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

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2025
Docket03-25-00523-CV
StatusPublished

This text of R. C. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (R. 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
R. C. v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-25-00523-CV

R. C., Appellant

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE 340TH DISTRICT COURT OF TOM GREEN COUNTY NO. C240004CPS, THE HONORABLE ELIZABETH WATKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant R.C. (Richard) appeals from the trial court’s order terminating his

parent-child relationship with E.L.C. (Evan). 1 By a single issue, Richard contends that the

evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that termination

was in Evan’s best interest. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On June 4, 2025, the trial court held a bench trial on the Department of Family

and Protective Services’ (the Department’s) petition to terminate Richard’s parental rights. At

the outset of trial, the court heard Richard’s motion for continuance. Richard was not present at

trial. According to Richard’s attorney, Richard had just completed a treatment program at a

1To protect the child’s privacy, we will refer to him and his family members using pseudonyms. See Tex. Fam. Code § 109.002(d); Tex. R. App. P. 9.8. behavioral hospital and sought additional time “so he could have the next month to continue to

show the [c]ourt he was making progress.” Richard had also indicated to his attorney “that he

didn’t have a way to get” to the trial. Richard’s attorney acknowledged that “the Department

made arrangements to have someone go pick him up,” but “he was not there, so I don’t know

where my client is.”

Lori Dooley, the Department caseworker assigned to this case, testified that she

called workers at the addiction-recovery center where Richard was purportedly residing

“approximately five times,” she “called [Richard’s] phone on two occasions,” and she “texted

him,” as well. Dooley learned from others of an “incident of him trying to break [into] a

female’s room . . . at 3:00 a.m. [that] morning.” She was also informed “that he was

possibly using.” The trial court denied the motion for continuance, and trial proceeded in

Richard’s absence.

Leah Ray, an investigator with the Department, testified that the Department

became involved with the family in January of 2024, when Evan’s brother, J.L. (Justin), passed

away. According to Ray, Justin died after enduring “severe abuse and neglect” at the hands of

S.L. (Sarah), the children’s biological mother. Ray testified that Evan witnessed and was asked

to participate in some of the abuse his brother suffered. Sarah’s parental rights were also

terminated in this proceeding. However, she does not appeal from the termination order. A

judgment of conviction was admitted into evidence and indicates that Sarah pleaded guilty to

injury to a child in exchange for a thirty-year sentence and dismissal of a separate charge. At the

time of Justin’s death, Ray testified that Richard “was incarcerated at the Runnels County jail”

and being held on “three different charges: [interfering with an] emergency request for

2 assistance, promoting prostitution[,] and criminal mischief.” According to Ray, as of the date of

Justin’s death, it had “been several years” since Richard had any contact with Evan.

Dooley testified that Richard “completed parenting packets while incarcerated,”

began counseling once released from custody, and completed either a psychological or

psychosocial evaluation. In July of 2024, Richard began virtual visits with Evan. During these

visits, Richard “would become frustrated, annoyed, because the caregiver was trying to take care

of” another child, which resulted in Evan being “distracted, and he would be getting up and

moving around.” An August 2024 letter from Richard to Evan’s biological mother, Sarah, was

also admitted into evidence. In the letter, Richard expresses his belief that Sarah was “not

guilty” and did not do anything wrong. According to Dooley, this letter posed some issues for

Evan’s counseling progress.

In October of 2024, Richard began in-person visitation with Evan. Dooley

testified that, overall, these visits “went well”; the first visit was focused on “reestablishing the

[parent-child] relationship” and during the second, Dooley, Richard, and Evan “went downtown

and went to different places, and [Evan] got candy, and that went well.”

However, shortly after in-person visitation began, Richard moved to Las Vegas,

Nevada. Dooley attempted to arrange travel to Nevada to confirm the safety of Richard’s new

home, but Richard “was reluctant for [Dooley] to come to that address, and then he started

saying that he was going to return back to Texas when [she] would ask him to please confirm a

date that [she] could visit him in the home there in Nevada.” Dooley also testified that Richard

was ordered to drug test while in Nevada. Richard completed one urinalysis test which yielded a

negative result. In December, Richard was asked to complete counseling “to address anger and

3 frustration issues and also protective parenting.” However, Richard did not complete

this counseling.

Richard returned to Texas on March 30, 2025, and submitted a clean urinalysis

result on March 31. On April 9, Richard had his first in-person visit with Evan since returning to

Texas. According to Dooley, this visit “did not go well.” Richard “appeared agitated at the

beginning of the visit because the visit was having to be held at the CPS office.” During the

visit, Richard accompanied Evan to the restroom. Dooley “stood outside the door and gave them

ample time to use the restroom.” After repeatedly asking them to leave the restroom, Dooley

entered the restroom and told Richard “he needed to come on.” Richard told Dooley that she

“needed to get the fuck out” and she “couldn’t tell him he couldn’t talk to his son.” Evan

reportedly “looked very uncomfortable.” Once the three exited to the visitation room, Dooley

“announced that the visit would be ended at that time, and [Richard] got very irate.”

The very next day, Richard contacted Dooley and admitted to relapsing. Richard

was asked to submit to a hair-follicle test but did not do so. According to Dooley, on April 14,

Richard “was arrested for public intoxication and possession.” On April 30, Richard was again

“arrested for public intoxication and possession.” On May 1, Richard was “arrested again . . . for

criminal trespass and terroristic threat.” Dooley testified that Richard had not had visitation or

contact with Evan since the April 9 visit. According to Dooley, termination of Richard’s

parental rights was in Evan’s best interest because Richard had “not shown any stability” and

was “not making any progress.”

Records reflecting Richard’s criminal history were admitted into evidence.

According to these records, on September 28, 2020, Richard pleaded no-contest and was placed

on probation for (1) evading arrest or detention with a vehicle, (2) terroristic threat, and

4 (3) driving while intoxicated. In February of 2022, probation was revoked for all three offenses

and Richard was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment for the evading-arrest offense.

S.M. (Sasha), Evan’s great aunt, testified that Evan, who was seven years old at

the time of trial, had been in her care since April of 2024. Sasha testified that she was “officially

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