in the Interest of C.F., a Child
This text of in the Interest of C.F., a Child (in the Interest of C.F., a Child) 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.
Opinion
In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana
No. 06-22-00045-CV
IN THE INTEREST OF C.F., A CHILD
On Appeal from the 5th District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 20S0025-005
Before Morriss, C.J., Stevens and van Cleef, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Stevens MEMORANDUM OPINION
The trial court previously appointed Mary as C.F.’s managing conservator even though
she was not biologically related to the child.1 After receiving reports of abuse and neglect of
C.F. while in Mary’s care, the trial court terminated Mary’s conservatorship. In her sole point of
error on appeal, Mary argues that she received ineffective assistance of counsel because counsel
did not urge her private petition to terminate Mother’s and Father’s parental rights so that she
could adopt the child. Because we find that Mary has failed to show entitlement to any relief
from the order removing her as conservator, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
I. Background
On August 21, 2020, the trial court entered an order in a suit affecting the parent-child
relationship. The August 2020 order afforded Father no conservatorship rights to C.F.,
appointed Mother as possessory conservator only, and appointed Mary as her managing
conservator. In October 2020, Mary, who was represented by counsel, filed a private suit that
sought to terminate Mother’s and Father’s parental relationships with C.F. so that Mary could
adopt the child. That petition was amended on October 14, 2021.
In November 2021, after receiving a September 1, 2021, report that the child was being
abused or neglected by Mary, the Department filed a petition asking the trial court to require
Mother, Father, and Mary to participate in “all services, recommendations, safety planning and
plans of service requested by the Department.” On November 18, the trial court set an
emergency hearing pursuant to Chapter 262 of the Texas Family Code and appointed the
1 To protect the child’s identity, we refer to the child by her initials and refer to parties other than the Department of Family and Protective Services by pseudonym. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8. 2 Department as temporary sole managing conservator of the child. Mary, who was represented by
counsel, answered the Department’s petition and prayed for reasonable and necessary attorney
fees.
On December 29, 2021, the Department filed a suit seeking to terminate Mother’s and
Father’s parent-child relationship with C.F., and the case was consolidated with Mary’s private
suit. After a full adversary hearing, the trial court found “that the placement of the child with the
child’s noncustodial parent, [Mary,] . . . [was] inappropriate and not in the best interest of the
child.” The trial court appointed counsel for Mary, continued the Department’s temporary
managing conservatorship of the child, and set the matter for a hearing. After the Department
approved a home study, C.F. was placed with her paternal aunt.
At the hearing, the Department’s caseworker, Demetris Simington, testified that the
Department investigated allegations of physical abuse to C.F. while in Mary’s care. Because
there were unexplained bruises on C.F.’s body and an injury to her eye, the child was removed
from Mary’s home. Simington, who was concerned about Mary’s mental health, testified that
Mary had not yet completed a court-order psychological evaluation. She testified that her
observations of visits led her to conclude that C.F. was more comfortable with Mother than with
Mary and that C.F. was “performing to please [Mary].” Simington and Joey Elliott, Bowie
County advocate coordinator, testified that Mary refused to enroll the child in school, and
Simington noted that Mary had a prior history of driving while intoxicated. Elliott informed the
trial court that C.F. was doing well under the care of her paternal aunt.
3 Elliott also testified that he was concerned Mary would allow Mother to “come back into
her house” and that Mary would not be protective of C.F. Substantiating this concern, Mary said
that she had declined the child support from Mother and Father and testified, “I’m not trying to
take their kid away. They can see them whenever.” Mary claimed that the allegations and
reports of abuse while the child was under her care were the result of prank callers and that the
Department’s witnesses were liars.
In her favor, Mary testified that she was attending weekly counseling and had received a
psychological evaluation but acknowledged that the Department had not been provided with a
report of that evaluation. She testified that she loved C.F., wanted to enroll the child in school,
and wished C.F. returned to her care.
After the hearing, the trial court terminated Mary’s rights as a conservator, appointed
C.F.’s paternal aunt as the child’s permanent managing conservator, and appointed Mother and
Father as possessory conservators.
II. Mary Was Not Entitled to Any Relief from the Order Removing Her as Conservator
Mary’s argument is based on ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to urge her
private petition to terminate Mother’s and Father’s parental rights:
In this case[,] [Mary] argues that her removal as a conservator of the child is essentially a termination because it severed the relationship with the child she had raised most of its life. This removal should be set aside because she was deprived of the effective assistance of her attorney. Had [counsel] followed through with her petition to terminate the biological parents’ rights, she would have had standing as the child’s mother and her relationship to the child would not have been so easily discarded.
4 First, we find Mary’s argument meritless because counsel did urge Mary’s private
petition to terminate parental rights. At the beginning of the hearing, the trial court remarked,
“All right. . . . . It’s my understanding that we’re here with regard to at least a motion to
terminate from [Mary]. Is that correct?” Mary’s counsel replied in the affirmative but, when the
trial court asked if the parties were ready to proceed, counsel for Mother and the Department
objected to moving forward on the ground that the trial court’s decision on the Department’s
petition should be addressed first because, if Mary were removed as conservator, she would then
lose standing to bring the termination petition. Despite Mary’s counsel’s argument to the
contrary and his request to “not go through with removing . . . [Mary] as conservator of the child
at [that] time,” the trial court sustained Mother’s and the Department’s objections and
determined it would proceed with the Department’s petition.
To the extent that Mary’s brief can be understood to mean that counsel should have
prosecuted her private suit to terminate parental rights earlier, “[t]he doctrine of ineffective
assistance of counsel does not apply in civil cases where there is no constitutional or statutory
right to counsel.” In re A.B.B., 482 S.W.3d 135, 140 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2015, pet. dism’d,
w.o.j.) (citing In re C.J., No. 04-14-00663-CV, 2015 WL 1089660, at *2 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio Mar. 11, 2015, no pet.) (mem. op.) (citing Culver v. Culver, 360 S.W.3d 526, 535 (Tex.
App.—Texarkana 2011, no pet.))).
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