Santos Suazo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2010
Docket03-08-00460-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Santos Suazo v. State (Santos Suazo v. State) 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
Santos Suazo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-10-00103-CV

Tabitha LaRocca, Appellant

v.

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 146TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 231,242, HONORABLE RICK MORRIS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Tabitha LaRocca appeals from the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights

to her son, R.W., after a jury found that her rights should be terminated.1 On appeal, LaRocca

challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s finding. Because

we conclude that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to establish (1) statutory grounds for

termination and (2) that termination is in the child’s best interest, we affirm the trial court’s order

of termination.

BACKGROUND

The Department of Family and Protective Services (the “Department”) brought suit

against Tabitha LaRocca and Gregory Worley for termination of parental rights to their son, R.W.

R.W.’s foster parents, Virgil and Melody Cowger, intervened.

1 At some point after this suit was filed, LaRocca obtained a divorce and changed her name to Tabitha Guerra. Because the trial court’s order of termination refers to her as Tabitha LaRocca, we will do the same for the purposes of this opinion. The Department first became involved in July 2008, when R.W., who was five weeks

old at the time, was brought to the emergency room by LaRocca and R.W.’s paternal grandparents,

Raymond and Rebecca Worley.2 R.W. suffered from a fractured skull, a hematoma on the right side

of his head, a “big subdural hematoma” on the left side of his head, and brain shearing.3 R.W.’s

injuries required several emergency surgeries and two-and-one-half weeks of hospitalization.

Emergency room doctors diagnosed the injuries as resulting from non-accidental trauma.

Shortly after the Department became involved, the Department’s investigator, Kecia

Amos-Folks, prepared an affidavit summarizing her investigation. LaRocca told Folks that the

injury occurred when she, Raymond, and Rebecca left R.W. with Worley to attend a doctor’s

appointment. LaRocca said that prior to leaving the house, she was holding R.W., who was awake

and uninjured. Approximately four hours later, Rebecca received a phone call from Worley

informing her that the baby had fallen off of the bed. LaRocca, Raymond, and Rebecca returned

home and drove R.W. to the fire station, where an ambulance took them to the hospital. Worley told

Folks that R.W. accidentally fell from his lap and hit his head on the side of the bed frame. R.W.’s

neurosurgeon, Dr. Patricia Aronin, testified at trial, however, that R.W.’s injuries could not have

occurred from falling off of a bed. She stated that the severity of R.W.’s brain shearing and skull

damage required a violent force, such as “violent shaking and then . . . being thrown down on

something that was pretty hard . . . or be[ing] hit with something.” Such an injury could occur from

a fall only “if you fell out of the fourth story window onto the pavement. . . . It would take that sort

2 For the sake of clarity, we will refer to R.W.’s grandparents and foster parents by their first names. 3 Documents related to the Department’s investigation indicate that brain shearing occurs when a body traveling at a certain velocity stops suddenly and the brain continues traveling forward in the brain cavity, ripping blood vessels. It is most often seen in high speed car accidents.

2 of a distance and an impact.” Despite the severity of R.W.’s injuries, LaRocca testified at trial that

for nearly six months she continued to believe Worley’s claims that R.W. was accidentally injured

by falling from the bed.

The Department sought and obtained an order appointing it temporary managing

conservator in August 2008, while R.W. was still hospitalized, on the grounds that the Department

could discern no credible explanation for the cause of R.W.’s injuries and that LaRocca persisted in

her belief that the injury was an accident.4 Worley was later convicted of serious bodily injury to a

child with a deadly weapon in connection with R.W.’s injuries and was sentenced to twenty years

in prison.5 The Department sought termination of both Worley’s and LaRocca’s parental rights and

a jury trial was held in January 2010.

R.W.’s Condition

At trial, Dr. Aronin testified to R.W.’s current condition. She stated that R.W. has

sustained several long-term effects from his injuries and is considered a medically fragile child. In

addition to his initial surgeries, R.W. has had two other major surgeries in December 2008 and

July 2009. He is at risk for seizures and takes seizure medication twice a day. He also wears an

orthotic helmet 23 hours a day to protect the holes in his skull and shape his head as it grows.

Because of his helmet, R.W. can overheat easily, which may cause seizures. R.W.’s caretaker must

be diligent to prevent R.W. from becoming too hot, and remove his clothing and helmet if he starts

looking overheated. Additionally, R.W. has two fluid-draining shunt tubes in his head which must

4 The Department later ruled out the possibility that R.W.’s injuries were caused by LaRocca. 5 The court in Worley’s criminal proceeding found the bed to be a deadly weapon.

3 be constantly monitored, as a shunt malfunction may cause brain damage or death. Because R.W.

is too young to communicate discomfort, in order to discover a shunt malfunction, R.W.’s caretaker

must know R.W., understand his patterns and behaviors, and recognize small behavioral changes.

Melody, R.W.’s foster mother, testified that as a result of R.W.’s medical conditions,

he sees a number of doctors on a regular basis. He attends physical, occupational, and speech

therapy four times per week for 30 minutes to an hour each, helmet fittings every two weeks for

30 minutes to two hours, and has appointments with his neurosurgeon every two to three months,

his neurologist every two to four months, his pediatric gastroenterologist every six months or as

needed, and his opthamologist every two months, as well as regular pediatric and dental

appointments. R.W.’s doctors are currently in Killeen, Austin, Round Rock, and Temple.

According to Dr. Aronin, R.W. was nineteen months old at the time of trial but was

functioning at the level of a twelve-month-old, and will continue to have severely limited

development. She testified that, based on what she had seen so far, R.W. will forever have the

cognitive ability and motor skills of a young child and will need care into adulthood. Though his

body will grow into an adult, she stated that he will likely be unable to walk, his speech will be

limited, and he will never be “normal.” She was unsure whether he will ever learn to dress, bathe,

or feed himself.

Upon R.W.’s release from the hospital, he was placed in foster care with the Cowgers

in Belton, where he still remains. Melody Cowger is a licensed vocational nurse employed with a

pediatric home health agency and has experience caring for medically fragile children. R.W.’s

neurosurgeon, pediatrician, physical therapist, caseworker, and guardian ad litem all testified to the

4 high quality of care the Cowgers have provided R.W. The Cowgers testified that they wish to adopt

R.W. following a successful termination.

The Guerras’ Home in Brownsville

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