Court Opinion

ID: 4467606
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-12-25 05:14:08.270041+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:12.645999
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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                                             NO. 19-0306
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                             IN THE INTEREST OF B.C., A CHILD

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                            ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
                  COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
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                                           PER CURIAM

       The Texas Family Code grants indigent parents the right to appointed counsel in

government-initiated suits seeking to terminate parental rights. TEX. FAM. CODE § 107.013(a).

When a parent claims indigence, an attorney shall be appointed if the trial court determines the

parent is indigent, but the court may not hold a hearing to make that determination until the parent

has filed an affidavit of indigence in accordance with the rules of civil procedure. Id. § 107.013(d)

(citing TEX. R. CIV. P. 145(b)). In this case, the court of appeals erred in holding the trial court was

required to conduct a pre-trial inquiry into a parent’s indigency status, because she neither claimed

indigence nor filed the requisite affidavit until after the trial had concluded. See 579 S.W.3d 432,

437 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2019). We nevertheless affirm the court of appeals’ judgment

remanding for a new termination trial because the trial court failed to give mandatory statutory

admonishments regarding the right to appointed counsel. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 263.0061.

       The Department of Family and Protective Services removed B.C. from her mother’s home

based on allegations that drugs were being used and sold in the home, the home lacked electricity

and running water, and domestic violence was ongoing. The trial court promptly held a removal
hearing and appointed the Department as B.C.’s temporary managing conservator. Because Mother

appeared without counsel at the removal hearing, the trial court informed her that she had the right

to legal representation and the right to court-appointed counsel if she was indigent, but she would

have to fill out “some forms” before the court could determine her indigency status. See Tex. Fam.

Code §§ 107.013(a-1) & (d), 263.0061. Mother appeared without counsel at every subsequent

permanency hearing, but she was not further admonished about her statutory right to legal

representation. Mother neither claimed indigency nor filed an affidavit of indigence, and the trial

court did not appoint counsel to represent her.

        Several months before the mandatory dismissal date, the Department’s primary goal of

family reunification changed to family or fictive kin conservatorship. But as the dismissal date

loomed, and Mother’s progress under the family service plan stalled, the Department sought to

terminate parental rights. Mother did not appear at either the pretrial hearing or the bench trial six

days later, and she remained unrepresented at both.

        After a brief evidentiary hearing, the trial court found grounds to terminate parental rights

and that severing the parent–child relationship is in B.C.’s best interest. See TEX. FAM. CODE

§ 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E), (O), (P), & (b)(2) (involuntary severance of parental rights). At that point,

Mother filed an affidavit of indigence and a pro se notice of appeal, prompting the trial court to hold

a hearing to determine her indigency status. See id. § 107.013(d). The court found Mother indigent

and appointed counsel to represent her on appeal. See id.

        Mother’s appeal raised three issues: (1) she was not timely notified about the trial setting;

(2) she was denied her statutory right to appointed trial counsel; and (3) the trial court’s best-interest

finding is not supported by sufficient evidence. The court of appeals rejected the first issue and did

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not reach the third issue, reversing and remanding to the trial court for a new trial based on issue

two. 579 S.W.3d at 436-37. The court held that Mother was entitled to appointed counsel because

she had appeared in opposition to the suit by informing the trial court that she “wanted her children

back” and “there was sufficient indication in the record that [she] was indigent such that the trial

court should have conducted further inquiry into her status.” Id. at 437.

       The Department does not dispute Mother’s indigency status but asserts that under section

107.013 of the Family Code, she was required to file an affidavit of indigence as a predicate to

obtaining court-appointed counsel. Mother contends an affidavit was not necessary to invoke the

statutory right to appointed counsel and, in the alternative, the trial court failed to properly inform

her about her right to legal representation as required by section 263.0061.

       Section 107.013 grants indigent parents the right to appointed counsel in

Department-initiated termination proceedings. Subsection (a) identifies who is entitled to appointed

counsel:

       In a suit filed by a governmental entity under Subtitle E in which termination of the
       parent-child relationship or the appointment of a conservator for a child is requested,
       the court shall appoint an attorney ad litem to represent the interests of:

               (1) an indigent parent of the child who responds in opposition to the
               termination or appointment . . . .

TEX. FAM. CODE § 107.013. Subsection (a-1) requires trial courts to admonish unrepresented

parents about the right to legal representation:

       In a suit described by Subsection (a) . . . the court shall inform [an unrepresented]
       parent of:

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               (1) the right to be represented by an attorney; and

               (2) if the parent is indigent and appears in opposition to the suit, the right to
               an attorney ad litem appointed by the court.

Id. Subsection (d) delineates the process for establishing indigence for purposes of the statutory

right to appointed counsel provided in subsection (a):

       The court shall require a parent who claims indigence under Subsection (a) to file an
       affidavit of indigence in accordance with Rule 145(b) of the Texas Rules of Civil
       Procedure before the court may conduct a hearing to determine the parent’s
       indigence under [section 107.013] . . . . If the court determines the parent is indigent,
       the court shall appoint an attorney ad litem to represent the parent.

Id.

       Our objective in construing and applying a statute is to determine and give effect to

legislative intent as expressed by the statute’s plain language. Gunn v. McCoy, 554 S.W.3d 645, 672

(Tex. 2018). This text-based approach to statutory construction requires consideration of the

language in the specific section, as well as the statute as a whole. In re Lee, 411 S.W.3d 445, 451

(Tex. 2013). In holding Mother was entitled to appointed counsel because (1) she opposed the suit

and (2) the record bears sufficient indicators of indigency, the court of appeals focused on the

language in subsections (a) and (a-1) but ignored subsection (d)’s requirements. This was error.

       Section 107.013(a)’s court-appointed-counsel mandate applies to an “indigent parent” but

subsection (d) specifies how a parent’s indigency status is determined. Under subsection (d), the

trial court “shall appoint an attorney ad litem to represent” “a parent who claims indigence under

Subsection (a)” “[i]f the court determines the parent is indigent.” TEX. FAM. CODE § 107.013(d).

But the trial court is not authorized to hold a hearing to determine the indigency status of “a parent

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who claims indigence under Subsection (a)” until the parent “file[s] an affidavit of indigence” with

the court. Id.; cf. TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.016(2); Perryman v. Spartan Tex. Six Capital Partners,

Ltd., 546 S.W.3d 110, 131 (Tex. 2018) (“By its plain and common meaning, ‘shall’ denotes

mandatory action.”). The court must inform the parent of the necessity of such a filing—“[t]he court

shall require a parent . . . to file an affidavit of indigence”—but per subsection (d)’s plain language,

the court is required to appoint counsel under subsection (a) only when an affidavit of indigence has

actually been filed and the trial court has determined the parent is truly indigent.

        At the removal hearing, the trial court admonished Mother as required by subsections (a-1)

and (d), but Mother did not file an affidavit of indigence until after the trial on the merits. The court

of appeals’ holding that the trial court was required to “conduct[] further inquiry” without the

requisite affidavit contravenes the statutory text. 579 S.W.3d at 437. Filing an affidavit of

indigence is a necessary prerequisite to a determination that the parent is indigent. See In re J.S.,

09-15-00150-CV, 2015 WL 5731643, at *10 (Tex. App.—Beaumont Oct. 1, 2015, no pet.) (mem.

op.) (stating a father who did not file an affidavit of indigence had “failed to properly initiate the

process for which his appointment of counsel would become mandatory”); In re S.G.,

02-14-00245-CV, 2015 WL 392772, at *1-3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Jan. 29, 2015, no pet.) (mem.

op.) (holding the trial court did not err by allowing trial to proceed without appointing counsel for

a parent who repeatedly failed to provide an affidavit of indigence); J.E. v. Tex. Dept. of Family &

Protective Servs., 03-14-00164-CV, 2014 WL 4536569, at *8 (Tex. App.—Austin Sept. 10, 2014,

no pet.) (mem. op.) (“To be entitled to court-appointed counsel, a ‘parent who claims indigence . . .

must file an affidavit of indigence[.]’”); In re K.L.L.H., 06-09-00067-CV, 2010 WL 87043, at *5

(Tex. App.—Texarkana Jan. 12, 2010, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (explaining that a parent’s filing of

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an affidavit of indigency is “the act which would trigger the process for mandatory appointment of

an attorney ad litem”).

       In this case, however, Mother’s failure to file an affidavit of indigence is not dispositive

because the trial court failed to properly admonish her as required by section 263.0061:

       At the status hearing under Subchapter C and at each permanency hearing under
       Subchapter D held after the date the court renders a temporary order appointing the
       department as temporary managing conservator of a child, the court shall inform
       each parent not represented by an attorney of:

       (1) the right to be represented by an attorney; and

       (2) if a parent is indigent and appears in opposition to the suit, the right to a
       court-appointed attorney.

TEX. FAM. CODE § 263.0061(a) (emphasis added).1 Mother argues, and the record shows, that the

trial court failed to admonish her of her right to counsel at the status hearing, the initial permanency

hearing, and all subsequent permanency hearings.

       As the court of appeals stated, Mother was “clearly and thoroughly informed of her right to

counsel” at the initial status hearing, but section 263.0061(a) requires more. 579 S.W.3d at 437.

At the status hearing and at each permanency hearing after the Department is appointed temporary

managing conservator, trial courts must inform unrepresented parents about their right to legal

       1
         Section 263.0061 also prescribes a process for determining indigency that is substantially
similar to the procedure provided in section 107.013(d):

       If a parent claims indigence and requests the appointment of an attorney in a
       proceeding described by Subsection (a), the court shall require the parent to complete
       and file with the court an affidavit of indigence. . . . If the court determines the
       parent is indigent, the court shall appoint an attorney to represent the parent.

TEX. FAM. CODE § 263.0061(b).

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representation, including the right to court-appointed counsel. That did not happen here. Mother

was present and unrepresented at several hearings falling within section 263.0061(a)’s ambit without

receiving the mandatory admonitions, including at one of the most critical points in the

proceeding—the permanency hearing immediately before trial, when the Department expressed the

necessity of moving forward with the impending termination trial due to the statutory dismissal

deadline. Following the repeated failure to properly admonish Mother, she remained unrepresented

at trial and her relationship with her child was permanently severed. Given these circumstances, and

absent a dispute that Mother truly is indigent, noncompliance with section 263.0061 was not

harmless and reversal is required. See TEX. R. APP. P. 61.1 (standard for reversible error); cf. In re

K.L.C., 990 S.W.2d 242, 243 (Tex. 1999) (trial court’s noncompliance with Family Code provisions

requiring certain admonitions in juvenile delinquency case was harmless under the facts presented).

       Parents face a complex and nuanced family-law system that is challenging to navigate

without the guidance of counsel. Considering the importance of the fundamental rights at issue, the

Legislature has adopted important safeguards in sections 107.013 and 263.0061 to help ensure

parents will not be deprived of their parental rights without due process of law. While the trial court

cannot force parents to retain counsel or follow the procedures required for establishing indigency,

the statutory framework mandates that courts repeatedly inform unrepresented parents about their

statutory rights so they will have an adequate opportunity to understand and invoke those rights.

       Mother raised the trial court’s noncompliance with section 263.0061(a) in her appellate brief

but the court of appeals did not reach that issue. Considering the parties’ shared interest in achieving

an expeditious and final disposition, we elect to exercise our authority to consider the issue.

See TEX. R. APP. P. 53.4. In doing so, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment reversing the

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termination order and remanding the case to the trial court for a new trial because Mother was not

properly admonished about her rights as required by Section 263.0061 of the Texas Family Code.

See TEX. R. APP. P. 59.1.

OPINION DELIVERED: December 20, 2019

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