in the Interest of I.L., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 2018
Docket02-18-00206-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of I.L., a Child (in the Interest of I.L., 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.

Bluebook
in the Interest of I.L., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-18-00206-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF I.L., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 393rd District Court Denton County, Texas Trial Court No. 17-4361-393

Before Kerr, Pittman, and Birdwell, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants J.A.F. (Mother) and D.L. (Father) appeal the trial court’s order

terminating their parental rights to their son, I.L. (Isaiah).1 In five issues, Mother and

Father contend that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support

statutory grounds for termination. We affirm.

Background

Mother and Father have a history of using illegal drugs. Father has used

marijuana and methamphetamine. Mother has used methamphetamine and has taken

prescription drugs for which she does not have a prescription. The parents’ drug

abuse continued during the litigation of this case in the trial court. According to Mary

Harrison, a court-appointed special advocate (CASA), Father said that he “wanted to

get off drugs” but that he had continued to use drugs during the case brought by the

Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department). Harrison testified

that Mother likewise admitted to using drugs during the Department’s case.

Mother and Father also have a pattern of engaging in domestic violence.

According to Harrison, Mother and Father admitted to physically, emotionally, and

1 To protect I.L.’s anonymity and privacy, we use pseudonyms to refer to him and to other individuals associated with this appeal. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d) (West Supp. 2018); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(b)(2).

2 verbally abusing each other.2 They told Harrison that they had “hit each other” and

that they had “slapped each other around.”

Mother and Father have each engaged in criminal conduct. Father has a 2015

conviction for a domestic assault and a 2015 conviction for criminal trespass. He was

confined in late 2017, during the pendency of this case, on a charge for possessing a

controlled substance, and that charge was still pending at the time of the termination

trial. Mother has a December 2017 conviction for failure to identify.

Mother gave birth to Isaiah in March 2017.3 Upon his birth, while he was still at

the hospital, Mother and Father engaged in an argument over his name that became

severe enough that hospital officials threatened to make Father leave. Near the end of

March 2017, when Isaiah was still an infant, Mother and Father placed him with M.W.

(Grandmother), Isaiah’s paternal grandmother, and K.W. (Grandfather), Father’s

stepfather. When the parents initially left Isaiah with Grandmother and Grandfather

over a weekend, they said that they were going “job hunting” on the following

Monday and that they would retrieve Isaiah on Tuesday. They never did so. Isaiah

continued to live with his grandparents. When the grandparents attempted to take

Isaiah to the doctor, they could not because they did not have proper documents. In

2 Harrison’s testimony belies the parents’ assertion on appeal that the record contains “no evidence . . . that domestic violence occurred between the parties.” 3 Isaiah is Mother’s second child and Father’s first child. Mother’s older child does not live with her.

3 the middle of 2017, after Mother and Father had lived for a short time with friends at

an apartment, they became homeless and started living in a tent behind a Wal-Mart

store.

In May 2017, the Department received a referral about Isaiah. Latisha Walker,

an investigator with the Department, learned of allegations that the parents were using

illegal drugs, were homeless, and were not taking care of Isaiah. When Walker

contacted Father, Father admitted to smoking marijuana but “declined to admit to

[using] any other drugs.” Mother admitted to one of the Department’s employees that

she had recently used methamphetamine. Mother and Father denied that they needed

treatment for their drug use. The Department learned that the grandparents were

facing difficulties in obtaining medical treatment for Isaiah.

The Department filed a petition seeking termination of the parents’ rights to

Isaiah if their reunification with him could not be achieved. To the petition, the

Department attached an affidavit that recited facts concerning the parents’ drug use;

their lack of a permanent home; their unemployment that resulted in their poverty;

their history of engaging in domestic violence; and the grandparents’ need for the

Department’s involvement so that Isaiah could benefit from services.

In June 2017, the trial court held an adversary hearing, but the parents did not

attend. The trial court found that allowing Isaiah to reside with his parents would be

contrary to his welfare, and the court named the Department as his temporary

managing conservator. The court ordered the parents to complete several services, 4 including a psychological evaluation, counseling, and parenting classes. The court also

ordered the parents to pay child support and to submit to drug tests when asked by

the Department. Finally, the court ordered them to comply with every requirement set

forth by any service plan that the Department filed during the suit.

In August 2017, Harrison informed the trial court that Mother and Father were

participating in some services that the trial court had ordered but were not

consistently participating in other services. In a report that she filed, she wrote,

[Mother] has been slow to initiate services[.] [S]he was homeless at the beginning of this case, but [she] reports she is currently living at a shelter. . . .

[Father] has been slow to initiate services[;] he is currently homeless and states he does not have any support. [Father] reported to CASA that he went to MHMR seeking medication . . . and that he had suicidal ideations two days prior to his appointment. He was not given any medication during that visit, and he did not make an appointment to return. CASA learned from the CPS caseworker that MHMR offered in- patient services for [Father], but he refused.

The Department filed a family service plan. The service plan required the

parents to, among other tasks, consistently visit Isaiah, remain sober, complete

parenting classes, participate in drug counseling meetings, provide financial support

for Isaiah, submit to drug screenings, and maintain employment and housing.

In December 2017, the Department filed a report to inform the trial court

about Isaiah’s well-being in his grandparents’ care and about the parents’ compliance

with services. The Department stated that Isaiah was happy and flourishing in the

grandparents’ care. The Department informed the trial court that the parents had not 5 been engaging in services and had not been regularly attending visits. The same

month, after holding a permanency hearing, the trial court signed an order in which

the court found that Mother and Father had not appropriately complied with the

service plan.

During the course of the Department’s case, Mother and Father were each

confined in jail, were released, and began living in San Antonio. At the time of trial,

the parents were living in separate San Antonio shelters.

The trial court held a bench trial in April 2018. Mother and Father did not

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