Wyatt v. Department of Family & Protective Services

193 S.W.3d 61, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1225, 2006 WL 348280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2006
Docket01-05-00213-CV, 01-05-00214-CV, 01-05-00373-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 S.W.3d 61 (Wyatt v. 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
Wyatt v. Department of Family & Protective Services, 193 S.W.3d 61, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1225, 2006 WL 348280 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SAM NUCHIA, Justice.

Appellant, Crystal Lee Wyatt, appeals the termination of her parental rights to *63 her children, D.R.A., M.S., and A.W. 1 Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s judgments. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Appellant’s first child, D.R.A., was born when appellant was 15 years old. When D.R.A. was about one year old, the Department of Family and Protective Services (hereinafter “CPS”) removed him from appellant and placed him with his father, Roy Apps, after discovering a serious burn, for which appellant had not sought medical treatment, on D.R.A.’s foot. When D.R.A. was five years old, CPS learned that Apps had been charged with sexual abuse of his teen-aged daughter. In July 2003, CPS removed D.R.A. from Apps’s possession and returned him to appellant. At this time, appellant had a second child, M.S., was pregnant, and had no employment or permanent place to live. Stacy Ahmed, a licensed social worker and CPS caseworker, was assigned as appellant’s caseworker. Ahmed did a family assessment, during which appellant ,said that she had used cocaine, heroin, and PCP in the past. Ahmed included this information in her report.

In August 2003, Ahmed went to the motel where appellant and her children were staying and found appellant upset and yelling at D.R.A., who was in the bed with the sheet covering him up to his eyes. Ahmed also saw that M.S., who was about 17 months old, had a serious burn on her arm. Appellant said that M.S. had burned herself with the curling iron. Ahmed asked if appellant had taken M.S. to the doctor. Appellant said that she had not, but that M.S. was fine. When Ahmed insisted that they take M.S. to the doctor, appellant became angry and began yelling at Ahmed. Finally, appellant agreed to go to the nearby CPS clinic if Ahmed would first pick up appellant’s friend, Kim Jackson. At the clinic, the doctor examined M.S. and told Ahmed that the injuries were not consistent with appellant’s explanation of the occurrence. When informed of this, appellant again became angry, and a security guard was called because of the disturbance. While waiting to see the doctor, Ahmed checked the messages on her cell phone and found a message that had been left by appellant the previous evening. Appellant was saying that she was “tired of this shit” and that CPS could come pick up D.R.A. and she was taking M.S. to her daddy’s house. Ahmed was concerned about M.S.’s injury and appellant’s behavior. She was also concerned because of appellant’s history with CPS and possible drug abuse, which appellant denied. Ahmed called her supervisor and, after a discussion with her supervisor, took the children into protective custody.

Appellant gave birth to A.W. on October 31, 2003. Because of the risks already existing, CPS took immediate custody of A.W. Initially, appellant told her new caseworker, Rebecca Moore, that she was going to give A.W. to someone, but she later changed her mind. A.W. was born *64 with heart problems and was diagnosed as being developmentally delayed, showing deficits in her physical and mental development. From the age of three months, A.W. saw an occupational therapist twice a week and, at the time of trial, was also seeing a speech therapist twice a week. Thus, her foster parents must take her to therapy four days a week. At the time of trial, A.W. showed improvement, although she still did not have coordination or cognitive skills appropriate for a 15-month-old child.

Because Moore thought that appellant did not understand the extent of A.W.’s special needs, she spoke to appellant about it at each monthly visit. At a court hearing, Moore again brought up the subject of A.W.’s special needs and the therapy A.W. was receiving. Appellant yelled at Moore and said that she didn’t understand why Moore kept bringing up the subject. Moore responded that appellant needed to know the information to provide for A.W.’s needs.

From the time that CPS took possession of appellant’s children until the time of the first trial, appellant lived in a number of locations, staying in one place from a few weeks to three or four months. These places included the home of her aunt, the home of her grandmother in Liberty, an apartment owned by her uncle, her godmother’s home, and an apartment she shared with her friend, Kim. She left the home in Liberty because she had a fight with her grandmother, and she moved out of one apartment because she fought with some old acquaintances who moved into the neighborhood. Moore wrote a letter to help appellant get government-subsidized housing and gave appellant copies of the children’s birth certificates and social security cards. Appellant lost all these documents and called Moore to get additional copies. At the first trial, appellant said she had obtained the government-subsidized housing, but had not moved in because the electricity was not yet turned on because she gave the electric company the wrong address. She moved into the apartment a few days before the second trial began.

After removing the children from appellant’s possession, .CPS arranged for supervised family visitation twice a month. Because A.W. was taken from appellant immediately after birth, CPS arranged for appellant to visit her once each week. However, appellant did not show up for many of these additional visits and told CPS that she wanted to visit all the children together.

Appellant also missed many of her visits with the children. Moore testified that appellant attended only 20 of 34 possible visits with A.W. Moore estimated that appellant attended 25 of 30 possible visits with D.R.A. and that she was about 25 or 30 minutes late for 5 of those visits. On several occasions, appellant called Moore 10 or 15 minutes before the meeting time to say that she would not attend, usually because of the lack of transportation. Because the foster families lived about one hour from Houston, this late cancellation resulted in their making a needless trip. Moore also testified that appellant left some of the visits early, saying that she had some other appointments. When appellant did attend, she was almost always accompanied by one of two friends, Kim or Mike, who had given her a ride and then participated in the visits. The friend would sit on the floor and play with the children while appellant sat on the sofa and waited for the children to come to her. Appellant was observed being highly critical of D.R.A. regarding his appearance, saying his hair was ugly, his breath stank, and his nails were dirty and also saying, in his presence, that she did not want him. *65 Her treatment of D.R.A. improved somewhat after appellant’s parenting classes.

Appellant’s employment history, as it appears in the record, consisted of a part-time job with a home health service and a job at Wendy’s. The home health service job, which paid $5.50 an hour, began in June or July 2004 and lasted about two months. Appellant said that she worked about 10 hours a week and quit the job because of the hours and the pay. Appellant testified that the job at Wendy’s, which paid $6 an hour, began as part time and became full time in the middle of December. However, she also testified that she worked only 28 to 30 hours a week and agreed that that was part time.

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193 S.W.3d 61, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1225, 2006 WL 348280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-department-of-family-protective-services-texapp-2006.