Sabrina Yonko v. Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 2006
Docket01-05-00091-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sabrina Yonko v. Department of Family and Protective Services (Sabrina Yonko v. 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
Sabrina Yonko v. Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion to: SJR TGT SN TJ EVK ERA GCH LCH JB

Opinion Issued April 27, 2006
 



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-05-00091-CV


SABRINA YONKO, Appellant

V.

DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND PROTECTIVE SERVICES, Appellee


On Appeal from the 314th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2004-04462J



OPINION ON REHEARING

Sabrina Yonko appeals the trial court’s judgment terminating her parental rights to her minor son (“V.Y.”).  Yonko contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s findings that (1) she knowingly allowed the child to remain in conditions which endangered the child’s physical or emotional well-being; (2) she knowingly placed the child with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered the child’s physical or emotional well-being; (3) she was the major cause of the child’s failure to be enrolled in school as required by the Education Code; and (4) it is in the child’s best interest for Yonko’s parental rights to be terminated.  In our opinion dated December 22, 2005, we held that the evidence was factually insufficient to support the trial court’s finding as to issue four and therefore we reversed and remanded for a new trial.  The State has filed a motion for rehearing and motion for rehearing en banc.  We withdraw our previous opinion and issue this opinion in its stead.[1]  Our disposition remains the same.

Facts

          After having been raped at age seventeen, Yonko gave birth to V.Y. in August 1995.  In 1996, Yonko began a relationship with Sam Perez (“Perez”), the man whom Yonko later came to consider her husband and V.Y.’s father.  Yonko testified that their families did not approve of their relationship and, to put it mildly, did not get along with each other.  She testified that in one incident, her father went to jail and Perez’s father went to the hospital after the two men had a fight, and in another, Perez’s father showed up at her father’s house with gang members and guns.  As a result, Yonko and Perez traveled wherever they thought they could find work and avoid problems with their families.  She further testified that V.Y. never witnessed any of the violence between their families.  Yonko estimated that during V.Y.’s childhood, they spent about a year to a year and a half in San Diego, a month to a month and a half in Las Vegas, four months in Phoenix, a couple months in Detroit, a couple months in Houston, two years in Chicago, and a couple months in Hammond, Indiana.  Yonko stayed either in motels or with family members, and V.Y. was with Yonko at all times during this period.  Yonko never enrolled V.Y. in school.  During this period, Yonko worked as an auto body repair technician, and sold potpourri and roses at flea markets.  She at all times was gainfully employed.

          During one visit to Houston in March 2002, Yonko was arrested and charged with aggravated assault.  Yonko testified that Perez was responsible for the assault, which was committed against a third person, but that she pled guilty in an effort to avoid imprisonment.  The criminal trial court sentenced Yonko to three years’ community supervision.  She left Harris County soon thereafter to visit her grandfather, who she claimed was having heart surgery.  As a result, the court revoked Yonko’s community supervision, and sentenced her to two years’ imprisonment.  At this time, V.Y. was six years’ old.  Upon her incarceration, Yonko placed V.Y. in her mother’s care.  Yonko testified that she believed her brother (“Angelo”) and his wife would also help her mother (“Betty”) take care of V.Y.  Yonko gave Betty $4,400, which she had saved from working, to care for V.Y. and to pay for an attorney.

In May 2004, the Department of Family and Protective Services (“DFPS”) received a referral of neglectful supervision of V.Y. when he was found taking cookies from an apartment complex leasing office.  V.Y. told police he had been staying with his maternal uncle, Angelo, in the complex, and that his mother and father were on vacation in Las Vegas.  Apartment personnel told police that the padlocked apartment where V.Y. claimed he had been living had not been occupied by Angelo, and that no one named “Yonko” occupied any apartment in the complex or in the surrounding area.  DFPS observed that V.Y.’s clothing was dirty and torn, and that he had dirt caked in his nails, and took him into custody.  Although he was eight years old, V.Y. could not write his name, nor could he identify much of the alphabet and some numbers. 

A week later, Angelo contacted DFPS and provided inconsistent stories about why V.Y. was in his care.  Angelo claimed V.Y. had been staying with Perez in Arizona, and that he went to get V.Y. in October 2003, but the DFPS caseworker testified that she had some concerns about Angelo’s honesty.  After performing a home study, DFPS determined that V.Y. should not live with Angelo because Angelo had been evicted in the past; V.Y. was seen roaming the streets at one o’clock in the morning; V.Y. shot someone’s window out with a BB gun while in Angelo’s care; Angelo could not produce proof of income; Angelo and his wife already had two children with a third on the way; and Angelo’s wife told DFPS that V.Y. would not follow her instructions.

Yonko learned that her son was in DFPS’s custody from a social worker, and was then served in prison with the lawsuit to terminate her rights. 

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