OPINION
After a bench trial, the trial court terminated the parent-child relationship between appellant, Lisa Bermea, and her children, G.B., P.B., N.B., and V.R. Ber-mea challenges the order terminating her parental rights. In six issues, Bermea argues that (1) the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to show that she allowed the children to remain in surroundings that endangered their physical or emotional well being; (2) the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to show that she used a controlled substance in a manner that endangered the health or safety of the children; (3) her due process rights would be violated by this court’s refusal to consider her points of error; and (4) her counsel was ineffective by failing to file a statement of points for appeal.
We affirm.
Background
Bermea is the mother of four children: G.B., age nine, P.B., age seven, N.B., age four, and V.R., age one. Bermea first came into contact with the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS), appellee, in July of 2005 after DFPS received a report of Bermea’s negligent supervision of her children. At this initial contact, Bermea submitted to a drug screening that was positive for cоcaine. The DFPS worker discussed with Bermea the effect that drug use could have on her ability to properly supervise her children. The DFPS worker returned for a second meeting in August 2005, when Bermea confessed that she was still using cocaine and had been drunk and used cocaine the day before. Bermea’s drug screening was again positive for cocaine. At that time, Bermea voluntarily placed the children with a friend she was living with at the time and signed a safety plan which stipulated that she must have only supervised contact with the children, submit to random drug testing, and follow all rеcommendations of DFPS.
In March 2006, Bermea entered a drug rehabilitation program, then switched to another program in April 2006, which she successfully completed, and Bermea also completed parenting classes. Because of this progress, DFPS decided to let Bermea maintain custody of the child with whom she was pregnant, V.R., and to work toward reunification with her other children. The trial court held a hearing in June 2006 and granted Bermea weekend visitation with her three oldest children at her mother’s home, as long as Bermea hаd clean drug screenings.
After the first weekend visit, Bermea admitted in court that she would test positive for cocaine. At that time, DFPS retained care of the three oldest children, but left V.R. with Bermea because V.R.’s father agreed to supervise and care for the child. In August 2006, Bermea came to the DFPS offices with V.R. alone and admitted she would have a positive drug test. She claimed this was due to some diet pills she was taking, but she would not provide DFPS workers with any information concerning who prescribed the pills or what kind of pills they were. V.R. was removed from Bermea’s care at that time and placed in foster care with her siblings.
Various DFPS personnel and other people who were familiar with Bermea’s case testified about Bermea’s drug abuse, including multiple instances when she had tested positive for cocaine, and the legal issues stemming from her drug abuse. Testimony showed that Bermea hád a conviction for possession of a controlled substance, and she had been arrested for driving while intoxicated in May 2007. The arresting officer testified that Bermea showed signs of being under the influence of a narcotic and that she had drug parаphernalia in her purse. Bermea ultimately pled guilty to driving while intoxicated. At the time of the termination proceedings, Bermea was in jail on a motion to revoke probation for an earlier possession charge. Bermea admitted she was also serving probation for a misdemeanor offense.
DFPS workers testified that, over the course of her dealings with DFPS, Bermea had failed to maintain steady housing, transportation, and employment. DFPS also testified that Bermea had very limited physical contact with the children after they were removed from her care. The DFPS worker who worked with Bermea when she decided to voluntarily place the children with a friend was asked whether she could see any signs of abuse of the children, and she replied, “Not that I can recall.” She also testified that the children appeared to be the proper size and weight for their ages, that they were clean and well kept, and that they did not complain of being hungry or of being abused or neglected.
Bermea testified regarding her criminal background and history of drug abuse. When asked what she intended to do when she got out of jail, Bermea testified:
I would like to straighten up, but[,] really, I’m going to be honest, I don’t know what. You know, with the feelings that I feel, I mean, I can’t say what would happen, but I do want to have a good life so that way when they do decide to come back, when they get older, they can say, you know, that I did something with my life.
She testified that she knew she was not stable or ready for the children to live with her but that she would still like another chance to get clean. She also testified that her contact with the children had been limited to ten-minute telephone calls with each of her children. When asked if she would like to tell the trial court anything, she testified:
Well, ... I’ve never been a person of, you know — I don’t know — -just putting other things before my children, but this drug that I got into[,] it’s just taken over. And, I mean, I try, but it’s like when things go wrong I lose hope.... My kids are important to me and it’s just this sickness I have[,] and it’s hard to get over once you start.
She also testified that she had always taken care of her kids. She testified, “They were always fed, always bathed, you know. They were never late to school. They went to school every day and I always had them checkups, their shots, everything, you know.”
At the conclusion of the bench рroceeding, the trial court made oral findings of fact that
[Bermea] knowingly allowed the children to remain in surroundings which endangered the physical or emotional well being of the children, and that she used a controlled substance in a manner that endangered the health or safety of the children, and continued to use drugs after completion of a court-ordered substance abuse treatment program, and ... failed to complete earlier ordered court-ordered substance abuse programs, and that her parental rights should be terminated.
The trial court issued the written order of termination on July 27, 2007, and it included the following findings regarding Ber-mea:
The Court finds by clear and convincing evidence that termination of the parent-child relationship between [Bermea] and the children the subject of this suit is in the children’s best interest.
Further, the Court finds by clear and convincing evidence that [Bermea] has: [1] engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the children with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical or emotional well-being of the children; [and][2] used a controlled substance ... in a manner that endangered the hеalth or safety of the children, and
(1) failed to complete a court-ordered substance abuse treatment program; or
(2) after completion of a court-ordered substance abuse treatment program continued to abuse a controlled substance.
Bermea filed a notice of appeal, but failed to file either a statement of the points she intended to raise on appeal or a motion for new trial. This appeal followed.
Issues
In six issues, Bermea argues that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to show thаt she allowed the children to remain in surroundings that endangered their physical or emotional well being, and the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to show that she used a controlled substance in a manner that endangered the health or safety of the children. She also argues that her counsel was ineffective because she failed to file a statement of points for appeal and that her due process rights would be violated by this
A. Legal and Factual Sufficiency
Preliminarily, we must address DFPS’s argument that Bermea did not preserve any issues for appeal because she fаiled to file a statement of points. Section 263.405(b) of the Texas Family Code requires an appellant to file “a statement of the point or points on which the party intends to appeal” not later than the fifteenth day after the date a final termination order is signed. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 263.405(b) (Vernon Supp.2007). Furthermore, subsection (i) provides:
The appellate court may not consider any issue that was not specifically presented to the trial court in a timely filed statement of the points on which the party intends to appeal or in a statement combined with a motion for new trial. For purposes of this subsection, a claim that a judicial decision is contrary to the evidence or that the evidence is factually or legally insufficient is not sufficiently specific to preserve an issue for appeal.
Id.
§ 263.405(i) (Vernon Supp.2007). Under the express terms of the statute, we cannot consider the issues related to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court’s termination decree.
See Pool v. Tex. Dep’t of Family & Protective Servs.,
Here, the record contains no statement of points on appeal or motion for new trial. Therefore, we cannot consider Bermea’s arguments of legal and factual sufficiency. See id.
We overrule Bermea’s first, second, third, and fourth issues.
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In her sixth issue, Bermea argues that she received ineffective assistance of counsel because her counsel failed to file a statement of points for appeal. In her fifth issue, Bermea argues that her due process rights would be violated by this court’s refusal to consider her issues on appeal. Speсifically, she argues that “to refuse to consider [her] factual and legal sufficiency challenges due to her failure to comply with [section] 263.405, would result in a complete bar to her appeal and as such, would deny her due process of law.” DFPS responds that an ineffective assistance of counsel claim may not be raised for the first time on appeal because that issue must first be presented in the statement of points for appeal. We, therefore, consider whether an ineffective assistance of counsel claim falls within the sсope of section 263.405(i) of the Family Code and may not be considered on appeal unless preserved in a timely filed statement of points for appeal.
1. Right to Effective Assistance
In
In re M.S.,
the Texas Supreme Court resolved a split among the courts of appeals and held that parents are entitled to effective assistance in termination proceedings, and it adopted a two-pronged test for evaluating claims of ineffective assistance of counsel based on
Strickland v. Washington,
Prior to the supreme court’s decision in
In re M.S.,
this Court had already held that the statutory right to counsel in termination cases meant the right to effective assistance of counsel.
In re J.M.S.,
2. Preservation of the Right to Appeal Ineffective Assistance
In
Doe v. Brazoria County Child Protective Services,
we held that ineffective assistаnce of counsel claims can be raised in termination cases for the first time on appeal, despite an appellant’s counsel’s failure to file a statement of points or motion for new trial.
a. This Court’s decision in Mikowski
The
Mikowski
case involved the termination of parental rights of both a mother and a father. In his brief filed with this Court, appellant Mikowski, the father, raisеd the claim that his trial counsel had provided ineffective assistance during trial.
See
Appellant’s Brief at *28-30,
Mikowski,
Indeed, we implied in dicta in another case, decided, like
Mikoivski,
in 2007, that we
could
consider a challenge to the effee-
b. Authority of Doe after enactment of Family Code subsection 263.105(i)
DFPS is correct that
In re J.M.S.,
the authority we cited in
Doe,
dates from before the legislature’s passage, in 2005, of section 263.405® of the Family Code, which limits an appellate court’s ability to consider any issues that were not specifically presented to the trial court in a statement of points for appeal.
See
Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 263.405® (Vernon Supp. 2007);
see also In re J.M.S.,
Section 263.405® requires the timely filing of a “statement of points on which the party intends to appeal”- in order for an appellant’s issues to be considered by the appellate court.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 263.405®. In
Doe,
as hеre, however, the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel consists of the failure to file a statement of points for appeal and, therefore, did not arise until after the trial court’s authority over the case had terminated. Thus, subsection (i) could not apply to the situation in
Doe.
Indeed, it is not logical to claim that an ineffective assistance claim based on failure to file a statement of points must be included in a statement of points in order to be preserved for appellate review.
See In re T.R.F.,
In addition, we observe that prohibiting appeal of an ineffective assistance claim that consists of the failure of counsel to preserve the right to appeal ineffective assistance would partially abrogate the right to effective counsel established by section 107.013 because a parent could never protest such ineffectiveness.
1
See In re M.S.,
Moreover, if we were to hold that an appellant cannot bring a claim on appeal for ineffective assistance of counsel based on her counsel’s failure to file a statement of points for appeal the result would be that an appellant would lose the entire right to appeal provided for in the Family Code when ineffective counsel failed to file a statement of points for appeal. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 109.002 (Vernon 2002), § 263.405 (Vernon Supp.2007). Under the rules of statutory interpretation, when the legislature enacts a statute, it is presumed that the entire statute is intended to be effective and that a just and reasonable result is intended. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.021(2), (3) (Vernon 2005). Moreover, amendments to a statute are to be harmonized, if possible, so that effect may be given to each. Id. § 311.025(b) (Vernon 2005).
Neither the Family Code nor the legislative history of the 2005 amendment to section 263.405 indicates that in requiring a statement of points for appeal the legislature intended to abrogate the entire right to аppeal provided by that section if ineffective counsel failed to preserve that right by complying with the statutory requirements. Rather, the legislature’s stated intent in adding section 263.405© was to reduce post judgment delays and, therefore, to decrease the amount of time that abused or neglected children had to spend in foster care. See House CoMM. on Juvenile Justice and Family Issues, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 409, 79th Leg., R.S. 2005 (“If a mistake is pointed out to the trial court that warrants a new trial, the trial court can immediately order a new trial, and the Legislature’s goal to decrease рost-judgment delays is accomplished.”). The interpretation of section 263.405© as precluding the right to appeal ineffective assistance claims not set out in a timely filed statement of points for appeal cannot be traced back to legislative intent, violates the rules of statutory construction, deprives a parent of statutory and constitutional rights, and is unjust. We decline to interpret section 263.405© in a manner that has such effects.
c. Split in the Courts of Appeals
DFPS is correct that the courts of appeals have split on the issue of whether an appellate cоurt may consider a complaint that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to file a statement of points for appeal. 2
We also note that neither the rules of statutory construction nor the legislative history behind section 263.405(i) supports an interpretation that disallows the appeal of trial counsel’s ineffective failure to file a statement of points for appeal. First, as argued above, the interpretation of section 263.405(i) offered by DFPS is inconsistent both with the exercise of the constitutional and statutory right to effective assistance of counsel and with the exercise of the right to appeal provided in the Family Code, and it is neither just nor reasonable. Nor is such an interpretation required to fulfill the purpose of section 263.405(i). See House Comm. On Juvenile Justice and Family issues, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 409, 79th Leg., R.S.2005. Rather, our interpretation of section 263.405® as not precluding a parent from raising ineffective assistance for the first time on appeal is compatible with the legislative goal of preventing delay in the final resolution of termination of parental rights cases.
The constitutional standard for determining the effectiveness of counsel estab-fished in
Strickland
and adopted for parental rights termination cases by this Court in
In re J.M.S.
and by the Texas Supreme Court in
In re M.S.
establishes a high hurdle for a parent hoping to reverse termination. The parent must' establish that “counsel’s conduct so undermined the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result.”
In re J.M.S.,
We hold that a person whose parental rights have been terminated may raise for the first time on appeal a claim of ineffective assistance for counsel’s failure to file a statement of points for appeal.
See Doe,
3. Merits of Bermea’s Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim
Here, Bermea’s counsel’s failure to file a statement of points deprived Bermea of appealing the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s order terminating her parental rights. This constitutes deficient conduct that satisfies the first prong of the
Strickland
test.
See Doe,
Next, we must determine whether Ber-mea’s counsel’s deficient conduct сaused her harm.
Strickland,
Section 161.001 of the Texas Family Code authorizes involuntary termination of a parent-child relationship if the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the parent has committed at least one of the acts or omissions listed in subsection (1) and that termination is in the best interest of the child. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 161.001 (Vernon Supp.2007). A trial judge only needs to make one finding of parental misconduct under section 161.001(1) of the Family Code.
In re A.V.,
Here, Bermea challenges the trial court’s findings that she allowed the children to remain in surroundings that endangered their physical or emotional well being and that she used a controlled substance in a manner that endangered the health or safety of the children. However, Bermea does not challenge the trial court’s findings that she engaged in conduct or knowingly placed her children with persons who engaged in conduct which endangered the physical or emotional well-being of the children pursuant to section 161.001(1)(E), nor does she challenge the trial court’s finding that termination of her parental rights was in the children’s best interest. The trial court’s finding under section 161.001(1)(E), together with its finding that termination was in the children’s best interest, are sufficient to support the termination, and we do not need to address the trial court’s other findings under section 161.001(1).
See In re A.V.,
Because Bermea could not have prevailed on her legal and factual sufficiency arguments, we cannot say that the result of the proceeding wоuld have been any
We overrule Bermea’s fifth and sixth issues.
Conclusion
We affirm the order of the trial court.
Notes
. We note that direct appeal is the only recourse for a parent whose parental rights have been terminated due to ineffective assistance of counsel.
See In re D.A.R.,
. Several courts of appeals have held the opposite-that an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, even one based on failure to file a timely statement of points, must be preserved in a statement of points.
E.g., In re R.M.R.,
. The appeal of termination of parental rights cases is accelerated. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 109.002(a) (Vernon 2002), § 263.405(a) (Vernon Supp.2007).
