in the Interest of K.W., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 2010
Docket02-09-00041-CV
StatusPublished

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in the Interest of K.W., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 2-09-041-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.W., A CHILD

------------

FROM THE 323RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

I. Introduction

Appellant S.H., the alleged biological father of K.W., appeals the trial

court’s order terminating the parent-child relationship between himself and K.W.

In four issues, Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the

evidence regarding the court’s findings of fact. We will affirm.

1  See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. II. Factual and Procedural History

K.W. was born to J.W. (“Mother”) on March 5, 2008. Mother and K.W.

tested positive for methamphetamine on the day of birth. On March 10, 2008,

the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“the Department”)

filed a Petition for Protection of a Child, for Conservatorship, and for

Termination in a Suit Affecting the Parent/Child Relationship. 2 The trial court

held a show cause hearing on March 14, 2008, and a two-day final hearing on

the Department’s petition beginning January 26, 2009. 3

The trial court terminated Appellant’s and Mother’s parental rights on

February 6, 2009. Because Mother has not appealed, we summarize only those

facts pertinent to the termination of Appellant’s parental rights.

A. Appellant’s Criminal History

Appellant served approximately thirty-six months in jail over the last

decade on eight convictions. At the age of 22, Appellant received two years’

deferred adjudication for possession of methamphetamine, less than one gram.

2  The Department interviewed Mother on Friday, March 7, 2008, and filed the petition the following Monday. 3  Mother did not attend the final hearing. Her counsel announced “not ready” to proceed and requested a continuance because she claimed she did not receive proper notice of the January 26, 2009 hearing. The trial court denied Mother’s request.

2 Appellant then served ninety days in jail after the court revoked his probation

on January 18, 2000, for assaulting his daughter’s mother. 4

On December 19, 2001, Appellant pleaded guilty to two counts of

possession of methamphetamine and received two concurrent two-year jail

sentences. In November 2003, Appellant received a sentence of one year

imprisonment for forgery. In July 2007, a court sentenced Appellant to 180

days’ imprisonment for possession of methamphetamine. 5 On September 25,

2008, a court sentenced Appellant to four years’ imprisonment for unlawfully

possessing a firearm, 6 and placed him on deferred adjudication probation for ten

years with a $1,000 fine for the separate offense of intent to deliver between

one and four grams of methamphetamine.

B. Appellant’s Relationship with Mother and His Claim of Paternity

Appellant and Mother were friends who used methamphetamine together.

Appellant testified he learned he might be K.W.’s father when Mother visited

4  Appellant testified his daughter was born prior to the assault in 2001. But at the January 2009 parental termination hearing, Appellant was unable to recall his daughter’s birthday, believed she was eight years of age, and stated he had not seen her in several years. 5  Appellant served this 180-day sentence from July 23, 2007, through August 2, 2007, and from November 7, 2007, through April 25, 2008. Thus, Appellant was incarcerated at the time of K.W.’s birth. 6  Appellant began serving a four-year sentence for the offense of unlawful possession of a firearm on September 2, 2008.

3 him in jail and revealed she was two months’ pregnant. Two days after K.W.’s

birth, Mother told a Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator that Appellant

may be the father and provided no indication of other potential fathers.

Appellant does not dispute that he did not file an admission of paternity

or a counterclaim for paternity in this case. However, Appellant did file a timely

answer generally denying the Department’s claims. At trial, Appellant

acknowledged he is K.W.’s biological father and testified, “Once I had seen the

pictures of [K.W.], I thought that we were—that it was very little chance that

he was not mine, but I don’t have a problem with taking a DNA test.”

C. The Department’s Initial Actions

The Department received notice on March 6, 2008, that Mother tested

positive for methamphetamine at K.W.’s birth. The next day, CPS Investigator

Teresa Shipley visited Mother in the hospital. During Shipley’s visit, Mother

was uncooperative, claiming that her attorney advised her “not to answer any

more questions nor sign any more papers” and denying drug use or having any

history with CPS. 7 Shipley did learn that Mother’s mother had recently moved

to Louisiana and that Mother was living with some of Appellant’s family, but

7  Mother gave birth to a child who tested positive for drugs in October 2005, resulting in the removal of Mother’s two children and voluntary placement of the children with Mother’s mother.

4 Mother did not provide a local address. In response to Shipley’s inquiries,

Mother provided Appellant’s name as K.W.’s potential father, stated Appellant

was in the Tarrant County jail, and provided the names of Appellant’s mother

and sister. Mother did not provide any contact information for these

individuals, nor did she identify other family members as potential placements

for K.W.

Shipley testified she was concerned for K.W.’s safety if K.W. was placed

with Mother upon being released from the hospital. She therefore obtained a

court order for K.W.’s emergency removal from Mother. The state took

custody of K.W. on March 7, 2008, and placed K.W. with a foster home.

Regarding the Department’s communication with Appellant during this

time period, Shipley testified she was uncertain whether she sent him a letter

and could not recall if she had gone to the jail to speak with him. Shipley

agreed, however, that if potential placement options are identified by the father,

they are considered by CPS. Shipley also admitted she did not meet with

Appellant prior to her signing the affidavit requesting emergency relief. Shipley

explained that Mother never definitively said that Appellant was the father, nor

did Mother identify any of Appellant’s family members as potential placements

5 D. The Effort to Place K.W. with Family

Shortly after the March 14, 2008 show cause hearing, CPS conducted

a home study on Judy Golden, a friend of Appellant’s mother. The home study

tentatively recommended placing K.W. with Golden, but Golden declined to

submit to a drug test. Mother identified no other potential placements for K.W.

Appellant’s sister accompanied Mother on her first visit with K.W. under

Mother’s service plan. During the visit, CPS caseworker Whitney Lagadinos

spoke with Appellant’s sister and obtained her contact information, but

Lagadinos determined Appellant’s sister was not a possible placement for K.W.

because she was living with “somebody who had a questionable criminal

history.”

At Appellant’s request, 8 Lagadinos contacted Appellant’s grandmother,

who declined a home study because of her age and health problems.

E. Appellant’s Service Plan and Efforts to Keep K.W.

After being released from jail on bond in late April 2008, Appellant visited

with K.W. on several occasions.

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