in the Interest of C.D L.R., C.D.L R., E.M., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 2019
Docket13-19-00008-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of C.D L.R., C.D.L R., E.M., Children (in the Interest of C.D L.R., C.D.L R., E.M., 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.D L.R., C.D.L R., E.M., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-19-00008-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

IN THE INTEREST OF C.D.L.R., C.D.L.R., E.M., CHILDREN

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 5 of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

The trial court terminated appellant Father’s parental rights to his daughter E.M.1

By two issues, Father argues that: (1) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to

support termination under both § 161.001(b)(1)(E) and § 161.001(b)(1)(Q) of the Texas

Family Code, and (2) the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that termination was

in the best interest of the child. Because we conclude the evidence was legally insufficient

1To protect the identity of the child, we refer to those involved in the case by aliases, as necessary. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b). under both § 161.001(b)(1)(E) and § 161.001(b)(1)(Q), we affirm in part, reverse in part,

and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

On September 16, 2016, appellee the Department of Family and Protective

Services (the Department) filed an amended petition to terminate the parental rights of

Mother and the respective fathers of C.D.L.R., C.D.L.R., and E.M. Mother, however,

passed away before trial began. After a bench trial on October 3, 2018, the trial court

terminated the parental rights of the fathers of all three children. Father of E.M. appeals.

E.M. was born in 2016 and was two years old at the time of trial; Father was twenty-eight

years old and has been incarcerated since before E.M.’s birth.

Before any witnesses were called, the trial court admitted into evidence multiple

exhibits, including: (1) Father’s 2008 judgment of conviction for injury to a child; (2) a

2008 motion to revoke Father’s community supervision for injury to a child, alleging Father

committed a new offense of burglary of a habitation and tested positive for marijuana in

December 2007 and January 2008; (2) two 2016 judgments adjudicating guilt for two

offenses for burglary of a habitation; (3) a July 2015 motion to revoke Father’s community

supervision for the burglary offenses, alleging Father smoked synthetic marijuana

“several times” while at a transitional treatment center in April 20152; (5) a July 2016

motion to revoke Father’s community supervision for the burglary offenses, alleging

Father committed the offense of “possession of a substance” and tested positive for

marijuana and benzodiazepines in May 20163; (6) an assault victim’s statement made by

2 The April 2015 motion to revoke also alleged Father, while at the transitional treatment center,

refused to take his mental health medication for two weeks, tested positive for synthetic marijuana, smoked a cigarette in violation of the center’s rules, and was unsuccessfully discharged from the program. 3 The July 2016 motion to revoke also alleged Father admitted to his supervising officer that he had smoked marijuana in May 2016, that Father had failed to report in March and June of 2016, and that Father 2 Mother in June 2016, before E.M. was born, where she accused Father of assaulting her

by pushing her multiple times, causing swelling of Mother’s right arm and pain in her neck;

and (7) an incident/investigation report and supplemental notes concerning Mother’s

allegation of assault against Father. In the incident report regarding the assault allegation

by Mother against Father, a detective wrote:

[Mother] stated that they argued in her car and [Father] pushed her. [Mother] stated she got out of the car and then [Father] tried pushing her back in the vehicle and she wound up getting in the driver[’]s seat trying to leave [Father]. [Mother] stated that [Father] then reached in the vehicle and tried pushing her to get in. [Mother] stated her head hit the window. [Mother] stated she was able to drive away without [Father] and called the police using another person [sic] phone. [Mother] stated she had no injury but the assault caused her pain. [Mother] did not want to conduct a video interview but she did fill out an assault victim’s statement form. [Mother] also stated [Father] would not try to kill her and she did not want to partake in the lethality assessment survey. [Father] was not on scene and not contacted at the time of this report.

....

I located the written assault victim[‘]s statement. [Mother] wrote that [Father] assaulted her. She marked that he hit her and pushed her, she wrote she was assaulted on her “left arm and right side of my head.” She marked that it was painful and did causes [sic] bleeding, bruises or swelling. She described the injury as “swelling on her right arm and my neck is in pain.” She wrote she was assaulted with “his hands.” She wrote, “he kept pushing me while I was in [the] passenger seat, then as I got in the driver seat he was grabbing and pushing me. My head kept hitting the passenger seat.”

Rey Rangel, an investigator with the Department, was the first witness called at

trial. Rangel testified regarding the circumstances that led to the Department’s

intervention into Mother and the three children. According to Rangel, the Department

was informed that Mother was using illicit drugs. Rangel believed that Mother’s drug

addiction made it inappropriate for her to care for the children, and the children were taken

had failed to pay court costs and fees. The exhibits also included a June 2016 motion to revoke Father’s probation, making the same allegations, as in the July 2016 motion to revoke. 3 into conservatorship by the Department. According to Rangel, Father was not available

at the time of removal because he was and still is incarcerated. Rangel testified that, at

the time of trial, the children were currently placed with the maternal grandparents, and

he recommended they remain there.

Yliana Carlisle, another investigator with the Department, testified she had been in

charge of the case for two months at the time of trial. Carlisle stated that E.M. could not

be placed with Father because he was incarcerated. Carlisle further stated that Father’s

projected release date was in 2020, but that his sentence could last until 2026. Carlisle

explained that: she had made two home visits to the maternal grandparents’ home; she

believed the grandparents are wonderful caregivers to the kids; the kids are happy, close,

and bonded with the grandparents; she had no concerns about the children’s placement

with their maternal grandparents; and she believed it would be in the best interest of the

children to remain with the grandparents.4 According to Carlisle, Grandmother speaks

with Father’s sister regularly and with Father sometimes by phone and the family “is

getting along well.” Carlisle testified there was no indication that Father was the cause of

the removal; instead, he is a “non-offending parent.” Carlisle testified there was nothing

in the exhibits admitted that indicated the injury suffered by the fourteen-year-old victim

of Father’s offense for injury to a child was serious.

Father testified he was seventeen years old at the time of his offense for injury to

a child and that he was convicted for punching a fourteen-year-old boy in the face. Father

stated: “Just to be completely honest, sir, it was just—to me, I was just fighting with

another teenager. I was a teenager. I made the mistake of getting into a fight with another

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