in the Interest of D.L.T.Jr., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 2017
Docket14-17-00376-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Interest of D.L.T.Jr., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 19, 2017.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00376-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF D.L.T., JR., CHILD

On Appeal from the 310th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2015-27542

MEMORANDUM OPINION The trial court terminated the parental rights of S.M. (Mother) with respect to her son, David,1 and appointed the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) to be David’s managing conservator. On appeal, Mother challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support termination and asserts the trial court abused its discretion in appointing the Department as David’s managing conservator. We affirm.

1 David is a pseudonym. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(b)(2). BACKGROUND

A. Removal The following facts come from the affidavit of Department investigator Domeka Brown, as well as Brown’s trial testimony.

The Department received three reports between March 30, 2015, and May 1, 2015, about eleven-year-old David’s safety. According to the reports, Mother frequently enrolled and withdrew David from his elementary school in La Porte. He had been absent ten of the previous thirty school days. Mother and David had been spotted walking “all day and night.” The reporters described David as sad and withdrawn and said he did not make eye contact. Mother and David reportedly did not have a safe place to live.

On April 1, 2015, Brown went to Mother’s last known address, a local hotel, but could not find her or David. Three days later, a hotel receptionist said Mother and David had stayed there but Mother did not pay for the room, so the receptionist paid because she wanted David to have somewhere to stay. Mother and David left the hotel on April 1 or 2. On April 3, Mother returned to the hotel at 11:00 p.m. and sat in the lobby throughout the night, at which point the receptionist told Mother to leave.

David’s school principal called Brown on April 7 and told her David returned to school. He reportedly was living with another student and her family. The student’s mother, Monica, is Mother’s aunt. Monica told Brown she had not seen Mother.

Investigator Nicole Hubbard spoke to the principal the next day. The principal said David started school at the beginning of the school year but was withdrawn in mid-December 2014. Since that time, Mother had behaved erratically. A staff

2 member of the school district had tracked Mother down, asked her if she needed help, and told her David needs to be in school. Mother responded by swearing at the officer and telling her to mind her own business.

On April 23, 2015, the principal called Brown and told her Mother was at the school attempting to withdraw David. Brown went to the school to talk with Mother. When she tried, though, Mother reportedly “began to take off her watch and charge [Brown] as if she wanted to fight.” Campus police officers were able to deescalate the situation. Mother agreed to contact Brown the next day and submit to a drug test. David told Brown that Mother had gotten a job and they were moving to Baytown. Despite her promise, Mother did not call Brown the next day, and Brown was unable to get in touch with her.

Mother’s cousin, Tonya, saw her and David walking along a very busy Pasadena highway near midnight on May 1, 2015. Tonya convinced Mother and David to come to Tonya’s apartment. According to Tonya, David was very hungry and very tired. She fed him, which upset Mother, who said David had just eaten and “was fine.” When Tonya was alone with David, David started to cry and said he did not want to leave with Mother. David stopped crying as soon as Mother walked into the room. Tonya said David would sit quietly with his head down and not talk to anyone when he was around Mother.

A Pasadena police officer came to Tonya’s apartment in the middle of the night to talk with Mother and David. Mother denied there was a problem. She said she and David would be moving to Houston soon but would not specify where or when. David told the officer he and Mother lived on the streets most of the time and occasionally stayed with friends or family. He said they eat most days.

Brown found Mother outside a relative’s house in La Porte on May 8, 2015. Mother charged Brown, swearing at her, threatening her, and putting up her fists.

3 After about thirty seconds of coming at Brown, Mother kicked Brown’s car, denting it, then left on foot with David. Brown called the police, and Mother was arrested.

After Mother was gone, David told Brown he and Mother would walk from La Porte to Pasadena, to Baytown, and sometimes all the way to Houston. He said had not eaten for two days or bathed for four days. David was limping because his legs and feet hurt from walking so much.

Brown tried to find a family member who would care for David. One relative agreed to take him for the weekend only. One of Mother’s cousins told Brown nobody in the family was willing to take David because they were scared of Mother. Mother’s own mother was said to have a restraining order against her.

On May 11, 2015, Brown went to the Harris County jail, where Mother was incarcerated for vandalizing Brown’s car. Brown gave Mother a notice of removal and told her David was being removed. Mother responded that David “better be at my aunt’s house when I get out, or [expletive] I am going to find you and beat your [expletive].”

The Department filed suit the next day and attached Brown’s affidavit to the original petition. The trial court signed an emergency order allowing the removal and naming the Department as David’s temporary managing conservator.

B. Family service plan Following a full adversary hearing the next week, the trial court signed an order requiring Mother to comply with any family service plan by the Department. The service plan would identify the tasks and services she needed to complete before David could be returned to her care.

The Department filed a service plan for Mother in July 2015. The plan required her to, among other things: complete parenting classes; obtain and maintain

4 suitable employment and stable housing; complete a substance abuse assessment and follow the assessor’s recommendations; submit to random drug testing; complete a psychosocial evaluation and follow the evaluator’s recommendations; refrain from criminal activity; and maintain regular contact with the caseworker.

Department caseworker Brian Lastrape met with Mother in early August 2015 to discuss the service plan and give her a copy. Mother refused to sign it. Lastrape asked for her address so he could arrange appointments with service providers geographically convenient to Mother. Mother said she was still homeless and did not provide an address.

C. Proceedings relating to mental health Mother was arrested and charged in January 2016 for assaulting a jail officer who was escorting Mother to her cell. Following a psychological evaluation, the criminal court declared her incompetent to stand trial and ordered her committed for 120 days for competency restoration.

Based on the psychological evaluation, Mother’s court-appointed lawyer in the termination case filed a motion in early February 2016 for the trial court to appoint a guardian ad litem for Mother. The motion indicated Mother appeared to have “a mental impairment or illness which limits her ability to participate in services or protect her parental rights.” Appointment of a guardian ad litem was requested “as an accommodation to [Mother] to assist with appropriate implementation” of her family service plan. The trial court granted the motion at the end of February and appointed Cheryl Cohorn to be Mother’s guardian ad litem.

Trial in the termination case was to begin in May 2016.

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