in the Interest of A.E.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 2015
Docket05-14-01340-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of A.E. (in the Interest of A.E.) 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 the Interest of A.E., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

AFFIRMED; Opinion Filed March 16, 2015.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-01340-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF A.E., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 304th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 13-186-W

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Lang, and Evans Opinion by Justice Lang

Following a jury trial, the trial court rendered judgment terminating Mother’s rights to

her daughter A.E. In a single issue on appeal, Mother contends the evidence is legally and

factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that termination was in A.E.’s best interest.

We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Mother was born in 1971, began using drugs “when she was like 13,” and had her first

child at age “16 or 17.” Six years later, Mother was convicted of burglary of habitation. After

she was released from prison, Mother had two more children. Each child had different fathers,

one of whom physically abused Mother, and both children tested positive for drugs at birth.

Mother’s parental rights to these three children were terminated in Florida before she moved to

Texas in the early 2000s. Between October 2003 and December 2004, Mother was arrested eight times for offenses

ranging from prostitution to burglary of habitation, and she received sentences ranging from

forty-five days in jail to four years in the penitentiary. In June 2008, she gave birth to A.E. She

was single at the time but, shortly after A.E. was born, she married Husband. She met Husband

while pregnant with A.E. and married him by proxy while he was in prison for violating parole.

Although Husband was not A.E.’s biological father, he was named the father on A.E.’s birth

certificate.

For about four years after she married Husband, as Husband was in and out of prison and

jail, Mother held a steady job as a waitress and provided for A.E. In January 2013, however,

shortly after Husband was released from jail again, Husband assaulted Mother. The next day,

Mother was arrested for “evading arrest using a vehicle.” A.E. was in the car with her, sitting in

the back seat unrestrained, leading to Mother also being charged with “endangering a child.”

A.E. was released to Husband and was in his care when, in February 2013, the Texas Department

of Family and Protective Services [“TDFPS”] received a report “alleging sexual abuse of [A.E.]

by her mother.”

TDFPS caseworker Jennifer Steel investigated the allegation and learned the allegation

arose after Husband had left A.E. all day with a neighbor who did “not know [A.E.’s] or

[Husband’s] name.” The police were called, but when A.E. was interviewed, she stated her

“Hello Kitty” doll had touched her. 1

Steel interviewed Husband, who admitted having a criminal record and being on parole

since 2008. Husband also told Steel that he was drug tested regularly and had not “failed a test

in 5 years.” He agreed to an oral swab drug test during the interview and tested positive for

cocaine. Because of concerns with Husband’s drug use and Mother’s incarceration, A.E. was

1 The neighbor was not prosecuted and testimony was elicited at trial that A.E. did not exhibit “any sexually reactive behaviors.”

–2– removed from the home. When no “viable relatives were identified or reached for placement,”

A.E. was placed in foster care.

Caseworker Danita Walker-Banks was assigned to monitor the case during its pendency.

Although Mother was convicted of the evading arrest charge and sentenced to three years in the

penitentiary, Walker-Banks developed a family service plan with the goal of reunifying A.E.

with Mother and Husband within the year. 2 Under the service plan, portions of which were

subsequently incorporated into a court order, Mother was required to submit to a psychological

evaluation, drug and alcohol assessment, and random drug testing. She was also required to

attend parenting classes, participate in individual and domestic violence counseling, and follow

any recommendations made by the service providers.

Over the next year, while in prison, Mother attended parenting and domestic violence

classes and participated in “AA” and “NA.” When she was released on parole in June 2014, she

obtained an apartment and a job at a restaurant, began domestic violence counseling, submitted

to the psychological evaluation and drug assessment required under the family service plan, and

began visiting A.E. one hour each week as allowed by TDFPS. By then, however, A.E. was

thriving in her foster home, and TDFPS had changed its goal from reunification to termination of

Mother’s rights and adoption of A.E. by her foster parents. TDFPS sought termination on three

of the grounds enumerated in section 161.001(1) of the Texas Family Code. See TEX. FAM.

CODE ANN. § 161.001(1) (West 2014). Specifically, TDFPS alleged Mother:

2 Under Texas Family Code section 263.401(a), if a suit affecting the parent-child relationship brought by TDFPS is not finalized within a year of the date the court appointed TDFPS as temporary managing conservator of the child, the case must be dismissed. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 263.401(a) (West 2014). The Code allows a 180-day extension, however, upon a finding of “extraordinary circumstances.” See id. § 263.401(b). Here, the trial court granted an extension, in part, because Mother did not disclose Husband was not A.E.’s biological father until the one-year deadline approached. A.E.’s biological father, in prison during this time for robbery and possession of a controlled substance, subsequently relinquished his rights to A.E. Although DNA testing conclusively excluded Husband, who TDFPS characterized as A.E.’s “legal” father, as A.E.’s biological father, he entered into a mediated settlement agreement with TDFPS “stipulating” that his parental right should be terminated for failure to comply with court-ordered services. See id. § 161.001(1)(O).

–3– •knowingly placed or allowed A.E. to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered A.E.’s physical or emotional well-being;

•engaged in conduct or knowingly placed A.E. with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered A.E.’s physical or emotional well-being;

•failed to comply with a court order establishing the actions necessary for her to regain custody of A.E., who had been in TDFPS’s temporary managing conservatorship for at least nine months as a result of abuse or neglect.

See id. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (O).

At trial, held in August 2014, caseworker Steel testified regarding the circumstances

leading to A.E.’s removal and placement in foster care. She also testified that, before A.E. went

to the foster home, A.E. was given a shower and new clothes because she had “caked on dirt all

over her body, . . . a really bad odor[,]” and was wearing clothes that were too big for her.

According to Steele, A.E. was moved from the foster home to a youth shelter a week later and

subsequently to a second foster home. Steel explained A.E. had a fear of males and had difficulty

with the foster father and a young male child in the first home.

Dr. Greta Kerwin, a psychologist, assessed A.E. in 2013, shortly after A.E. came into

foster care, and again in the spring of 2014. At the time of her first evaluation, A.E. did not

know the alphabet or her birthday, could count only to seven, and “knew . . . [t]riangle and

circle[, but] did not know a square.” According to Dr. Kerwin, this was not “normal for a child

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