in the Interest of C. R. and C. R., Minor Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2018
Docket01-17-00725-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of C. R. and C. R., Minor Children (in the Interest of C. R. and C. R., Minor 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 C. R. and C. R., Minor Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 6, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00725-CV ——————————— IN THE INTEREST OF C.R. AND C.R., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2016-05073J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

D.U., a father, appeals the trial court’s decree terminating his parental rights

to two of his children, Chris and Cindy.1 D.U. challenges the trial court’s judgment

on the grounds that the evidence is factually and legally insufficient to support the

1 We use pseudonyms for the children. trial court’s conclusions that (1) he committed the predicate acts required for

termination, and (2) termination was in his children’s best interest. We affirm.

Background

In April 2015, the Department of Family and Protective Services received an

allegation of neglectful supervision after then-one-year-old Chris was nearly hit by

a passing SUV while he was playing alone in the road. The driver of the SUV called

911 to report the incident. The Department determined that a cousin was supposed

to be watching Chris but had not been paying attention. The cousin retrieved Chris

after the SUV driver honked for ten minutes to get his attention.

The Department investigated and discovered that the apartment where the

children were living with their mother and D.U. was filthy, with dog feces on a

bedroom floor. The children were also dirty.

In July 2015, the mother reported to the Department that D.U. had pushed her

while they were arguing. She also reported that D.U. had lost his job, they had been

evicted from their apartment, and their car had been repossessed. She told the

Department that D.U. took the children to his brother’s house and refused to return

them. The Department interviewed D.U., who denied being unemployed and

accused the children’s mother of assaulting him while she was drunk.

At an August 2015 family team meeting, both the mother and D.U. admitted

to committing acts of domestic violence. They also admitted to using synthetic

2 marijuana, and soon thereafter D.U. tested positive for methamphetamines and

amphetamines.

In October 2015, the family was referred to Family Based Safety Services,

where they were given substance-abuse evaluations, psychosocial assessments,

individual counseling, substance-abuse counseling, parenting classes, and random

drug tests. The children were placed with their maternal grandmother, who reported

to the Department that the parents were not cooperating or providing any financial

support for the children. The mother and D.U. thereafter completed substance abuse

counseling.

In May 2016, the maternal grandmother informed the Department that the

mother told her that she was going to a women’s shelter because D.U. had been

beating her. The Department met with the mother, who told the caseworker that D.U.

had been abusing her, including hitting her in the back of the head so that people

could not see the bruising. The mother did not want her children returned to a home

where they would witness this abuse.

When the caseworker talked with D.U., he denied the abuse, but he agreed to

complete a Batterers’ Intervention Class. He later called the caseworker to tell her

that he thought the mother should also complete a batterers’ class because she had

pulled a knife on him while they were drinking. When the caseworker asked the

3 mother about this incident, the mother said she did not remember anything from that

night because she passed out.

In July 2016, the mother told the caseworker that she had moved back in with

D.U. and wanted to go to rehab. She also stated that D.U.’s abuse was limited in

scope.

But in August 2016, the mother told the caseworker that she had moved out

again because D.U. broke her phone. She feared that if she had not left, something

worse would have happened. When the caseworker asked D.U. about it, he denied

any altercation and told her that the mother moved out while D.U. was away from

the apartment.

In September 2016, the Department filed a petition to terminate parental

rights. At the time of trial in August 2017, Chris and Cindy were three and two years

old.

The record reflects that D.U. has had one other child removed from his care.

R.U., his child with another mother, was admitted to Texas Children’s Hospital in

February 2012 for failure to thrive. R.U. was emaciated and lethargic, but D.U. and

the child’s mother appeared unconcerned. The child was removed from D.U. and his

mother’s care and custody, R.U. was placed with a relative caregiver.

Notably, D.U. was also convicted of assault in 2012.

4 At trial, Davien Guidry, the Department caseworker, testified. With regard to

the children’s placement, Guidry testified that Chris and Cindy were currently placed

with their maternal grandmother, and that the goal was ultimately to place them with

their maternal aunt and uncle. The children had bonded with the other children in

the maternal grandmother’s care, and they would maintain these familial

relationships if they were placed with the maternal aunt and uncle.

According to Guidry, the mother acknowledged that she was not capable of

caring for the children because of her drug use and other issues. The mother

repeatedly tested positive for drugs. She wanted the children to remain in placement

with her relatives and not to be placed with D.U.

Guidry testified on numerous topics concerning D.U. For one, Guidry testified

that D.U. was the stepfather to a child who had to be removed from the home because

of abuse by D.U.

Guidry also testified that Chris has a 30 percent hearing disability due to the

abuse and medical neglect by his parents. And she testified that Chris was

uncomfortable in visits with his father and that visiting his father has a negative

effect on his behavior.

As to drugs and alcohol, Guidry stated the following. In September 2015, D.U.

tested positive for methamphetamines and amphetamines. Since the pendency of the

case, however, all of D.U.’s drug tests were negative. In his initial psychiatric

5 evaluation, D.U. admitted that he tested positive for methamphetamine and had also

used cocaine, marijuana, and Xanax in the past. In June 2017, he had a second

psychiatric evaluation in which he stated that he had been sober for a year and a half.

The evaluation also recommended that D.U. attend a 12-step program to maintain

sobriety. As of the time of trial, D.U. had not attended any such program, but he

received notice of this requirement a week before trial, and he offered proof that he

had registered for the program. Guidry also testified that D.U. had a job and had

rented an apartment.

The Permanency Plan admitted into evidence included the Department’s

recommendation that both parents’ rights be terminated. But at trial Guidry

recommended that only the mother’s rights be terminated—and not D.U.’s. When

asked what had changed her mind since earlier in 2016 (when she had recommended

termination of D.U.’s rights), she pointed to the progress she had seen D.U. make.

Guidry asserted that D.U. was in constant contact with the agency. She also stated

that D.U. had visited the children and bonded with them. She testified that D.U. was

at work when Chris’s road incident occurred.

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