in the Interest of J. L. B. and J. R. B., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 2, 2011
Docket06-11-00019-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J. L. B. and J. R. B., Children (in the Interest of J. L. B. and J. R. B., Children) 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 J. L. B. and J. R. B., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

                                                         In The

                                                Court of Appeals

                        Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

                                                ______________________________

                                                             No. 06-11-00019-CV

                               IN THE INTEREST OF J.L.B. AND J.R.B., CHILDREN

                                       On Appeal from the 307th Judicial District Court

                                                             Gregg County, Texas

                                                      Trial Court No. 2010-544-DR

                                          Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

                                                        Opinion by Justice Moseley


                                                                   O P I N I O N

            This is a joint appeal by the mother and father of two children, Samuel and Joshua,[1] of a judgment of the termination of their parental rights to those children.  The trial court gave the same three reasons as the bases for terminating each parent’s rights.  The trial court found that both parents

knowingly placed or knowingly allowed the [children] to remain in conditions or surroundings which endanger the physical or emotional well-being of the [children];[2]

engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the [children] with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical or emotional well-being of the [children];[3]

had [their] parent-child relationship terminated with respect to another child based on a finding that [the parents’] conduct was in violation of § 161.001(1)(D)or (E), Texas Family Code, or substantially equivalent provisions of the law of another state.[4]

            The trial court also found that it was in the best interest of the children that the parental relationship be terminated.

            We affirm the trial court’s judgment of termination.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

            The parents’ first point of error asserts that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the findings by the trial court as recited above.  The second point of error contends that the evidence is factually insufficient to support those findings.[5]

            We begin by summarizing the testimony and evidence admitted at trial, generally grouping the evidence into subjects which were ultimately relevant to the trial court’s rulings.  We focus on the following areas:  the children’s past and present circumstances and upbringing, the condition of the family home, the intellectual, emotional, developmental, physical, and educational status of the children, and the mother’s and father’s past and present status as it affects their ability to parent the children.

Background and Living Conditions 

            Samuel (born in January 2005) and Joshua (born in January 2007) first came to the attention of the Child Protective Services Division of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (CPS) when a law enforcement officer stopped a speeding vehicle driven by Russell McCurry, a friend of the boys’ parents.  Samuel and Joseph were in the back seat of the car and at that time, Joshua was naked and wrapped in a blanket while Samuel was dressed in a jumpsuit.  The deputy sheriff who stopped the vehicle said Samuel’s jumpsuit was “filthy” and the boy had defecated in his pants.  Both boys smelled as if neither had been bathed in days.  McCurry testified that Joshua was wrapped in the blanket because he had also defecated in his pants, causing McCurry to throw the child’s clothes away.  At the time of the stop, Samuel was five years old and Joshua was three, but neither was potty trained.[6] Officers took the boys to the police station, where they were cleaned up.  CPS representatives went to the parents’ home to investigate and the investigation revealed numerous unsafe and filthy conditions, discussed below.

            McCurry testified he had taken the boys, with the acquiescence of the parents, to panhandle (i.e., to beg for money) from people in stores and parking lots.  Although McCurry equivocated somewhat in his testimony,[7] it was clear that he had used the boys in this kind of money-raising endeavor on previous occasions.  McCurry had used the boys in this fashion before to acquire money, both alone and in concert with the parents.  Although Detective David Falco initially testified that the father had told Falco he and McCurry used the boys in panhandling, on cross-examination, Falco said that the father was “evasive about the panhandling issue during his interview” and that concrete information that the boys were used for panhandling came solely from McCurry.  The day before the traffic stop, after the boys had been taken to school, the parents and McCurry tended to panhandling, using the proceeds to buy drugs and then “g[e]t high.”  Later that night, while the parents continued to smoke crack cocaine in their bedroom, they allowed McCurry to take the boys on another panhandling trip,[8] McCurry relating that the father had told him to take the boys and “go make some money.”  McCurry and the boys were gone for a day or more. 

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in the Interest of J. L. B. and J. R. B., Children, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-j-l-b-and-j-r-b-children-texapp-2011.