J. M. and A. G. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 2013
Docket03-12-00487-CV
StatusPublished

This text of J. M. and A. G. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (J. M. and A. G. v. Texas 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
J. M. and A. G. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-12-00487-CV

J. M. and A. G., Appellants

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 207TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 2011-1242, HONORABLE WILLIAM HENRY, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In June 2011, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services filed a petition

seeking custody of father J.M. and mother A.G.’s children, T.M. and A.M., based on allegations that

the children were being neglected and that T.M. was being abused. The Department also sought

custody of H.M., a daughter born the day the Department filed its petition. At the time of trial,

son T.M. was four and one-half years old, daughter A.M. was three and one-half years old, and H.M.

was not quite one year old. The Department asserted that T.M., who had numerous physical and

developmental problems, had been injured while in his parents’ care, sustaining in three separate

incidents a broken arm, a cut over his eye that required ten stitches, and a black eye. The Department

alleged that several witnesses were concerned that J.M. was abusive or at least neglectful of

T.M. and was endangering him through his erratic behavior and use of alcohol. Although earlier

allegations of neglect and abuse had been ruled out, the Department was concerned because both

J.M. and A.G. had prior arrests for marihuana possession, J.M. had undergone treatment for cocaine addiction and continued to use alcohol and marihuana, and J.M. had difficulty controlling

his temper and was verbally aggressive. T.M. was placed in a therapeutic foster home where he

could receive appropriate medical care, and A.M. and H.M. were placed together in another foster

home. After eleven months, the Department sought termination instead of reunification, and a jury

trial was held in May 2012. The jury determined that J.M.’s and A.G.’s parental rights should be

terminated and that termination was in the children’s best interest, and the trial court signed a final

order in accordance with those findings.

Both J.M. and A.G. appeal, attacking the sufficiency of the evidence to support

termination under section 161.001(1)(D) or (E), the statutory grounds relied upon for termination.

J.M. also argues that the evidence is insufficient to show statutory grounds for the termination of his

rights or to support the jury’s findings that termination was in the children’s best interest, that J.M.

had the required mental state, or that the Department should be appointed managing conservator.

We affirm the trial court’s final order of termination.

Summary of the Evidence

Amanda Tolleson testified that she worked as T.M.’s night nurse for about two and

one-half years, helping the family from 8:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. Tolleson was with the family during

A.G.’s pregnancies with A.M. and H.M., and she formed a personal relationship with J.M. and A.G.

and spent time with them outside of work. Tolleson testified that she smelled marihuana on J.M.

occasionally and that she witnessed him use it “a couple of times.” She never saw other drugs in the

house. Tolleson said J.M. “drank on a daily basis” and had a very high tolerance for alcohol. She

did not believe his marihuana or alcohol use influenced his behavior or endangered the children.

2 When Tolleson started working with the family, T.M. was on a ventilator and could

not breathe on his own, was deaf, could not take anything by mouth, could not sit on his own, and

could not speak. T.M. later came off the ventilator and needed oxygen periodically, and Tolleson

said J.M. “was knowledgeable of [T.M.]’s medical needs and how to provide for them.” Tolleson

testified that the parents got training in early childhood intervention and were instructed to gently

push T.M. to teach him balance and how to fall without injuring himself.

Tolleson testified that for most of the time she was with the family, J.M., who was

unemployed, was the primary caregiver and would clean up the children’s toys, give them baths,

change diapers, feed them, and care for their needs. Tolleson said that the house was filthy and that,

although J.M. tried to clean up or do some dishes, “it was out of hand.” Tolleson never saw A.G.

help clean, and J.M. sometimes called A.G. lazy or threatened to leave because of it.

Tolleson’s impression of J.M. as a father was that he “wasn’t very loving, didn’t

seem to have a bond with [T.M. and A.M.], verbally and physically abusive.” Tolleson testified that

J.M. “would yell and be verbally—he would make inappropriate verbal commands,” although she

did not think T.M. could hear J.M.’s yelling. She believed J.M. was abusive with the way he signed

at T.M. but admitted that she knows very little sign language. She also testified that she saw J.M.

abuse the family’s animals, saying he would “choke them, kick them, throw them,” and that she

once saw J.M. punish the family’s cat by strangling or choking it. Although Tolleson was “fearful”

of J.M., she never saw him strike the children with his fists. She did, however, see marks on T.M.

that she believed were caused by being spanked with a belt, and during her time with the family,

Tolleson said she saw daily or weekly “aggravation”:

3 just spanking for different reasons, grabbing them by the foot to pick them up, you know, upside down, hanging upside, throw—throwing them into the baby bed, you know, from the doorway, maybe, however they landed. Just things like that. Just constantly aggravating, just—you know, the squeezing, the hitting—throwing things at them, hitting them in the head with toys.

You know, sometimes he’d just sit there and just bang [T.M.] in the head with a toy, no matter how hard it was, just to do it until [T.M.] would crawl away. But just—it was just a constant aggravating, a constant doing something to—pick on him, it seemed like. You know, push him over, kick him out of the way . . . grab him, push him down when he was pulled up on furniture.

When asked why she feared for the children’s safety, Tolleson said, “Same thing:

punishing them when nothing is happening; spanking them over doing it; throwing them into the baby

bed from the doorway; knocking them down; hitting them with objects; spanking them with belts.”

Tolleson testified that A.G.’s interaction with the children was minimal but never

abusive. A.G. never advocated for the children or defended them against J.M.’s abuse, however,

and Tolleson testified that A.G. usually ignored the children and “would sleep most of the time or

watch television.” Tolleson admitted that she was only present with A.G. and the children for about

two hours in the evenings before the children went to bed, and she did not know how A.G. behaved

during the rest of the day, other than hearing complaints from J.M.

Tolleson testified that when T.M. injured his head and needed stitches, J.M. explained

that he had been using his foot to push T.M. in his rocking chair when he pushed too hard, causing

T.M. to fall into a piece of furniture and cut his head; A.G. was not at home at the time. Tolleson

was asked about an instance when she saw significant bruising on T.M.’s face, body, and leg, and

she said J.M. told her that T.M., who was about two years old at the time, had wrenched his arm out

of J.M.’s hand and had fallen or thrown himself onto the rocks in the driveway. Finally, Tolleson

4 testified that when T.M. broke his arm, J.M.

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