L. C. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2024
Docket03-24-00322-CV
StatusPublished

This text of L. C. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (L. C. 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
L. C. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00322-CV

L.C., Appellant

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE 146TH DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY NO. 317,282, THE HONORABLE CHRISTOPHER L. CORNISH, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The trial court terminated L.C.’s (Mother) parental rights to two children after

finding multiple predicate grounds and finding that termination was in the children’s best

interest. See Tex. Fam. Code §§ 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E), (N), (O) (grounds for termination), (2)

(best interest). Mother contends that termination was not supported by sufficient evidence. She

contends that undisputed evidence showed that she visited the children regularly and could

provide a safe environment for them. She argues that the Texas Department of Family and

Protective Services (Department) made no efforts to return the children. Mother contends that

she complied with the service plan even when not ordered to do so, she neither created a danger

to the children nor allowed them to remain in dangerous surroundings, and that her drug use was

not shown to have affected her children. She also argues that the evidence was insufficient to

overcome the presumption that return to her is in the children’s best interest. We will affirm

the judgment. BACKGROUND

This case concerns Mother’s parental rights to two children—a twelve-year-old

and a five-year-old. 1 The Department’s Kayla Magee testified that she had been the

conservatorship worker since June 2023. She testified that the children had been in the

Department’s care since May 6, 2020, after the older child reported domestic violence by

Mother’s boyfriend against Mother. The removal led to the discovery that Mother was an active

methamphetamine user. The children were initially placed with their grandmother

(Grandmother). Mother’s access to the children was supposed to be supervised by the

Department, but Grandmother allowed her to stay overnight. One night, Mother’s boyfriend

(who was accused of domestic violence against Mother), broke into Grandmother’s home and

stole Mother’s phone. The children were removed from Grandmother because she had permitted

unsupervised contact between the children and Mother. The children were placed with fictive

kin, then moved to another foster home because the fictive kin could not be a long-term

placement. They were discharged from that home because the second foster home could not

manage the children’s behavior. The children then moved to their current placement.

Magee testified that in April 2022 the Department shifted its intention to

termination because Mother tested positive again for methamphetamine use. In October 2022,

Mother tested positive for methamphetamine use again while pregnant. 2 Magee testified that

1 The Department was unable to locate the children’s fathers or the fathers’ families. Mother said the father of the younger child was never involved in the child’s life and the father of the older child had last been in contact eight years earlier when the child was four. The fathers’ parental rights were terminated; those terminations are not part of this appeal. 2 The child with whom Mother was pregnant in October 2022 was one year old at the time of the trial below and was the subject of a Department case in Collin County, Texas. The Department sought termination of Mother’s rights to that child in Collin County. 2 Mother was incarcerated in Collin County, Texas, based on a violation of parole imposed for the

crime of possession of a controlled substance in 2020.

Magee testified that Mother was allowed four-hour visits once a month supervised

by the Department. Mother attended these visits in-person. She fell asleep during two visits; she

asserted that she had narcolepsy but never provided medical records supporting that claim. She

was not allowed to visit other times because she tested positive for use of amphetamine and

methamphetamine. During allowed visits, she acted appropriately.

Mother successfully completed counseling and parenting classes in August 2023

but tested positive for methamphetamine use in October 2023. Magee testified that, as a result of

the October 2023 positive test, Mother was asked to participate in counseling and Alcoholics

Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous, but she declined to participate and did not say why.

Mother did not participate in weekly drug testing and did not attend all of her court hearings in

Collin County. Magee testified that Mother turned herself in to the Collin County jail on

January 19, 2024, for an unspecified “parole” 3 violation and was placed into a drug-

rehabilitation program for a minimum of 120 days. Mother came to the last permanency hearing

before trial but had not attended previous permanency hearings or the trial below; the latter was

due to her incarceration.

Magee testified that she was concerned by Grandmother’s support for Mother.

Magee testified that Mother had moved in with Grandmother after being evicted from

an apartment.

Magee testified that she did not believe that Mother could provide a safe and

stable home for the children because she had not shown an ability to do so. Magee testified that

3 The Department’s attorney described this as a probation violation. 3 the Department was concerned that Mother would continue to abuse drugs because she had

continued to do so during the pendency of the case—even when pregnant. Magee testified that

continued drug use would endanger the children through neglectful supervision and possible

contact with the drugs. Magee also testified that Mother was unable to complete other visits

because her “instant test” was positive for amphetamine and methamphetamine. Magee testified

that Mother had made no behavioral changes since the children were taken into the Department’s

care. Magee said she was not able to say that drug rehab would help alleviate concerns about

Mother’s drug use because previous rehab stints had not deterred her from using illegal

substances. Magee testified that Mother continued to use drugs and alcohol during the fall of

2023, when she was placed on an ankle monitor because of her drug-and-alcohol use. Magee

testified that previous caseworkers reported that Mother had also gotten into domestic disputes

with a girlfriend.

Magee recommended termination of Mother’s parental rights because Mother was

not able to provide a safe and stable environment free of drug use and criminal activity. Magee

testified that termination would be in the children’s best interest and that the Department planned

for adoption by the children’s current foster placement. Magee testified that the Department had

exhausted all efforts to place the children with Mother and that Mother had not done her part in

making sure she was safe for her children. Magee testified that the children had been in limbo

for four years; the limbo had negatively affected the older child because she was uncertain

whether she was “going to go home.” Magee testified that the children were doing really well in

their current placement and that the elder child was exceling in school despite her previous

upheaval. She testified that the younger child did not know Mother as his mother.

4 Magee testified that the children “would like to go back to their grandmother, but

they understand that she’s not going to be able to provide a safe environment due to her support

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