in the Interest of S. M., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 26, 2012
Docket08-11-00288-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of S. M., a Child (in the Interest of S. M., 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.

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in the Interest of S. M., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

' No. 08-11-00288-CV ' Appeal from IN THE INTEREST OF S.M., A CHILD ' 65th District Court ' of El Paso County, Texas '

' (TC # 2010CM724)

OPINION

In this accelerated appeal, Appellant (Raul) challenges an order terminating his parental

rights to S.M. and appointing the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as S.M.’s

sole managing conservator. He brings five issues for review, four of which relate to the

sufficiency of the evidence supporting termination. The remaining issue attacks the denial of a

motion for continuance. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

S.M. was born on July 16, 2009. Raul has been incarcerated all of S.M.’s life and has

never met his daughter. On February 2, 2010, at approximately 3 p.m., S.M.’s mother left the

infant alone in a motel room. S.M. was not quite seven months old at the time. A neighboring

motel guest heard the baby crying and discovered her alone on the bed. The neighbor took her to

another motel resident who knew S.M.’s mother. Around 2 a.m. on February 3, 2010, S.M.’s

mother “strolled back in, intoxicated.” An altercation occurred between S.M.’s mother and the

resident caring for S.M. The police were dispatched to the motel and the Department was called. The police arrested S.M.’s mother for child endangerment, and the Department caseworker

placed the baby in foster care.

The following day, the Department filed its original petition for protection of a child,

seeking conservatorship of S.M. and termination of the parental rights of both parents. The

motion was accompanied by an affidavit from the caseworker detailing the events leading to

removal. On February 5, 2010, the trial court entered temporary orders appointing the

Department as temporary sole managing conservator. The mother’s rights were terminated prior

to trial, which was scheduled for September 20, 2011.

At trial, the Department introduced judgments from Raul’s four prior convictions. Three

of the convictions involved assault and one involved possession of cocaine. In May 2001, Raul

pled guilty to assault of a police officer. He was placed on probation for five years, but less than

seven months later, his probation was revoked for failing to meet with his probation officer as

required. Raul admittedly absconded to Florida to try to get a job and to “start a new support for

[his] family.” As a result of violating the terms of his probation, Raul was incarcerated for three

years. He evidently was released early because on December 22, 2003, he was convicted for

possession of cocaine and ordered to serve 180 days. Finally, the Department introduced

evidence of two separate convictions of family violence assault causing bodily injury. Both were

committed against S.M.’s mother. Raul pled guilty to the first offense and was sentenced to

seventy-five days in the El Paso County Jail. He also pled guilty to the second offense and was

sentenced to four years’ imprisonment.

At trial, Raul admitted he pled guilty to each and every offense, but claimed he was

actually innocent of all charges. For example, he testified that because of his experiences with

-2- drugs, he’s a good role model for S.M. and is “educated enough to tell her, Look, don’t be doing

this.” However, the following question and answer session followed:

Q. [BY COUNSEL FOR S.M.]: You didn’t learn that after your first assault conviction?

A. [BY APPELLANT]: No, I did not learn that, because it was simply not an assault. The police officer assaulted me.

Q. Okay. You didn’t learn that after your conviction for possession of cocaine or a cocaine pipe?

A. It wasn’t possession of cocaine.

Q. You pled guilty to possession of cocaine?

A. I pled guilty. I was not competent in the field of law. If I was competent in the field of law, I would have won all those cases.

Q. You still didn’t learn from being incarcerated, a second time, that you shouldn’t do stuff against the law; correct?

A. It was -- correct. Yes. I kept on doing it and doing it.

Q. But you’re testifying before the Court now that you’ve learned your lesson now and you don’t intend to commit any crime?

A. Yes, sir.
Q. Even though you assaulted a family member?

A. It was not an assault. Of course, under the law, even if I raise my voice to her and she feels threatened, that is considered assault.

Q. But you physically touched her; correct?
A. Yes, I physically touched her.

Q. After being incarcerated for assault once, incarcerated for cocaine once, you still broke the law with an assault on a family member?

A. Yes.

. . .

Q. [BY MR. SHANE]: Sir, earlier you testified that you had pled guilty to hitting [S.M.’s mother] with your hand on her face; correct?

-3- A. No, I did not. I pled guilty, but I did not hit her on the face. It was due to the fact the State does not -- if I was to stay in jail, it’s three months. It’s a Class A misdemeanor. It’s three months without -- I need to get out, make money, so on. So I pleaded guilty.

Q. You were under oath when you pled guilty; right?
A. Yes, I pleaded guilty under oath.
Q. Just like you’re under oath today?

Q. So you’re telling the Court, prior, when you pled guilty under oath and said you did that, you were not telling the truth?

A. I wanted to get out, yes.
Q. You were not telling the truth under oath?
A. We had a complication.
Q. Sir, it’s a simple question. Did you lie under oath when you pled guilty?
A. That I hit her on the face? Yes, I lied under oath.

Q. Taking an oath really doesn’t mean anything to you whether you’re going to tell the truth or not?

A. (No audible response.)
Q. So under oath you lied; correct?
A. Under that day, yes. That day, I did not assault her on the face.
Q. But you lied under oath when you said you did?
A. Right. That day, yes.

Raul also testified regarding his permanency plan for S.M. “My plan for the future is to

educate my child, try to keep her away from society.” He emphasized that he does not believe

society is a proper role model and that he wants to teach his daughter that the system is corrupt.

In fact, he wants S.M. to be brought to the prison to visit him so that “she could see what the

State is doing to me and other people.”

-4- Raul acknowledged at trial that currently he has no way of supporting S.M. because he is

incarcerated, but he has completed a drug course program and is up for parole. Once out of

prison he plans to look for a job and to live in a one-bedroom duplex owned by his uncle. His

uncle also testified. He was willing to help Raul upon release from prison. The uncle lived in a

duplex with a two bedroom unit on one side and a one bedroom unit on the other. The one

bedroom unit was unoccupied and Raul could stay there as long as he wanted. But it had been

“kind of destroyed” by the previous tenants, and it did not have electricity, a refrigerator, or a

stove.

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