N. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 2015
Docket03-14-00815-CV
StatusPublished

This text of N. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (N. D. 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.

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N. D. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-14-00815-CV

N. D., Appellant

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 1 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, NO. 13-0139-CPS1, HONORABLE SUZANNE BROOKS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

N.D. appeals the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights to her children,

L.D. and L.M.D, following a bench trial.1 N.D. challenges the factual and legal sufficiency of the

evidence to support the trial court’s findings as to the statutory predicate grounds and the children’s

best interest. Because we conclude that the evidence was legally and factually sufficient, we affirm

the trial court’s order of termination.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The appellate record shows that N.D. has a history with child protective services. In

June 2011, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department) received

1 We use initials to refer to appellant, her children, and their father and N.D’s husband, J.D., who voluntarily relinquished his parental rights and is not a party to this appeal. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8. allegations that N.D. had left L.D. in a bar with J.D., while he was drinking. In December 2011, the

Department conducted an investigation following a report by a UPS driver that he had discovered

L.D., who was three years old at the time, home alone.2 During the investigation, the Department

learned that J.D. had made suicidal threats and exhibited other unstable behavior. Based on concerns

about J.D.’s drug use and instability and N.D.’s decisions in light of those factors, the Department

removed the children from N.D.’s home in August 2012 and placed them in foster care.3 In

November 2012, the children were placed with N.D.’s parents. The Department subsequently

removed them from the grandparents’ care upon learning that the grandfather had driven off with

the grandmother and left the children alone on the front porch.4 A protective order was issued to

prevent J.D. from coming to N.D.’s home, and N.D. filed for divorce. N.D. cooperated in keeping

J.D. from the home and completed her court-ordered services, and the children were returned to N.D.

in June 2013. The Department monitored their care until November 2013, at which time it dismissed

the case.

After the protective order ended on November 14, 2013, N.D. allowed J.D. to return

to the home. N.D.’s father expressed concerns that J.D. was living with N.D., and N.D. agreed to

let the children live with her parents. Nonetheless, L.D. continued to go back and forth between the

2 According to testimony, J.D. was incarcerated on charges related to leaving L.D. home alone. Following his release, he met with the Department and signed a service plan, but he made no progress on the plan and eventually relinquished his parental rights prior to the Department’s petition for termination in this case. 3 L.M.D. was born on April 30, 2012, during the investigation. 4 It is not clear from the record where the children were placed following removal from the grandparents’ care.

2 two homes. Approximately a week after the first case was dismissed, while L.D. was in the home,

there was an incident in which a known drug user assaulted N.D. and J.D. with a knife.

Approximately one week later, the Department received a report of new concerns about the

children’s safety. The police had arrived at the home in response to reports that there was drug

manufacturing and selling in the home. The police found three glass pipes believed to be drug

paraphernalia, but subsequent testing revealed no illegal substance, and no charges were pursued.

The children were temporarily placed with N.D.’s parents pending an emergency family meeting.

At the family meeting, J.D. admitted to using methamphetamine. N.D. denied drug usage.

The Department filed a petition for termination of parental rights and was named

temporary managing conservator of L.D. and L.M.D. J.D and N.D. were ordered to submit to

random drug testing. J.D. tested positive for methamphetamine. N.D. tested positive for

methamphetamine once but tested negative on all subsequent drug tests. At a status hearing in

January 2014, N.D. was ordered not to have contact with anyone with a criminal or drug history.

In July 2014, N.D. was arrested and charged with four felony counts of manufacturing and delivering

a controlled substance and one misdemeanor assault charge.5

The final hearing was held in January 2015. The witnesses included N.D., who was

still incarcerated pending disposition of the criminal charges; the Department caseworker,

Todd Luis Serpico; and the CASA volunteer who served as guardian ad litem, Laura Hancock. N.D.

testified that the Department had been involved with her children the majority of their lives. She

5 The felony counts were first-degree charges for manufacturing and delivery of methamphetamine, morphine, hydrocodone, and alprazolam. The assault misdemeanor charge involved an incident with N.D.’s former roommate.

3 stated that in November 2013, she tried methamphetamine and tested positive for methamphetamine

in December 2013. She agreed that having children present where there is methamphetamine,

having drug abusers at the home, making or selling drugs, and violence in the home would be a

danger to her children’s physical and emotional well being. N.D. further testified that she

understood that one thing that would alleviate the Department’s concerns was to make sure that J.D.

was not around but that she had let him come back because he said he had changed. She stated that

she understood the protective order expired on November 14, 2013, J.D. had moved in after that, and

he was living with her in July 2013. She also stated that she was still married to him and they were

still communicating in writing while they were incarcerated although she agreed that remaining in

contact with him is not in the children’s best interest. N.D. testified that a problem in her life is that

she gets angry at J.D. but then reconciles with him. She also testified that she believed she was

protecting her children by having them at her parents’ home even knowing that her father had driven

off and left them alone. However, she agreed that it is not in the children’s best interest to have J.D.

at her home and her children somewhere else. She explained that she had let L.D. come to the house

at the time the knife incident occurred because it was Thanksgiving weekend, and L.D. wanted to

see her father. N.D. also testified that she had been diagnosed with anti-social personality disorder

and borderline bi-polar disorder but disagreed with the results. She agreed that the psychologist had

expressed concerns that she would always put herself and J.D. before the interest of L.D. and L.M.D.

N.D. also testified that she had last worked in February 2014 for approximately three

weeks and otherwise had not been employed in the last year, during which she had paid “some

money here and there” but no child support. She testified that her children deserve to have a good

4 life, that she had not been able to provide that for quite awhile, and that she had made some bad

choices in the last couple of years that were not in the children’s best interest. She stated that she

was currently incarcerated and could not provide a stable environment for her children “right now

at this moment.” N.D.

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