In Re Texas Department of Family & Protective Services

245 S.W.3d 42, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9900, 2007 WL 4462654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 2007
Docket03-07-00109-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 S.W.3d 42 (In Re Texas Department of Family & 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
In Re Texas Department of Family & Protective Services, 245 S.W.3d 42, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9900, 2007 WL 4462654 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

W. KENNETH LAW, Chief Justice.

Relator Texas Department of Family and Protective Services filed a petition for a writ of mandamus seeking to vacate the county court at law’s December 13, 2006 order returning two foster children to their foster parents and finding that there was “no abuse, exploitation, or neglect” of the foster children by their foster parents. The abuse allegation involved an eight-year-old foster child, C.L.H., who along with a sibling, C.M.H., was under the permanent managing conservatorship of the Department. C.L.H. and C.M.H. had been moved into and out of multiple foster homes since 2004. In 2006, the court placed both children in the foster home of D.W. and T.H., 1 who planned to adopt the children. The trial court expressly retained jurisdiction over the suit establishing the Department as the children’s managing conservator under the family code. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. §§ 155.001-.003 (West 2002). In addition, the court had previously appointed an attorney ad litem and a guardian ad litem for C.L.H. and C.M.H.

The Department’s petition claims that the court abused its discretion by enjoining the Department from proceeding with its investigation into the abuse allegation, entering its own finding of “no abuse,” and ordering that the children be returned to their foster home. At oral argument however, the Department conceded that: (1) the court had the continuing jurisdiction and duty to place the children and to make a finding in the best interest of the children; and (2) in making its best-interest finding, the court could consider whether abuse occurred but could not memorialize its decision about the alleged abuse on the record or in writing. We deny the Department’s petition.

The first information pertaining to the incident of alleged abuse was provided voluntarily by foster parent D.W., who left a telephone message and sent a “restraint *44 report” by facsimile to a caseworker at A World For Children, the child placement agency licensed by the Department to provide foster care for C.L.H. and C.M.H. The report detailed the actions taken on October 21, 2006, during a physical outburst by C.L.H. Included with the report was a detailed explanation of how D.W. applied a restraint method that she had learned from A World For Children during foster-parent training and a four-page journal recounting the daily events in the home and C.L.H.’s behavioral patterns on the day of the incident and on the days preceding and. following it.

The day after D.W. left her telephone message, Kim Nicholas, a caseworker from A World For Children, picked up C.L.H. to drive her to a scheduled therapy appointment. 2 During this trip, C.L.H. told the caseworker that D.W. had slapped her. 3 According to Nicholas, C.L.H. had a “black eye.” Nicholas attempted to photograph the “black eye” with her cellular telephone. 4 She also notified the regional director of A World for Children, Lorraine Guerrero, about C.L.H.’s statement. Guerrero in turn notified the program director, Rebecca Allen. Guerrero testified that she and Allen conferred by telephone, made the decision to remove the children from the home, 5 and “notified Child Protective Services.” This decision was made without further interview of C.L.H., any interview of the foster parents, or any further investigation.

Nicholas placed a telephone call to Jennifer Deazvedo, an adoption unit worker in the Department’s Child Protective Services division, and requested that C.L.H. and C.M.H. be removed from the foster home. Deazvedo did not interview C.L.H. or C.M.H. Nor did she speak with her supervisor or the program director because she was unable' to “get in touch with” them. Deazvedo had never exercised sole authority to make a removal decision, and she “really didn’t know what to do” because she “never had cases like this.”

Nevertheless, Deazvedo agreed to the children’s removal from the home of D.W. and T.H. Deazvedo did not notify the court, the children’s attorney ad litem, or the children’s guardian ad litem (CASA) of the fact that A World for Children was unwilling to keep C.L.H. or. C.M.H. in their current foster home. Asked whether it seemed logical for the Department, the children’s permanent managing conservator, to allow a foster home agency to remove the children before any investigation was done — possibly creating a problematic situation for the children — Deazvedo responded, ‘Well if they are the child[-]placing agency, I can’t make them keep the children in their home.” She later recant *45 ed that testimony, acknowledging that she could have informed the child-placing agency that the children were being placed in their current foster home and that the agency could not remove them. Deazvedo further stated that she initially wanted to place a call about the incident to an agency hotline and “keep the children in the home while it’s being investigated.” But when she was informed that A World for Children was unwilling to keep C.L.H. and C.M.H. in the home because of their concerns about their own potential liability, she agreed to the children’s removal. She thought, “[W]e’ll just go ahead and remove and do the investigation and see what the outcome is of that investigation.” 6 Deaz-vedo denied that A World for Children makes the decisions about whether children should be removed: “It was staffed with me, and I decided to go with what they decided.” Deazvedo clarified that by “staffing” with A World for Children, she referred only to her telephone conversation with Nicholas. Deazvedo never spoke with the agency’s regional director, Guerrero; its program director, Allen; the children’s guardian ad litem, the children’s attorney ad litem, or the court before agreeing to remove the children.

Deazvedo did not discuss the matter with anyone else at Child Protective Services, either. 7 On October 23, 2006, two days after the alleged abuse incident and without notice to the children’s attorney ad litem, their guardian ad litem, or the court, Kim Nicholas removed C.L.H. and C.M.H. from D.W. and T.H.’s home. The children were placed in yet another foster home overseen by A World For Children.

After C.L.H. and C.M.H. were removed, D.W. and T.H. filed a motion for an evi-dentiary show-cause hearing, and the Department filed a motion for continuance. In their show-cause motion, D.W. and T.H. asked the court to determine whether the removal of C.L.H. and C.M.H. from their home was proper and in the children’s best interest. The Department’s motion urged the court to postpone any ruling on the children’s placement until after the Department’s investigation into the alleged abuse was complete.

At the beginning of the November 14, 2006 hearing on the Department’s motion for continuance, the court noted that it had met in chambers with C.L.H. and C.M.H.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.3d 42, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9900, 2007 WL 4462654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-texas-department-of-family-protective-services-texapp-2007.