in the Interest of T.M.E., A.J.E., and R.J.E., Children

565 S.W.3d 383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 2018
Docket06-18-00046-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 565 S.W.3d 383 (in the Interest of T.M.E., A.J.E., and R.J.E., 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.E., A.J.E., and R.J.E., Children, 565 S.W.3d 383 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-18-00046-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF T.M.E., A.J.E., AND R.J.E., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 102nd District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 14C0249-102

Before Morriss, C.J., Moseley and Burgess, JJ. Opinion by Justice Burgess OPINION The Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) filed a petition to

terminate Aurelio Ron’s 1 parental rights to his three children. The trial court granted the

Department’s petition and terminated Ron’s parental rights following a bench trial establishing

that Ron was a Mexican national living in Mexico. On appeal, Ron argues that he was never served

with notice of the Department’s suit against him. Because we agree, we reverse the trial court’s

judgment and remand the case for a new trial.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

This case began in 2013 when the Department initiated an investigation of the children’s

mother, Amber Kim. Kim informed Department caseworkers that Ron was voluntarily living in

Mexico and was the father of all three children. As a result of Kim’s drug tests that were positive

for marihuana, the Department filed an original petition in 2014 to terminate Kim’s and Ron’s

parental rights to their children. Although the Department filed an amended petition alleging

grounds for termination against Kim only, on July 14, 2015, the trial court also terminated Ron’s

parental rights, even after finding that he was not notified of and did not appear at the final hearing.

In fact, the Department had not served Ron with its petition.

As a result, on July 26, 2017, the Department filed a petition which asked the trial court to

vacate its prior order terminating Ron’s parental rights so it could consider its new request to

terminate those rights. The Department’s new petition, filed under the same cause number as prior

proceedings which had resulted in the void order against Ron, alleged that Ron’s address was

1 We use pseudonyms for involved parties to protect the confidentiality of the children. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8.

2 “CARR ACAPULCO MEXICO SN, LOC ORGANOS DE J R ESCUDERO, ACAPULCO DE

JUAREZ, GRO MEXICO 39901.” It also attached an affidavit executed by April Hays, a Child

Protective Services Supervisor, which stated:

On June 6th 2016, I received contact from Juan Carlos Galicia Villanueva, representative of the Mexican Consulate, requesting information on the father’s behalf. A copy of the termination order was sent to him on that date. At that time, I researched the case and discovered that the father had never been served and no pleadings of termination where [sic] contained in the petition for [Ron]. Later that month, Caseworker Chanda Zachery, [sic] received a letter from the father requesting an extension. The letter included an address and email address. Since that time, the Department has attempted to reach him through the contact information that he provided and he has not responded. He is a citizen of Mexico. At this time, his whereabouts are unknown and the Department has had no contact with him since the letter dated May 31st, 2016.

At a hearing held on July 27, 2017, the trial court found void its previous order and noted the

Department’s representations that it still had “not been able to locate [Ron] as of now.”

The clerk’s record established that the citation and petition were mailed from the clerk’s

office, twice to the wrong address. Initially, citation was mailed to “60S ORGANOS DE J R

EDCUDERO 39901 ACAPULCO DE JUAREZ GRO” and was then sent to “CARR ACAPULCO

MEXICO SN LOC ORGANOS DE J R ESCUDERO 39901 ACAPULCO DE JUAREZ GRO.”

In an August 16, 2017, status report, the Department stated that “[s]ervice ha[d] been sent to

Mexico by certified mail from the clerk’s office” and that it would “seek help from the Mexican

consulate to locate” Ron. At an August 31, 2017, hearing, the trial court noted, “The father is in

Mexico. We’ve tried numerous times to locate him and have him served. I hate to say, in all

likelihood probably will not get him served, but we’ll keep trying.”

3 On September 24, 2017, Ron mailed a letter stating that he had received on August 1, 2017,

“a judicial letter . . . [o]riginated from the state of Texas, with the cause number 14C0249-102,

sent from the Department of Family Services and Protection [sic]” notifying him “of this situation

that these minors are confronting,” which was previously “unknown” to him. Because the

unsigned, typewritten letter was addressed “[t]o whom [it] may concern” and contained no address

for the addressee, it is unclear who received and filed Ron’s letter. 2 Ron’s letter stated that he was

the father of the children and wished to be reunited with them, but was unable to do so as a result

of his immigration status. Ron further stated that he was divorced from Kim, that the two had lost

contact, that he was surprised to hear that the children were in a foster home, and that he was

“available for any action that the jury assigns.” Ron provided a telephone number and an

incomplete address in the letter and asked that he be notified of “any procedure to take.” Although

the letter did not indicate that Ron had received the new citation and petition or had any knowledge

that the Department sought to terminate his parental rights, this letter was labeled by the clerk as

an answer to the Department’s suit.

On October 10, 2017, the trial court found that Ron was not served with notice of a status

hearing and had no counsel. Accordingly, the trial court appointed counsel for Ron. In its April 18,

2 Although the letter contains the district clerk’s date and time stamp, the envelope in which the letter was mailed is not a part of our appellate record. Accordingly, we do not know whether the letter was mailed directly to the district clerk or whether it was mailed to someone else who then filed it with the district clerk. Logically, in order to find that a defendant has answered a lawsuit, there must be (1) a writing containing sufficient information to constitute an answer and (2) proof that the defendant—or someone authorized to act on behalf of the defendant—presented the writing to the district clerk for filing in the clerk’s record. It is both the content of the document and the act of filing the document with the district clerk that constitutes an answer. Consequently, in the absence of proof that Ron—or someone on his behalf—mailed the letter to the district clerk, the letter cannot be characterized as an answer to the lawsuit. 4 2018, permanency hearing order, the trial court found that Ron “ha[d] not been served in this cause,

and therefore ha[d] not been notified.” The court also found that “[t]he department ha[d] sent

service paperwork to the Mexican consult [sic] for service on the father” and that “said papers

[had] not been returned to the department.” The record contains no return of service on file, shows

that the citation and petition sent by the clerk’s office were sent to the wrong address, and does not

establish the addresses used by the Department in mailing any of its letters. The record also fails

to contain any notices sent by the trial court informing Ron of the final hearing.

Ron did not appear at the final hearing. Referring to Ron’s September 24 letter, the

Department asked the trial court to “take judicial notice of the answer that was filed by [Ron],”

which the court did. 3 Chanda Zachery, the Department’s caseworker, testified that she tried to dial

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