In the Interest of A.M., J.M., and K.W., Children v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
DecidedJune 4, 2026
Docket02-26-00083-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of A.M., J.M., and K.W., Children v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of A.M., J.M., and K.W., Children v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth) 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.M., J.M., and K.W., Children v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-26-00083-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF A.M., J.M., AND K.W., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 233rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 324-751165-24

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Wallach and Walker, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant J.A. (Mother) challenges the termination of her parental rights to

three of her children: A.M. (Amy), J.M. (John), and K.W. (Kim).1 Mother argues that

the evidence was neither legally nor factually sufficient to support the trial court’s

termination findings (1) that she, among other things, endangered the children by her

course of conduct, and (2) that termination was in the children’s best interest. But the

evidence showed that Mother had a near-decade-long pattern of not only dating

abusive men but also downplaying their violent actions—even after an ex-boyfriend

killed one of her children. Because this evidence was sufficient to support the trial

court’s findings, we will affirm.

I. Background

The evidence at Mother’s termination bench trial showed that she had been in

a series of relationships with violent men since before the children were born.

• In approximately 2016 and 2017, Mother dated Amy’s father, D.M. (First Boyfriend). Although Mother later claimed that First Boyfriend never “physically” beat her, she admitted that they “had altercations.” And just a few months after Amy was born in mid-2017, First Boyfriend pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault family violence for hitting Mother.2

• In 2018 and 2019, Mother dated John’s father, J.M. (Second Boyfriend). While they were living together, Second Boyfriend violently beat Mother and left

At the time of trial, Amy was 8, John was 6, and Kim was between 3 and 4. 1

First Boyfriend was also convicted of misdemeanor assault for hitting 2

Mother’s sister around the same time.

2 visible injuries. At trial, Mother acknowledged that Amy and John3 had been “in close vicinity when [Second Boyfriend] was beating [her],” and she further admitted that Second Boyfriend had assaulted her “[m]any” other times during their relationship. Second Boyfriend was ultimately convicted of misdemeanor assault family violence for “kicking, . . . striking, grabbing, or pushing” Mother. [Formatting altered.]

• After Mother and Second Boyfriend broke up, she attempted to pick up Amy and John from a mutual friend’s home, and Second Boyfriend pulled a gun on her outside the house while the children were steps away inside.

• By 2020, Mother had begun dating S.N. (Third Boyfriend). Mother later admitted that she “had heard things” about Third Boyfriend being a violent, “dangerous person” and that he “was disciplining the kids behind [her] back.” But Mother insisted that she “was never shown any proof” of Third Boyfriend’s violence and that she had no way of knowing that he would turn out to be a murderer.

• After Mother and Third Boyfriend broke up,4 Mother had two additional children: Z.A. (Zack)—who later died, and is thus not a party to this case— and Kim. Mother later explained that Kim’s father was “a one-night stand . . . in Las Vegas” and that she “ha[d] no way of knowing” who the man was.

• In 2024, even though Mother and Third Boyfriend had broken up, Third Boyfriend continued living with Mother’s mom (Grandmother).5 And Mother routinely left her children at Grandmother’s home for extended periods of time, knowing that Third Boyfriend lived there.6 Then, one day, while the

3 John was born in 2019 before the incident. 4 There was conflicting testimony regarding when Mother and Third Boyfriend broke up. A Department investigator recalled Mother giving an end date in 2020, a caseworker recalled her identifying an end date in 2022, and Mother testified to an end date in 2021. 5 There was evidence that Grandmother was living in a hotel at the time.

A Department caseworker testified that, according to the children, they lived 6

with Grandmother. But according to Mother, her children spent about half their time at Grandmother’s home due to Mother’s overnight work schedule. She later

3 children were staying with Grandmother—and Third Boyfriend—Third Boyfriend murdered then-three-year-old Zack.

• When Zack died, he had bruises all over his body, and the surviving children— Amy, John, and Kim—exhibited bruises as well. Amy, John, and Kim were removed from Mother’s care.

• At the time of the children’s removal in May 2024, Mother was dating D.W. (Fourth Boyfriend), who again, was abusive. Yet, even after Zack’s death and the children’s removal, Mother remained in her abusive relationship with Fourth Boyfriend.

• In July 2024, while Mother was pregnant with Fourth Boyfriend’s child,7 Fourth Boyfriend choked her and punched her in the stomach. But when a Department caseworker asked Mother about Fourth Boyfriend a few months later, she stated that “there[ had] been no domestic violence between [them].”

• Then, in September 2024, Mother began a relationship with M.T. (Fifth Boyfriend).8 During their relationship—which continued for more than a year, through the start of the termination trial—Fifth Boyfriend “kicked [Mother], punched [her], bit [her], held a gun to [her],” and “held [her] hostage,” among other things.

• In August 2025, Fifth Boyfriend confronted Mother at the door to her apartment, accused her of cheating, dragged her by her dress into the apartment, beat her with a cord, prevented her from accessing her phone to call for help, held a loaded gun to her head, and threatened to kill her.9 But just

explained that, at the time, she worked for “a temp service” that sent her out to “various jobs” in the “medical” field. 7 Mother testified that she later decided to terminate the pregnancy. 8 In July 2025, Mother gave birth to Fifth Boyfriend’s child: M.D.T. (Mike). Mother’s parental rights to Mike were not adjudicated as part of this case and are instead the basis of a companion case. 9 After Mother escaped to a local gas station and called the police, they arrested Fifth Boyfriend and searched Mother’s apartment. Under a couch cushion, the police found the weapon that Mother had described—a loaded miniature AK-47 with an extended magazine and a live round in the chamber.

4 one day later, Mother pretended that Fifth Boyfriend’s assault had never happened, telling a Department caseworker that it had been months since the last incident of domestic violence between her and Fifth Boyfriend.

• Although Fifth Boyfriend was arrested for assaulting Mother and prohibited from “[c]ommunicating [with her] in any manner,”10 Mother continued communicating with him while he was in jail, telling him that she “loved him” and “wanted to make the relationship work.” When the termination trial began in November 2025, First Boyfriend was in

prison for robbery causing bodily injury (following earlier misdemeanor convictions

for assaulting Mother and her sister); Second Boyfriend was in prison for a drug-

related offense (following a prior misdemeanor conviction for assaulting Mother);

Third Boyfriend was in jail awaiting trial for Zack’s murder; Fourth Boyfriend was in

prison for his 2024 assault on Mother; and Fifth Boyfriend was in jail awaiting trial

for, among other things, his 2025 assault on Mother. Yet, Mother was still in contact

with Fifth Boyfriend and was still downplaying her other boyfriends’ violence.

But her attitude changed as the trial progressed. The trial testimony was spaced

out over several months, and by the time Mother testified in February 2026, she had

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Related

Holley v. Adams
544 S.W.2d 367 (Texas Supreme Court, 1976)
in the Interest of A.B. and H.B., Children
437 S.W.3d 498 (Texas Supreme Court, 2014)
in the Interest of O. E. R. and L. F. J., Children
573 S.W.3d 896 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019)

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In the Interest of A.M., J.M., and K.W., Children v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-am-jm-and-kw-children-v-the-state-of-texas-txctapp2-2026.