William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 2011
Docket03-10-00052-CV
StatusPublished

This text of William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz 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
William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-10-00052-CV

William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz, Appellants



v.



Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TOM GREEN COUNTY, 340TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. C-08-0049-CPS, HONORABLE JAY K. WEATHERBY, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



This is an accelerated appeal from a decree terminating the parental rights of appellants William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz. Klotz's parental rights were terminated as to her children R.J.D., D.D.K., J.L.R., and E.J.M.R. Rader's parental rights were terminated as to his children, J.L.R. and E.J.M.R. In her sole issue on appeal, Klotz challenges the admission of R.J.D. and E.J.M.R.'s therapist's notes on hearsay grounds. Rader's counsel has filed a motion to withdraw as counsel and a brief in support of that motion. We affirm the trial court's decree terminating Klotz's and Rader's parental rights and grant Rader's counsel's motion to withdraw.



BACKGROUND

Klotz is the mother of six children. The four youngest children, R.J.D., D.D.K., J.L.R., and E.J.M.R., are the subjects of this termination proceeding. When the children were removed, R.J.D. was fifteen years old, D.D.K. was eleven, J.L.R. was seven, and E.J.M.R. was five. Rader is the biological father of J.L.R. and E.J.M.R. but cared for all four children prior to their removal. Though Klotz and Rader were never married, they maintained a relationship for approximately ten years, separating in December 2008.

The Department initiated this case on January 24, 2008 when it received a referral communicating concerns that Klotz, who had recently been released from the hospital for suicidal thoughts, was a "loose cannon," and that her children may be in danger. The report also stated that Klotz's oldest son, J.D., age nineteen at the time of his siblings' removal, had sexually assaulted his younger brothers J.M., age sixteen at the time of his siblings' removal, and D.D.K. in 2002 and that Klotz and Rader were aware of the assaults but did not report them. (1)

The Department took possession of the children on March 13, 2008 and placed them in a group home. The Department changed its permanency goal from reunification to termination in December 2008, citing Rader's and Klotz's insufficient progress following the removal of the children. A bench trial was held concerning the termination of Klotz's parental rights as to R.J.D., D.D.K., J.L.R., and E.J.M.R. and Rader's parental rights as to J.L.R. and E.J.M.R.

At trial Rader testified that in 2002, R.J.D. notified him that she had seen J.D. engage in sexually inappropriate acts with J.M. and D.D.K. in the family home. Upon Rader's inquiry, J.M. and D.D.K. admitted that J.D. had abused them. Rader testified that he told Klotz of the incident and that Klotz chastised J.D., but instructed Rader and the children not to tell anyone. (2) Rader also testified that R.J.D. made an outcry to the Department that, on a separate occasion, J.D. forced her to smoke methamphetamine and then sexually abused her. Klotz testified that she did not believe R.J.D.'s outcry and that she believes her children were "brainwashed" and lied about many of the events brought up at trial.

Rader further testified that shortly before the Department referral, Klotz asked Rader to put all of the children in her car so that she could take them out to a "last supper" before she committed suicide. Klotz admitted that she wanted to take her children out to dinner and planned on driving her car into a tree afterward, but testified that she did not intend to harm the children. Following this incident, Klotz entered a hospital for treatment. Upon release from the hospital, Klotz announced that she intended to bring the children with her to Crane, Texas to live with her new boyfriend, who had been a fellow patient at the hospital. Klotz admitted at trial that she did not begin consistently taking her medications for bipolar disorder until December 2008. She testified that prior to December 2008, she would stop taking her medication when she felt she was "doing better."

According to Rader, Klotz was also physically abusive. Rader testified that Klotz repeatedly attempted to run him over with her car. On one occasion, Rader claimed that Klotz hit him in the leg with her car while the children were watching. Rader further testified that Klotz intentionally drove recklessly while the children were in the car in order to scare them and that her behavior made J.L.R. so afraid that he vomited. (3) Rader contended that Klotz hit him several times over their ten-year relationship, at times when the children were present. He stated that he lived in the garage or storm cellar of their house in order to avoid Klotz.

The children were also witnesses to an altercation, according to Rader, in which Rader pulled Klotz off of J.M. by her hair because she had beaten and choked J.M. until he began spitting up blood. (4) Rader stated that he called the police, but that Klotz ran away before they arrived.

Finally, Rader testified that Klotz, over his objection, invited her father Billy Mason, a registered sex offender, to live with Klotz, Rader, and the children. Mason became a registered sex offender after being convicted of repeatedly sexually abusing Klotz when she was a teenager and young adult. Mason lived with the family for approximately six months. Rader testified that he never left the children alone with Mason.

Rader and Klotz also testified regarding their violations of the Department's family service plan. Klotz admitted that, though the family service plan ordered her to pay $260 per month in child support beginning May 1, 2008, she made no payments. She also admitted that she was arrested for harassment of an ex-boyfriend in violation of the plan. Rader admitted to using methamphetamine on December 31, 2007 and failing a subsequent drug test, but testified that he had not used illegal drugs since. Rader also admitted to being arrested in 2008 for placing a non-emergency 911 call.

At the time of trial, R.J.D. and E.J.M.R. lived together in a children's home and D.D.K. and J.L.R. each lived in separate foster facilities. According to Hecht, R.J.D. and E.J.M.R.'s therapist, and Connie Gauwain, the children's court-appointed advocate, R.J.D., D.D.K., and E.J.M.R. all communicated that they would like their parents' rights to be terminated.

After hearing the evidence, the trial court found that Klotz and Rader each (1) knowingly placed or knowingly allowed the children to remain in conditions that endangered the physical and emotional well-being of the children, (2) engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the children with persons who engaged in conduct that endangered the physical or emotional well-being of the children, and (3) failed to comply with the provisions of a court order establishing the actions necessary for the return of the children, who had been in the custody of the Department for over nine months. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (O) (West Supp. 2010).

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William Joseph Rader and Michelle Lea Klotz v. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-joseph-rader-and-michelle-lea-klotz-v-texas-department-of-family-texapp-2011.