in the Interest of J.E.M.M & L.A.M.M, Children

532 S.W.3d 874
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 2017
DocketNO. 14-17-00355-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 532 S.W.3d 874 (in the Interest of J.E.M.M & L.A.M.M, 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.E.M.M & L.A.M.M, Children, 532 S.W.3d 874 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Kem Thompson Frost, Chief Justice

In this accelerated appeal, a mother seeks reversal of the trial court’s judgment terminating her parental rights to two children. She challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s findings on ' two predicate grounds and its finding that termination is in the best interest of the children. We conclude no evidence supports two of the three predicate findings. Though we conclude the evidence is' legally and factually sufficient to sustain the finding under the third predicate ground, we conclude the evidence is legally insufficient to support the best-interest finding. The mother has' not challenged the trial court’s appointment of the father as the children’s sole managing conservator. So, we reverse the trial court’s judgment terminating the mother’s parental rights, render judgment denying the Department of Family and Protective Services’ requests to terminate the mother’s parental rights,.and affirm the remainder of the trial court’s judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

M.L.M.-F. (“Mother”) and J.A.M.-C. (“Father”) are the natural parents of the tw;o young children at the center of this controversy—J.E.M.M, (“Julian”), a four-year-old boy with autism and L.A.M.M. (“Lauren”), a 19-month-old girl. Until, a few weeks before the Department became involved with the family, Father, Mother, Julian, and Lauren all lived together in an apartment in Houston, where the family made their home.

Father served as the family’s breadwinner, working a day job while Mother devoted her efforts to caring for the children and managing the household. Mother did not work outside the home, in part, because she suffers from rheumatoid arthritis, a condition that causes her to endure painful and unpredictable flare-ups. In September 2015, Mother suffered a flareup and entered the hospital for medical treatment of the condition, which had grown worse in recent years. Following Mother’s hospitalization, her doctors prescribed medications to treat the disease. At times, the medications made Mother “feel out of it.” When Mother stopped taking the medications, she felt better. During the times Mother was on medications, she depended on Father for help with the children.

In mid-December 2015,. Father moved out of the family home, marking the beginning of a marital separation with Mother. After Father left, Mother remained in the apartment with the couple’s young children. She had scant resources. Without her husband’s presence or support and with no other adult living in the home, Mother had to manage the children by herself. That same month, Mother’s son from a prior relationship (“Frank”) traveled to Texas from Pennsylvania to visit family over the Christmas break. Frank was nearly 11 years old. In Father’s absence, Frank was a help to Mother.

A few weeks after Father moved out, Mother was doing the family’s laundry at the apartment complex’s laundry facility. During her runs from the family’s apartment to the laundry facility in the same building, Mother left Frank to watch Julian and Lauren. While Mother was in and out of the apartment doing laundry, the three children remained in the apartment without another'adult present.

After returning to the apartment from taking clothes out of the dryer, Mother found Lauren lethargic. Frank told Mother that the toddler had run into the kitchen table. Mother called 911 and an ambulance transported Lauren to the hospital emergency room. Mother told medical personnel what happened, passing along Frank’s account of the kitchen-table accident. At the hospital, medical providers reported that Lauren had suffered a serious head injury.

Though Lauren fully recovered from the head injury, she spent a few weeks in the pediatric intensive care unit before being discharged. 1 At the beginning of Lauren’s hospital stay, medical personnel noticed the toddler had a bruise on her left forehead and right cheek. She also had child-size bite marks on her abdomen. A medical scan revealed bilateral subdural hemato-mas and initially that raised concerns of non-accidental trauma. The day of Lauren’s hospitalization, the Department received a referral alleging possible physical abuse of Lauren. An investigation followed.

The Department’s Investigation

As part of the Department’s investigation, a Department representative spoke with Lauren’s treating physicians and nurses. Lauren’s medical providers noted concerns about an old bruise on the child’s cheek and bite marks on her abdomen. Mother reported Lauren had bumped into a door, getting a bruise, three days before the hospitalization. Mother said she was not aware of the bite marks.

Medical personnel reported to the Department that the head injury Lauren sustained could be consistent with the history (kitchen-table accident) Mother provided. The medical evidence was not inconsistent with the child suffering the head injury by running into a table. Additionally, the medical records indicated Lauren, who was an active toddler, had recent, minor head injuries, which would explain the minor facial bruising. Though there was no explanation for the bite marks on the child’s abdomen, hospital personnel noted that the bite marks appeared to have been made by a child. No criminal charges came out of Lauren’s injuries.

The Department’s Temporary Conserva-torship of the Children

The Department took possession of Julian and Lauren on December 31, 2015, the day after Lauren entered the hospital. Within a week, the Department filed a petition seeking to become temporary managing conservator of Julian and Lauren. Frank returned to his father in Pennsylvania. 2

After Julian and Lauren went into the Department’s care, Mother visited them regularly, never missing a scheduled visitation. Though the Department’s initial goal was family reunification with both parents, in June 2016, the Department became concerned with Mother’s ability to care for the children on her own and changed its goal to reunification with Father only. After the Department decided to seek termination of Mother’s parental rights, the trial court, at the Department’s urging, discontinued Mother’s scheduled visitation. In January 2017, the Department placed the children in Father’s care, without giving Mother access or visitation. At the time of trial, Mother had not been permitted to see the children for months.

The DepaHment’s Suit to Terminate Mother’s Parental Rights

In seeking termination of Mother’s parental rights to Julian and Lauren, the Department asserted predicate grounds under Texas Family Code sections 161.001(b)(1)(D), (N), and (O). 3 Following a bench trial, the trial court terminated Mother’s parental rights, citing the predicate findings under all three sections. The trial court also found that termination of Mother’s parental rights was in the children’s best interest. Though Mother and Father remained married, the trial court terminated Mother’s parental rights and appointed Father as sole managing conservator.

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Bluebook (online)
532 S.W.3d 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-jemm-lamm-children-texapp-2017.