in the Interest of J.C.P. and M.E.S., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 2012
Docket02-11-00289-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J.C.P. and M.E.S., Children (in the Interest of J.C.P. and M.E.S., 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.C.P. and M.E.S., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00289-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF J.C.P. AND M.E.S., CHILDREN

----------

FROM THE 323RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 ----------

I. INTRODUCTION

In two issues, Appellant Father appeals the trial court’s termination of his

parental rights to J.C.P. and M.E.S., arguing that there is no evidence or

insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s finding that he did not respond by

filing an admission of paternity and that there is no evidence or insufficient

evidence to support the trial court’s finding that termination was in the children’s

best interest. We will affirm.

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The children involved in this appeal are J.C.P., a male child who was born

on October 19, 2006, and M.E.S., a female child who was born on March 16,

2009. Because only Father has appealed and because he does not challenge

the endangerment grounds, the following testimony from the June 27, 2011

termination trial will focus on the evidence relevant to the best interest factors.

A. CPS Investigator’s Testimony

1. Domestic Violence and Drug Use

Wanesta Corretjer, an investigator with Child Protective Services

(hereinafter referred to as CPS or the Department), testified that a referral was

received on July 15, 2010, regarding domestic violence that had occurred two

days prior when Father had allegedly lunged at Mother with a kitchen knife and

had threatened to kill her. Mother ran out of the house in a t-shirt and panties

and reported that she was afraid and that the domestic violence was ongoing.

Due to the report of the knife, Corretjer took the police with her when she

went to visit the home on July 19. When Corretjer talked to Mother alone, she

did not deny the knife incident but minimized it by stating that Father merely had

a knife in his hand. Mother said that the children were safe and that there was

no abuse or domestic violence going on in the home. Corretjer noted that Mother

had a bruise on her thigh, which she said had occurred when she bumped into a

washing machine. Mother did admit that Father had “busted her lip” with a

telephone on a prior occasion.

2 When Corretjer interviewed Father by himself, he said that he understood

how Mother could have been intimidated by the knife but that it was not his

intention to scare her; he just picked it up during the argument. Father said that

he was arguing with Mother over her not cleaning the home. Father denied

hitting Mother any time recently, but he admitted that he had “smacked” her when

she was a teenager because she had allegedly cheated on him.2 Father also

admitted that he had used marijuana since he was a teenager and had used it

the day before Corretjer interviewed him, said that he had used

methamphetamine the Friday before Corretjer interviewed him, but denied that

he had used it around the children. Father told Corretjer that he could not

promise to abide by a safety plan.3

2. Condition of Children

Corretjer testified that M.E.S. had one of the worst diaper rashes that

Corretjer had ever seen.4 Corretjer noted that M.E.S.’s feet were dirty, that she

came outside wearing only a diaper, and that the parents never tried to get her to

go back inside. J.C.P. had discolored teeth, a dirty face, dirty fingernails, dirty

feet, and dirty toenails. He was still wearing a diaper at age four, and his diaper

2 Mother was twenty at the time of the termination trial and had been in a relationship with Father since she was thirteen. 3 Father did not recall telling Corretjer that he could not abide by the safety plan. 4 Mother and Father said that the children did not have any medical conditions and denied that M.E.S. had a diaper rash.

3 was soaked with urine. After J.C.P.’s feet were cleaned, unexplained marks

were noticeable. Both children had what appeared to be insect bite marks on

them.

3. Condition of Home

Corretjer described the home as unsanitary and filthy. The one bedroom

in the duplex had two twin beds in it, one of which was bare, and the other had a

blanket on it. The bed that had no bedding on it had old food on it. Corretjer

recalled seeing a crib that was piled with toys and that had a bottle with old

formula in it; there were roaches crawling on the bottle. The high chair was very

dirty, had a roach in it, and contained old food and unknown substances. The

one bathroom in the duplex had a toilet that was filled with feces and was not

flushable, a “very filthy” tub that had a film around the inside and along the walls,

a dirty sink, and dead roaches on the walls. A water hose was strung across the

dining room and kitchen, but Corretjer did not know what it was being used for.

The kitchen walls were dirty and had dead roaches on them. The family had

adequate groceries in the refrigerator, but the refrigerator was not clean. Mother

and Father said that they made their own cigarettes, and there was a photograph

depicting their tobacco.

4. Removal of Children

The parents were not able to agree on a relative placement for the

children, so Corretjer took the children and placed them with a foster family.

4 B. CPS Caseworker’s Testimony

Tashani Fernandes, a caseworker with CPS, testified that she had first

contacted Father in December 2010. At that time, Father had already received a

service plan from a previous caseworker.

1. Father’s Compliance with Service Plan

Father’s service plan required him to complete a psychological evaluation,

which he had completed; to complete parent training, which he had not

completed or initiated; to complete anger management, which he had completed;

to complete the Batterers’ Intervention and Prevention Program, which he was

slated to start with Safe Haven the month after the trial because Merit Family

Services—the initial provider—was never able to get in contact with him; to

complete individual counseling, which he had started but had not completed; to

complete couples counseling, which he had started but had not completed; to

complete a drug and alcohol assessment, which he had not completed; to attend

outpatient drug and alcohol treatment groups, which he had not completed; to

attend Narcotics Anonymous meetings, which he had not completed;5 and to

participate in random drug testing, for which he had submitted a urinalysis on

January 25, 2011, that tested positive for marijuana.6 Father attended the visits,7

5 The Department admitted into evidence a judgment showing that Father had been convicted of possession of marijuana in 2006 and was sentenced to twenty days’ confinement. 6 Fernandes said that Father had last been tested for drugs in January 2011.

5 was appropriate with the children, and seemed to have a relationship with them.

Fernandes testified that Father, who was the sole wage-earner in the family, had

told her that the services interfered with his job, and Fernandes told Father to

speak to the service providers and that they would accommodate his work

schedule.

2. Condition of Home

Fernandes made an unannounced visit to the home on December 17,

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