in the Interest of M.C, N.L., and D.L., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 9, 2008
Docket02-08-00125-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of M.C, N.L., and D.L., Children (in the Interest of M.C, N.L., and D.L., 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 M.C, N.L., and D.L., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

                                        COURT OF APPEALS

                                         SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                      FORT WORTH

                                          NO. 02-08-125-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF M.C., N.L., AND D.L.,

CHILDREN                                                                                           

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

             FROM THE 324TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                  MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I. Introduction

In four issues, Appellant E.C. contests the sufficiency of the evidence to support the termination of her parental rights to M.C., N.L., and D.L.  We affirm.

II. Factual and Procedural History


At the time of the termination trial in March 2008, M.C. was seven years old, N.L. was five years old, and D.L. was two years old.  M.C. and N.L. had previously been removed from E.C. in 2004, after a referral to Child Protective Services (CPS) by a neighbor resulted in E.C.=s arrest for possession of a controlled substance.  E.C. completed her service plan while pregnant with D.L., and in June 2006, CPS returned her children to her.


E.C. testified that she was currently incarcerated because she had violated the terms of the four years= community supervision she received for the deferred adjudication of the 2004 possession charge.  She also testified that, with regard to the Acrack cocaine@ that led to her arrest in 2004, she had not been using it; N.L. and D.L.=s father, R.L., had given it to her to sell for him.[2]  She also testified that she knew nothing about selling drugs, that she only did it twice, and that she did it so that he would not Aput his hands on [her],@ i.e., physically abuse her.  She testified that when she sold crack cocaine, she would leave M.C. with her mother and turn the sales profits over to R.L.; that R.L. was mentally, physically, and sexually abusive to her throughout 2004; and that he would beat her while the children were asleep.[3]  She added that sometimes the children were awake and saw the domestic violence between her and R.L.; she did not know if he had ever harmed the children.

E.C. also testified that she used marijuana around her children, then immediately contradicted herself, stating, ANo, I don=t use drugs around my kids,@ and then explained that she would smoke Aweed@ outside on her patio while her children were inside the house.  She admitted that she had cared for her children while under the influence of marijuana and that she had allowed R.L. and his girlfriend to care for the children when R.L. was under the influence of drugs.


E.C.=s community supervision was revoked because, in December 2006, she committed assault with bodily injury against the mother and sister of R.H., her alleged common law husband;[4] she was also charged with, and she pleaded guilty to, harassment and criminal trespass.  E.C. claimed that R.H.=s mother attacked E.C. first, in front of the children, and that E.C. hit her back.  E.C. testified that she gave R.H. temporary custody of her children when she knew she was going back to jail for violating the terms of her community supervision.  She also testified that R.H. had a girlfriend while E.C. was incarcerated and that he was unable to take care of E.C.=s children because Ahim and his girlfriend were having confrontations, or whatever.@

In March 2007, the State placed the children into foster care.  In the affidavit the State submitted in support of its request for temporary managing conservatorship, the CPS caseworker averred that E.C. asked a friend to call CPS and request removal of the children from R.H. and for CPS to place them in foster care.  E.C. testified that she remained in jail from March to July, that she had no contact with her children or R.H. during that time, that neither CPS nor R.H. notified her that her children were placed into foster care or taken away from R.H. while she was in jail, and that CPS did not mail her a service plan while she was in jail.  She testified that a friend wrote to her in April or May and told her that her children were in foster care and that CPS Anever gave [her] a service plan due to the fact that [she] knew what a service plan was.@  E.C. testified, AI just knew what I had to do,@ but she also testified that she did not know what a service plan was.  She testified that she called CPS the day that she was released from jail but that the caseworker was out of the office that day.


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