in the Interest of T.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. A/K/A S.M., and D.M., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2009
Docket02-09-00145-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of T.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. A/K/A S.M., and D.M., Children (in the Interest of T.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. A/K/A S.M., and D.M., Children) 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 T.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. A/K/A S.M., and D.M., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

                                                COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                                 FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-09-145-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF T.M., D.M., JR.,

C.M. A/K/A S.M., AND D.M., CHILDREN                                                 

                                              ------------

           FROM THE 323RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

Appellant D.M. (Father) appeals the trial court=s order that terminated his parental rights to four of his children.[2]  In seven points, he argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support any statutory basis for terminating his rights and that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for continuance.  We affirm.


Background Facts

Father and T.M. (Mother) are the parents of the children who are subject to this suitCT.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. a/k/a/ S.M., and D.M.[3]  Father moved to Pennsylvania in May 2007, and in August 2007, he and Mother left the children with Mother=s cousin (Cousin) in Texas.  Father said that he was moving to Pennsylvania just for the summer to sell newspapers and that he would come back to Texas Abefore school started.@  He occasionally called the children, but he never visited them.  He sent the children money Aa couple of times.@

In December 2007, because Cousin could not adequately meet the children=s needs, they went to stay with Father=s mother (Grandmother). Grandmother began to have financial and marital problems, and in June 2008, she brought the children to the Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) because she believed that she could not care for them any longer.


After Grandmother gave the children to the Department, it filed its original petition; at that time, the children=s ages ranged from three to eight.  In the original petition and in an amended petition, the Department alleged that it had made reasonable efforts to reunify the children with Father and that Father had constructively abandoned the children.  Thus, the Department asked the trial court to terminate Father=s rights if reunification could not be achieved.  An affidavit attached to the Department=s original petition detailed Father=s failure to return from Pennsylvania despite his representations that he would do so and his failure to leave proper medical documents about the children.  The trial court entered an order naming the Department as the children=s temporary sole managing conservator.

In July 2008, the Department filed its initial service plans (including a separate plan for each of the children and a comprehensive AFamily Service Plan@).  The service plans explained that the Department=s goal remained to be reunification but that the children had basic needs including food, shelter, supervision, routine medical care, and a safe home environment.  The initial and subsequent service plans asked Father to, among other tasks, demonstrate responsibility in parenting, visit the children as much as possible, complete a psychological evaluation, and participate in drug assessments, random drug tests, and parenting classes.[4] 


The Department scheduled a family group conference for July 31, 2008, and it told Father that it would pay for his bus ticket to Texas to attend the conference and visit the children.  However, Father did not attend the conference; instead, he participated in the conference by telephone.  During the conference call, Father expressed anger toward the Department and his family, and he was Avulgar, very confrontational, [and] not cooperative at all.  [The conference facilitator] had to actually take him off of speakerphone a couple of times.@

In November 2008, the Department opined that Father had Aessentially abandoned@ his children by moving to Pennsylvania and by failing to move back to Texas or visit his children despite the Department=s requests that he do so. A progress report filed by the Department indicated that in November 2008, the children had minimal phone contact with Father but that his phone number was frequently disconnected and that he did not maintain contact with the Department.  By that time, the children had expressed that they did not wish to leave their foster home.


In January 2009, after the trial court granted Father=s and Mother

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in the Interest of T.M., D.M., Jr., C.M. A/K/A S.M., and D.M., Children, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-tm-dm-jr-cm-aka-sm-and-dm-child-texapp-2009.