in the Interest of M.D.E., a Child v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2019
Docket14-18-00898-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of M.D.E., a Child v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (in the Interest of M.D.E., a Child v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services) 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.D.E., a Child v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 12, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-18-00897-CV NO. 14-18-00898-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.T.E., AND M.A.E., Children IN THE INTEREST OF M.D.E, Child

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2012-11109 Trial Court Cause No. 2017-04419J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

K.D.G. (Mother) appeals the trial court’s decrees terminating her parental rights as to her daughter, K.T.E., and sons, M.A.E., and M.D.E.1 On appeal, Mother challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the predicate grounds under which her parental rights were terminated and the finding that termination was in her children’s best interest. We affirm. 1 The Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) filed motions to terminate K.D.G.’s parental rights in two separate suits affecting the parent child relationship, one as to K.T.E. and M.A.E. and one as to M.D.E. The cases were tried together. Background

I. Department History

The facts in this section are taken from an affidavit signed by the Department’s caseworker that was admitted at trial.2

A. Erratic Behavior In April 2017, the Department received a referral alleging neglectful supervision of K.T.E. and M.A.E. The referral alleged that Mother was driving recklessly with K.T.E. and M.A.E. in the vehicle and that she was swerving into multiple lanes of traffic. Mother was arrested for failure to maintain a single lane. Mother said that she was instructed by a friend who had recently died to swerve into traffic.

At the time of the April 2017 referral, Mother was living with her four children: K.T.E., M.A.E., M.D.E., and D.G. Mother and the children had recently moved in with D.G.’s father, D.B. D.B. said that Mother had been acting strange and had threatened to kill him.

In May 2017, the Department received a new referral alleging Mother had given D.G. wine and D.G. was running into walls and acting drunk. D.B. subsequently reported to the Department that Mother was behaving oddly.

B. Physical Violence The May 2017 referral also alleged that about a year before, Mother had hit M.A.E. and bruised his face. After the above referrals were made and D.B. reported Mother’s behavior, Mother went for a psychological evaluation. After she returned, she hit K.T.E. in the face and head multiple times. K.T.E. told the

2 Trial counsel objected to the affidavit as hearsay but does not complain on appeal of the trial court’s admission of the document.

2 caseworker that Mother’s hits “kind of hurt.” M.A.E. and M.D.E. also reported that Mother hit K.T.E. on her head. M.A.E. said it was about ten times. Mother told K.T.E., M.A.E., and M.D.E. to lie to the Department and the police about the incident.

After another week, the Department received a new referral. This referral alleged that Mother had swung at K.T.E. and hit her on the head, back, and shoulders. K.T.E. had bruises on her back.

In September 2017, D.B. reported that the children told him Mother previously had punched M.A.E. in the nose. Mother had also tried to stab D.B. with a boxcutter.

Mother had a prior referral to the Department in 2006 for physically abusing M.D.E. “on an ongoing basis.” M.D.E. had a cut on his forehead after Mother hit him with a bottle of water and had bruises on his face on another occasion. Mother and M.D.E.’s father successfully completed family counseling and demonstrated the ability to provide a safe home at that time. That case was closed.

In 2015 after K.T.E. and M.A.E. were born, the Department received another referral, alleging that Mother physically abused M.A.E. and K.T.E.’s father sexually abused her. The case was not completed because Mother moved to Pennsylvania with the children. The Department received another referral in 2016 alleging Mother physically abused all four of her children.

C. Criminal History After Mother was released from jail for failure to maintain a single lane, she was arrested for evading arrest after failing to stop at a stop sign. She was also charged with two counts of possession of a dangerous drug. The drug charges were dropped. Subsequently, Mother was arrested for trespassing. After Mother was

3 released from jail, she returned to Pennsylvania for a few months and then came back to Houston.

D. Placement of Children The caseworker advised D.B. not to allow Mother to be around the children. He agreed to do so and to take care of the children. D.B. took care of all four children for approximately three months, but then left K.T.E., M.A.E., and M.D.E. with their maternal aunt.

The Department was contacted by the children’s aunt. The Department provided the aunt with a family service plan in which she agreed not to allow Mother to have unsupervised contact with the children and to contact the Department if Mother showed up. The aunt subsequently told the Department she did not know how she would be able to take care of the children financially, although she wanted to do so.

The trial court subsequently ordered placement of K.T.E., M.A.E., and M.D.E. with the Department as temporary managing conservator. They were relocated to a group foster home. The Department’s goal for K.T.E. and M.A.E. was adoption by a non-relative. The Department did not seek adoption for M.D.E., in accordance with his wishes. At the time of the hearing, M.D.E. was seventeen- years-old, and although he did not want to be adopted, he also did not want to be returned to Mother.

II. Trial Proceedings

The caseworker testified at trial that she developed a family service plan for Mother, but Mother was difficult to locate because she was in and out of jail. Mother also relocated to Pennsylvania while the children were in Department care. She was unavailable to the children due to incarceration or absence from the state

4 for over a year while the children were in Department care. Once Mother received the plan, she did not comply with it in several respects: Mother completed the required psychiatric and substance abuse evaluations but did not obtain stable housing, provide proof of stable employment, or maintain contact with the Department during the lawsuit. Mother also failed to attend hearings and parenting classes.

Mother visited M.D.E. once while he was in the Department’s care but did not visit K.T.E. or M.A.E. There was a court order limiting Mother’s ability to visit the children, but the record does not show that she attempted to petition the court for contact with the children during the time that she was incarcerated or out of state. The caseworker testified that in her opinion, it was in the best interest of K.T.E., M.A.E., and M.D.E. for Mother’s parental rights to be terminated because Mother had “been putting her kids in and out of [the Department], which [is] trauma[tic] to a child” and had “not demonstrated or showed [the Department she understood] the serious [circumstances] she put her children in.”

The caseworker testified that K.T.E. and M.A.E. were placed in a nonadoptive group foster home but had potential adoptive placements with one family. M.D.E. did not want to be adopted. In the Department’s permanency report, admitted at trial, the Department reported that M.D.E. was placed in a group foster home and was “progressing and doing great.” He attended school and church and was a role model to others. He would like to stay in his current placement, age out of the system, and go to college. K.T.E. and M.A.E. were in the same group home as M.D.E. K.T.E. was doing well and liked being placed with her brothers. She interacted well with her teachers and others in the home. M.A.E. similarly was doing well.

The caseworker further testified that K.T.E. and M.A.E.

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