In the Interest of E.G.P. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 2023
Docket09-22-00330-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of E.G.P. v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of E.G.P. 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 E.G.P. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-22-00330-CV ____________________

IN THE INTEREST OF E.G.P.

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 3 Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 21-10-13621-CV ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Mother and the alleged Father appeal an order terminating their parental rights

to their child, Eric.1 The trial court found by clear and convincing evidence, statutory

grounds exist for termination of their parental rights, and termination of Mother’s

and Father’s rights would be in the best interest of Eric. See Tex. Fam. Code. Ann.

§§ 161.001(b)(1)(E), (M), (N), (O), (2), 161.002(b)(1). On appeal, Mother and

Father raise several issues. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

1 To preserve the privacy of the parties, we refer to the Appellants as “Mother” and “Father” and the child by a pseudonym to protect their identities. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8. 1 I. Background

A. The Affidavit of Removal

The affidavit of removal stated that Mother and Father had other children who

had been removed by the Department in a prior proceeding.2,3 According to the

affidavit, Mother gave birth to Eric in September 2021, and Mother and Father were

hiding the child from the Department. The affidavit stated that the Department had

concerns that Mother was on methamphetamines and that the parents did not have

any baby supplies for Eric. The Department reported that Mother was observed

running after Father’s vehicle with Eric inside of the vehicle. The child’s maternal

grandmother reported that she had spoken to both parents, and they insisted that they

are “clean[.]” The Department contacted both parents and both denied using drugs

despite testing positive for methamphetamine. Mother and Father stated they would

comply with drug testing. The Department alleged that Father refused to let the

Department enter his residence stating, “he wasn’t ready for a home visit.” The

affidavit quotes the guardian ad litem, alleging the parents have not maintained

contact with the guardian ad litem and have not shown up for visitation with their

2 The trial court took judicial notice of its file before commencing with the final trial. 3 The other children are subject to a separate legal proceeding and are not part of this appeal. 2 other children. The affidavit concluded by stating the parents have not maintained

contact with the Department or completed drug testing.

B. Trial

The case was tried in a bench trial on September 7, 2022, and Mother and

Father did not appear for trial. Before the commencement of trial, Mother’s attorney

requested a continuance for Mother to complete her family service plan because

Mother’s attorney represented that Mother had recently completed a 30-day inpatient

rehabilitation treatment. The trial court stated the case was already continued from

July 27th to September 7th. In discussing its decision, the trial court noted that

Mother did not appear at hearings in February, May, or at an initial setting for final

trial in July, although the record shows that Mother did appear for a May 26, 2022,

hearing. Mother’s counsel argued that Mother’s absence was due to her working and

being dependent on Father for transportation. The trial court denied the Motion for

Continuance.

1. Alexis McQueen

Alexis McQueen testified she is the current Department caseworker on this

case, but she explained she has only been the caseworker for two months. McQueen

stated that the Department requested Eric be removed from his parents because

“[t]he child was born during the course of the other case and there were concerns

that the parents were using methamphetamines and they had no supplies to care for

3 the child’s needs.” According to McQueen, Mother signed a family service plan that

required her to “complete parenting classes, a psychological evaluation, a drug and

alcohol assessment, random drug screenings, maintain contact with the Department,

and stable income and housing.” Mother completed the parenting class, the drug and

alcohol assessment, and attended a 30-day inpatient treatment recommended after

her drug and alcohol assessment. McQueen testified that she has never received any

information that Mother completed the inpatient program other than an unreadable

intake form, and a discharge form provided by Mother’s attorney which is illegible.

McQueen confirmed Mother also attended weekly follow-up therapy sessions and

weekly drug testing as a result of her inpatient therapy. McQueen has not received

evidence that Mother failed any of those weekly drug tests. Additionally, Mother

has not provided McQueen any proof of her residence.

McQueen testified regarding Mother’s and Father’s communication with the

Department. McQueen believes that the parents are in a relationship and live

together. During the time that McQueen has been on the case, Mother has

communicated via email, only, she has not asked about the welfare of her child, and

she has not visited Eric since May. Father has not maintained contact with the

Department, and the only contact the Department has with Father is through Mother.

McQueen testified she reached out to both parents three times for visitation and the

parents did not attend visitation with Eric.

4 McQueen stated that Father was also ordered per his family service plan to

complete “parenting classes, a drug and alcohol assessment, a psychological

evaluation, random drug screenings, maintain contact with the Department, and

[demonstrate] stable income and housing.” Father completed the parenting class, the

drug and alcohol assessment, and the psychosocial assessment. Father has not

allowed the Department to assess his home. McQueen agreed that it is impossible

for the Department to recommend returning Eric to a home that it has never visited.

McQueen testified that Eric has been in foster care since October 2021 and he

is happy and “doing great.” According to McQueen, the foster parents are meeting

all Eric’s needs and want to adopt him if the parents’ rights are terminated. McQueen

stated that Eric has struggled during visitation with Mother, he has no bond with

Mother, and he cries during the entire visitation until he is reunited with his foster

parents. McQueen testified that for the parents to be able to get their child back, they

needed to work toward coming to more visitations and have negative drug

screenings. Since she has been the caseworker, Mother and Father have not formed

a bond with Eric because they have not attended visitation consistently. She believes

it is in Eric’s best interest to remain in foster care.

2. Rosario Salinas

Rosario Salinas testified she is a supervisor for CASA and was employed by

the Department for two years prior to working for CASA. During her employment

5 with the Department, she was a caseworker on Mother’s and Father’s case. Salinas

stopped working for the Department in July. She testified that the parents had a case

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