in the Interest of L.B., L.B., K.B., and K.B.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 2022
Docket09-21-00224-CV
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-21-00224-CV __________________

IN THE INTEREST OF L.B., L.B., K.B., AND K.B.

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 317th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. F-237,899 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After a bench trial, Appellant R.B. (“Ronald”) appeals the trial court’s order

terminating his parental rights to his children, L.B. (“Linda”), L.B. (“Lonnie”), K.B.

(“Katie”), and K.B. (“Kenny”). 1 The court also terminated the parental rights of the

1 To protect the identities of the minors, we use pseudonyms to refer to the children and their parents. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8(b)(2). Appellant’s notice of appeal and brief include only three of the children’s initials in the case style, but we interpret his brief to apply to all four children that are subjects of the termination order. 1 children’s mother, A.O. (“Annie”).2 For reasons explained herein, we affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

Background

On September 3, 2020, the Department of Family and Protective Services

(“the Department”) filed an Original Petition for Protection of a Child, For

Conservatorship, and for Termination in Suit Affecting the Parent-Child

Relationship. The petition named Linda, Lonnie, Katie, and Kenny as the children,

Annie as the children’s mother, and Ronald as the children’s father. At the time the

petition was filed, Linda was eleven years old, Lonnie was nine years old, and Katie

and Kenny were five years old.

Evidence at Trial

Testimony of CPS Caseworker

The CPS Caseworker assigned to the case testified that the children came into

the care of the Department after law enforcement received a report and appeared at

Ronald’s home and found there was no water or electricity after a hurricane, the

children were left unsupervised for a long time, and the children were given keys to

the car to sit in it to get air conditioning. At the time, Ronald and his girlfriend had

been arrested for trespassing. During an investigation and during the Caseworker’s

2 Although the Department’s brief asserts Annie raised the same appellate issues as Ronald, we note that Annie is not a party to this appeal. Accordingly, we include limited details about her as necessary to explain the facts. 2 conversations with the children, the children expressed that they had limited access

to food and that food would be locked away and kept from them. According to the

Caseworker, other family members of the children had reported concerns about the

living conditions in the home. The Caseworker testified that it was her understanding

that when CPS responded the children were not clean. The Caseworker testified that

she learned that when the children were at home, Ronald and his girlfriend would

disappear for hours at a time and sometimes all day and that when they would return,

they would either use drugs and pass out or cook food for themselves and lock up

the rest of the food without feeding the children. The Caseworker testified that she

was told that Ronald’s girlfriend would tell the children that there was a camera in

the refrigerator and she and Ronald would know if they tried to get into the

refrigerator. It was also reported to the Caseworker that when Ronald and his

girlfriend dropped the children off to her, the children were underfed and not clean.

The Caseworker testified that she was informed that Lonnie had been diagnosed with

a medical condition, Ronald and his girlfriend had been overmedicating Lonnie, and

Ronald and his girlfriend were not taking Lonnie to his follow-up appointments.

At the time of removal, attempts to contact Annie, the children’s mother, were

unsuccessful. According to the Caseworker, Annie’s home had burned the previous

year, she was living in a travel trailer, and the children had been living with their

father for the past year. The Caseworker testified that Ronald and Annie had a

3 previous history with CPS from 2018 in which Annie admitted she used marijuana

and methamphetamine and Ronald admitted to drug abuse issues and crack cocaine

use.

The Caseworker testified that at the time of trial the children had been in the

Department’s care for over nine months, the court had ordered a plan of service for

the parents to remedy the effects of abuse or neglect that were happening in the

home, and she would discuss monthly with Ronald the tasks that needed to be

completed on his service plan. One of the requirements of the plan was that he

maintain a home with working utilities and that the home needed to be safe and drug

free. According to the Caseworker, Ronald owns the home that was given to him by

his father, and through virtual visits she conducted she was able to determine that

the home had working utilities and no safety hazards. The Caseworker testified that

“as far as me being able to assess whether the home was drug free, [Ronald] has

submitted to drug tests; and for the positive drug screen he did eventually provide

me proof of medication.” The Caseworker testified that she asked him for proof of

his hydrocodone prescription. The Caseworker testified that Ronald was unable to

submit to drug testing in the area because he was working out of town. The

Caseworker testified that she ordered a hair follicle drug test at one point, but that

Ronald did not have enough hair for them to do the test. According to the

Caseworker, Ronald had been working in a lot of different places and had expressed

4 that he had not had consistent work due to Covid, and she did not believe if the

children were returned home that the children would be appropriately supervised.

Ronald provided his pay stubs to the Caseworker the day prior to trial, but he only

provided pay stubs for a couple of weeks for a job in Houston, and he provided

employment information for the job he was working in Oklahoma at the time of trial.

The Caseworker testified that at the time of trial Ronald still had the same girlfriend

and that both Ronald and the girlfriend had left his children alone with food locked

up and that the younger children had to take care of Ronald’s girlfriend’s older child

who has special needs and aggressive tendencies. The Caseworker testified that

Ronald completed his parenting classes as part of his service plan, and she was

provided proof of completion. The Caseworker testified that Ronald’s visits with the

children were sporadic and “ha[d] not been significant[]” over the last nine months,

which she assumed was due to his work schedule. The Caseworker testified that

Ronald completed a drug assessment that recommended that he attend online

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA) meetings. Ronald

completed a psychosocial evaluation and it was recommended that Ronald attend

counseling. According to the Caseworker, Ronald did not provide proof that he

attended AA or NA, and when they spoke about counseling sessions, he told her that

work would prevent him from participating in those sessions. He also did not provide

5 proof that he attended the parent support group meetings as recommended in the

parenting plan.

The Caseworker testified that Annie and Ronald both knowingly placed or

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