in the Interest of T.W., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 2016
Docket05-16-00232-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of T.W., a Child (in the Interest of T.W., 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.

Bluebook
in the Interest of T.W., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed June 21, 2016

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-16-00232-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF T.W., A CHILD

On Appeal from the 256th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DF-15-00889

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Lang-Miers, and Myers Opinion by Justice Francis T.G.W. (Mother) and J.L.W. (Father) appeal the trial court’s decree terminating their

parental rights to their daughter, T.W. In separate briefs, Mother and Father challenge the legal

and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the decision to terminate their parental rights

and to appoint the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as permanent managing

conservator. For reasons set out below, we affirm.

The trial court conducted a bench trial to determine whether appellants’ parental rights

should be terminated. Neither Mother nor Father appeared at trial. The evidence showed that in

2014, both were involved in a parental termination case regarding their four children, all of

whom were in CPS custody.1 The case, which was “proceeding towards termination,” involved

1 Father was the biological father to three of the children; all of the children were born to Mother. allegations of domestic violence and substance abuse, and records showed appellants would not

cooperate in the investigation.

While the case was pending, the Department learned Mother was pregnant. A baby girl,

T.W., was born in September 2014. Over the next several months, Department caseworkers tried

numerous times to contact the family by phone and visits but could not confirm where T.W. was

living and whether she was safe. At one point, a caseworker saw Mother outside of the

courthouse during a hearing involving her other children. Mother gave the worker an address the

Department had previously confirmed was a P.O. Box mailing center. When the worker reached

Father by telephone, he refused to divulge the family’s address, come to CPS offices, or

participate in any services offered.

Because of concerns for T.W.’s safety and the parents’ lack of cooperation, in January

2015, the Department filed a “First Amended Petition for Investigation of Child Abuse or

Neglect, for Order to Participate in Services, and for Release of Information and Records.”

Although the Department believed T.W. lived with Mother, Father, or both, they could not

confirm T.W.’s residence or that it was safe. An affidavit was attached to the petition detailing

the Department’s efforts in attempting to locate appellants and T.W. over many months as well

as appellants’ prior CPS history, which included allegations that Father had been physically

violent with Mother and the other children and that one child tested positive for marijuana at

birth.

A hearing on the petition was scheduled for February 11. By this time, appellants’

parental rights to their other children had been terminated. Stephon Frazier, the Department

investigator assigned supervisor, testified he spoke with Mother the day before the hearing,

explained why the Department believed the family was not being cooperative, and talked to her

about being present in court to determine what further steps needed to be taken. Nonetheless,

–2– Mother was at least two hours late to the hearing. Frazier said he also spoke to Father, who kept

referring back to hearings regarding the other children and was reluctant to participate in services

regarding T.W. Following the hearing, the trial court ordered appellants to make T.W. and her

residence available to the Department for inspection. In addition, Mother and Father were

ordered to undergo psychological and psychiatric evaluations through a CPS provider; submit to

random urinalysis and hair strand drug testing within twenty-four hours of the Department’s

request; complete parenting classes; sign releases for information regarding the health and

mental health records of Mother and child, Father’s military records, and marriage/counseling;

and undergo individual counseling on domestic violence and, with respect to Father, anger

management. The order warned that failure to participate in the court-ordered services could

result in T.W.’s removal under chapter 262. A review hearing was scheduled two weeks later.

After the OTP hearing, Mother took T.W. to the CPS’s offices so that workers could look

her over. Also, a caseworker inspected Mother’s residence, noting that it was clean but was

devoid of any furniture except a crib. Additionally, the Department provided addresses and

phone numbers to appellants to start counseling.

On the day of the review hearing, the trial court reset the matter until March so that

appellants could obtain legal counsel. But the court ordered appellants to start their services and

ordered the Department to conduct a minimum of three unannounced visits to the residence

where T.W. was available, including that of any childcare provider who had possession. Over

the next two weeks, the caseworker tried on three different occasions to visit Mother’s residence

but no one answered so she left her contact information on the door. And although Mother gave

the name of the child care provider, she but did not give an address.

When the parties returned to court in March, Frazier said appellants had begun or

completed “close to none” of the court-ordered services, and the Department was concerned

–3– about “ongoing domestic violence” and appellants’ lack of cooperation. By that time, Frazier

explained, appellants’ rights had been terminated to their other four children because of domestic

violence, Mother had been diagnosed as bipolar but was not taking her medications, and Father

was “known to be a perpetrator of family violence,” all of which could put T.W. in immediate

danger. Although it was unclear whether Father was living in the home with Mother, the

Department had concerns that Mother was “unable to be protective” because she allowed the

child to be around Father. And despite its efforts, the Department had not been able to verify the

whereabouts of the child or whether she was in a safe location. The Department asked to be

named temporary managing conservator of T.W. with intent to place the child in foster care.

The trial court ordered the child removed from appellants’ custody, but Mother refused to

disclose T.W.’s whereabouts. It was only after the trial court ordered Mother taken into custody

that she revealed the child’s location. T.W. was placed in foster care that day. Appellants were

given caregiver resource forms to identify relatives or close friends to care for T.W. Both listed

Father as well as two relatives that lived in California.

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

conservatorship and for termination in the suit affecting parent-child relationship. Following a

hearing two weeks later, the trial court signed temporary orders naming the Department

temporary managing conservator of T.W. and again set out the services appellants needed to

complete. At trial, Frazier acknowledged there were no “new allegations” of domestic violence

between appellants from the time T.W. was born until her removal in March.

Nikisha Anderson, a caseworker, created the service plans that reflected the court-ordered

services appellants needed to complete for reunification to occur. According to Anderson,

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