Lead Opinion
OPINION
This is an accelerated appeal from the trial court’s judgment terminating the parental lights of a father of two children. On appeal, the father contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support termination of his parental rights. Viewing the evidence in a light favorable to the trial court as the fact finder, we conclude that sufficient evidence supports the termination order. We therefore affirm.
BACKGROUND
The two children in this case, S.C.F. and L.C.F., were seven- and six-year-old girls, respectively, at the time of the trial. They are the youngest of the mother’s five children and the only two fathered by F.C., the father in this appeal.
The children resided with their mother before the Department of Family and Protective Services removed them. The Department removed the two children from their mother’s home in February 2014 after receiving a referral reporting neglectful supervision. According to the referral, the children arrived late to school approximately three or four days a week. Upon arrival, the children had not been bathed, smelled bad, and wore dirty clothes. They did not have warm clothing during the winter months and would wear bathrobes over their clothes when it was cold. The children were infested with lice. They had sores on their heads from scratching, and lice would drop onto the floor during class. The children’s teeth were so rotten that they would break.
The referral also reported that the mother left the children unattended in the home and in her locked car, that she sexually abused the children, and that she would bring men home and have sex with them in front of the children. The home itself was filthy, and the mother kept a chicken coop inside the apartment where the family lived.
The Department located maternal relatives who were willing to take care of the children, and it referred the mother to its Family-Based Support Services program. No evidence in the record shows that the father had any contact with the children during the year the mother participated in support services and they lived with the mother’s relatives.
When it became clear that the mother was not going to satisfactorily complete the services and the relatives caring for the children were no longer able to care for them, the Department brought the children into custody, placed them with a foster family, and initiated this suit.
At a May 2015 status hearing, the caseworker told the trial court that the child advocate had smelled alcohol on the father at an earlier hearing setting. Based on this information, the Department referred the father for a substance abuse assessment. A hair specimen taken from the father during an August 2015 drug screening tested positive for marijuana.
The trial commenced in early July 2016, On the first day of trial, the mother’s rights were terminated as to all of her children. The father of the other three children voluntarily relinquished his rights, and trial proceeded as to the father of the children in this appeal. The trial court admitted into evidence as .Exhibit 22 the Department’s family service plan for the father, detailing the reported condition' of the children, the mother’s mental illness and non-compliance with treatment, and the mother’s “significant DFPS history.” That document noted the Department’s concerns, including: “[The father] left his children in the care of their mother, who is not appropriate;” and “[The father] is not appropriate due to him having a history of domestic violence.” The father’s service plan goals were to “demonstrate an ability to provide basic necessities such as food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and supervision for his children.” The service plan required the father to provide the current caseworker “with any and all sources of income by the 15th of each month” and to complete a psychosocial evaluation and follow all of the recommendations associated with that evaluation. The father signed the family service plan on April 17, 2015.
The caseworker, Jasmin Green, testified that the mother had a prior CPS history in which her mental health and the conditions of the home were in question. The children were placed in a “safety placement” with the mother’s brother. When the brother’s family could no longer care for the five children, the Department brought them into its care. The mother had not seen the children from late September 2015 to the time of the trial in July 2016.
At the beginning of the trial, Green testified that the Department’s, goal for the two children was “family reunificatiqn” with the father while the Department maintained conservatorship. Green reported that this was the Department’s future plan—the father and the children had engaged in one family therapy session at the time of trial. The agency supported the father’s reunification with the children with the Department’s conservatorship, but Green testified that “we would really want to rebuild that relationship because [the father] really didn’t reside with the children.” Green stated that the Department would come back to the trial court to seek modification at a later time based on the family therapist’s later recommendation, Green testified that the father had completed all of his services, with the exception of family therapy, and that he had visited and bonded with his children.
Green testified that the children “were behind” when they first came into the Department’s care,- but that their circumstances had “substantially improved” since the Department was charged with their care. She stated that the five children would prefer to be together, but that the father had expressed some desire for all of the children and the oldest of the five had told Green that she “would be okay” with going with the father.
Carla Ramirez, the child advocate, testified that the Department had initially sought termination of the father’s rights, but had changed its position in the three weeks before trial. Ramirez stated that, if the trial court ordered Department conser-vatorship and a continuance of the trial, then Child Advocates would monitor the situation and talk to the family therapist' about the children’s best interests. She noted that the father had just started therapy and completed services during the month before trial and “he hadn’t” done
Ramirez agreed that the children were doing well in their current placement, which was not a long-term placement. Meanwhile, the Department was continuing to look for a long-term placement with a family relative.
In light of this testimony, the trial court continued the trial. The trial recommenced on July 12. The father did not appear at the trial. At that time, the Department stated that its continued goal was reunification with the father. Ramirez again testified. She had visited with the children again during the trial recess and had informed them that the Department had changed' its goal to reunification with the father. Ramirez stated that the children then informed her that they. “are very adamant” against going home with the father. The older,child’s earlier expression to the caseworker that she would be “okay” with the children going to their father was made at the time because the father had promised her a phone and a lap top. The children’s therapist similarly reported that the children do not want to go with the father. The children told Ramirez that “the reason they don’t want to go back home, [is] because he toma mucho, which means he drinks too much and they’ve seen him roll around the floor fighting with Mom.” The children reported that dad “smelt like alcohol” during supervised visits in the CPS-office. Ramirez then interviewed the father during the recess and talked to him about the children stating that “they’ve seen him drink, that theyFve] seen him fighting.” The father told Ramirez that “he’s never fought” and he “doesn’t drink because he is allergic.” The father reported to Ramirez that “if he drinks beers he will die.” Ramirez confirmed, however, that, the father had a protective order in place against contact with the mother in 2013. . In light of reviewing “the case,” “the substance abuse assessment,” and the .interviews with the children and the family therapist, Ramirez testified that Child Advocates continued to recommend termination of the father’s parental rights.
Green also was recalled to the witness stand. She testified that the father -had completed his services, except for family therapy. She stated that family therapy was added to the service plan when the Department changed its goal, and the father had completed two- sessions at this time. Green testified that the . father told her “the father had never really lived with [his two daughters], [but] he provided financial support.” Other than what the father reported, the caseworker had no evidence that the father provided support for the children, and the record shows no employment or wage information provided to the .Department in compliance with the service plan. The trial court abruptly adjourned the trial and asked that the Department find a person with additional knowledge of the case to appear when the case recommenced.
On August 11, the father’s counsel moved for a.two-week continuance of the trial. Counsel sought the continuance because an- interim July drug test administered to the father yielded a positive result for the presence of cocaine. In light of this drug-test result, counsel reported that the Department had returned to its initial po
On August 25th, the Department proffered the results of two positive drug tests, and the trial court admitted them into evidence without objection. The first, dated August 21, 2015, reported that the father’s hair specimen tested positive for marijuana and marijuana metabolite. The second, dated July 20, 2016, reported that the father’s hair specimen was positive for cocaine and cocaine metabolites.
The father then testified. When confronted with the drug test results, the father testified that he had “[njever ha[d] drugs in my life.” He described the July test as a “false test.” He testified that he had completed the service plan except for family therapy. He did not testify about his means of supporting the children, his living situation, or his parenting abilities. He did not offer an explanation for his decision to leave them in their mother’s neglectful care. He did not dispute the caseworker’s assessment that he had never really lived with the children. He stated that he had seen the children for an hour for lunch after each of the family therapy sessions, but that otherwise “CPS don’t call me to see my daughters,” and thus it had been three months since he otherwise had seen them. He testified that it was in the best interests of the children to live with him.
Ramirez testified for a third time. She testified that the children are “doing well” with no medical or physical problems. One child might be a candidate for speech therapy. She continued to recommend that the father’s rights be terminated because of the children’s expressed desires, the father’s positive tests for alcohol and cocaine, his denials in his substance abuse assessment that he had any drug or alcohol issues, and the open protective order against him by the mother. Ramirez reported that the protective order resulted from the father’s “dragging the mother on the floor, physically fighting her and this is what the children [had] seen.” She also noted that the father excused the earlier positive drug test for marijuana by stating that it was due to exposure because “the landlord used to come over and smoke in his house,” but the father reported that he would “use his landlord as a possible child caregiver.” She observed that the father was untruthful to the Department about his alcohol and drug use and his domestic issues. She opined that he lacked skills necessary to parent the children, particularly given the fact that he went through the family service plan and then tested positive for cocaine after the termination trial began.
Ramirez conceded that the children’s current placement was not an adoptive placement, but she noted that their caregiver had agreed to keep them “however long until they’re adopted.” The placement is “very safe” and “drug free.” Ramirez opined that termination was in the best interests of the two children.
The trial court signed the final decree terminating the father’s parental rights to the children on September 15, 2016.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
A parent’s right to the care, custody, and control of his child is a liberty interest protected under the Constitution, and we strictly scrutinize termination proceedings on appeal. Santosky v. Kramer,
In conducting a legal-sufficiency review in an appeal from a termination case, the appellate court looks at all 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.,
In conducting a factual-sufficiency review in a parental-rights-termination case, we determine whether, considering the entire record, including evidence both supporting and contradicting the finding, a factfinder reasonably could have formed a firm conviction or belief about the truth of the matter on which the Department bore the burden of proof. In re C.H.,
To prevail in a termination case, the Department must establish that one or more of the acts or omissions enumerated under Texas Family Code section 161.001(1) occurred and that the termination is in the best interest of the children, pursuant to section 161.001(2). Tex Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001. In this case, the father challenges the trial court’s findings that he endangered the children and that he failed to comply with the court-ordered family service plan. See id. § 161.001(1)(E), (O). He also challenges the trial court’s finding that termination is in the best interest of the children. See id. § 161.001(2).
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence Supporting Termination
Section 161.001(1)(E) of the Family Code provides a basis for terminating parental rights because of child endangerment. “ ‘To endanger’ means to expose a child to loss or injury or to jeopardize a child’s emotional or physical health.” Jordan v. Dossey,
Endangerment means more than “a threat of metaphysical injury or the possible ill effects of a less-than-ideal environment,” but “it is not necessary that the
Domestic violence may be considered as evidence of endangerment. In re E.M.,
The father endangered, the children by physically abusing the mother in the children’s presence. Ramirez testified that there was an open protective order against him due to his violent conduct with the mother. The father did not controvert this testimony when he testified. The father had left the children in the filthy home with their mother. The mother was a caregiver who was incapable of caring for the children, suffered from untreated mental. illness, and was neglectful of children’s physical and medical needs. The father did not deny these assertions from the caseworker.
In addition, the random drug-testing results support a finding that the father consumed marijuana and cocaine during the time the children were in Department custody, knowing .that his parental rights were at risk.
Viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s judg
Having determined that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s finding on this statutory ground, we need not consider whether the evidence would support subsection (0), the other predicate ground for termination found by the trial court. See In re A.V.,
III. Sufficiency of the Evidence of the Children’s Best Interest
In addition to a predicate violation, the Department must establish by clear and convincing evidence that termination is in the best interests of the children. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(b) (West Supp. 2015). There is a strong presumption that the best interest of the child will be served by preserving the parent-child relationship. In re J.F.C.,
Because of the strong presumption that maintaining the parent-child relationship is in the best interest of the child, and the due-process implications of terminating a parent’s rights, the evidence be clear and convincing evidence that termination is in the child’s best interest. Id. “Termination should not be used to merely reallocate children to better and more prosperous parents.” In re W.C.,
The factfinder should consider a number of factors to determine the best interest of the child, including
• the desires of the child,
• ' thé present and future physical and emotional needs of the child;
• the present and future emotional and physical danger to the child,
• the parental abilities of the people seeking custody,
• programs available to assist those people in promoting the best interest of the child,
• plans for the child by those people or by the agency seeking custody,
• the acts or omissions of the parent that may indicate that the existing parent-child relationship is not appropriate, and
• any excuse for the acts or omissions of the parent.
Holley v. Adams,
The father had “never really lived with” his daughters before they came into Department, custody. Ramirez testified that the father had an open protective order against contact with the mother since 2013, and there is no evidence in the record that he had contact with the children after the protective order was instituted until they came into Department custody. Even after
The children were “adamant” that they preferred not to live with their father. The older child initially told the caseworker that she would be okay with going to live with the father. Later, however, she recanted, telling Ramirez that she did not want to live with the father, and had said so at first because the father promised to give her a cell phone and a laptop. The younger child did not waver in expressing that she did not wish to live with the father. Ramirez testified that the children remember their father drinking alcohol and physically fighting with them mother. The therapist confirmed that the children did not desire to be with the father. The children reported that the father smelt of alcohol during his supervised visits. The record contains testimony that the children and others involved in the case observed signs that the father had consumed alcohol at inappropriate times.
The children are in a foster placement together with their three half-siblings. The home is safe and drug-free, and the children attend school and have their support and medical needs met by the Department. While it is true that the current placement is not an adoptive placement, the Department plans to make the children available for non-relative adoption in a safe, permanent home.
The trial court could reasonably have found that the father failed to show that he is able to provide appropriate care for the children with any consistency or that home life with him would be safe or stable. While the caseworker described the father as “bonded” with the children, other evidence in the record could lead a reasonable fact finder to the contrary conclusion. The father left the children with a neglectful mother and called on the Department to take custody of his children rather than caring for them himself. He visited the children only when the Department scheduled visits and had no explanation for his apparent lack of effort to visit the children for the first year that they were in Department custody. He proffered no basis for his decisions to leave the children in an unsafe environment with their mother or not to see them while in Department custody, other than that the caseworkers did not call him to see the children. See Holley,
The father proffered no basis for his lack of engagement in family services with his children from April 2015 until June 2016, three weeks before trial, when he learned that the mother’s rights would be terminated.
The father used cocaine during the additional time he was given to complete the service plan while the trial was continued. At trial, Ramirez opined that termination was in the best interests of the children, not only because of the father’s positive drug test, but also because of his lack of veracity concerning his illegal drug use
The evidence of the father’s drug use and his history of domestic violence supports a finding that that placement -with the father would put the children in emotional danger. See Cervantes-Peterson v. Tex. Dep’t of Family & Protective Servs.,
Considering the entire record, clear and convincing evidence supports the trial court’s implied findings that the children had no desire to live with their father, that he used drugs knowing that his parental rights were at risk of being terminated, that he left the children with a caregiver who was neglectful and incapable of caring for them, and that he had a history of domestic violence related to drinking too much. The Department began the trial planning to seek conservatorship with eventual placement with the father; however, it returned to its goal of termination once the father tested positive for cocaine use mid-trial. The father denied Ramirez’s testimony regarding drug use and domestic violence, but the trial court could have disbelieved those denials and believed Ramirez and the lab reports introduced into evidence. The father did not deny Ramirez’s testimony that the children had no desire to live with him. Finally, while the Department proffered evidence that the children’s circumstances had substantially improved in their current placement and they were doing well, the father did not controvert that evidence or provide the trial court with evidence of his ability to care for children who had never lived with him, nor did he testify that he had ever provided for their social or emotional well-being during the time they lived with their mother or were in the custody of the Department. We hold that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s finding that termination of the father’s parental rights was in the children’s best interest.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Jennings, J., dissenting.
Notes
. After the father’s positive drug test for cocaine, both Ramirez and the children’s guardian ad litem disputed the caseworker's testimony that the father had sucdessfully completed his family service plan. Ramirez opined that the test result showed that the father was untruthful during the substance abuse assessment, and the ad litem testified that the positive test showed- that the father "didn’t learn anything” from-the services. .
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
It is cardinal ... that the custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents....[1 ]
In this accelerated appeal,
Background
On February 27, 2015, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (‘.‘DFPS”) filed a petition seeking managing conservatorship and termination of F.C.’s parental rights to the children.
At trial, DFPS caseworker Jasmih Green testified that DFPS took the children into custody due to allegations related to their mother. Green explained that DFPS gave F.C. a Family Service Plan (“FSP”) and F.C. completed all of the requirements of his FSP, with the exception of the family-therapy requirement. Green, however, noted that “family therapy wasn’t initially listed on” F.C.’s FSP and he and the children were currently attending family therapy. Green explained that the recommendation for F.C. to attend family therapy occurred after he completed individual therapy and at a time when DFPS was- considering reunification' of the children with F.G. At the time of trial, F.C, and the-children had attended two family-therapy sessions,
Green further noted that F.C. attends visits with his children and those visits are “going well.” F.C. is bonded with the children, and although he did not live with the children before their removal from their mother’s care, he did provide financial support for them and their mother. Green also noted that one of the children’s older half-siblings had indicated to her that if the children were to be returned to F.C., “they would be okay with that.”
Carla Ramirez, an advocacy coordinator with. Child Advocates Inc. (“Child Advocates”), testified that F.C. has expressed a desire to care for the children, but she presented conflicting testimony on whether or not the children wanted to live with their father. She noted that the children are doing well in their current placement, do not have any medical problems, and are attending school. Further, although' she stated that it would be in the children’s best interest to be in a stable home, she also' stated that the children’s current placement is not “a long term placement”
Ramirez further testified that the children told her that F.C.' “toma mucho, which means he drinks too much and they’ve seen him roll around on the floor fighting with [their mother].” And L.C.F. told her therapist that F.C. “smelt like alcohol” during “certain visits” that he had with the children. However, when Ramirez spoke to F.C. about this, he told her that he had “never fought and he doesn’t drink because he’s allergic.” F.C. also told Ramirez that “he has never drinked in his life and never had any legal issues.”
Ramirez also explained that F.C. “did have a protective order against him in 2013 from [the children’s mother],” although the trial court admitted into evidence little detail concerning the circumstances surrounding the protective order.
F.C. testified that he has “[n]ever [done] drugs in [his] life” and any positive narcotics-test results were false. He noted that he had “done everything” required by his FSP and is currently attending family therapy with the children.
Standard of Review
A parent’s right to “the companionship, care, custody, and management of’ his children is a constitutional interest “far more precious than any property right.” Santosky v. Kramer,
Because termination of parental rights is “complete, final, irrevocable and divests for all time that natural right ..., the evidence in support of termination must be clear and convincing before a court may involuntarily terminate a parent’s rights.” Holick,
Instead of requiring just more than a scintilla of evidence to support a finding, we, in conducting a legal-sufficiency review in a termination-of-parental-rights case, must determine whether the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the finding, is such that the fact finder could reasonably have formed a firm belief or conviction about the truth of the matter on which DFPS bore the burden of proof. Id. In viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the finding, we “must assume that the factfinder resolved disputed facts in favor of its finding if a reasonable fact-finder could do so,” and we “should disregard all evidence that a reasonable factfin-der could have disbelieved or found to have been incredible.” In re J.P.B.,
Notably, a fact finder may not, from meager circumstantial evidence, reasonably infer an ultimate fact, one no more probable than another. Hammerly Oaks, Inc. v. Edwards,
[A] truth or proposition drawn from another which is supposed or admitted to be true. A process of reasoning by which a fact or proposition sought to be established is deduced as a logical consequence from other facts, or a state of facts, already proved....
Marshall Field Stores, Inc. v. Gardiner,
In conducting a factual-sufficiency review in a parental-rights-termination case, we must determine whether, considering the entire record, including evidence both supporting and contradicting the finding, a fact finder reasonably could have formed a firm conviction or belief about the truth of the matter on which DFPS bore the burden of proof. In re C.H.,
Best Interest
In his third issue, F.C. argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that termination of his parental rights is in the best interest of the children because he had “completed” the requirements of his FSP, except for the family-therapy requirement, his visits with the children were going “very well,” the children 'had “bonded with him,” and “[throughout the trial, [DFPS] supported [him] and did not believe termination [of his parental rights is] in the best interest of his children.”
As the majority correctly emphasizes, a strong presumption exists - that the children’s best interest is served by maintaining the parent-child relationship. In re L.M.,
In regard to the children’s desires, the evidence is contradictory at best. Notably, neither child testified at trial. Ramirez, an advocacy coordinator with Child Advocates, did testify that the children did “[n]ot want to go” with F.C., but she also stated in the same breath that S.C.F, “want[ed] to go home [with F.C.] because he promised her a phone and a. lap top.” S.C.F.’s desires cannot be reasonably discredited simply because she, as -a seven year old, was excited about obtaining a telephone and a computer,. In regard to L.C.F., Ramirez only testified, without explanation. or description, that she “just kept going like this to me.” This statement provides no insight into L.CJVs desires. See In re E.N.C.,
Further, DFPS caseworker Green testified that the children are bonded with F.C. and their- visits, which occur every two weeks, are “going well.” See In re Z.B., No. 07-16-00026-CV,
In regard to the children’s current and future emotional and physical needs, there is little to no evidence in the record. See In re E.N.C.,
In regard to the current and future emotional and physical danger to the children, the majority states that “[t]he evidence of [F.C.] ’s drug use and his history of domestic violence supports a finding that th[e] placement with [him] would put the children in emotional danger.” Notably, F.C. tested positive for cocaine use only once during the entire pendency of the case.
The majority also emphasizes that F.C.’s “history of domestic violence” indicates that the children will be placed in “danger.” However, again, there is little evidence in the record regarding the purported “domestic violence” that occurred at the hands of F.C. Ramirez testified that the children told her that they had seen F.C. “roll around the floor fighting” with their mother, and ’Ramirez stated that F.C. “ha[d] a protective order against him in 2013 from [the children’s mother].” However,- there is no evidence concerning the frequency or extent of the fighting between F.C. and the- children’s- mother, there is little detail concerning the circumstances surrounding the protective order, and there are no allegations that F.C. ever
Further, while a trial court may measure a parent’s future conduct based upon his conduct in the past, it is significant that DFPS has not presented any evidence of recent “domestic violence” issues that have plagued F.C. It is undisputed that F.C. has completed his FSP, with the exception of the family-therapy requirement, which required him to “create and maintain” a safe home for the children. And it is also significant to note that although F.C. may have engaged in a physical altercation with the children’s mother in the past, F.C. and the children’s mother are no longer in a relationship together, the children’s mother suffers from schizophrenia, she is in Mexico receiving inpatient treatment at a mental hospital, and her parental rights to the children have been terminated. See In re J.K.V.,
To the extent that the majority relies on the limited evidence of F.C.’s alcohol consumption to support the trial court’s best-interest finding, it should be noted that the children only reported to Ramirez that, in their words, F.C. “toma mucho” and that he “smelt like alcohol” at “certain visits” with them. However, there is no evidence that F.C. was ever intoxicated around the children or has a history of alcohol abuse.
In regard to the programs available to assist F.C., DFPS presented no evidence that F.C. would require assistance if the children were returned to him. In re E.N.C.,
In regard to the plans for the children, Ramirez testified that the children’s current placement is not “a long term placement” and she would like to find another placement for the children. Notably though, Ramirez provided no details regarding with whom or where that other placement might be or if a new placement for the children was even possible. See In re E.N.C.,
In regard to the stability of the proposed placement, the majority characterizes the- .children’s current placement as “safe” and “drug-free,” and notes that “the children attend school.” Notably though, Ramirez testified that the children’s -placement is not “a long term placement” and she would like to find another placement for the children. Further, while the children’s placement may be “safe” and “drug-free,” DFPS did not present evidence that the home the children would share with F.C. would be unsafe or not “drug-free.” And there is no evidence that the children would not attend school if they were to be returned to- R.C. See In re E.N.C.,
In regard to acts or omissions of F.C. that may indicate that the. parent-child relationship is not proper, there is no evidence that F.C. has an unstable lifestyle, is an .avid narcotics user, cannot provide a stable home for the children, is facing the potential of incarceration, or has wholly failed to comply with his FSP. See In re S.B.,
Finally, it is important to reemphasize that “[t]ermination of parental rights requires proof by clear and convincing evidence. [And] [t]his heightened standard of review is mandated not only by the [Texas] Family Code .,., but also the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.”
It also must be. .noted that, at times during trial, DFPS stated that its goal was reunification of the children with F.C., not termination of F.C.’s parental rights; And at one point Child Advocates did agree with this goal. See In re
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s finding; the trial court could not have formed á firm belief or conviction that' termination of F.C.’s parental rights is in the best interest of the children. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(b)(2). Accordingly, I would hold that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that termination of F.C.’s parental rights is in the best interest of the children, sustain F.C.’s third issue in part, reverse the judgment of the trial court, and render judgment in favor of F.C. See id.-, In re J.F.C.,
Further, to the extent that the majority - holds that the evidence is factually sufficient to support the trial court’s finding that termination of F.C.’s parental rights is in the best interest of the children, it fails to conduct a proper factual-sufficiency review of- the evidence. The majority does not properly consider all of the evidence in a neutral, light, including that which does not support, the trial court’s finding. See In re J.F..C., -
. Prince v. Massachusetts,
. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann, § 263.405(a) (Vernon 2014); Tex. R. Apr. P. 28.4.
. See Tex. Fam. Code 'Ann. § 161.001(b)(1)(E) (Vernon Supp. 2016).
. See id. § 161.001(b)(l)(0),
.’ See id. § 161.001(b)(2).
. The majority also errs in holding that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s finding that F.C. engaged, or knowingly placed the children with persons who engaged, in conduct that endangered their physical and emotional well-being. See id. § 161.001(b)(1)(E). However, the evidence is legally and factually sufficient' to support the trial court's finding that F.C. failed to comply with the provisions of a court order that specifically established the actions necessary for him to obtain the return of-the children. See id. § 161.001(b)(l)(O); In re A.V.,
.At the time of trial, S.C.F, was seven years old and L.C.F. was six years old.
. Although the majority implies that the protective order against F.C. remains in place, the record does not support the implication.
. Although the majority asserts that "the record shows [that F.C. provided] ho employment or wage information ... to [DFPS] in compliance with” his FSP, it is undisputed that F.C. completed his FSP, with the exception of the family-therapy requirement, and his FSP required him to provide DFPS with "[p]roof of income” and a list of "any and all sources of income for himself ... each month.”
. The majority focuses on testimony that F.C. did not provide, noting he “did not testify about his means of supporting the children, his living situation, ... his parenting abilities,” or “his decision to leave [the children] in their mother’s neglectful care.” See In re E.N.C.,
. The majority notes that F.C. "tested positive for marijuana” in August 2015. However, Ramirez testified that F.C. tested positive for • "exposure” to marijuana.
. In fact, there is no evidence in the record - that F.C. hás ever been convicted of any crime.
. The majority refers to F.C.'s "positive tests for alcohol” as one of the justifications for the termination of his parental rights. However, Ramirez testified that F.C. only tested positive for alcohol once in September 2015, and the alcohol/narcotics-test results that were admitted into evidence at trial do not show that F.C. ever tested positive for alcohol use. And nothing in F.C.’s FSP shows that he was prohibited from consuming alcohol.
. The majority faults F.C. for not immediately completing the requirements of his FSP. However, the moment that F.C. completed his FSP seems irrelevant, especially considering that it is undisputed that he did complete his FSP, with the exception of the family-therapy requirement, by the time of trial.
. Again, it must be noted that the majority places great emphasis on what F.C. did not testify about, and-in- doing so, improperly implies that F.C. had the burden to prove that his parental rights should not be terminated. See In re E.N.C.,
