in the Interest of M.C.T., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2008
Docket02-07-00170-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of M.C.T., a Child (in the Interest of M.C.T., 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 M.C.T., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-07-170-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF M.C.T., A CHILD

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FROM THE 158 TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

OPINION

I.  Introduction

Appellant Tina A. appeals the termination of her parental rights to her son, M.C.T.  In three points, Appellant argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the termination order, that she was denied effective assistance of counsel, and that family code section 263.405(i) violates her right to due process.  We will affirm.

II.  Factual and Procedural Background

M.C.T., Appellant’s biological son, is an emotionally disturbed and educationally and developmentally delayed twelve-year-old boy.  Appellant has two other sons, J.T., who is sixteen, and N.T., who is older than M.C.T. but younger than J.T.  Johnnie T. is the alleged biological father of M.C.T., J.T., and N.T. (footnote: 1)

On or about January 25, 2006, police discovered M.C.T., who was ten years old, wandering the streets after 11:00 p.m.  Appellant was in Florida and initially contended that she had left M.C.T. in the care of a person named “Rick,” but later claimed to have left M.C.T. in his father’s care.  Appellant’s mother and sister refused to pick up M.C.T., and Appellant did not return from Florida for a few days.  Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“TDFPS”) removed M.C.T. from Appellant’s home and placed him with a foster family.  TDFPS returned M.C.T. to Appellant’s care in August 2006 but re-removed him on November 9, 2006, and placed him with a second foster family.  Between November 2006 and late April 2007, the time of trial, M.C.T. was admitted twice to the inpatient psychiatry unit at Cook Children’s Hospital.  M.C.T. was in Houston at a residential treatment center during trial.

Rebecca Ash, a psychotherapist, testified that she began individual counseling with Appellant at the end of March 2006 and counseled Appellant’s family from August 2006 until TDFPS re-removed M.C.T. in November 2006. Ash reasoned that J.T., N.T., and M.C.T. are “very” difficult to handle and described Appellant’s family as “extremely dysfunctional” with a lot of chaos and physical and verbal aggression among the family members.  M.C.T. reported to Ash that J.T. and N.T. regularly “physically abuse[d]” him and that Appellant never spent any time with him.  Ash opined that M.C.T. did not feel safe at home because of daily roughhousing between the boys and physical and verbal aggression directed at M.C.T. by J.T. and N.T.  Nothing that Ash observed in the counseling sessions indicated that Appellant exercised control over the children, and Appellant denied there being a problem in protecting her children from the abuse and minimized the problems faced by her children.  Ash concluded that Appellant’s home was not a safe environment for M.C.T., stating that she supported the termination of Appellant’s parental rights to M.C.T., which she believes would be in M.C.T.’s best interest.

Marvin Jones, a family therapist at Cook Children’s Hospital, testified that M.C.T. had been admitted to the hospital because he was a danger to himself and to others; M.C.T. pushed a foster sibling into a railing, ran away from his foster home, and made statements that he wanted to harm himself.  Jones testified that M.C.T. did not know his date or place of birth and that he experienced difficulty with “sequence,” which was not normal for a child of his age.  He recounted that M.C.T. told him that Appellant abandoned him, that Appellant went to Mexico relatively recently without him, that “he was pretty much on his own” at home, that he did not feel safe at home with Appellant and his brothers, and that M.C.T. and his brothers “were pretty well left to do what they wanted to do.”  Jones concluded that M.C.T. does, however, do well in a structured and stable environment and that he needs “fairly intensive” supervision, therapy, and educational development.  He agreed that “it would be a detriment to him if he did not get those things.”  Jones opined that it is not in M.C.T.’s best interest to return to an environment like he was in while living with Appellant.

Angela Batson, a licensed professional counselor, counseled M.C.T. after TDFPS removed M.C.T. from Appellant’s home the second time.  Batson agreed that M.C.T. is “aggressive” and “destructive,” that his relationships “for the most part are combative,” and that he requires “intense supervision.”  M.C.T. told Batson that there were no rules at home and that he could do whatever he wanted to do.  Batson opined that it would be detrimental to M.C.T.’s well-being and not in his best interest to live in a home with no supervision.

M.C.T.’s second foster mom testified that she had the impression there was no structure at Appellant’s home and that M.C.T did whatever he wanted to do.  She agreed that M.C.T. has some “very serious” behavioral problems—he lied, had “awful” language, destroyed and tore up things, and was “out of control” at school.  M.C.T. told her that Appellant could neither take care of nor handle him and his brothers and that Appellant “would go off and leave him, or he and his brothers would just sometimes be there by” themselves.  M.C.T.’s foster mom agreed that he needs intense supervision and opined that it would be “detrimental” (both developmentally and physically) to him if he was not supervised at home.

Connie McAnnally, the CASA worker who investigated M.C.T.’s case, testified that M.C.T. improved at his first foster home, but that when he returned to Appellant’s care in August 2006, he “spiraled down quickly in a variety of ways, in school and in the sessions with the therapist and in [her] observations of him when [she] went to visit with him when he was living with his mom.”  M.C.T.’s “acting out, aggression, and violence” primarily began when he was returned to Appellant’s care in August 2006.  McAnnally observed M.C.T. with his older brothers.  They were “very hard to control” and kind of “bouncing off the walls.”  McAnnally explained that Appellant left M.C.T. home frequently, that there were few rules or boundaries at home, that M.C.T. “pretty much did his own thing,” and that Appellant has no family or outside support to help her with the children.  She recounted that M.C.T. is on “psychotropic” medication, that he needs to have his medications checked periodically, and that Appellant had missed a few of his medical appointments over the course of the investigation.  McAnnally obtained police reports from the Garland Police Department showing that police were called to Appellant’s residence thirteen times between March 2006 and November 2006.  She testified that M.C.T. had attended eleven different elementary schools, nine prior to TDFPS’s intervention, and that he is in the sixth grade but reads at a first-grade level and does mathematics at a second-grade level.  McAnnally ultimately opined that it was in M.C.T.’s best interest that Appellant’s parental rights be terminated.

Miranda Moughon served as a caseworker on M.C.T.’s case.  She testified that Appellant did not implement the counselors’ recommendations and that Appellant cannot keep M.C.T. safe or provide for his needs.  Moughon was aware that M.C.T.’s siblings were “assaulting” him.

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