Pedro Castorena and Penny Renee Delgado v. Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 2004
Docket03-02-00653-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pedro Castorena and Penny Renee Delgado v. Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (Pedro Castorena and Penny Renee Delgado v. Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory 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
Pedro Castorena and Penny Renee Delgado v. Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-02-00653-CV

Pedro Castorena and Penny Renee Delgado, Appellants

v.

Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 274TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 2001-0993, HONORABLE DON B. MORGAN, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After a bench trial, the court found by clear and convincing evidence that the parental

rights of Pedro Castorena (Castorena) and Penny Renee Delgado (Delgado) should be terminated.

In two issues on appeal, each contends that the evidence was factually insufficient to support the

grounds for termination and to support a finding that the termination was in the children’s best

interest.1

Background

Delgado is the mother of the four children involved in this termination suit. M.D.,

the oldest, was born in February 1994. M.D.’s father is Miguel Delgado, Penny Delgado’s second

1 Although Castorena and Delgado were represented by separate counsel at trial and on appeal, much of the evidence overlaps and their appellate challenges are essentially the same. husband, to whom she was still legally married at the time of trial. F.H., whose father is Jose

Hernandez, was born in June 1997.2 M.D.C. was born in March 1999, E.D.C. in June 2000.

Castorena is the father of the two youngest children.

History of Involvement with CPS3

The referral that ultimately resulted in the filing of these termination proceedings

occurred in July 2001. Julie Melton, the CPS investigator handling the referral, discovered that CPS

had conducted investigations into this family dating back to December 1995 for physical and medical

neglect, physical abuse, and neglectful supervision.4 Although services were offered on more than

one occasion, no previous referral resulted in the children being removed from the home. The

December 1995 referral alleged, among other things, that Delgado’s boyfriend locked her out in the

cold, along with her baby clothed only in a diaper; maggots were found in the sink and in the couch

where the baby had been sleeping.

2 Miguel Delgado and Jose Hernandez were represented by counsel at trial. Hernandez had been deported to Guatemala. He had had no contact with F.H. since she was very young. Counsel talked to Miguel Delgado by telephone. He was in the United States illegally and would not disclose his whereabouts to counsel. When counsel called the same number again, she was informed that Miguel Delgado had returned to Mexico. Miguel had made no effort to contact M.D. for years and made no effort to respond to the contact concerning termination. No appeal was perfected on behalf of either Miguel Delgado or Jose Hernandez. 3 CPS is the Child Protective Services Division of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. References in the text will be to CPS or “the Department.” 4 A file of reports on the contacts between the Department and the family was admitted in evidence as a business record as well as the narrative testimony of the various caseworkers who prepared the reports.

2 In June 1997, Seton Home Health Care became involved with the family because

Delgado had alcohol in her system when F.H. was born and admitted a lack of child care knowledge.

Delgado also admitted that she was in an abusive relationship with F.H.’s father. She said that on

several occasions he had kicked the car seat while F.H. was in the seat. Delgado said that her mother

had been married seven times and the different husbands had abused her and her siblings until CPS

intervened and pressured the men to move; Delgado said she supposed CPS would have to do the

same with her.

In September 1997, a police officer contacted Delgado because three-year-old M.D.

was running around the apartment complex, including the pool area, unsupervised. Delgado told the

police officer that M.D. was bright and could handle herself. In October 1997, Delgado told a CPS

worker that she did not see any danger in letting M.D. play outside at the complex unsupervised.

She further told the caseworker that she had been in jail for hitting M.D.’s father with a hammer

because she wanted to get back together and he refused.

A July 1999 referral alleges that Delgado reported to law enforcement that Castorena

abused M.D. by kicking the child in the back and flicking a beer-bottle cap at her, striking her under

the eye. In January 2000, Delgado was investigated for leaving six-year-old M.D. to care for the

younger children. She admitted to a pattern of leaving the children alone for as long as an hour while

she went to the store with Castorena. M.D. was not in school because she did not have

immunizations. In February 2000, Delgado told the caseworker that Castorena regularly beat her and

hit the children. Sometimes he withheld food. At that point, the Department started family-based

safety services. The case worker noted poor bonding and attachment between Delgado and the

3 children; lack of supervision and chronic neglect; dirty children with chronic lice; medical treatment

was not sought for the children and Delgado did not obtain prenatal care, although she was

approximately six months pregnant. Castorena apparently never sought medical care on her behalf.

There was a history of domestic violence between Delgado and Castorena, which Delgado

minimized as “arguing.” At a March 2000 visit, there was no food in the house. A woman’s shelter

provided a bus ticket to Georgia so Delgado and the children could stay with some of Delgado’s

relatives.

When Delgado relocated to Georgia, the Department had been at the point of

removing the children because of Castorena’s presence. She returned to Texas in April of 2000 and

moved into a mobile home in Kyle. The Department understood that Castorena would not live there

but he moved in within three days. Services started again in August 2000.

Referral Leading to Removal

In July 2001, CPS picked up the children based on a referral alleging that Delgado

abandoned the children. Delgado left the children at Maria Rodriguez’ house. Delgado told

Rodriguez that she was going to go fill out some job applications. Rodriguez thought Delgado

would be gone for a couple of hours, but after three days she had not returned. Not knowing how

to contact Delgado, Rodriguez called the police, who took the children to their maternal grandmother

for only one day, after which CPS picked them up. Melton said that the children stated that before

being left with Rodriguez, they had been sleeping in the car at rest stops. The children did not know

where their mother was.

4 The children were picked up on July 12; Delgado contacted Melton on July 16. She

said that Castorena had evicted them from the mobile home in Kyle in May. Even before evicting

them, Castorena had the electricity turned off. The children lived there for about a month longer.

After being evicted they had been sleeping at rest stops, as well as staying with friends and with

persons contacted through Delgado’s church. She was not working, but her pastor had been helping

with some money and supplies. Delgado claimed that Rodriguez had agreed to care for the children

for four or five months while Delgado looked for work.

F.H. told the children’s guardian ad litem, Jill McLaughlin, that the children slept on

the road, not in the car. There were maggots in the car. McLaughlin testified that she feels that

Delgado takes very little responsibility for anything.

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