K. M. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

388 S.W.3d 396, 2012 WL 5835332, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9565
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 2012
Docket08-12-00018-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 388 S.W.3d 396 (K. M. 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
K. M. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, 388 S.W.3d 396, 2012 WL 5835332, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9565 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

GUADALUPE RIVERA, Justice.

In this accelerated appeal, Appellant K.M. (Kari) appeals from the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights to her child, S.M., and appointing the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services as S.M.’s sole managing conservator. 1 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

After S.M. reported that she had been sexually abused by her stepfather, Bran *399 don, Department Investigator Kristen Johnson was assigned in May 2010 to investigate the allegations. 2 Johnson interviewed S.M., Brandon, and S.M.’s mother, Kari. S.M. informed Johnson that she did not believe Kari was aware of Brandon’s abuse, which consisted of touching S.M. “over and under her clothing, on her breast and on her butt.” According to Johnson, Kari was hostile during the investigation and expressed a disbelief that the sexual abuse had occurred. Brandon, however, admitted touching S.M. a dozen times, over and underneath S.M.’s clothing in September 2009. Although Brandon had begun attending Sex Addicts Anonymous in January 2010, S.M. informed Johnson that Brandon continued to abuse her thereafter. Finding reason to believe that Brandon had sexually abused S.M., Johnson referred the case to Family-Based Safety Services (FBSS).

In July 2011, Johnson attended the sentencing phase of a military court-martial proceeding after Brandon had been tried and found guilty of an offense arising from his sexual misconduct with S.M. 3 At the sentencing hearing, Kari testified that she did not believe the sexual-abuse allegations against Brandon and requested that the court show leniency in sentencing Brandon so that he could support her and her other children.

Johnson believed Kari’s treatment of S.M. had endangered S.M.’s emotional and physical well-being. Johnson stated that over the course of several interviews with S.M., “[Kari] was telling [S.M.] that it was not a big deal ... [and she] was a big girl and she just needed to basically suck it up.” She further opined that S.M. had been both emotionally and physically affected by what had occurred and observed that Kari “was more upset that she was going to lose her benefits” than she was concerned for S.M.’s welfare. Johnson never observed Kari express compassion or understanding toward S.M. Rather, Johnson believed that Kari’s testimony at Brandon’s sentencing hearing indicated that Kari intended to stay married to Brandon.

Lauren Williams, a supervisor for an investigative unit at Child Protective Services, participated in an investigation regarding S.M.’s October 2010, allegation that Kari had physically abused S.M. S.M. had “received” a black eye and reported that her mother had hit her in the face. Williams assigned investigator Alexandra Acuna to the physical-abuse case. S.M. informed Acuna that she and Kari argued because Kari was angry that Brandon was being criminally prosecuted, blamed S.M. for “what had gone on,” told S.M. that it was her fault that the family was having difficulties, and then hit S.M. in the face. According to Williams, Acuna had observed bruising and swelling around S.M.’s eye area consistent with S.M.’s description of the assault. Acuna’s affidavit specified that Kari had been waving her fists in S.M.’s face, that S.M. had passed out, and had awakened the next morning with a black eye. Williams concluded that Kari had struck S.M. and that there was reason to believe that Kari had physically abused S.M. According to Williams, the incident not only caused physical endangerment to S.M. but also caused emotional endangerment because Kari was not supportive of S.M. as a sexual-abuse victim, did not believe the sexual abuse had occurred, and blamed S.M. for Brandon’s actions. Ac *400 cording to Williams, Kari thereafter placed S.M. at a runaway shelter from which S.M. ran away a few weeks later. After she ran away, S.M. informed Acuna that she was “terrified to go home” and was “scared for her life” because of Kari. The Department then “removed” S.M. Williams testified that she believed S.M.’s fear of her mother was valid and S.M. was thereafter “removed.”

The Department’s caseworker assigned to S.M. since December 2010, Tanya Berry, provided Kari with a court-ordered service plan which Kari signed and they reviewed together. 4 Berry testified that Kari had failed to complete a drug and alcohol assessment and did not attend family therapy with S.M. as required by the terms of the court-ordered service plan. Kari moved to Utah in January 2011, but failed to comply with Berry’s request to provide the Department with documentation of services that Kari may have obtained in Utah in compliance with the service plan. As a consequence, Berry was unable to ascertain whether Kari had completed her therapy, had refrained from drug or alcohol use, or had obtained employment or suitable housing as mandated by the sendee plan. Kari failed to pay court-ordered child support.

According to Berry, Kari failed to comply with the requirement that she visit with S.M. on a regular basis and stated that S.M. last saw Kari face-to-face on January 25, 2011, when Berry and S.M. retrieved some of S.M.’s belongings from Kari’s home. Although Kari traveled back to attend Brandon’s court-martial hearing for a three or four-day period in July 2011, Kari made no effort to see S.M., despite the fact that Berry and S.M. were present at the hearing. Berry related that Kari testified in S.M.’s presence that she did not believe S.M’s allegations and was concerned about the welfare of herself and her other children. S.M. informed Berry that since Kari moved in January 2011, Kari had sent messages through Facebook to S.M. which were “never positive” and blamed S.M. for breaking up the family. Kari’s messages did not indicate a desire to see S.M. and Berry related that Kari failed to maintain contact with S.M. without providing any excuse for such failure. With the exception of a single email in September 2011, in which she expressed dissatisfaction because the Department had not encouraged S.M. to move to Utah and general dissatisfaction with Berry’s performance, Kari stopped communicating with Berry after March 2011, and failed to provide Berry with any information about where she was living. In the September 2011 email to Berry, Kari did not inquire about S.M.’s well-being. Thereafter, Kari did not return any of Berry’s email or telephone messages. Despite Berry’s weekly emails to Kari, which included another copy of the service plan, S.M.’s psychological evaluation, temporary orders, status-hearing orders, and a request for updates on any services Kari may have obtained in Utah, Kari provided “no response at all.”

S.M. expressed a desire to continue living with her foster family, and Berry testified that she is extremely supportive of S.M.’s placement with the foster family and that S.M.’s adoption by the foster family is part of the Department’s permanency plan for S.M. According to Berry, Kari has shown no remorse for her treatment of S.M., has not expressed any future plans in relation to S.M., has not demonstrated any parenting ability that shows an *401 appropriate relationship with S.M., has not been a positive role model for S.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
388 S.W.3d 396, 2012 WL 5835332, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-m-v-texas-department-of-family-and-protective-services-texapp-2012.