Court Opinion

ID: 4640363
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-08 10:13:12.093929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:13.765868
License: Public Domain

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

                                      NO. 03-20-00450-CV

                                     M. M. H.-A., Appellant

                                                 v.

               Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

               FROM THE 353RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY
     NO. D-1-FM-19-002261, THE HONORABLE DARLENE BYRNE, JUDGE PRESIDING

                            MEMORANDUM OPINION

               Appellant M.M.H.-A. (Mother) appeals from the district court’s decree, following

a bench trial, terminating her parental rights to A.H.-A. (the child).      The mother’s court-

appointed counsel has filed a brief pursuant to Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738, 744 (1967).

We will affirm the district court’s decree of termination.

               The case began in April 2019, when the Texas Department of Family and

Protective Services (the Department) received a referral alleging neglectful supervision of the

child by Mother. According to Kayla Rascon, the Department’s conservatorship supervisor for

the case, the referral alleged that Mother “was high off of K2 on I-35 and 6th Street, and she had

[the child] in a stroller, and was walking across the highway with [the child].” A Department

investigator responded to the report and found Mother and the child under the bridge at I-35.

Mother told the Department investigator that she had been living under the bridge for 34 years,
that she was “trying to get some dick,” and that she had ten children “but didn’t know where they

were.” The child, who at that time was approximately one year old, “had dirty clothes,” “food

around her face,” “was wearing shorts but no diaper,” had “long fingernails and dirty hands,” and

a “cigarette smell in her hair.”

                 The Department initiated an emergency removal of the child from Mother’s care.

Meanwhile, Mother was transported to Austin Lakes Hospital for a mental-health evaluation.

Upon her discharge from the hospital later that month, Mother was charged with the offenses of

burglary of a building and child endangerment and jailed at the Travis County Correctional

Complex. In July 2019, Mother was transferred to Austin State Hospital for a competency

evaluation and, in late September 2019, was transferred to a competency restoration program run

by Integral Care, a community center in Travis County. Mother was found competent to stand

trial in January 2020.1

                 To obtain reunification with the child, Mother was ordered to complete several

services, including random drug testing, therapy, and parenting classes. She was also required to

maintain contact with the Department. According to Rascon, Mother “attempted to complete

some” of her services. Mother took some parenting classes but did not complete them, and she

took thirteen drug tests but missed five.2      She participated in therapy but was discharged

unsuccessfully in July 2020 “due to excessive no shows.”

                 Mother visited the child on multiple occasions. Rascon testified that Mother’s

initial visits with the child “went really well,” but eventually the child began exhibiting

       1
           At the time of the termination trial, Mother’s criminal charges remained pending.
       2
         Mother tested positive for opiates on three of the tests but provided Rascon with a
doctor’s note indicating that she had been prescribed Hydrocodone.

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“aggressive behavior” toward others after the visits had concluded. Consequently, beginning in

May 2020, the Department reduced the number of visits between Mother and the child.

              In response to the reduced visitation, Mother called Rascon and told her that she

was contemplating suicide. Mother also stopped attending therapy sessions, began missing visits

with the child, failed to complete a drug test, and stopped communicating with the Department.

Attempts by Mother’s therapist, the police, and Rascon to contact Mother were unsuccessful.

Eventually, Rascon found Mother outside Mother’s apartment and noticed that “she just looked

very different, you know, really red faced. Her lips were bluish. She was slurring her words.”

Rascon asked Mother if she was okay but Mother did not respond and instead “turned around

and went inside.” After that encounter, Mother’s communication with the Department and

participation in services was “inconsistent.” Mother had one visit with the child in June but

missed the next two visits. At around the same time, Rascon noticed that the child “started

disconnecting” emotionally with Mother, who had stopped receiving mental-health treatment and

was becoming increasingly agitated during the visits. After Rascon ended one visit due to what

she characterized as Mother’s “inappropriate behavior,” Mother called Rascon, screamed at her,

and threatened to have a family member “f**k [her] up.”

              The child’s first placement with a foster family was unsuccessful because of the

child’s aggressive behavior. However, according to multiple witnesses, the child was doing well

in her current placement.    The child’s current foster parents were trained in Trust Based

Relational Interventions (TBRI) and had demonstrated some success in improving the child’s

behavior. Rascon did not believe that Mother was able to provide for the child’s needs but that

the foster parents were. CASA volunteer Gemma DeLeon provided similar testimony. She had

observed the child interact with the foster parents. Based on her observations, DeLeon described

                                               3
the relationship between the child and the foster parents as “[l]oving and secure.” She added that

the child was “happy” and looked to her foster parents “to feel safe” and to provide “affirming

words and care.” One of the foster parents testified that she and her wife loved the child and

wanted to adopt her. She explained,

       We want to adopt [the child] because we have gotten to be attached to her and her
       to us. We love her. And she tells us often that she loves us and this is her home,
       and Sadie keeps her safe, and Sadie is her dog. And we want to have the—we
       want to have the opportunity to help her grow and give her everything that she
       deserves. She is a really incredible—incredible child and we want to be able to
       parent her and give her a safe home.

The Department’s plan for the child was adoption by the foster parents.

               Mother testified at trial. When asked to explain what went wrong “to where CPS

is no longer seeking to reunify you with [the child],” Mother testified, “I think it was just lack of

communication. And when the COVID virus hit it just—it was not the same and just—we were

not able to complete our services.” Mother claimed that she had been “doing a great job” in the

case and “moving in the right direction” until the onset of COVID restrictions in March 2020,

when she “just got discouraged.” Mother believed that by taking parenting classes, she had

“learned to be a better nurturing, caring, loving, guiding, just individual.” Mother also testified

that she and the child “have a really good bond” and that she “just love[s] that little girl.”

               When asked why she had stopped attending therapy, Mother testified that she

“was told that [her therapist] was going on vacation” for two weeks and that she “didn’t hear

from her after that.” Mother claimed that she was scheduled to meet with another therapist the

day after trial. When asked why she had stopped taking drug tests, Mother testified that she had

lost her phone and “didn’t know that [she] was supposed to go do one.” She added, “And it took

                                                  4
me about three weeks to get situated. So I guess, within that time period, I must have missed a

couple.” Mother testified that moving forward, she was “willing to do drug test[s], parenting

classes, anything, any kind of services” to obtain reunification with the child. She testified that

adoption of the child by the foster parents “would hurt me very much.” She explained, “[S]he is

all I have, I mean, really—and I am all she has, and we need each other.”

               On cross-examination, Mother testified that she did not remember any of the

events that occurred on the day when she and the child were found under the bridge and the child

was removed from her care. Also, Mother either denied or claimed not to recall missing five of

the last seven scheduled visits with the child, telling the caseworker that she was contemplating

suicide, threatening the caseworker with physical violence, ceasing communication with the

Department in July 2020, and receiving calls from her therapist.

               At the conclusion of trial, the district court found by clear and convincing

evidence that Mother had failed to comply with the provisions of a court order that established

the actions necessary for her to obtain the return of the children, see Tex. Fam. Code

§ 161.001(b)(1)(O), and that termination of Mother’s parental rights was in the best interest of

the child, see id. § 161.001(b)(2). Based on these findings, the district court terminated Mother’s

parental rights. This appeal followed.

               Court-appointed counsel has filed an Anders brief and a motion to withdraw as

counsel, concluding that the appeal is frivolous and without merit. See 386 U.S. at 744; In re

P.M., 520 S.W.3d 24, 27 & n.10 (Tex. 2016) (per curiam) (approving use of Anders procedure in

appeals from termination of parental rights because it “strikes an important balance between the

defendant’s constitutional right to counsel on appeal and counsel’s obligation not to prosecute

frivolous appeals” (citations omitted)).     The brief meets the requirements of Anders by

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presenting a professional evaluation of the record and demonstrating why there are no arguable

grounds to be advanced on appeal. See 386 U.S. at 744; Taylor v. Texas Dep’t of Protective &

Regulatory Servs., 160 S.W.3d 641, 646-47 (Tex. App.—Austin 2005, pet. denied). Counsel has

certified to this Court that she has provided her client with a copy of the Anders brief and

informed her of her right to examine the appellate record and to file a pro se brief. No pro se

brief has been filed.

               Upon receiving an Anders brief, we must conduct a full examination of the record

to determine whether the appeal is wholly frivolous. See Penson v. Ohio, 488 U.S. 75, 80

(1988); Taylor, 160 S.W.3d at 647. After reviewing the entire record and the Anders brief

submitted on Mother’s behalf, we have found nothing in the record that might arguably support

an appeal. We agree with counsel that the appeal is frivolous. Accordingly, we affirm the

district court’s termination decree. We deny counsel’s motion to withdraw.3

                                             __________________________________________
                                             Gisela D. Triana, Justice

Before Justices Goodwin, Triana, and Smith

Affirmed

Filed: December 4, 2020

       3
         The Texas Supreme Court has held that the right to counsel in suits seeking termination
of parental rights extends to “all proceedings [in the Texas Supreme Court], including the filing
of a petition for review.” In re P.M., 520 S.W.3d 24, 27-28 (Tex. 2016) (per curiam).
Accordingly, if after consulting with counsel Mother desires to file a petition for review, counsel
should timely file with the Texas Supreme Court “a petition for review that satisfies the
standards for an Anders brief.” See id.
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