In the Interest of S.S.B. and A.A.C., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 2023
Docket01-23-00278-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of S.S.B. and A.A.C., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services (In the Interest of S.S.B. and A.A.C., Children v. 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 S.S.B. and A.A.C., Children v. Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 5, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-23-00278-CV ——————————— IN THE INTEREST OF A.A.C., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2021-01162J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After a bench trial, the trial court terminated the parent-child relationship

between A.R.C. (Mother) and A.A.C. (Alan).1 Mother appeals the termination order,

raising three issues: (1) the evidence is insufficient to support a finding of

constructive abandonment; (2) the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that

1 We use a pseudonym to refer to the child involved here. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 109.002(d); TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2). termination is in Alan’s best interest; and (3) the trial court erred by appointing the

Department of Family and Protective Services as Alan’s sole managing conservator.

Because the evidence supports the trial court’s termination order, we affirm.

Background

Alan was born in 2020 and came to the Department’s attention when a report

was made in 2021 alleging neglectful supervision by Mother. In 2021, the

Department petitioned to be named temporary managing conservator of Alan and

his two older siblings, V.H. (Valerie) and S.B. (Sarah), on an emergency basis and

to terminate Mother’s parental rights.2 See TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 105.001(a), 262.101.

The trial court granted the Department’s emergency request and later held a full

adversary hearing. Id. § 262.201. After the adversary hearing, the trial court

appointed the Department as the children’s temporary managing conservator

pending a final hearing in the suit.

Mother’s family service plan listed family reunification as the primary

permanency goal for each child. The plan noted reports that Mother was “unstable”

and had moved “from state to state.” It also noted that Valerie and Sarah reported

that, while under Mother’s care, they were evicted from homes and had their utilities

2 We use a pseudonym to refer to the children. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2). Mother has five children. Three of the children (Valerie, Sarah, and Alan) were under Mother’s care prior to the Department’s care. Her two other children, T.C. (Tina) and T.C. (Tyler), reside with their father in Houston. Id. 2 shut off. They also reported that Mother physically, mentally, and emotionally

abused them. The plan also stated that Mother was using marijuana while driving

with the children, and that she was admitted to a psychiatric hospital because of

“concerns over her mental health and her being a threat to herself and others.” The

plan required Mother to provide stable housing for the children and maintain that

housing for at least six months; participate in all meetings and court hearings;

maintain monthly contact with the Department; obtain and maintain employment for

at least six months; complete family therapy, as well as substance abuse, psychiatric,

and psychological assessments, and follow all recommendations from these

assessments.

Before trial, the Department filed a permanency report documenting Mother’s

progress on her family service plan. It stated that Mother had obtained housing from

May 2022 to April 2023, was employed, had maintained contact with the

Department, and participated in family therapy. Mother also completed a substance

abuse assessment in December 2021, a psychiatric evaluation in December 2022,

and a psychological evaluation in February 2022, which diagnosed her with bipolar

disorder. She completed substance abuse counseling in December 2022 and

individual counseling in June 2022. Lastly, drug testing showed that she tested

positive for cocaine in November 2022.

3 The permanency report also detailed the Department’s concerns about Alan’s

older siblings, including child neglect and suspected physical abuse. In December

2021, Valerie (17) and Sarah (15) participated in mental health assessments. Both

admitted experiencing suicidal thoughts and self-harm. And both were diagnosed

with adjustment disorder, mixed anxiety, depressed mood, and unspecified trauma.

The assessment recommended therapy for both children and that their

communication with biological family members “be strictly supervised and

monitored to decrease the chances of [them] being privy to information that may

heighten [their] level of anxiety and distress.”

A. Trial

Trial began in January 2023 with brief testimony from J. Coto, the

Department’s caseworker. Coto recounted that Alan was two years old and living in

a foster home in Houston, Texas, and his sister, Sarah, was residing in a 24-hour

residential childcare facility.3 The trial court then recessed until March 2023.

In March, Mother informed the trial court that she agreed with naming Sarah’s

paternal grandmother as Sarah’s sole managing conservator, but she did not want

her parental rights terminated as to Alan. Instead, Mother wanted him also placed

with Sarah’s paternal grandmother, a non-blood relative to Alan, or for the

3 Before trial began, Valerie turned 18. 4 Department to be named Alan’s permanent managing conservator without

terminating her parental rights.

Per Coto, Alan remained in the same foster home where he had been living

since the suit began, and that Sarah was now living with her paternal grandmother.

He testified that Alan had been in his foster home for most of his life, and his foster

parents were meeting his physical and emotional needs and would adopt him if

parental rights were terminated.

Coto next discussed that the three children came to the Department’s attention

most recently because of allegations that Mother smoked marijuana while driving

them from Louisiana to Houston and posted on social media that she needed to save

her family and that they were all going to heaven. Mother then had a “mental health

episode” and was placed in a psychiatric hospital where she stayed for a month.

When asked about the Department’s concerns about Mother, Coto agreed that the

primary concerns were her drug use and mental health issues.

Coto also discussed Mother’s drug testing. Mother lived in Louisiana and only

participated in drug testing when she came to visit Alan, because the Department

would only pay for drug testing done in Texas. She was tested eight times and was

found to have failed twice, once due to medication prescribed by her doctor and once

due to illegal narcotics. Coto explained that he had continuing concerns over

5 Mother’s drug use and that part of her therapy required her to maintain three months

of negative drug tests.

Next, Coto recalled Mother’s history with the Department stemming from

cases in 2012 and 2013, which involved concerns about Mother’s mental health and

child neglect. Mother also had two neglectful-supervision cases in 2015 over

concerns about her drug use and mental health. But only two of the cases, one in

2013 and one in 2015, were ruled as “reason to believe” by the Department.

Addressing Mother’s family service plan, Coto conceded that Mother

completed the psychiatric, psychological, and substance abuse assessments, as well

as individual, family, and substance abuse therapy. And that she was receiving

medication management through a Louisiana service provider. He had also visited

Mother’s home in Louisiana and said it was appropriate.

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