in the Interest of J. S.- A. S AKA J. S., J. B. S., Jr., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 2017
Docket01-17-00491-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J. S.- A. S AKA J. S., J. B. S., Jr., Children (in the Interest of J. S.- A. S AKA J. S., J. B. S., Jr., 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.

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in the Interest of J. S.- A. S AKA J. S., J. B. S., Jr., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 5, 2017

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00491-CV ——————————— IN THE INTEREST OF J.S.-A A/K/A J.S., AND J.B.S., JR., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2016-03173J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The mother and father of two young children appeal from the trial court’s

order terminating their parental rights. In her appeal, the mother challenges the legal

and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the finding that termination of her

parental rights is in the children’s best interest. See TEX. FAM. CODE

§ 161.001(b)(2). The father’s appeal challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the predicate grounds that the trial court found to support

termination as well as the appointment of the Department of Family and Protective

Services as sole managing conservator of the children. See id. §§ 161.001(b)(1)(E),

(O), 161.207, 161.208. We affirm.

Background

History leading to the Department’s managing conservatorship

The mother’s history with the Department began when she was a child.

Because of her father’s his illegal drug use, the Department removed the mother and

her brother from the father’s custody and placed them in the foster care system. The

mother has given birth to five children. One is deceased and the two eldest, who are

not the subject of these proceedings, live with their father in San Antonio.

In June 2010, when the mother’s eldest child was about seven months old,

the Department received a referral alleging that the mother and the child’s father

engaged in domestic violence, including an incident in which one parent threw a

dresser drawer that landed on the child. The parents were living in the San Antonio

area but did not have a stable home at the time. The Department took temporary

managing conservatorship of the child and referred the mother to participate in

Family-Based Safety Services (FBSS), but the mother did not cooperate and would

not complete the services. Over the Department’s objection, the San Antonio court

presiding over the case ordered family reunification.

2 The mother separated from the older children’s father and began a relationship

with J.B.S., Sr., the father in this case, sometime before the end of 2013. She gave

birth to Joann in July 2014 and John in June 2015.1

By early 2016, the mother was pregnant and had the four children living with

her in her father’s home. The children’s maternal grandfather assisted the mother in

caring for the children; it does not appear that the father was involved with the

mother and children at that time. The mother’s brother, who had aged out of foster

care, also was living in the home. The mother left the children in his care while she

and the grandfather were at work.

In late January 2016, the Department received a referral alleging neglectful

supervision, physical abuse, and physical neglect of the four children by the mother

and the grandfather. According to the referral, the mother left the children in a

vehicle unattended for five to ten minutes, then the grandfather left the children

unattended in a dental office waiting room for about ten minutes. The mother and

grandfather were observed striking the children on their heads and other body areas.

The two eldest wore dirty clothing and smelled like urine. One of the children stated

that his mother hits him in the head and pushes him to the floor.

Another referral in March 2016 alleged that the mother’s brother had sexually

abused the children while the mother had left them in his care. It was reported that

1 These are pseudonyms. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8. 3 the brother also sexually assaulted Joann and John. The Department found the

children’s outcries to be credible. By the time the Department received the report,

the mother’s brother had left the home and could not be found.

In mid-March 2016, while seven months’ pregnant, the mother’s vehicle was

rear-ended in a collision. The mother did not seek immediate medical care. She

prematurely went into labor the following day and gave birth to Paul.2 Around this

time, the father of the two eldest children learned of their sexual abuse by the

mother’s brother. One of the children also told him that their grandfather smoked

crack cocaine in front of them. The father immediately picked his children up and

brought them to live with him in his home.

Paul remained in the hospital for approximately two months, until he weighed

six pounds. Paul died the day after he was discharged from the hospital, in mid-

May. That morning, the mother and father, who apparently had resumed their

relationship, picked up the grandfather and brought him to their home to watch Paul,

Joann, and John while they were at work. The grandfather drove with the children

to the mother’s workplace to pick her up when her shift ended at 1:00 P.M. The

mother, however, was unable to leave work until two hours later. While the

grandfather and the children waited in the car during that time, Joann soiled her

diaper, so after the mother left work, they stopped at a discount store to purchase

2 This also is a pseudonym. 4 items to clean her and change her diaper. When the mother returned to the car, she

bumped into Paul’s carseat and noticed that he did not respond, his color was not

right, and something was coming out of his mouth. EMS was contacted and

responded immediately, but the efforts to revive Paul were unsuccessful.

The Department was notified of Paul’s death through a referral alleging

neglectful supervision. Its investigation into these circumstances did not reach a

definitive conclusion as to the cause of Paul’s death. Concerned with the welfare of

the two surviving children in light of the mother’s lack of stable housing and her

failure to cooperate with the Department’s previous efforts to provide services,

however, it continued investigating the family’s living conditions.

A Bexar County investigator for the Department spent two days trying to

locate the mother. When the investigator found the mother, she set up an

appointment for the family to visit her in the Department’s San Antonio office.

The mother was staying at her cousin’s house and refused to allow the

investigator to visit the home. The mother resisted efforts to establish a safety plan

for the children and hung up on the investigator. She took the children to Dallas

after being warned not to leave town.

Eventually, the mother orally agreed to bring the children to a maternal aunt’s

home in Dallas and allow the aunt, who had fostered children in the past, to supervise

the children. The Department approved the aunt as a monitor. The day after they

5 moved in with the aunt, however, the father and mother took the children from the

home, over the aunt’s protest. In speaking with the investigator about that

development, the aunt told her that the mother and father “did not want to have any

rules.”

Next, the mother’s cousin contacted the Department. She told the worker that

the mother had asked her if she could care for her children for a while, but the mother

and children never arrived. After repeated efforts to contact the family, the

investigator finally reached the father by phone. The father said that the family was

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