in the Interest of K.R. and K.R., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 2022
Docket07-21-00205-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of K.R. and K.R., Children (in the Interest of K.R. and K.R., 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 K.R. and K.R., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-21-00205-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.R. AND K.R., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Randall County, Texas Trial Court No. 78,505-L1, Honorable James W. Anderson, Presiding

February 3, 2022 MEMORANDUM OPINION Before PIRTLE and PARKER and DOSS, JJ.

In this accelerated appeal, Mother seeks reversal of the trial court’s judgment

terminating her parental rights to her children, K.A.R. and K.L.R.1 By her appeal, Mother

raises two issues. In her first issue, Mother challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to

support the trial court’s best interest finding. In her second issue, Mother challenges the

1 To protect the privacy of the parties involved, we will refer to the appellant as “Mother,” and to the children by initials. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 109.002(d); TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b). Father’s parental rights were also terminated in this proceeding. Father does not appeal. appointment of the Department as permanent managing conservator. We affirm the

judgment of the trial court.

Background

In December of 2019, the Department received an intake involving Mother, Father,

and seven-month-old K.A.R. According to the Department’s investigation, Mother and

Father were involved in an automobile accident and fled the accident scene as law

enforcement was arriving. When they were stopped by law enforcement, Mother was

driving and K.A.R. was seated in a car seat. Both Mother and Father were arrested on

outstanding warrants, and Mother was charged with evading arrest or detention with a

motor vehicle and child endangerment. K.A.R. was placed with his maternal

grandmother. During the Department’s investigation, Mother admitted that she was a

daily marijuana user. The Department implemented a safety plan with Mother having

supervised visits by the maternal grandmother. In February of 2020, the Department

referred the family to the Family Based Safety Service (FBSS) division and offered

counseling, parenting classes, substance abuse evaluation and testing, and mental

health services.

While the FBSS case was open, the Department received an intake involving

negligent supervision of K.A.R. and allegations of illegal drug use by the maternal

grandmother. The Department requested that the maternal grandmother submit to drug

testing and she was positive for methamphetamine. K.A.R. also tested positive for

methamphetamine. K.A.R. was removed from the maternal grandmother’s care and

placed with a maternal great-aunt and uncle.

2 In the spring of 2020, Mother tested positive multiple times for marijuana and

admitted to her FBSS worker that she had relapsed. Mother made three appointments

to complete an inpatient drug treatment program, but she did not follow through with these

appointments.

In July of 2020, K.L.R. was born. When K.L.R. was one month old, the Department

discovered that Mother had violated the safety plan by allowing the maternal grandmother

access to K.L.R. Since Mother had not made any progress on her FBSS services, the

Department filed its original petition for protection of a child on August 21, 2020.2 After

an adversary hearing, the court granted a non-emergency removal and named the

Department as managing conservator of both children. K.L.R. was placed with a maternal

great-aunt and K.A.R.’s placement was changed to the home of his maternal great-

grandmother.

The Department developed a family service plan for Mother. The service plan set

out several tasks and services for Mother to complete before reunification with K.A.R. and

K.L.R. could occur. These tasks and services included the following: attend parenting

classes; obtain and maintain stable housing that is appropriate and safe for the children;

locate and maintain employment sufficient for her family’s needs; attend visitation;

maintain contact with the caseworker; maintain a drug-free lifestyle; submit to random

drug screens; participate in a substance abuse assessment and follow recommendations;

attend individual counseling; participate in and complete rational behavior therapy (RBT);

2 On October 30, 2020, the Department filed its second amended petition for protection, conservatorship, and termination of parental rights.

3 participate in and complete a psycho-social evaluation; and attend a Women Against

Violence program (WAV).

The trial court conducted a bench trial through Zoom videoconferencing on

September 3, 2021.

At trial, the Department caseworker testified that Mother had made minimal

progress on her plan of service. Mother was unable to maintain stable housing. She

lived with Father periodically, and then she moved in with a person who could not pass a

Department background check. She worked as a waitress for two weeks before she was

terminated from her employment. Mother did not complete her mental health services,

individual counseling, or RBT. Mother attended some sessions of the WAV program, but

she did not complete the program. Mother submitted to random drug testing, but she did

not maintain a drug-free lifestyle. She completed a substance abuse assessment, but

she did not complete the inpatient rehabilitation recommended. In November of 2020,

Mother admitted that she had been using methamphetamine, marijuana, and alcohol. In

December of 2020, the caseworker drove Mother to an inpatient substance abuse

treatment center in Plainview. Mother was admitted for a minimum thirty-day stay, and

she left after two days. In late January of 2021, the caseworker accompanied Mother a

second time for inpatient substance abuse treatment, and this time Mother stayed nine

days before leaving the facility.

The Department presented evidence that Mother pled guilty on November 30,

2020, to a third-degree felony of evading arrest and detention with a vehicle, and a state

jail felony of abandoning and endangering a child. Mother was placed on deferred

4 adjudication community supervision for four years for each offense. As a part of her

community supervision probation, Mother was to abstain from the use of illegal

substances and refrain from committing another criminal offense. While on probation,

Mother admitted to her probation officer that she had used methamphetamine.

Subsequently, a supplemental order amending the conditions of her probation was

signed, and Mother was ordered to a substance abuse felony punishment facility (SAFPF)

for nine months beginning in June of 2021.

At the time of trial, Mother was incarcerated in SAFPF with an expected release

date of March 23, 2022. Mother had been incarcerated in the Randall County Jail for

violations of her probation for two and a half months before she was transferred to SAFPF.

Mother testified that she has recently obtained her GED. She is working on her

anger management issues, attending chemical dependency groups, and will begin

parenting classes soon. She is learning how to live without drugs and how to manage

crisis situations.

Mother plans to work her Department services after she is released. She

acknowledged that she is currently unable to take care of the children. Mother wants her

children to remain with her family and she thinks that they are in good placements. Mother

admitted that she did not take the case seriously enough in the beginning and her drug

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