Court Opinion

ID: 4100295
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-11-21 08:20:03.524482+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:11:10.349316
License: Public Domain

Fourth Court of Appeals
                                           San Antonio, Texas
                                      MEMORANDUM OPINION
                                               No. 04-16-00315-CV

                          IN THE INTEREST OF A.G.K. and T.L.C., Children

                       From the 57th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
                                    Trial Court No. 2014-PA-02489
                            Honorable Stephani A. Walsh, Judge Presiding

Opinion by:       Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice

Sitting:          Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice
                  Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
                  Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice

Delivered and Filed: November 16, 2016

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART

           Frances and Thomas 1 appeal the termination of their parental rights. They argue there is

insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings. Because we agree there is legally

insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s best-interest findings, we reverse the trial court’s

order terminating Frances’s and Thomas’s parental rights and render judgment denying the

Department of Family and Protective Services’ request that their parental rights be terminated.

Because the parents do not challenge conservatorship, we affirm that part of the judgment.

1
 To protect the identity of the minor children, we refer to the children’s parents by their first names and to the children
by their initials. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 109.002(d) (West 2014); TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2).
                                                                                                  04-16-00315-CV

                                        PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

        In October 2014, the Department filed a petition to terminate Frances’s parental rights to

A.G.K. and T.L.C., to terminate Thomas’s parental rights to T.L.C., 2 and for conservatorship of

the children. The Department removed A.G.K. and T.L.C. due to concerns that Frances was over-

medicating, over-hospitalizing, under-feeding, and emotionally abusing A.G.K. The Department

was unable to determine whether Frances and Thomas neglected or abused the children and ruled

out an allegation that Thomas had abused one of the children. The Department returned the

children to Frances and Thomas after they completed their family service plans and after Frances’s

therapist recommended the children be returned home.

        The Department removed A.G.K. and T.L.C. a second time because the Department

disagreed with Frances’s and Thomas’s decision to take the advice of a medical doctor and fill the

children’s prescriptions for psychotropic medication. The case proceeded to a bench trial, at which

sixteen witnesses testified. The trial court admitted hundreds of pages of A.G.K.’s medical records,

A.G.K.’s school records, and “contact narratives” kept by the Department to document the family’s

visits. After the parties presented closing argument, the trial court found Frances and Thomas

endangered the children and that termination of their parental rights was in the children’s best

interest. Frances and Thomas now appeal.

                                           STANDARD OF REVIEW

        A judgment terminating parental rights must be supported by clear and convincing

evidence. Id. § 161.001(b). To determine whether this heightened burden of proof was met, we

employ a heightened standard of review to determine whether a “factfinder could reasonably form

a firm belief or conviction about the truth of the State’s allegations.” In re C.H., 89 S.W.3d 17, 25

2
  Thomas is A.G.K.’s step-father; A.G.K.’s biological father voluntarily relinquished his parental rights in a prior
proceeding.

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(Tex. 2002). “This standard guards the constitutional interests implicated by termination, while

retaining the deference an appellate court must have for the factfinder’s role.” In re O.N.H., 401
S.W.3d 681, 683 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2013, no pet.). We do not reweigh issues of witness

credibility but defer to the factfinder’s reasonable determinations of credibility. In re J.P.B., 180
S.W.3d 570, 573 (Tex. 2005).

       A legal sufficiency review requires us to examine the evidence “in the light most favorable

to the finding to determine whether a reasonable trier of fact could have formed a firm belief or

conviction that its finding was true.” In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d 256, 266 (Tex. 2002). We assume

the factfinder resolved disputed facts in favor of its finding if a reasonable factfinder could have

done so, and we disregard all evidence that a reasonable factfinder could have disbelieved or found

incredible. Id. But we may not simply disregard undisputed facts that do not support the finding;

to do so would not comport with the heightened burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence.

Id.

                         THE TRIAL COURT’S BEST-INTEREST FINDINGS

       The trial court found that termination of Frances’s and Thomas’s parental rights is in the

children’s best interest. Frances and Thomas argue the evidence is legally insufficient to support

these findings. “To terminate parental rights, the fact-finder must find by clear and convincing

evidence that . . . termination is in the best interest of the child.” In re J.P.B., 180 S.W.3d at 572.

“[T]here is a presumption that fit parents act in the best interests of their children.” In re D.J.H.,

381 S.W.3d 606, 614 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2012, no pet.) (quoting Troxel v. Granville, 530
U.S. 57 (2000)). The best-interest determination is a wide-ranging inquiry, and the Texas Supreme

Court has set out some factors relevant to the determination:

       •   the desires of the child;
       •   the emotional and physical needs of the child now and in the future;

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       •   the emotional and physical danger to the child now and in the future;
       •   the parental abilities of the individuals seeking custody;
       •   the programs available to assist these individuals to promote the best interest of
           the child;
       •   the plans for the child by these individuals or by the agency seeking custody;
       •   the stability of the home or proposed placement;
       •   the acts or omissions of the parent which may indicate that the existing parent-
           child relationship is not a proper one; and
       •   any excuse for the acts or omissions of the parent.

Holley v. Adams, 544 S.W.2d 367, 372 (Tex. 1976). The list is not exhaustive, and not every factor

must be proved to find that termination is in the child’s best interest. In re C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 27.

Evidence of only one factor may be sufficient for a factfinder to form a reasonable belief or

conviction that termination is in the child’s best interest—especially when undisputed evidence

shows that the parental relationship endangered the child’s safety. Id.

       “Evidence that the parent has committed the acts or omissions prescribed by section

161.001 may also be probative in determining the child’s best interest; but the mere fact that an

act or omission occurred in the past does not ipso facto prove that termination is currently in the

child’s best interest.” In re O.N.H., 401 S.W.3d at 684 (internal citation omitted). Even if there is

evidence of poor parenting skills, poor decision making, and inadequate protection of children in

the past, the evidence may be legally insufficient to support a best-interest finding when it is

undisputed that a parent has done everything the Department has reasonably required of the parent

and more. See In re C.E.K., 214 S.W.3d 492, 503 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.).

A. The Children’s Desires

       The Department acknowledges in its brief it did not offer the testimony of A.G.K. or T.L.C.

regarding their desires. The Department argues, however, A.G.K. “appeared frightened and distant

when Frances and Thomas picked him up from school.” There is no evidence that T.L.C. ever

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appeared frightened of Frances or Thomas. Bernadette Jimenez, a nurse at A.G.K.’s school,

testified:

        I would watch [A.G.K.]’s reaction when mom and dad would pick him up or from
        the clinic. And he wasn’t really receptive to their affection or it just seemed a little
        -- I was just concerned about him overall, just watch his reaction and it -- he didn't
        seem comfortable. I don’t know how to describe it.

She further testified it appeared to her that A.G.K. was afraid of his parents. School Nurse

Bernadette’s testimony was based on her observations while A.G.K. attended Sinclair Elementary

School from August 2014 to November 2014. A.G.K.’s medical records also note he was

“observed to visibly fearful of [Frances]” in April 2014. The Department also received a referral

in May 2014 alleging A.G.K. showed fear of being hit by Frances if he did not take a dietary

supplement, and a June 2014 referral alleging A.G.K. stated “I don’t want to go home with my

mom. She is really mean to me and hits me really hard.” We must take this evidence as true.

        But there is no evidence A.G.K. recently feared his parents. The trial in this case was held

in April 2016, nearly two years after these alleged incidents. The Department notes “A.G.K. and

T.L.C. bonded well with Frances and Thomas when engaged in therapy.” Specifically, notes from

Frances’s individual and family counselor, Melanie Hennis, state that in June 2015, Frances and

A.G.K. interacted well with each other, “they were affectionate toward each other,” and A.G.K.

“was definitely excited about spending time with his mother.”

        The Department argues, however, “no evidence suggests they got along well outside of

therapy.” We disagree. The trial court admitted uncontroverted contact narratives describing the

family’s visits after the children were removed. They show:

        •    On August 5, 2015, A.G.K. and T.L.C. “both ran up and hugged [Thomas] when they
             saw him. [Thomas] picked up [T.L.C.] by the arms and gave him a kiss,” and A.G.K.
             said he was happy to see Thomas.

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       •   On August 6, 2015, A.G.K. went to Frances when he was upset, she hugged him, and
           he calmed down.

       •   On October 20, 2015, A.G.K. and T.L.C. “came and hugged their parents and were
           happy to see them.” An October 6, 2015 narrative states Thomas held A.G.K., and
           A.G.K. was laughing and asked for a cat.

       •   On October 27, 2015, A.G.K. and T.L.C. were excited to be returned home to Frances
           and Thomas, they did not want to go back to their foster home, A.G.K. got onto
           Frances’s lap and started hugging her, he gave her a letter that said “I love you,” and
           after he got upset and started crying, Frances was able to calm him down. The contact
           narrative noted, “Both boys appeared comfortable with their parents and were not
           fearful.”

We may not disregard these undisputed facts, which do not support the trial court’s best-interest

finding, because doing so would not comport with the heightened burden of proof. See J.F.C., 96
S.W.3d at 266.

B. The Children’s Needs, Acts and Omissions & Explanations

       The Department argues evidence of the following acts and omissions supports the trial

court’s best-interest findings: (1) Frances’s drug use in 2009; (2) falsification of A.G.K.’s

behavioral conditions; (3) over-medication of A.G.K.; (4) over-hospitalization of A.G.K.; (5)

A.G.K.’s emaciation and failure to thrive; (6) emotional abuse of A.G.K. in 2014 (when he was

five years old) by having him wear leg braces, sending him to school in a Pull-up diaper, making

him drink from a sippy cup, sitting him in a high chair when he ate, and requiring him to be isolated

when he ate; (7) physical abuse of A.G.K. and failure to seek medical treatment; (8) frequent

switching of schools; and (9) A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s improvements in foster care.

       1. Drug Use

       The Department argues, “Frances endangered A.G.K. from the very beginning of his life

when he was born with drugs in his system.” Although there is evidence A.G.K. was born drug-

addicted, it is undisputed Frances stopped using drugs after A.G.K. was removed in 2009 and has

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remained drug free since then. It is also undisputed Frances completed her family service plan after

A.G.K.’s 2009 removal and the Department decided to place A.G.K. back with Frances in 2010.

Distant acts such as drug use, absent evidence that similar conduct remains a current or future

threat to the children, may not support termination. See Wetzel v. Wetzel, 715 S.W.2d 387, 390

(Tex. App.—Dallas 1986, no writ). The Department presented no evidence that Thomas ever used

drugs or that Frances’s use of drugs in 2009 endangered T.L.C. Because it is undisputed Frances

has rehabilitated herself and remained drug free since 2009, and there is no evidence that drug use

remains a current or future threat to the children, Frances’s drug use in 2009 does not support

termination. See id.

       2. Pediatric Condition Falsification

       The Department argues Frances falsified A.G.K.’s behavioral conditions. The Department

primarily relies upon the testimony of Dr. James Lukefahr, Nurse Kathleen Buckley, and School

Nurse Bernadette. Dr. Lukefahr personally examined A.G.K. after he was removed from Frances

and Thomas in 2014. Dr. Lukefahr was concerned that Frances might suffer from Pediatric

Condition Falsification disorder (formerly known as Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy) based on

reports Department caseworker Buckley had provided him and the number of medications A.G.K.

had been prescribed by other medical professionals. Dr. Lukefahr testified he had not reviewed all

of A.G.K.’s school records or his medical records and he testified it is sometimes acceptable to

have a child A.G.K.’s age on psychotropic medication. He clarified his testimony and stated he

had not diagnosed Frances with Pediatric Condition Falsification disorder or Munchausen’s

syndrome by proxy.

       Before A.G.K. was removed in 2014, Frances agreed to take A.G.K. to the Center for

Miracles, where A.G.K. met with Nurse Kathleen. Nurse Kathleen testified she had a similar

concern that Frances falsified psychiatric conditions because such diagnoses “require problems in
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two domains.” However, she also testified the Department did not provide her with all of A.G.K.’s

medical records from his admissions to psychiatric hospitals. The trial court admitted those

records, which detail A.G.K.’s behavioral problems after he was admitted. The Department did

not offer evidence contradicting these medical records.

       Finally, School Nurse Bernadette expressed a concern that A.G.K. was not showing

aggressive behavior at school, as Frances had reported. However, School Nurse Bernadette

testified a teacher reported to her that A.G.K. was injured because he could not sit still in class,

and he fell over and hit his ear or head on the table. Caseworker Buckley testified Frances once

took A.G.K. for in-patient psychiatric care in 2014 and removed him because she disagreed with

the facility’s assessment that A.G.K. was not exhibiting behavioral problems.

       We must take this evidence as true, but we may not ignore undisputed facts that do not

support the trial court’s findings because doing so does not comport with the heightened burden

of proof by clear and convincing evidence. See In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266. Frances testified

she and A.G.K.’s first foster mother observed A.G.K. was easily upset, had mood swings, could

not sustain attention, and had episodes of aggression. Other undisputed evidence shows that, in

addition to A.G.K.’s teacher who observed him injure himself because he could not sit still, several

others personally observed A.G.K. exhibit similar behavior.

       Thomas Gaines, Ph.D., a licensed specialist in school psychology, conducted a

psychological evaluation of A.G.K. in June 2014. Dr. Gaines personally observed A.G.K.’s

conduct. His report stated his observations were consistent with what Frances had reported to him

and explained:

           Behaviorally, [A.G.K.] appears to be highly restless, distractible and impulsive.
       He has difficulty listening to what others tell him as well as focusing on one idea
       or task for an extended period of time. He is easily distracted by irrelevant thoughts
       and extraneous noises and conversations. He often overlooks and fails to respond
       appropriately to directions and other important cues in his environment. [A.G.K.]
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       is impatient and has difficulty waiting for what he wants. He is likely to find it hard
       to organize and finish tasks, to lose or forget important things, and to make careless
       mistakes. Even when he tries to please others (e.g., authority figures), he is apt to
       have difficulty maintaining his concentration and compliance with rules and
       expectations.

Dr. Gaines further noted A.G.K. appeared to be moody and irritable and “to experience moderate

emotional distress. He portrays projective characters as being mean, scaring others, fighting, and

feeling mad, bored and/or upset.” He also noted A.G.K. exhibited an “odd gait” and is likely to

“lie excessively.”

       Robert Jimenez, M.D. personally observed A.G.K. at a psychiatric hospital two times in

2014. He interviewed A.G.K. and noted A.G.K. was depressed, anxious, irritable, and having audio

and command hallucinations. Nurses on Dr. Jimenez’s team observed A.G.K. as:

       [V]ery er[r]atic and unpredictable. Without provocation he will become explosive
       and escalate to the point of complete loss of control. [H]e bangs his head violently
       and repeatedly on the wall and the floor. [He] has an inordi[na]te appetite and is
       very irritable. He states that he has heard voices that tell him do ‘very bad things’.
       He talks to an imaginary friend.

A.G.K.’s medical records from the visit also state A.G.K. had paranoid delusions, threw tantrums,

and occasionally refused to eat. The records also state Frances and Thomas initially did not want

A.G.K. on medication, but “they finally realized he would not stabilize without an antipsychotic

and consented.”

       Counselor Darlene Jimenez counseled A.G.K. in 2014 before he was removed. For all of

A.G.K.’s visits except for one, Counsel Jimenez’s records note A.G.K. exhibited aggressive

behavior toward himself or other people.

       Furthermore, the Department sought the opinion of Gary Bobele, M.D., for a “fresh set of

eyes” after A.G.K. was removed. In December 2014, Dr. Bobele observed A.G.K. was “a little

hyperactive” like most children, but after receiving questionnaires filled out by A.G.K.’s teachers

stating A.G.K. had problems with his attention, social skills, and hyperactivity, Dr. Bobele
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determined “attention deficit disorder was probably the right diagnosis to start with.” Dr. Bobele

recommended A.G.K. be placed on medication and discussed different medication with the

Department caseworker Buckley.

       The Department sought another opinion from Carmen Salmeron, Ph.D., who conducted a

comprehensive psychological evaluation of A.G.K. in June 2015. Although Dr. Salmeron ruled

out several of A.G.K.’s prior diagnoses, she did not rule out ADD or ADHD. Dr. Salmeron

diagnosed A.G.K. with “Posttraumatic Stress Disorder with Depression.” According to Dr.

Salmeron, manifestations of A.G.K.’s diagnosis “can range from aggression to anxiety

to . . . relatively adaptive behavior. It comes and goes. There’s depression sometimes involved.”

       The children’s foster mothers Christine Graham and Kelley Cole testified at trial. Foster

mother Graham testified A.G.K. “refused to get out of the car for about 15 minutes. He was

relatively nonverbal with the caseworker, and cried a bit. He stated that he was afraid but would

not say why. Eventually he agreed to go inside when the caseworker offered to carry him.” Graham

has been a licensed foster parent for approximately ten years and had fostered over one-hundred

sixty children. According Graham, A.G.K. was a:

       [v]ery active little boy. He would get mad at simple things, simple tasks, cry when
       asked to do something really simple. We do homework together and he would start
       off paying attention. Maybe three or four minutes into it, he would constantly look
       off into another direction. I had to kind of seclude him because he would always
       constantly look at everybody else and not pay attention to what was going on with
       his homework.

She observed him have “anger issues” at times. “He would throw things or he would just get upset

where he would hit objects or the table or a chair.” Although Graham thought some of A.G.K.’s

behaviors were normal for a child, she determined his overall behavior justified a doctor’s visit.

       Foster mother Cole testified most of A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s behavior was typical and

normal for brothers, but “[t]hey do tend to get a little aggressive with each other” and both “have

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trouble sitting still” and “paying attention.” Cole explained A.G.K. would choose not to eat as part

of a “power struggle,” but when he was given different options, he was not a picky eater. According

to Cole, A.G.K. was angry; he and T.L.C. would be angry at each other “a lot”; they would push

each other; and T.L.C. would push other children. Cole testified the pushing was not extraordinary.

Cole found that A.G.K. responded better to a strict schedule and she did not think A.G.K. needed

to be on ADHD medications. Cole did not observe the children act afraid of Frances or Thomas.

       Dr. Lukefahr affirmatively stated he was not testifying Frances suffered from Pediatric

Condition Falsification disorder (or Munchausen’s Syndrome by Proxy). He and Nurse Kathleen

testified their concerns about the possibility of Frances having such a disorder were based on the

absence of evidence that others observed A.G.K. as being hyperactive or aggressive. Witnesses

testified without contradiction and the undisputed evidence contained in A.G.K.’s medical records

show that A.G.K. was diagnosed with ADHD; his hyperactivity was observed by numerous

individuals other than Frances; and A.G.K. had undisputed episodes of agitation, aggression, mood

swings, and auditory-command hallucinations. Thus, Dr. Lukefahr’s and Nurse Kathleen’s

testimony does not support the Department’s assertion that Frances suffered from Pediatric

Condition Falsification disorder.

       3. Overmedication

       The primary dispute at trial and between the Department and the parents was whether

Frances overmedicated A.G.K. The Department argues Frances “administered over seven different

types of psychotropic medications at one time, compromising [A.G.K.’s] health and

development.” It was undisputed at trial that A.G.K.’s medications were prescribed by doctors

because of A.G.K.’s behavior, which was observed by several individuals over the course of

several years in several different settings. The only evidence pertaining to the potentially harmful

side effects of A.G.K.’s medications was that Ritalin can suppress one’s appetite and Risperdal
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caused A.G.K. to have “tics” or “tremors.” However, it was undisputed that doctors prescribed

A.G.K. at least three other medications that would stimulate his appetite. Furthermore, according

to A.G.K.’s medical records, Dr. Jimenez decided to keep A.G.K. on Risperdal because the

benefits of Risperdal “far outweigh” the side effects of tics and tremors, which side effects could

be addressed with Benadryl.

       Dr. Jimenez testified without contradiction that ADHD is “a neurological problem.” Dr.

Bobele testified without contradiction that “medication has been shown to be the most effective

therapy for [ADHD].” Dr. Bobele explained there was a recent “big study” comparing different

approaches to therapy for ADHD and the study “found that medication therapy was superior to

other kinds of approaches to treatment.” The record does not support the Department’s suggestion

that the side effects of A.G.K.’s medications outweighed the benefits. Finally, with regard to

T.L.C., the Department presented no evidence that Frances and Thomas’s decision to give A.G.K.

prescribed medication affected T.L.C. negatively in any way.

       4. Over-Hospitalization

       The Department argues Frances took A.G.K. to the hospital too many times, disrupting his

growth and development. Specifically, the Department notes “A.G.K. was hospitalized by Frances

at least five times in eleven months before the Department removed him.” At trial, Department

caseworker Buckley and Dr. Lukefahr testified that unnecessarily taking a child to a hospital can

be disruptive to a child. However, there is evidence that only one of A.G.K.’s hospitalizations was

unnecessary. Department caseworker Buckley testified Frances took A.G.K. to a medical facility

during the 2013-2014 school year for in-patient treatment, was informed by a facility

representative that no behavioral problems were observed, and then removed A.G.K. from the

facility because she disagreed with the assessment.

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       But it was undisputed that Frances took A.G.K. for in-patient treatment when A.G.K. was

“hearing voices” and violently and repeatedly banging his head on the wall and the floor, behavior

that was independently observed by medical professionals at a different in-patient facility. Another

time when Frances took A.G.K. to a psychiatric hospital, medical professionals observed A.G.K.

have “agitation, tremors, restless leg kind of phenomenon, and ticks,” which were also observed

by medical professionals at the hospital. Another hospital visit was for an x-ray of A.G.K.’s nose

after he had fallen down the stairs. And, as the Department acknowledges, it is undisputed that

Frances took A.G.K. to the hospital and reported his weight issues—which was one of the

Department’s primary concerns—and that A.G.K. gained weight while he was in the hospital. We

may not disregard these undisputed facts when determining whether the Department satisfied its

heightened burden of proof in this case. See id. Finally, there is no evidence that A.G.K.’s hospital

visits affected T.L.C.

       5. Emaciation & Failure to Thrive

       The Department argues Frances and Thomas caused A.G.K. to fail to thrive and become

emaciated by intentionally withholding food as a form of punishment and restricting his diet. It is

undisputed that A.G.K. has always been in the fifth percentile of body weight or lower, he did not

weigh above the fifth percentile when he was reunited with Frances in 2010, and he was diagnosed

as failure to thrive at his twelve-month check-up when A.G.K. was first placed in foster care.

Because it is undisputed that A.G.K. has always had a very low body weight, there is no evidence

supporting the Department’s suggestion that Frances and Thomas caused him to become emaciated

after the Department returned A.G.K. to Frances. The Department acknowledges Frances and

Thomas took A.G.K. to the hospital out of concern for his low weight and, as a result of seeking

medical attention, A.G.K. gained weight. It was further undisputed that Frances and Thomas gave

A.G.K. three different prescribed medications that had the side effect of stimulating his appetite.
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         School Nurse Bernadette testified she inferred Frances must have been withholding food

as a form of punishment from the sole fact that A.G.K. “was always hungry.” 3 When explaining

what she meant by “restricting” A.G.K.’s diet, School Nurse Bernadette clarified she was

concerned about the type of food Frances provided for A.G.K. She testified:

         [Frances] would do a menu and she wanted to know exactly how much he ate. And
         there would be like six olive[s], six pickles, just things that you wouldn’t normally
         see in a child’s lunch. You know, it would be like one Nutella sandwich, and then
         there were other kinds of items he wasn’t interested in eating, but they were on the
         menu and she wanted written down exactly what he ate and didn’t eat.

The trial court admitted into evidence two lunch menus Frances had prepared for A.G.K. Both

lunch menus included a monthly calendar with entries for school days. One of the menus shows

one week of entries: each day, A.G.K. was to eat (1) a sandwich (Nutella and banana, ham and

cheese, or chicken and cheese); (2) fruit (either grapes or strawberries); (3) either yogurt or

pudding; (4) pickles or olives; and (5) Ensure. 4 The other menu contained entries with a wider

variety of food including various types of sandwiches, chicken nuggets, mashed potatoes, cheese

and pepperoni pizza, sweet potato fries, taco salad, hamburgers, chicken fajitas, and various fruits

and vegetables.

         Three of A.G.K.’s foster mothers, as well as Frances, described him as a “picky eater.”

A.G.K.’s foster mother Cole testified A.G.K. used food as a form of power and control, and she

was able to get him to eat when she gave him options. A.G.K. was on three medications that would

stimulate his appetite. Once Frances and Thomas learned they could successfully encourage

A.G.K. to eat by giving him choices, they successfully implemented that technique during visits

3
  Department caseworker Buckley and Dr. Lukefahr also testified about this concern, but both referred to the source
of the concern was A.G.K.’s school records.
4
  Dr. Lukefahr and School Nurse Bernadette testified Ensure was not appropriate for a child because it is “for adults”
and not “for children.” It was undisputed Frances had A.G.K. drink Ensure as a dietary supplement to increase
A.G.K.’s calorie intake and protein at Dr. Jimenez’s recommendation. Other than testimony that Ensure is “for adults,”
there is no evidence Ensure is harmful if consumed by a child. Frances and Thomas explained they gave A.G.K.
Ensure because he refused to drink Pediasure and Dr. Jimenez also had A.G.K. drinking Ensure.

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and at home after the children were returned. We may not disregard these undisputed facts when

determining whether the Department satisfied its heightened burden of proof in this case. See id.

Considering the record as a whole and considering the Department’s evidence in light of other

undisputed facts, the record does not support the Department’s assertion that Frances or Thomas

caused A.G.K. to become emaciated by intentionally withholding food from him as a form of

punishment.

       6. Emotional Abuse & the Department’s Scapegoating Theory

       Although the Department acknowledges there is “no evidence suggest[ing] T.L.C. was the

victim of . . . emotional abuse,” it argues there is evidence that Frances and Thomas emotionally

abused A.G.K. by making him wear leg braces and wear a Pull-up diaper to school, forcing him to

drink from a sippy cup, sitting him in a high chair when he ate at home, and requiring him to be

isolated when he ate at school. The Department suggests Frances and Thomas intended to abuse

A.G.K. emotionally because the family had “problems” they sought to blame on A.G.K.’s

behavior. The Department also notes it “became concerned for T.L.C. as A.G.K.’s removal would

endanger T.L.C., as he could become the new scapegoat.” The Department argues that T.L.C.

“adopted” his parents’ behavior and blamed A.G.K. for their being in foster care.

       Dr. Lukefahr testified, “Scapegoating is where one family member, frequently a child, is

blamed for the problems that the family is having, be they emotional, financial, or otherwise, and

that child is singled out for negative treatments.” He further testified “[t]here is a phenomenon

where if the scapegoat is removed from the situation, then another individual . . . then becomes the

new scapegoat.” Dr. Lukefahr testified he did not “interview the parents or teachers or anybody

else to determine if scapegoating could be diagnosed.” Department caseworker Buckley testified

she believed Frances was “scapegoating” A.G.K. by “[m]aking false reports about his behaviors

to get him hospitalized [and] placed on medications.” Department caseworker Buckley echoed Dr.
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Lukefahr’s concerns about scapegoating in her testimony. Foster mother Cole testified that when

A.G.K. and T.L.C. first came to live with her, she heard T.L.C. blame A.G.K. for their being in

foster care.

        The Department does not identify in its brief any “problem” for which Frances and Thomas

used A.G.K. as a scapegoat. The only evidence of such “problems” was Nurse Kathleen’s

testimony. Nurse Kathleen testified she reviewed records the Department provided her and

identified several risk factors: Frances had a history of mental illness, the family lived in poverty,

and A.G.K. was “living with an unrelated adult.” However, Nurse Kathleen clarified on cross-

examination that the Department failed to inform her that the “unrelated adult” was Frances’s

husband, T.L.C.’s biological father, and A.G.K.’s step-father. She also testified she did not know

Thomas had a job as a nurse, and she inferred the family was living in poverty because Frances

might have qualified for Medicaid. Furthermore, it was undisputed Frances had not used drugs

since 2009, and she managed her anxiety and ADHD with medication and Thomas’s support.

        There is evidence that in November 2014, when A.G.K. was five, he was wearing leg

braces and Pull-up diapers, drinking from a “sippy cup,” and eating in a highchair at home. But it

was undisputed at trial that an orthopedic specialist recommended that A.G.K. wear leg braces. A

June 2014 physical therapy record shows A.G.K.’s motor skills were fairly normal but he

“presented with impaired strength, balance, coordination, [and] motor planning . . . [and he] would

benefit from skilled physical therapy services 2x/week to improve impairments in order to acquire

age appropriate gross motor skills.” His subsequent physical therapy notes showed A.G.K. reached

75%-80% of his short term goal of ascending stairs without support and he reached 50%-65% of

descending steps without support. His records also state he had “poor ankle stability” when

walking on an eight-foot line.

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       Department caseworker Buckley testified A.G.K. “had accidents at the very beginning,”

but she believed Pull-up diapers were inappropriate because it appeared to be emotional abuse.

A.G.K.’s medical records show that foster mother Cole and nurses at a psychiatric facility observed

A.G.K. use food and bathroom accidents to gain power and control over his environment. When

A.G.K. was admitted for in-patient care, he would refuse to go to his room and would “sit in the

hallway until he urinate[d] on himself.”

       Frances explained she had A.G.K. eat in a highchair “because he would make a big mess

when he would eat,” and Thomas explained A.G.K. drank from a “sippy cup” because “he spilled

stuff.” Frances’s and Thomas’s explanation that A.G.K. spilled and made messes when he ate and

drank was not contradicted. Instead, it is undisputed that A.G.K. suffered from ADHD and often

could not sit still, and one of the Department’s contact narratives notes A.G.K. “was spilling his

ice cream on himself.”

       Department caseworker Buckley testified Frances “had allegedly asked the school to have

the child eat alone in the cafeteria or in the office at the school.” School Nurse Bernadette testified

she had documentation from A.G.K.’s doctor suggesting eating in the cafeteria “was too

stimulating” for A.G.K. According to School Nurse Bernadette, she “questioned the doctor’s

office” and contacted Nurse Darlene. School Nurse Bernadette testified Nurse Darlene told her it

“was fine” for A.G.K. to eat in the cafeteria “if [A.G.K.] was okay and it wasn’t over stimulating.”

       The record does not support the Department’s arguments that Frances and Thomas

emotionally abused A.G.K. by treating him as a scapegoat for the family’s problems, making him

wear leg braces and a diaper to school, having him drink from a “sippy cup,” having him sit in a

high chair when he ate at home, and requiring him to be isolated when he ate at school. It was

undisputed that either a doctor or nurse recommended Frances’s and Thomas’s actions, or Frances

and Thomas were attempting to address A.G.K.’s messy eating and bathroom accidents. We may
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not disregard these undisputed facts when determining whether the Department satisfied its

heightened burden of proof in this case. See J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266.

       7. Physical Abuse & Failure to Seek Medical Care

       Although the Department acknowledges there is “no evidence suggest[ing] T.L.C. was the

victim of physical . . . abuse,” it argues Frances and Thomas physically abused A.G.K. The

Department received an allegation that A.G.K. said he did not want to leave in-patient treatment

in June 2014 because Frances “is really mean to me and hits me very hard,” and Frances yanked

A.G.K.’s arm and spanked him twice. School Nurse Bernadette testified A.G.K. came to school

one day in October 2014 with red marks on his cheek and he told her Thomas “got mad” at him

and hit him across the face. She then clarified her testimony, after locating her notes at trial, that

on October 31, 2014, A.G.K. came in late and had “two marks on both sides of face.” She testified

A.G.K. told her Thomas had “kicked him and pushed him down the stairs and that [Thomas] was

being mean to him.”

       There is evidence that on a separate occasion in August 31, 2014, A.G.K. fell down the

stairs, causing him to bruise his nose and fracture his wrists. The Department argues there is

evidence that Thomas caused A.G.K.’s bone fractures by kicking A.G.K. and pushing him down

the stairs on that date. We disagree. When School Nurse Bernadette clarified her testimony based

on her October 31, 2014 notes, she stated A.G.K. said he received two red marks on his face that

day because Thomas “kicked him and pushed him down the stairs and that [Thomas] was being

mean to him.” This incident was two months after A.G.K. fell down the stairs. Furthermore, Dr.

Lukefahr testified he asked A.G.K. to explain who hurt his arms or wrists and A.G.K. first said no

one had hurt him, but then said T.L.C. had hurt him. Dr. Lukefahr testified that A.G.K.’s wrist

fractures were consistent with falling, but had concerns that A.G.K.’s metacarpal bone fracture

was from something smashing or stomping on his hand.
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       Although the Department investigated several referrals alleging physical abuse prior to

December 2014, the Department was unable to determine whether physical abuse occurred

because there was—in the Department’s determination—insufficient evidence. In addition to

A.G.K.’s conflicting accounts of how he was injured, it was undisputed that A.G.K. had episodes

of hyperactivity, one of which caused him to fall out of his chair and injure himself; physical fights

with T.L.C. and other children; and difficulty ascending and descending stairs without support.

Dr. Gaines’s psychological evaluation of A.G.K. also noted A.G.K. would “lie excessively.”

       The Department argues there is evidence that Frances and Thomas failed to seek medical

treatment for A.G.K.’s bone fractures after he fell down the stairs. We disagree. It is undisputed

that Frances and Thomas took A.G.K. to the emergency room after he fell down the stairs because

of a bump on his nose. Department caseworker Buckley testified she reviewed the records from

A.G.K.’s visit to the emergency room and, according to Buckley, the physician and nurse did not

“note any kind of extremity pain.” There also is no evidence A.G.K. had ever complained of pain

in his hands, wrists, or arms after August 31, 2014, when he fell down the stairs. The witnesses

who testified about their interactions with A.G.K. during this time affirmatively testified A.G.K.

did not complain about pain in his wrists.

       There is some evidence that Frances and Thomas had hit A.G.K. in 2014 before the children

were removed. However, it is undisputed that after the children were removed in 2014, Frances

and Thomas completed their family service plans and successfully used parenting techniques they

had learned in therapy. Counselor Hennis testified she recommended with 100% certainty that the

children should be returned to their parents. It is undisputed that after the Department returned the

children to Frances and Thomas, A.G.K. and T.L.C. reported there was no physical abuse.

Furthermore, the sole reason the Department removed the children again in 2015 was caseworker

Buckley’s disagreement with the parents’ decision to follow the medical advice of another medical
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professional who, after the children were returned to Frances and Thomas, recommended and

prescribed medication for the children. Thus, there is no evidence that physical abuse remains a

current or future threat to the children. See Wetzel, 715 S.W.2d at 390.

        8. Frequent Switching of Schools

        The Department argues Frances and Thomas failed to provide for A.G.K.’s physical and

emotional needs by “switch[ing] schools multiple times over the course of a year and a half,

disrupting his growth and development.” There is evidence that A.G.K. was attending pre-school

at Premiere Leadership Academy, and at the beginning of the new school year, A.G.K. started

kindergarten at Sinclair Elementary School. However, the Department’s evidence shows A.G.K.

and T.L.C. switched schools multiple times because of the Department’s removals and the changes

in foster parents.

        9. Foster Care

        The Department contends “A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s physical and emotional needs were met

with their foster parents, where their health improved.” There is some evidence that the children’s

health improved. Foster mother Cole described A.G.K. and T.L.C. as normal brothers, but she

testified A.G.K. and T.L.C. were aggressive and often angry with each other and had trouble sitting

still and paying attention. Foster mother Graham also testified about A.G.K.’s episode of “refusing

to get out of the car for about 15 minutes,” crying, and saying he was afraid for no apparent reason.

Graham also described A.G.K. as “very active,” and testified he had anger issues, was easily

distractible, would cry when asked to do something “really simple,” and would hit objects, the

table, or a chair. Graham believed A.G.K. would benefit from medication, as did the doctor

Graham took A.G.K. to see.

        There is undisputed evidence that after the Department removed A.G.K. and T.L.C. in

November 2015, A.G.K. and T.L.C. continued fighting; T.L.C. would bite and be “very defiant”;
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A.G.K. angered easily, would cry a lot, and would “kick things” when he did not want to do

something; homework time was a “nightmare”; and A.G.K. was distractible and required disability

accommodations at school. Although there is evidence that A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s health, behavior,

and school performance improved as they got older, the evidence does not support the

Department’s suggestion that A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s behavioral issues improved in foster care.

C. Parenting Abilities & Services

       The Department argues that “[o]nce reunited, Frances was unable to successfully parent

A.G.K., relying on psychotropic medications.” The Department contends Frances and Thomas

gave A.G.K. psychotropic medication without the Department’s consent after the Department

returned A.G.K. and T.L.C. in November 2015. There is conflicting testimony as to whether the

Department instructed Frances and Thomas not to give A.G.K. or T.L.C. medication without the

Department’s approval. There is also conflicting testimony that Frances and Thomas subjectively

wanted A.G.K. and T.L.C. on medication and that they fabricated a bus driver’s threat to prevent

A.G.K. and T.L.C. from riding the school bus if they continued to misbehave. The trial court was

entitled to resolve these disputes in the Department’s favor and believe that France and Thomas

were attempting to find a way to get A.G.K. back on medication. See In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at

266.

       But we may not disregard undisputed facts in determining whether the Department met its

heightened burden of proof in this case. See id. Frances and Thomas’s decision to fill A.G.K.’s

and T.L.C.’s prescriptions is reasonably explained by the undisputed evidence at trial. A.G.K. had

a history of hyperactivity and aggression. Several medical professionals recommended medication

for A.G.K., and Dr. Bobele testified without contradiction that medication is the most effective

method to treat ADHD. Frances was required by her family service plan to continuing taking her

medication, and she found that taking medication personally helped her manage her anxiety and
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ADHD. Thomas had approximately thirty years of experience as a nurse, worked at a psychiatric

hospital, and personally observed the benefits of psychotropic medications. Frances’s and

Thomas’s act of filling A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s medication without the Department’s consent is

explained by Frances’s and Thomas’s personal experience with the benefits of psychotropic

medications and doctors determining psychotropic medications would benefit the children.

       After the Department returned A.G.K. and T.L.C. to Frances and Thomas, A.G.K. hit

T.L.C. on the side of the head with a toy and T.L.C.’s school would not allow him to return without

a doctor’s note. Frances took A.G.K. and T.L.C. to see Dr. Pick, who placed T.L.C. on Citirazine,

an anti-allergy medication, and prescribed Intuniv, a mood stabilizer, for A.G.K. and T.L.C.

Although there is evidence that Frances and Thomas filled the medication and T.L.C. was given

anti-allergy medication, there is no evidence that Intuniv, if given to A.G.K. or T.L.C., would have

had any harmful side effects. Department caseworker Buckley informed Frances and Thomas she

was “not completely opposed to meds for ADHD for [A.G.K.].”

       The Department acknowledges “Frances and Thomas successfully completed services

recommended by the Department.” It also acknowledges “Frances and Thomas performed well

after reunification implementing therapy techniques to address A.G.K. and T.L.C.’s behavior

during therapy sessions.” According to the undisputed evidence, Frances was successfully

implementing techniques she had learned in family therapy and the Department’s records describe

her parenting skills as “very textbook.”

       Counselor Hennis initially predicted in spring 2015 that it would take at least a full year

for Frances to make “even the slightest progress” and she could not “see the children ever going

back to [Frances].” According to Hennis, Frances and Thomas “did a good job over the course,”

and “could definitely implement” strategies and techniques she suggested. And, as of October

2015, Hennis recommended with 100% confidence the children be returned home. The
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Department’s contact narratives detailing the family visits confirmed Frances was able to calm

A.G.K. down when he got upset; successfully encouraged A.G.K. and T.L.C. to eat without

complaining; and helped A.G.K. complete his homework. The record does not support the

Department’s assertion that Frances and Thomas “chose to cease [these parenting techniques] at

home” and instead relied solely on medication after the children were returned in 2015.

D. Plans for the Children & Stability of the Home

        The Department plans for the children to be adopted. Department caseworker Buckley

testified there were three families who expressed interest in adopting A.G.K. and T.L.C.: (1) foster

mother Graham; (2) a family that has adopted other children before but is “not licensed”; and (3)

a foster family in El Paso that A.G.K. and T.L.C. had not met. Other than Graham, there is no

evidence as to the parenting abilities or homes of the other families that expressed interest in

adopting A.G.K. and T.L.C. Graham testified she wanted to adopt the children because she

believed it was a way that A.G.K. and T.L.C. could be reunified with Frances and Thomas. She

testified:

        My personal opinion is that I feel that the children should be placed with their
        biological mom and dad, that -- I feel that they are wonderful parents who deserve
        to have their children back and they are very nurturing and caring and we would
        love to have [A.G.K.] and [T.L.C.] if they didn’t go back home to their family. But
        I feel like that they are fully capable of doing this, taking care of them.”

Regarding Frances’s and Thomas’s home, the Department’s contact narratives described their

home as having plenty of food, and the home was safe and appropriate for A.G.K. and T.L.C.

E. Conclusion

        The record does not support many of the Department’s arguments and characterizations of

the evidence. The Department primarily relies on Frances’s and Thomas’s conduct predating the

children’s removal in November 2014. Frances’s drug use in 2009, which caused A.G.K. to be

born prematurely and drug addicted, is concerning. But because it is undisputed she has remained
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drug free and there is no evidence suggesting Frances is likely to start using drugs in the future,

Frances’s drug use in 2009 is too remote to support the trial court’s best-interest finding. See

Wetzel, 715 S.W.2d at 390.

       There is evidence that before November 2014, Frances hit A.G.K. across his face causing

him to be afraid of her and Thomas hit A.G.K. on one occasion leaving red marks on A.G.K.’s

face and possibly kicked A.G.K. and pushed him down the stairs. But it is undisputed that after

A.G.K. and T.L.C. were removed in November 2014 and someone fractured his wrist, Frances and

Thomas learned and successfully implemented parenting skills from their family service plans that

were effective. Although A.G.K. said Thomas kicked him and pushed him down the stairs, A.G.K.

gave conflicting accounts of whether it was his parents, his brother, or no one who had hurt him,

and based on Dr. Gaines’s evaluation, A.G.K. was likely to “lie excessively” and describe authority

figures as “mean.” There is also no evidence Frances and Thomas hurt A.G.K. after November

2014, and there is undisputed evidence showing neither A.G.K. nor T.L.C. has shown any fear of

Frances or Thomas dating back to August 2015. We may not disregard these undisputed facts when

determining whether the Department satisfied its heightened burden of proof in this case. See

J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266.

       There is evidence suggesting Frances once took A.G.K. to a facility for in-patient treatment

when he was not exhibiting any behavioral problems. The Department suggests it is reasonable to

infer from one unnecessary hospitalization that all of A.G.K.’s hospitalizations were unnecessary.

We disagree. Undisputed evidence shows there was a basis, if not medically necessary reasons,

for A.G.K.’s numerous other hospital visits. We may not disregard these undisputed facts when

determining whether the Department satisfied its heightened burden of proof in this case. See id.

       In addition to there being no evidence that the children desired Frances’s and Thomas’s

parental rights to be terminated, other undisputed facts show that many of the Holley factors weigh
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against a finding that termination is in the children’s best interest. Frances and Thomas repeatedly

sought to determine and meet the emotional and physical needs of both A.G.K. and T.L.C. They

completed their family service plans and successfully implemented parenting skills they learned

in counseling. Frances not only completed her family service plan, but sought additional therapy.

Frances was able to manage her anxiety and ADHD with medication and her relationship with

Thomas, and Frances and Thomas had a safe home for A.G.K. and T.L.C.

       Most of the Department’s evidence demonstrated the Department questioned or disagreed

with how Frances and Thomas addressed A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s physical and mental needs. But,

considering the undisputed evidence, Frances and Thomas had legitimate explanations for (1) the

number of medications A.G.K. had been prescribed; (2) relying on combination of medication and

other techniques to manage A.G.K.’s and T.L.C.’s behavior; and (3) having A.G.K. wear leg

braces and Pull-up diapers, sit in a highchair when eating, drink from a “sippy cup” and eat alone

at school. In light of the undisputed facts in this case, we hold a factfinder could not reasonably

form a firm belief or conviction that termination of Frances’s and Thomas’s parental rights is in

the children’s best interest. See In re C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 25.

                                           DISPOSITION

       The Department requests we reverse and remand in the interest of justice because Frances

and Thomas did not contest the trial court’s award of conservatorship to the Department, and the

children would be left in “custody limbo” if we rendered judgment denying its request to terminate

Frances’s and Thomas’s parental rights. When we conclude there is legally insufficient evidence,

we must ordinarily reverse and render judgment. Flores v. Brimex Ltd. P’ship, 5 S.W.3d 816, 821

(Tex. App.—San Antonio 1999, no pet.). Under unique circumstances when the trial record is not

fully developed, we may exercise our broad discretion to remand for a new trial in the interest of

justice. In re J.A.J., No. 04-14-00684-CV, 2014 WL 7444340, at *3 (Tex. App.—San Antonio
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                                                                                        04-16-00315-CV

Dec. 31, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op.) (citing In re J.E.H., 384 S.W.3d 864, 872 (Tex. App.—San

Antonio 2012, no pet.)).

       Citing In re J.A.J., the Department suggests the interests of justice justify a new trial

whenever the Department fails to satisfy its heightened burden of proof and when an appellant

does not challenge the conservatorship award. Because the facts and procedural posture of J.A.J.

are substantially different, J.A.J. does not support this proposition. The trial in this case lasted one

and a half weeks. Sixteen witnesses testified, and the trial court admitted hundreds of pages of

documents. This case does not present unique circumstances in which the trial record has not been

fully developed. Instead, the Department’s evidence simply does not enable a factfinder to

reasonably form a firm belief or conviction that termination of Frances’s and Thomas’s parental

rights is in A.G.K.’s or T.L.C.’s best interest. We therefore reverse the trial court’s orders of

termination and render judgment denying the Department’s request to terminate Frances’s and

Thomas’s parental rights. Because Frances and Thomas do not challenge the trial court’s

appointment of the Department as managing conservator of the children, we affirm that portion of

the trial court’s judgment.

                                                          Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice

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