in the Interest of T.M. and E. M., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 2017
Docket01-16-00942-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Interest of T.M. and E. M., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 9, 2017

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00942-CV ——————————— IN THE INTEREST OF T.M. AND E.M., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 315th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2014-03559J

MEMORANDUM OPINION

E.M. appeals from the trial court’s judgment terminating his parental rights to

his daughters, T.M. (“Theresa”) and E.M. (“Emma”). In one issue, E.M. contends

that the evidence is factually insufficient to support a finding that termination of his

parental rights is in the children’s best interest. We affirm. Background

On April 18, 2014, the Department of Family and Protective Services received

a referral alleging neglectful supervision of Theresa (three years old) and Emma (one

year old) by their mother, A.N.T. The referral alleged that A.N.T. was charged with

child endangerment after being stopped for driving 84 to 100 miles an hour with

Theresa in the car. This incident led to her subsequent arrest for possession of

cocaine.1 Theresa was subsequently released into the care of her father, E.M.

On June 24, 2014, the Department received another referral alleging

neglectful supervision of Theresa and Emma, this time by E.M. and A.N.T. The

intake report alleged that E.M. and A.N.T. were fighting because the Department

had become involved and E.M. refused to take a drug test, E.M. had strangled A.N.T.

in the apartment, and that A.N.T. had bruises on her back and legs. Theresa and

Emma were in the apartment at the time of the altercation. According to the report,

E.M., A.N.T., and the children got into E.M.’s vehicle and A.N.T. later jumped out

and flagged down police. E.M. was subsequently arrested for possession of a

controlled substance, cocaine, and for domestic violence. The report alleged that

E.M.’s apartment was filthy with trash everywhere, Theresa and Emma slept on the

floor because there was no furniture, E.M. was going to be evicted from the

apartment, Emma had a diaper rash down to her thighs, Theresa’s hair was knotted,

1 A.N.T. had twenty-five grams of cocaine in her possession at the time of her arrest. 2 and that the children needed to be bathed. The children were removed from E.M.’s

care the same day.

On June 25, 2014, the Department filed an Original Petition for Protection of

a Child, for Conservatorship, and for Termination in Suit Affecting the Parent-Child

Relationship, accompanied by the affidavit of Jerri Thomas, a Department

caseworker. In its petition, the Department requested that it be named temporary

managing conservator of Theresa and Emma. In her affidavit, Thomas cited the

children’s exposure to A.N.T.’s drug use and possession, E.M.’s drug possession

while Theresa and Emma were in his care, and the parents’ domestic violence in the

presence of the children, in support of the Department’s request that the children be

removed and that it be named temporary managing conservator.

On September 4, 2014, the Department created a family service plan for E.M.

which required, among other things, that he complete a psychosocial evaluation and

follow all recommendations; successfully complete domestic violence classes;

maintain contact with the Department caseworker at least once a month; maintain

stable and safe housing for a minimum of six months consecutively and provide the

caseworker with a current lease and utility bills; provide the caseworker with all

sources of income by the 15th of each month or, if not employed, proof of his

registration with WorkSource and a list of at least three employers to whom he has

submitted an application; refrain from engaging in any criminal activities; complete

3 a drug/alcohol assessment and follow all recommendations; participate in

drug/alcohol testing and show progress by testing negative for drugs and alcohol;

and successfully complete parenting classes.

The trial began on November 30, 2015, and was recessed until February 1,

2016, at the request of A.N.T.’s counsel.2 When trial resumed, Deputy L. Lizcano

with the Harris County Constable’s Office testified that her sergeant was flagged

down in response to a disturbance involving A.N.T. and E.M. in June 2014. When

Deputy Lizcano arrived at the scene, A.N.T. told her that she and E.M. had had an

argument in his car and that she had jumped out. Deputy Lizcano testified that

A.N.T. had bruises on her back, neck, and legs. A.N.T. told her that E.M. had hit

and choked her during an argument that morning and that he had beaten her a few

days earlier. Deputy Lizcano then accompanied A.N.T. back to her apartment to

look for the children. Deputy Lizcano described the apartment as dirty with trash

everywhere, and furnished only with a blow-up mattress on the floor. A.N.T. told

Deputy Lizcano that she was not supposed to be around her children because she

had been arrested for having a suitcase full of drugs that belonged to E.M. while one

of her children was with her, and that the children had been removed from her care.

2 The recess was requested so that A.N.T., who was incarcerated at the time, could appear at trial. 4 A.N.T. also told Deputy Lizcano that E.M. was a drug dealer, that he kept the drugs

in his truck, and that she had been with him on several drug deals.

Deputy Lizcano was then dispatched to a nearby car wash gas station where

she found E.M., Theresa, and Emma. Deputy Lizcano testified that the two little

girls “looked bad”: the toddler’s hair was badly matted, and the infant was wearing

a dirty diaper and had a severe diaper rash down her thighs. Deputy Lizcano testified

that A.N.T. changed the infant’s diaper and that E.M. had ointment in the car for

Emma’s rash. Deputy Lizcano testified that E.M. was subsequently taken into

custody and that the Department picked up the children.

After a recess, trial resumed on October 7, 2016. Prior to calling its first

witness, the Department introduced numerous exhibits, which the trial court

admitted, including the following: E.M.’s conviction for possession of a controlled

substance, for which he was sentenced to seventy days’ incarceration; E.M.’s plea

of guilty to misdemeanor theft, for which he received deferred adjudication; E.M.’s

October 15, 2014 drug test, with positive results for cocaine and marijuana; E.M.’s

February 4, 2015 drug test, with positive results for cocaine; E.M.’s August 24, 2015

drug test, with positive results for cocaine and marijuana; E.M.’s November 30, 2015

drug test, with positive results for amphetamine, methamphetamine, cocaine, and

marijuana; E.M.’s February 8, 2016 drug test, with positive results for cocaine and

5 marijuana; E.M.’s March 3, 2016 drug test, with positive results for cocaine; and

E.M.’s May 20, 2016 drug test, with positive results for cocaine.

Sergeant L. Gonzales with the Harris County Constable’s Office testified that,

on June 24, 2014, A.N.T. flagged him down and told him that she had been assaulted

by her husband, E.M. Sergeant Gonzales testified that A.N.T’s neck was red and

that she had bruising on her back and legs. Sergeant Gonzales accompanied A.N.T.

to her apartment which he described as “pretty filthy,” with trash in the rooms, and

no furniture except a blow-up mattress in the living room. Sergeant Gonzales

subsequently located E.M., Theresa, and Emma and conducted a pat down search of

E.M.

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