in the Interest of B.M.H., H.M.H., and A.M.E., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2014
Docket02-13-00333-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of B.M.H., H.M.H., and A.M.E., Children (in the Interest of B.M.H., H.M.H., and A.M.E., Children) 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 B.M.H., H.M.H., and A.M.E., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-13-00333-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF B.M.H., H.M.H., AND A.M.E., CHILDREN

----------

FROM THE 323RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

Appellant A.K.P. (Mother) appeals the trial court’s order terminating her

parental rights to her children, B.M.H. (Billy), H.M.H. (Heather), and A.M.E

(Adam). 2 In one issue, Mother argues that the evidence is legally and factually

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. 2 To protect the anonymity of the children, we will use aliases to refer to them and to other people associated with this appeal. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d) (West Supp. 2013); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(b)(2); In re K.N., No. 02-13- 00062-CV, 2013 WL 3325104, at *1 n.2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth June 27, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.). insufficient to prove that termination of her parental rights is in the children’s best

interest. We affirm.

Background Facts

Mother gave birth to Billy in June 2002, to Heather in December 2003, and

to Adam in July 2008. M.H. (Michael) is Billy and Heather’s father. Mother was

once married to Michael, but they divorced in 2004 after his infidelity. In October

2008, Mother married Z.P. (Zeth), who fathered Adam.

Mother, who was thirty-two years old during the trial, has a history of using

illegal drugs. She began smoking marijuana when she was fourteen years old.

At about eighteen years old, Mother once smoked marijuana with her mother,

G.B. (Glenda). She progressed to using cocaine and methamphetamine when

she was in her early twenties. When Mother was twenty-three or twenty-four

years old, after her divorce from Michael and after Billy and Heather had been

born, she used methamphetamine three to five days per week, spending about

$20 per day for the drug.

During that time, by Mother’s admission, she was not as attentive to the

children’s needs as she should have been, and her home was not clean. Thus,

shortly after Mother began using methamphetamine, in 2005, by her choice, the

children began living with Glenda. Mother saw them sporadically. 3 According to

3 Glenda had threatened to report Mother to Child Protective Services (CPS) before Mother relinquished the children to Glenda. CPS still became involved with Mother at that time to some extent.

2 Mother, placing the children with Glenda at that time was “what was best” for

them; she had intended to get her “life back on track.” Billy and Heather stayed

with Glenda for over two years before beginning to live with Mother again a few

months before Adam’s birth in 2008.

After taking a long break from using drugs, Mother began using

methamphetamine again in 2012, near the time of a failed attempt at

reconciliation with Zeth. 4 Mother admits that using drugs around the children

endangered them. For months in 2012, Mother used methamphetamine two or

three times a day on two or three days per week.

Although still married to Zeth, Mother became engaged to W.P. (Winston)

in September 2012—one month after meeting him—and she and Winston used

drugs together. They planned on moving from Fort Worth to San Antonio, where

Mother had prospective employment and familial support to help her stop using

drugs.

One morning in early October 2012, however, just before the planned

move, Adam, who was four years old at that time, went outside of the apartment

that he, Mother, Winston, and the other children were living in. 5 Mother was

4 Mother, Zeth, and the children lived in New York together. Mother moved with the children back to Texas in February 2012. Zeth and Mother were still married, although separated, at the time of the trial. Mother had not yet divorced Zeth because she wanted to prevent herself from getting remarried and because she did not have adequate finances to do so. 5 Adam had been outside of the apartment without supervision on multiple occasions.

3 shopping for groceries at that time, and Winston was asleep. A maintenance

worker found Adam unattended and called the police. CPS visited the apartment

and removed the children.

On October 8, 2012, the Department of Family and Protective Services

(the Department) filed a petition in which it asked to be named the children’s

temporary sole managing conservator and sought the termination of Mother’s

parental rights to the children if her reunification with them could not be achieved.

To the petition, the Department attached an affidavit explaining that, among other

facts, Adam had been found outside of his residence alone and Mother had orally

tested positive for using methamphetamine. Mother and Winston temporarily

abandoned their plan to move to San Antonio.

The trial court entered an order in which it found that the children’s

physical health or safety was in danger while they were living with Mother and

named the Department as their temporary sole managing conservator. The trial

court also appointed counsel to represent Mother. The children began living in

foster care. 6

The Department created and filed a service plan that required Mother to

attend Narcotics Anonymous (NA) meetings three times per week, maintain

employment to demonstrate an ability to meet the children’s financial needs,

6 Glenda testified that she did not take the children upon their October 2012 removal from Mother’s care because she did not believe that she could support them financially and because she believed that Mother would “get herself together” quicker if the children remained in foster care.

4 attend parenting classes, take random drug tests, submit to a drug assessment

and follow all accompanying recommendations, attend visitation with the

children, and participate in individual counseling. The trial court ordered

compliance with the service plan.

For the first few months while the children were in foster care, although

Mother knew that her parental rights to the children were in jeopardy, she

continued to use methamphetamine. In November 2012, while the Department’s

case remained pending, Mother and Winston moved to Bexar County. Although

Mother testified that she left the Fort Worth area because “all [she] knew was

drugs” there, she continued to use drugs after the move until late February 2013,

when she started a period of sobriety. After becoming sober, Mother began

engaging in the tasks required by the service plan.

Neither Mother nor Winston had a job upon arriving in Bexar County, so

they lived with one of Mother’s friends in an apartment. After Mother’s friend left

the apartment, Mother and Winston were evicted from it. They “bounced

[around] pretty much from different motels, and . . . ended up homeless.” For a

while, starting in about March 2013, Mother and Winston slept in a box in the

woods. At about the end of April or beginning of May 2013, they began living

with Glenda.

In June 2013, Mother entered into a three-month lease for a one-bedroom

apartment in San Antonio. Around that time, she began working part-time at a

5 restaurant. 7 Mother explained that she entered into a short-term lease on the

one-bedroom apartment so that she could lease a larger apartment if the trial

court returned the children to her. She also testified that the apartment was

clean, was located in a safe area, and was close to an elementary school.

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in the Interest of B.M.H., H.M.H., and A.M.E., Children, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-bmh-hmh-and-ame-children-texapp-2014.