In the Interest of D.R v. J.I.R., and J.R., Children v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 2023
Docket08-22-00238-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of D.R v. J.I.R., and J.R., Children v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of D.R v. J.I.R., and J.R., Children v. the State of Texas) 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 D.R v. J.I.R., and J.R., Children v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ No. 08-22-00238-CV

In the Interest of D.R.V., J.I.R., and J.R., § Appeal from the

Children. § 65th Judicial District Court

§ of El Paso County, Texas

§ (TC# 2021DCM1164)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Mother E.Y.R. appeals the trial court’s November 29, 2022, judgment

terminating her parental rights to her children, D.R.V., J.I.R., and J.R. 1 We affirm.

I. Procedural and Factual Background

In a previous suit, E.Y.R. and her mother, A.V., were named permanent possessory

conservator and permanent managing conservator, respectively, of D.V.R., J.I.R., and J.R. The

Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) filed an original petition in the instant suit

in March 2021. The same month, the trial court ordered removal of all three children and named

1 To protect the privacy of the parties, we refer to them by their initials. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 109.002(d); TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(a), (b)(2). DFPS their temporary managing conservator. E.Y.R., A.V., and the children’s fathers, 2 were

named temporary possessory conservators.

Ultimately a bench trial was held in October and November 2022, wherein DFPS sought

to terminate E.Y.R.’s parental rights as to all of her children, name A.V. permanent managing

conservator of D.V.R., and name J.I.R., Sr. permanent managing conservator of his two boys,

J.I.R. and J.R. At the time, D.V.R. was residing with her grandmother (A.V.) while J.I.R. and J.R.

were residing with their father (J.I.R., Sr.). 3 D.V.R., J.I.R., and J.R. were thirteen, ten, and nine

years old, respectively.

At trial, the evidence mainly centered on E.Y.R.’s ongoing drug abuse, failure to maintain

employment, failure to provide a stable home environment for the children, cohabitation and

continued relationship with an abusive partner, failure to maintain contact with her children, and

lack of participation in court-ordered services. Key witness testimony is summarized below.

A. DFPS caseworker’s testimony

DFPS caseworker Melissa Martinez testified that the children had been removed from

E.Y.R.’s home in March 2021 due to concerns regarding their safety, including E.Y.R.’s drug use,

ongoing domestic violence in the home, and an overall unsafe and unstable environment. The same

month, Martinez met with E.Y.R. to discuss the reasons for DFPS’s involvement and to formulate

a family service plan, which the trial court then ordered E.Y.R. to complete. During the subsequent

service-plan meeting, Martinez reviewed its requirements with E.Y.R., which included taking

parenting classes; undergoing a substance abuse assessment and a psychological assessment and

2 H.G. is D.V.R.’s father; J.I.R., Sr., is J.I.R. and J.R.’s father. 3 When it filed its petition, DFPS found reason to believe A.V. had neglectfully supervised the children by using cocaine in their presence and had had also physically and sexually abused J.I.R.; the boys did not wish to have any contact with A.V.

2 completing any recommended treatment flowing therefrom; attending parent-child visits;

submitting to random drug testing as requested; maintaining stable housing; and attending

domestic-violence classes. Martinez testified that she impressed upon E.Y.R. the importance of

complying with services to regain custody of her children and that E.Y.R. indicated she

understood. At their next meeting in May 2021, E.Y.R. stated had arranged an appointment for

domestic-violence classes but had not yet started the classes. Martinez advised E.Y.R. she could

attend parenting classes online, so long as the program was an accredited one. In terms of parenting

classes, E.Y.R. ended up finally completing them in November 2022, on the second day of trial.

As of November 2022, E.Y.R. had also undergone the substance-abuse and psychological

assessments but had not followed up with the recommended services from the assessments. The

recommended services, which E.Y.R. failed to complete, included domestic-violence classes,

random drug testing, and inpatient substance-abuse treatment. Despite initially agreeing to

residential treatment, E.Y.R. never submitted to inpatient services and consistently admitted using

methamphetamines. E.Y.R. did not consistently submit to drug testing as required, and after she

tested positive for methamphetamines in January 2022, she stopped submitting to drug tests.

Martinez described having difficulty maintaining contact with E.Y.R. during the pendency

of the case due to E.Y.R.’s inconsistency. There were periods of time when E.Y.R. failed to

maintain any contact with Martinez, which made it difficult to further assist her in receiving

services, such as rental assistance, and to coordinate visitation with the children. For instance,

E.Y.R. would call Martinez from a new phone number and would then cease all further contact

with her. Moreover, E.Y.R.’s living situation was unstable. After moving out of her apartment,

E.Y.R. moved in with her ex-boyfriend, “Mr. X.,” for a period of three or four months, after which

she began “couch surfing” between his apartment and her sister’s house.

3 There was a history of domestic violence between Mr. X and E.Y.R., and Mr. X also had

a history of dealing drugs and committing various other assaultive offenses. At the time of the trial,

E.Y.R. was living with Mr. X. Martinez testified that E.Y.R. claimed she had “nowhere else to

go,” even though she could have sought refuge at a domestic-violence shelter. Overall, E.Y.R.

demonstrated a history of unstable relationships with men.

With regard to visitation with her children, E.Y.R. was inconsistent, attending less than

half of the scheduled visits scheduled throughout the case. Martinez repeatedly stressed to E.Y.R.

the importance of maintaining regular visitation and how her lack of contact with the children

created anger and resentment in them. Martinez advised E.Y.R. on how to address the children’s

hesitation and resentment toward her so that they could move forward in a positive manner. E.Y.R.

would claim she would start attending visits but would then fail to attend. The last visit E.Y.R.

attended was in August 2022, three months before the trial. J.I.R. and J.R. had not lived with

E.Y.R. since 2017—at least half of their lives. Martinez agreed E.Y.R. had failed to maintain an

active role in most of the boys’ lives and that it was “not healthy for a child to have a parent that

comes in and out, in and out, in and out[.]”

Martinez also explained that E.Y.R. received settlement funds from the death of her father

and used the money to purchase a vehicle, which she no longer had, and purportedly invested in a

business with her sister. Nonetheless, E.Y.R. remained unemployed. And after she received the

money settlement, she stopped visiting her children and cut off contact with Martinez.

D.V.R. initially objected to termination of E.Y.R.’s parental rights, but by the time of trial,

she indicated that she did not care whether termination happened or not. Martinez testified that

D.V.R. had a close bond with A.V.; that D.V.R. trusted and confided in her; and that A.V.

completed all services required, demonstrated “remarkable progress,” and has the desire and

4 ability to provide a suitable home for D.V.R. Martinez testified that J.I.R. and J.R., who had been

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In the Interest of D.R v. J.I.R., and J.R., Children v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-dr-v-jir-and-jr-children-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2023.