members of the household as well as C.Y. made outcries of

drug use in the home while the children were present.” The progress report stated

that M.D. had not completed any services provided for in her family service plan at

that time, the caseworker had had minimal contact with M.D., and their first face-

to-face meeting had not occurred until January 6, 2011.

This report also contained the information gathered during DFPS’s

investigation. Upon arrival at the reported residence on August 21, 2010, the

DFPS investigator was met by two Harris County Sheriff’s Department deputies

who were familiar with the residence due to “drug allegations.” The woman who

admitted the DFPS investigator to the property stated she was the girlfriend of the

homeowner and that the homeowner and another adult resident had been arrested

on August 20, 2010 on “unknown charges” and had not been heard from since.

The investigator “immediately noticed numerous pipes, spoons and baggies

distributed throughout [the homeowner’s] bedroom used for drug use purposes,”

and she noted that the paraphernalia “was seen to have residue present.” The

investigator “also observed over thirty pornographic items (pictures, magazines,

videos, and paintings) throughout the room and home which were all accessible to

the children residing in the residence.” She further stated, “The room was much

4 cluttered and there was a video camera setup facing the bed but the use was not

confirmed by the residents in the home.” The DFPS investigator noted that “[t]he

home was cluttered with tools, clothes, and other items but the living room and

kitchen appeared clean and appropriate with no concerns except for a picture

hanging in the front room of a woman’s vagina with her arm fingering the vagina

in plain view.”

The investigator interviewed the man against whom H.D. made an outcry of

sexual abuse. He denied the allegations, but he confirmed that he, M.D., J.H., and

H.D. “sleep in the same bed with another adult male.” She further stated that three

of the adult men in the home and M.D. “all admitted openly to drug use going on

in or around the home”: specifically, one man “stated that there was ‘a lot of use,

abuse and contribution, but no meth lab’ located on the property”; another

“admitted to past methamphetamine use but denies ever using in front of the

children [and] was arrested recently for possession of marijuana and spent 7

months in prison for 4 g of methamphetamine five years ago”; and M.D. “stated

that she would test positive for marijuana but denied using methamphetamines

anymore.” M.D. admitted that she had a “history of use and abuse of

methamphetamines.”

The DFPS investigator interviewed J.H., who at first “denied any and all

drug use but later recanted, stating that he actively uses alcohol, beer, liquor,

5 marijuana, pills (Xanax, Soma, and Ecstasy) and methamphetamines.” J.H. had

been diagnosed as bipolar, but he had not taken his medications “in two to eight

months.” The investigator noted that H.D. “was observed to be dirty and very

unkempt. She also had [a] grave lice infection that was found to have left scabs in

her head due to non-treatment.” This same DFPS investigator also interviewed

C.Y., who “made an outcry of sexual abuse against her biological father, . . . as

well as methamphetamine use by her mother [M.D.], sister [M.D.’s adult

daughter], and brother [J.H.] while in their care” at the home where M.D. was

residing at that time. C.Y. reported that she had seen M.D. obtain

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