in the Interest of M.R., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 2020
Docket02-19-00212-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of M.R., a Child (in the Interest of M.R., 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.R., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-19-00212-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF M.R., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 323rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 323-107788-18

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Birdwell and Bassel, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

In three issues, Appellant Mother appeals the termination of her parental rights

to her child, M.R. Because the evidence supports the trial court’s findings in favor of

termination, we affirm.

Background

Mother has had seven biological children. The three oldest children were

removed from Mother’s care by a California agency and placed for adoption; they are

now adults. Three more children were removed by the State of Texas, and Mother’s

parental rights were terminated for knowingly placing or allowing the children to

remain in conditions or surroundings endangering their physical or emotional well-

being and for engaging in conduct or knowingly placing the children with persons

engaging in conduct which endangered the children’s physical or emotional well-

being. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E). This case regards Mother’s

seventh child, M.R.

At the time that Mother gave birth to M.R. in July 2018, she was married to

Husband, who is not M.R.’s biological father,1 and Mother had been homeless for

nine or ten months. The Department of Family and Protective Services (the

Department) was referred to Mother and M.R. on the day of M.R.’s birth because of

1 Mother identified the alleged biological father, but an attorney ad litem was unable to locate him. The trial court terminated the alleged father’s parental rights in addition to Mother’s. The termination of his parental rights is irrelevant to this appeal.

2 Mother’s previous history with the Department. The Department removed M.R.

from Mother’s care on the day after M.R.’s birth.

I. The Department’s investigation

Morgan Overn investigated the case on behalf of the Department, and Sarah

Vinet acted as Mother’s Child Protective Services (CPS) caseworker. Both testified at

trial, identifying several areas of concern regarding Mother’s ability to care for M.R.:

Mother’s history of domestic violence, her troubling behavior around M.R., her

mental-health issues, her illegal drug use, and her lack of a stable residence and

employment.

A. Mother’s involvement with domestic violence

Overn testified to Mother’s history of violence, of which Overn was familiar

because she had investigated domestic-violence allegations during the Department’s

removal and termination proceedings regarding two of Mother’s older children.

According to Overn, Mother and Husband both acknowledged instances of domestic

violence. Overn related Husband’s description of two specific instances when Mother

had assaulted him when he and Mother had been sleeping on the street because he did

not want to cuddle with her. While Overn did not personally witness any physical

abuse between Mother and Husband, Overn testified that “[t]here was a lot of

yelling.” For instance, Overn described a verbal altercation when Husband

repeatedly told Mother to “shut up” when Mother was explaining to Overn that she

“had to keep [M.R.] or she would not have a place in the shelter she was wanting to 3 go stay at.” Overn testified that domestic violence is worrisome because it could

result in physical and emotional harm to the children.

Vinet testified that she had discussed Mother’s history of domestic violence

with Mother, and although Vinet had requested that Mother participate in domestic-

violence classes, Mother had refused.

In Mother’s trial testimony, she denied any domestic violence had occurred

between her and Husband or between her and the father of two of her other children.

When Mother was confronted with her 2018 deposition testimony that her previous

husband had assaulted her at least 22 times, she denied testifying that he had assaulted

her. Instead, she claimed that they “had many accidents together” that involved

blood and getting hurt but that he never punched or hit her. She described him as

“the most loving, calm, nondrug using father that you would ever meet” and “a great

father.”

While most of the testimony on the topic of violence and criminal charges

focused on Mother’s involvement in domestic-violence incidents with her partners,

Overn also testified to her review of CPS records that included a report of Mother’s

2010 arrest after she physically blocked a caseworker’s exit from a daycare parking lot.

B. Mother’s behavior around M.R.

Overn described her first encounter with Mother and M.R. at the hospital

shortly after M.R.’s birth:

4 When I first walked into the room [Mother] continued asking me and the nurse that was in the room to drug test the baby, and she kept trying to hand us the baby. When I explained that that’s not something that I do and explained that the nurses already have done that, she continued trying to hand me the baby to the point where her arms were very far out over the bed and it was concerning to me that she was going to drop the baby so I did hold the baby and get the baby from her. According to Overn and Vinet, after M.R. was removed and Mother’s

interactions with M.R. were limited to supervised visitation sessions, Mother made no

progress in demonstrating her ability to be a safe parent. Overn described Mother’s

first visit with M.R.:

During the first visit, I had an observer helping me out watch that visit [between Mother and M.R.] while I was making some phone calls. She had let me know that she felt very uneasy about [Mother] holding the baby. She was not very steady. And so I was bringing the car seat to the visit room so we could have the baby sit in the car seat. As I was doing that, when I turned the corner to look into the room, [M.R.] was face down in [Mother]’s lap with her face in a blanket and so I went and picked up [M.R.] and I made a rule that [M.R.] had to sit in the car seat unless there was a worker standing right next to her while she was holding [M.R.] A recurring theme from Overn’s and Vinet’s observations was Mother’s

preoccupation with her phone and her refusal to put the phone down during the

visitation sessions. Overn testified that at one visit, two of Mother’s other children2

were also there, and Mother appeared “very uneasy, just appeared to not know how to

hold [M.R.] and was constantly on her phone and [Mother] allowed [her eight-year-old

At the time of the visit, Mother’s rights to those two children had not yet been 2

terminated. By the time of trial in this case, her rights to those children had been terminated.

5 child] to hold [M.R.] and [that child] was holding [M.R.] better than [Mother] was.”

Overn noted that Mother was constantly on her phone and “very easily distracted by

stuff that was on her phone or taking pictures of something on her phone to where

she would come close to or almost drop [M.R.]”

Vinet described another incident when Mother arrived at visitation wearing a

neck brace and attempted to feed M.R. while holding the baby bottle with her chin

and trying to use her phone at the same time. Vinet reported that the bottle fell out

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