Ruiz v. Texas Department of Family & Protective Services

212 S.W.3d 804, 2006 WL 3095404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2007
Docket01-05-00556-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 212 S.W.3d 804 (Ruiz v. Texas Department of Family & 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
Ruiz v. Texas Department of Family & Protective Services, 212 S.W.3d 804, 2006 WL 3095404 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

TERRY JENNINGS, Justice.

We grant appellee’s motion for rehearing, withdraw our opinion dated August 8, 2006, and substitute this opinion in its place.

In this accelerated appeal, 1 appellant, Monica Ruiz, challenges the trial court’s decree, entered after a bench trial, terminating her parental rights to her minor child, A.J. In two issues, Ruiz contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s findings that she knowingly placed or knowingly allowed A.J. to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered the physical or emotional well-being of A.J., 2 that she engaged in conduct or knowingly placed A.J. with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered the physical or emotional well-being of A.J., 3 and that termination of the parent-child relationship between Ruiz and A.J. was in A.J.’s best interest. 4

We reverse the portion of the decree terminating the parent-child relationship between Ruiz and A. J.

Factual and Procedural Background

On September 9, 2008, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“DFPS”) filed its petition to terminate Ruiz’s parental rights to her son, A.J. During the trial, DFPS case worker Tammy Brown testified that in June 2003, an individual made a referral to DFPS “stating that [A.J.] was being left with his paternal great grandmother for periods of time where [Ruiz’s] whereabouts were unknown.” Brown also stated that “it was alleged [that] there were cigarette burns on [A.J.’s] arm and that [Ruiz] could not give a consistent explanation for those said cigarette burns.” DFPS then removed A.J. “after a period of time because Ruiz took [A.J.] from the care of the grandmother and they didn’t know where [A.J.] was and then, about two months later, [A.J.] was removed and was returned.”

Brown further testified that after DFPS removed A. J., it gave Ruiz a family service plan, which stated that DFPS became involved because “it was reported that there were allegations of physical abuse.” As part of this plan, DFPS instructed Ruiz to attend individual counseling sessions, family counseling sessions with her boyfriend, anger management classes, parenting classes, and a psychiatric follow-up. DFPS also instructed Ruiz to participate in a drug assessment and random urinalysis exams. Although Ruiz had attended some individual counseling sessions and some anger management classes, Ruiz would have to begin the eight-week session of anger-management classes again because she had missed so many of them. Brown stated that Ruiz went to the Mental Health and Mental Retardation Authority (“MHMRA”) one week before trial, but that “they did not see [Ruiz] and there was no time for [Brown] to follow-up for why [MHMRA] wouldn’t follow through with services on [Ruiz], to find out what the reasoning was on that.” Brown agreed *808 that Ruiz had completed the parenting classes required in the plan and that Ruiz also completed a required narcotics assessment “and had a recommendation of psychological on it,” but that “there wasn’t time to follow through with that recommendation.” 5 Brown also noted that Ruiz did attend some family counseling sessions.

Brown also testified that DFPS requested that Ruiz complete “some” of these services shortly after it removed A.J. in September 2003. DFPS also requested that Ruiz complete these services in July 2004, and, in July 2004, DFPS granted Ruiz’s request for more time to complete these services. Brown stated that she was not sure whether Ruiz “would ever follow through to complete the services at this point,” that DFPS had “given her every opportunity to complete services,” that DFPS had “put[ ] family based services in place to where they were going to [Ruiz’s] home,” and that these services “were not followed through with.”

After DFPS removed A.J. in September 2003, he was placed with his paternal great grandmother, “Miss Hernandez.” 6 A review of the record reveals that at some point in December 2003, the trial court placed A.J. with Marcella Chappa, Ruiz’s cousin, with whom Ruiz was living at the time. The record does not disclose why A.J.’s placement was modified, and DFPS contends that it never agreed with this placement. One of the stipulations for this placement was that Ruiz could not be left unsupervised with A.J. However, when Brown visited the Chappa home in January 2004, she found Ruiz alone with A.J., who was in a “very soaked” diaper “as though he had not been changed since the previous day.” Brown also noted that A.J. had “some bruising on his face and a gash on one of his eyes that was fairly deep ... and looked like it should have some medical attention.” Ruiz told Brown that A.J. had fallen down and that, in Ruiz’s opinion, the gash “didn’t look like it was that serious.” Although Brown removed A.J. from the Chappa home and took him to a clinic to be assessed, there are no medical records or any testimony in the record concerning the results of this medical assessment or whether, in fact, A.J. needed medical attention. A.J. was then returned to the Hernandez home until trial, which was held in November 2004.

Brown asked the trial court to terminate Ruiz’s parental rights and asserted that termination would be in A.J.’s best interest for the following reasons:

Ruiz doesn’t have a stable place to live at this point. She is not employed. She has a possibility of some domestic violence going on in her home situation with her current boyfriend. She has not completed her services as we agreed in mediation. She’s just proven to have a very unstable life style. 7

Brown further asserted that A.J. was “an adoptable child,” that he “is extremely bonded with the paternal side of his family, especially his great grandmother [Miss Hernandez],” and that there is a very *809 large extended family that visits him frequently at Hernandez’s home. Brown also stated that she had previously spoken with Ruiz and A.J.’s father concerning termination of their parental rights and that both Ruiz and A.J.’s father had mentioned Chris Levin, a cousin, as a person who would be “a good choice” for A. J.

Brown testified that she had confronted Ruiz about the possibility of domestic violence with her current boyfriend, Ismael Castone, with whom Ruiz was currently living, that Ruiz initially denied that there was domestic violence, but that Ruiz eventually admitted that there had been “some domestic violence” in the relationship. Brown stated that Miss Hernandez and Hernandez’s daughter had also told her that there was domestic violence in Ruiz’s current relationship. Specifically, Hernandez told Brown that on one occasion Ruiz had been brought to her home by Houston Police Officers and that Ruiz had bruising on her face. Ruiz allegedly told Hernandez that Ruiz and Castone had been fighting, Castone had dropped her off on the freeway, and police officers had picked her up and brought her to the Hernandez home.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.3d 804, 2006 WL 3095404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruiz-v-texas-department-of-family-protective-services-texapp-2007.