in the Interest of J.G.K., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 2011
Docket02-10-00188-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J.G.K., a Child (in the Interest of J.G.K., 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 J.G.K., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-188-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00188-CV

In the Interest of J.G.K.,

a ChilD

----------

FROM County Court at Law No. 1 OF Wichita COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

          Appellant Mother appeals the trial court’s judgment terminating her parental rights to her daughter, J.G.K.  In four issues, Mother argues that the trial court denied her due process and abused its discretion by denying her pretrial motion to dismiss for due process violations, that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s endangerment findings, and that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s best interest finding.  We will affirm.

II.  Factual and Procedural Background

          A.      Mother’s Testimony

                   1.       General Background

          Mother testified that she was thirty years old at the time of trial and had given birth to six children: J.K.P., J.G.K., T.M.J., D.J.F., T.Q.F., and G.J.M.-B.  Mother admitted that she had never been married to any of the fathers of her six children.  Of the six children, only G.J.M.-B. lived with Mother at the time of trial. The following recounts Mother’s life before children, the birth of her children,[2] CPS’s involvement,[3] the living conditions the children experienced, Mother’s dependence on CPS and the Court-Appointed Special Advocate Association (CASA), and the instability in Mother’s emotional state and living arrangements that persisted throughout the case.

                   2.       Mother’s Employment History and Criminal History

In 1999, Mother worked at Whataburger for two days.  That was the only job that she had ever held.  Mother admitted that she had been charged with aggravated robbery and that the case had remained pending for approximately two years, but the case was dismissed after DNA testing.  Mother said that the dismissal of the case “helped like law wise” but not as far as getting a job or an apartment because the arrest remained on her record.[4]  Mother said that she did not have the money to get the arrest expunged from her criminal record.[5]

                    3.       Births of the Children and CPS’s Involvement

                    a.       Mother Gives Birth to J.K.P.

Mother gave birth to J.K.P. in June 1999 and supported herself and J.K.P. by using food stamps and Medicaid.  Mother stayed with J.K.P.’s father on Spring Lake Drive.  They lived there for two years and then moved to the Housing Authority at 415-D Bailey Street, paying $50 a month for rent.  After that, Mother moved in with her mother on Gerald Street.

                    b.       Mother Passes Out After Smoking Marijuana

CPS first got involved in Mother’s life in May 2002 when she ended up in the hospital after fainting from smoking “weed.”  At the time, J.K.P., who was approximately three years old, was Mother’s only child.  Mother said that CPS talked to her and then dropped the case.

                    c.       Mother Gives Birth to J.G.K. and T.M.J.

In December 2002, when J.G.K. was born, Mother was staying with her mother, who was helping to support Mother, J.K.P., and J.G.K.  The same was true in 2004 when T.M.J. was born.

                    d.       Mother Gives Birth to D.J.F.

When D.J.F. was born in 2005, Mother lived in “the projects” owned by the Housing Authority until she was evicted.[6]  Then, Mother moved in with her mother, later moved to Park Regency, and then moved back with her mother. During 2005, Mother was supported by D.J.F.’s father,[7] J.K.P.’s father, food stamps, Medicaid, and her mother, who was helping her “a lot, too.”

e.       Mother Leaves Children with a Mentally Ill Person, and Children Are Removed by CPS

In 2005, Mother left J.K.P., J.G.K., T.M.J., and D.J.F with a lady named Dorothy, whom Mother had known for only a day; Mother later learned that Dorothy had a mental illness.  D.J.F. stopped breathing while she was in Dorothy’s care, and Dorothy called 911.  D.J.F. was taken to the hospital, and CPS thereafter removed the four children and placed them in foster care.  Mother received a family plan that included counseling, drug testing, and parenting classes.

                    f.       Mother Calls CPS to Take J.K.P.

J.K.P. was placed with Mother’s mother in 2005 and lived with her from then until 2006.  During that time, Mother “was staying just anywhere” because she was homeless.  In 2006, Mother’s mother dropped off J.K.P. at Faith City Mission where Mother was staying; Mother’s mother said that she was not going to come back to get him.  Mother then called CPS, and CPS placed J.K.P. into foster care.[8]

                    g.       Mother Gives Birth to T.Q.F.

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