In re Of

543 S.W.3d 422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2018
DocketNO. 14-17-00793-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 543 S.W.3d 422 (In re Of) 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 Of, 543 S.W.3d 422 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Tracy Christopher, Justice

This accelerated appeal arises from a final decree in a suit in which termination of the parent-child relationship was at issue. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(a-1) (West 2014 & Supp. 2017) The trial court terminated the parental rights of C.L.R. (Mother) and appellant C.D. (Father) with respect to their son, Rico.1 The decree also concerns a little girl, Lily, whose parents are Mother and M.M.M. Their parental rights with respect to Lily were terminated; neither Mother nor M.M.M. appeals. The trial court also appointed the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) to be Rico's and Lily's managing conservator.

On appeal, Father challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the sole statutory predicate for termination: constructive abandonment. See id. § 161.001(b)(1)(N). He also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the *424finding that termination of Father's parental rights is in Rico's best interest. He does not challenge the Department's appointment as Rico's managing conservator. We conclude the evidence in the record is legally insufficient to justify termination under subsection N. We therefore reverse and render the portion of the judgment terminating Father's parental rights. We affirm the remainder of the judgment.

BACKGROUND

A. Removal

This case began following the in-home death of Rico's infant half-brother, Matthew, in August 2013. (M.M.M. is Matthew's father.) Matthew was found unresponsive and pronounced dead. The medical examiner found no signs of abuse, neglect, or trauma on Matthew and was unable to determine his cause of death.

Rico (then six years old) and Lily (then thirteen months old) lived with Mother and M.M.M. At the Department's request, Mother and M.M.M. arranged a parental child safety placement for Rico and Lily.

After Matthew's autopsy revealed no signs of foul play, the Department referred the case to Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).2 Mother voluntarily participated in the services offered by FBSS; M.M.M. did not. Rico and Lily were returned to Mother in November 2015.

Despite two years of progress, Mother began a downslide in January 2016. She reportedly disappeared, and the Department did not find her until April. Even then, she would not permit the Department inside the home or disclose where the children were. The Department formally removed Rico and Lily at the end of April, though the Department did not find or obtain physical possession of the children until January 2017. The trial court appointed the Department as the children's temporary managing conservator at the time of removal.

There is no evidence in the record about Father's whereabouts during the period between Matthew's death and the Department's removal of Rico and Lily.

B. Trial

Trial was held in August 2017. We will discuss only the evidence relevant to the finding that Father constructively abandoned Rico, because the insufficiency of that evidence is dispositive.

1. Caseworker Amy Obot's testimony

Obot spoke with Father and encouraged him to visit Rico. Father saw Rico on one visit, for Rico's tenth birthday in April 2017. No "issues or concerns" arose during that visit. Nothing prevented Father from visiting Rico more than once.

Obot said she and Father discussed the possibility of Rico living with Father. According to Obot, Father "stated that he would rather his mother take the child and not him." The Department conducted a home study of Father's mother as a possible placement for Rico. She was ruled out due to concerns of inadequate spacing in the home and the immigration status of other adults living in the home, none of whom had a driver's license or was a U.S. citizen. The Department was concerned that if any of those adults were arrested or sent to immigration, there would be no back-up caregivers for Rico.

Father told Obot he had a job, but he did not provide support for Rico during *425this case. He attended the first pretrial hearing in this case in May 2016 but did not attend any of the three following hearings.

Over a hearsay objection, Obot testified Father failed to submit to a drug test on May 12, 2016, the day of the show-cause hearing. She also testified, again over a hearsay objection, that Father was charged in 2011 with "possession" and in 2006 with assault. The record includes a judgment showing Father was convicted in 2011 of misdemeanor possession of marijuana and sentenced to two days in county jail. The record does not include evidence of the alleged 2006 assault charge.

Obot said Father has three other children. None of them live with him, and she does not know where they live.

On cross-examination, Obot confirmed the Department did not know where the children were from January 2016 through January 2017. She conceded Father could have been visiting and/or supporting Rico during that 12-month period.

2. Mother's testimony

Mother testified she hid Rico and Lily from the Department while this case was pending. She said Rico was not in school during that time. Nobody asked her if Father visited or maintained contact with Rico, and she did not offer any information concerning any such visits or contact.

3. Father's testimony

Father's lawyer asked him if he provided support for Rico during the period from January 2016 and January 2017, when they were not in the Department's physical custody. Father replied:

The only time I haven't helped my kids only when CPS have them. The other time, when the baby's with my mom or with the other lady beside her. I help the baby and when they were with the mom [Mother].... I help the babies. Like I haven't helped the babies only one day with CPS. When they were with my mom, I helped them. I bought diapers, clothes. I'll give money to my mom. When they were with [Mother], I was helping with the money and diapers. And when ... [Rico] was with [Mother's] mom, I would help her too.

Father testified he also visited Rico "during that time."

According to Father, the Department scheduled only two visits between him and Rico: one in April 2017, discussed above, and the second about a month before trial. Father brought Rico toys and a cake for the birthday visit in April. He did not make the second visit, Father said, because he did not finish work in time.

Father testified he would have taken the opportunity to visit Rico more frequently once the Department had physical custody of the children. He said he called "the other lady" at the Department, presumably a previous caseworker, but "every time I would call CPS, they never-I never get in contact with them." Father never called Obot.

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543 S.W.3d 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-of-texapp-2018.