in the Interest of P.M., the Child ( 2015 )


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  •                        COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-14-00205-CV
    IN THE INTEREST OF P.M., THE
    CHILD
    ----------
    FROM THE 362ND DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY
    TRIAL COURT NO. 2011-40896-362
    ----------
    MEMORANDUM OPINION ON REHEARING 1
    ----------
    I. Introduction
    Appellant Mother filed a motion for rehearing of our November 20, 2014
    memorandum opinion and judgment, raising two substantive issues and seeking
    some factual corrections. We deny the motion in part on its substantive issues
    but grant the motion in part to clarify the factual issues raised by Mother,
    1
    See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
    withdrawing our prior opinion and substituting the following in its place. Our
    memorandum opinion otherwise remains unchanged. See Tex. R. App. P. 49.3.
    This is the second appeal involving the termination of Appellant Mother’s
    parental rights to P.M. 2 See In re P.L.G.M., No. 02-13-00181-CV, 
    2013 WL 5967037
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Nov. 7, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.). In the
    first appeal, the trial court terminated Mother’s parental rights to P.M. after a
    bench trial, finding that Mother had endangered P.M. and that termination of her
    parental rights would be in P.M.’s best interest. 
    Id. at *1,
    *3 n.6.; see Tex. Fam.
    Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (2) (West 2014). On November 7, 2013, we
    reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the case for a jury trial when,
    based on the entire record, there was no showing that Mother’s motion to
    reinstate the jury trial she had originally requested would unduly interfere with the
    trial court’s docket, delay the trial, or injure the opposing party; thus, the trial
    court’s refusal to grant the jury trial was not harmless in light of the case’s
    material fact issues. P.L.G.M., 
    2013 WL 5967037
    , at *4–5.
    In nine issues, Mother now appeals the trial court’s judgment on the jury’s
    verdict that terminated her parental rights to P.M., arguing that the evidence is
    legally and factually insufficient to support the judgment’s endangerment and
    2
    We use initials for the child’s name and pseudonyms for the names of
    other individuals who were involved in the case but who were not medical or
    mental health professionals, employees of the Department of Family and
    Protective Services (DFPS), or social services volunteers. See Tex. R. App. P.
    9.8.
    2
    best interest findings and raising various due-process complaints, including that
    the trial judge should have been recused and that he demonstrated bias against
    her throughout the trial. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (2). We
    affirm.
    II. Procedural Background
    As we stated in the first appeal,
    [i]n February 2011, Father’s assault on Mother put her in the
    hospital. DFPS closed its investigation after the caseworker found
    that the “risk factors” were controlled—Father had been
    incarcerated,[] and Mother no longer tested positive for drugs.
    Several months later, in October 2011, Denton County Child
    Protective Services (CPS) received a referral alleging that Mother
    had been using methamphetamine.                  Mother signed an
    acknowledgment that she had used methamphetamine on October
    6, 2011.[3] CPS removed P.[M.] from Mother and placed the child
    first with Father’s mother and then with a foster family.
    3
    Mother was indicted for endangering a child by
    intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with criminal negligence,
    engag[ing] in conduct, by omission, that placed [P.M.], a child
    younger than 15 years of age, in imminent danger of death, bodily
    injury, or physical or mental impairment, by failing to protect the child
    from exposure to the controlled substance, methamphetamine, and
    the defendant had a legal duty to act, namely, as a parent or legal
    guardian or having care, custody, or control of a child under age of
    15.
    Mother pleaded guilty to the lesser-included offense of assault under penal code
    section 22.041, entitled, “Abandoning or Endangering Child,” a class A
    misdemeanor, in exchange for eighteen months of deferred adjudication
    community supervision. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.041 (West 2011). At
    the time of the 2014 jury trial, Mother had one more week of community
    supervision to complete.
    3
    On November 3, 2011, DFPS filed its original petition in this
    case. Mother filed her answer and jury demand on November 23,
    2011, and the case was originally set for a jury trial on March 18,
    2013.
    On December 14, 2011, the trial court issued temporary
    orders and set out all of the services Mother would be required to
    complete over the course of the case: weekly counseling sessions;
    parenting classes; a “Choosing Healthy Relationships” class; a drug
    and alcohol assessment; and random drug tests (saliva, urine, and
    hair follicle). It also set out the requirements she had to meet over
    the course of the case: establish and maintain safe, stable, and
    appropriate housing and suitable employment for at least six months
    and through the pendency of the suit; refrain from engaging in
    criminal activities and from unsupervised contact with a child under
    age sixteen; comply with each requirement set out in the service
    plan or any amended service plan; have one hour of supervised
    visitation per week at the CPS office; and pay $25 each month in
    medical support.
    ....
    Between November 23, 2011, and the child’s return to Mother
    on November 18, 2012, Mother completed all but the services that
    had been continued and extended by CPS such as counseling. At
    that time, all concerned parties—DFPS, CPS, the court-appointed
    special advocate (CASA) volunteer, the child’s ad litem attorney, and
    Mother—agreed that P.[M.] should be returned to Mother.
    ....
    On March 7, 2013, the trial court held a permanency hearing
    and hearing on DFPS’s emergency motion to modify temporary
    orders, in which DFPS again sought to remove P.[M.] from Mother.
    The CPS supervisor testified that DFPS had recently become aware
    of Mother’s phone contact with Father after he had been bench-
    warranted back to Denton County for the termination trial, that their
    phone conversations had raised safety concerns, and that removing
    P.[M.] again was in the child’s best interest. The CASA volunteer
    also testified that removing P.[M.] from Mother was in the child’s best
    interest.
    4
    At the March 7, 2013 hearing, Mother’s counsel asked DFPS’s
    attorney if it was clearly seeking to terminate Mother’s parental rights
    because “that wasn’t what you were seeking before,” and she asked
    for updated discovery. On March 8, 2013, the trial court entered an
    injunction prohibiting Mother from any contact with Father and from
    allowing any contact between Father and P.[M.], among other
    things, but it did not order the child’s removal. The trial court stated
    that it would postpone making a ruling until the next day at docket
    call.
    Three days after the trial court entered the injunction, Mother,
    who had been raised in the foster system herself, told a friend that
    DFPS was seeking to terminate both Father’s rights and her rights to
    P.[M.] and asked whether she would be willing to adopt P.[M.] The
    friend indicated that her niece might be interested in adopting the
    child and arranged a meeting in conjunction with a family dinner.
    Without first seeking permission from CPS, . . . the child spent the
    night with the friend’s family. There are no allegations that anything
    untoward happened to the child or with the family in question.
    Mother picked the child up the next day.
    Mother’s attorney filed a withdrawal of jury demand at 1:01
    p.m. on March 15, 2013, the Friday before the originally scheduled
    jury trial. At some point that same day, Mother’s friend contacted
    CPS to ask about P.[M.]’s placement, and at 3:50 p.m., the friend’s
    niece filed a petition in intervention in the termination case, seeking
    to adopt P.[M.] CPS filed an application for a subpoena for Mother’s
    friend at 4:09 p.m. and removed P.[M.] from Mother’s home at 6:12
    p.m.
    P.L.G.M., 
    2013 WL 5967037
    , at *1–2 (footnote omitted).              The bench trial
    concluded over thirty days after Mother sought to revoke the waiver of her jury
    trial. 
    Id. at *3.
    At the conclusion of the bench trial, the trial judge made some findings on
    the record:
    I’m going to find that the mother’s testimony in many instances
    is not credible. I think that she’s told so many lies that she can’t
    even remember all the lies.
    5
    She lied about using meth or being under the influence of
    meth while she was caring for her child. She made up a story about
    someone giving the child a methamphetamine-laced bologna
    sandwich.
    She had money put on the father’s books, then came in court
    and tried to cover it up and lied about it.
    She desperately tried to get the father to contact her and then
    made up stories about justifying it with closure and those type things.
    I think very telling is the letters to the father and the phone
    calls. I think they’re clearly indicative that she was planning to
    reunite with him upon his release from prison. Here are a few of the
    excerpts, and this is to a man who she testified beat her almost to
    death[:]
    [“]I think you are one of the greatest men I have ever met in
    my entire life.[”]
    [“]I compare everyone to you, and they do not measure up.[”]
    [“]I still love you. I am still in love with you.[”]
    And when we’re talking about a relationship in the future, she
    states to him, [“]If you don’t want that, then you need to let me know
    so I can go on. You need to tell me so then I can move away.[”]
    Those are clearly indicative of getting back together with the
    father in spite of the fact that he almost beat [her] to death and
    poses a danger to [her] and [her] daughter.
    Then within the two weeks before trial, you go to your bail
    bondsman and ask her to adopt your child. You get your daughter
    involved by leaving your daughter with her, eventually spending the
    night with a family she just met. In fact you discussed this to the
    point in front of the child or with the child that the child would ask
    you, [“]If you die, is this the family I’ll go with?[”]
    The bottom line is, you exposed your child to the culture of
    illegal narcotics, all the dangers that are involved with those
    criminals, and now you refuse to take responsibility for that.
    6
    In addition, you’ve put this child in danger by wanting to
    reunite with a violent man, then went through an elaborate deception
    throughout this case regarding the father by telling everybody that
    was trying to help you that you were scared to death of him, when in
    fact you were actually planning to reunite with him when he gets out.
    You’re putting your desires ahead of what’s in the best interest
    of the child.
    When they find out about all these, then you come back and
    try to say, [“N]o, I don’t want to be with him.[”] But it’s too little too
    late.
    On May 9, 2013, the trial court concluded that Mother had endangered P.M.
    under family code section 161.001(D) and (E) and that termination of her
    parental rights would be in the child’s best interest. 4 See Tex. Fam. Code Ann.
    § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (2). For the reasons previously explained, we remanded
    the case to the trial court for a jury trial.
    Two weeks after we remanded this case to the trial court for a jury trial,
    Mother filed a motion to recuse the trial judge, contending that his impartiality
    might reasonably be questioned in the new trial and that he had a personal bias
    or prejudice against her based on his findings at the bench trial’s conclusion. In
    December 2013, the regional presiding judge heard Mother’s motion and denied
    it.
    On January 13, 2014, Mother filed a motion to return the child to her. She
    also filed a motion to enforce possession and access under the original
    4
    The trial court also terminated Father’s parental rights to P.M. Father did
    not appeal.
    7
    temporary orders in effect before the child’s return to her in the first case. On
    February 5, 2014, Mother filed an emergency motion for the child’s return.
    On February 26, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on Mother’s
    emergency motion. Mother argued that her due-process rights had been violated
    when the child was removed from her in March 2013 and that because the
    termination order had been reversed and the case remanded for a jury trial, P.M.
    should have been returned to her or visitation should have resumed. DFPS
    responded that the March 2013 removal was not an original removal but rather a
    change of placement, which it had a right to do as P.M.’s managing conservator.
    The trial court denied Mother’s motion but stated that it would be proper to have
    an evidentiary hearing to determine temporary orders until the jury trial and told
    the parties to set a hearing.
    At the April 30, 2014 temporary-orders hearing, Mother testified that she
    had not seen P.M. in a year and that when she contacted CPS directly, she was
    told that “the attorneys were handing everything.”              After calling her CPS
    caseworker several times to no avail, Mother tried to go through her counsel and
    left all of her gifts for P.M. at P.M.’s ad litem attorney’s office.
    Mother testified that she had continuously asked to visit P.M., that she had
    not had any contact with Father since before the first trial and had a protective
    order against him, and that she thought P.M. might feel abandoned since Mother
    8
    was left in foster care for the last time at P.M.’s age. 5 P.M.’s attorney ad litem
    asked Mother how visitation just a few weeks before trial would affect P.M. if
    Mother’s rights were terminated again.        Mother replied, “I would have given
    anything to see my mother one more time.” P.M.’s attorney ad litem redirected
    Mother, stating “I’m not asking about you. . . . Do you believe it would affect
    [P.M.] negatively at all to see you again after a year and gaining stability and then
    to lose rights?” Mother replied, “Anything’s possible.”
    DFPS’s attorney asked Mother if whether, during her final two-hour visit
    with P.M. after the first termination trial, she had P.M. pose with a birthday cake
    and then take a photo each time after adding a candle. Mother said that she had
    and that she thought they celebrated all the way up to P.M.’s eighteenth birthday
    to show P.M. that she was celebrating every year with her. Mother said that she
    did not recall P.M. asking her to stop.
    Norma Cruson, P.M.’s psychotherapist since April 2013, testified that P.M.
    had moved past her relationship issues with Mother over the last two months and
    had talked about wanting to be adopted. 6 Some of P.M.’s relationship issues had
    involved Mother telling P.M. to lie to CPS and to tell Mother’s boyfriend that P.M.
    5
    Mother stated, “I have been that child. I know exactly how she feels. She
    feels abandoned, left alone, forgotten by her mother whom she hasn’t seen in
    one year.”
    6
    Between November 2013 and January 2014, Cruson told CPS or P.M.’s
    ad litem attorney that visitation with Mother would be harmful to P.M. and not in
    the child’s best interest because P.M. was still working through her issues.
    9
    was her sister instead of her daughter. 7 Cruson opined that receiving Mother’s
    gifts would have confused P.M., and she expressed concern that seeing Mother
    might set P.M. back in her healing process. Cruson recommended waiting to see
    whether Mother’s rights would be terminated at the upcoming trial before allowing
    visitation.
    P.M.’s ad litem attorney informed the trial court that he had spoken with
    P.M. on the night before the hearing and said that P.M. missed and loved Mother
    and would like to see Mother for at least a short period of time.
    At the hearing’s conclusion, the trial court denied Mother’s motion, stating
    that with the trial set for June 2, a visit would not be in the child’s best interest if
    the jury decided to terminate Mother’s parental rights.
    On May 14, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on DFPS’s motion to
    compel, in which DFPS complained that Mother’s discovery responses were
    incomplete and that Mother had not supplemented her responses to DFPS’s
    requests for disclosure since originally providing them on January 2, 2014,
    despite DFPS’s agreement to extend the discovery deadline until May 9. The
    trial court stated that Mother would only be allowed to call and use testimony
    from any witnesses for whom she had “disclosed fully their name, contact
    7
    Mother denied that she had ever told P.M. to pretend that she was
    Mother’s sister when her boyfriend was around or that she had ever told P.M. to
    lie to CPS.
    10
    information, and a description of their opinions or expert testimony” by 5:00 p.m.
    that day. Mother’s counsel replied, “Okay.”
    The jury trial lasted from June 2 to June 11, 2014, and involved testimony
    by many witnesses, including Mother, Father, P.M.’s paternal grandmother
    Sherry, CPS personnel, P.M.’s counselor in the first case, P.M.’s counselor after
    the first case, Mother’s counselor in the first case, Mother’s current counselor, a
    psychologist, the emergency room doctor who treated Mother in February 2011
    after Father’s assault, Mother’s former bail bondsman Eileen, and P.M.’s current
    foster mother Katie. Cumulatively, the evidence showed domestic violence, drug
    use, and bad choices by Mother that occurred before P.M. was removed in
    November 2011 and after she was returned to Mother in November 2012 to
    March 2013, when DFPS removed the child again.             The parties presented
    conflicting evidence on whether Mother suffered from memory loss and post
    traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) caused by Father’s February 2011 assault.
    Eleven out of twelve jurors found by clear and convincing evidence that
    Mother had endangered P.M. by knowingly placing or knowingly allowing her to
    remain in conditions or surroundings that endangered the child’s physical or
    emotional well-being; that Mother had endangered P.M by engaging in conduct
    or knowingly placing the child with persons who engaged in conduct that
    endangered the child’s physical or emotional well-being; and that termination of
    the parent-child relationship between Mother and P.M. was in P.M.’s best
    11
    interest.   See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (2).           This appeal
    followed.
    III. Termination of Parental Rights
    In a termination case, the State seeks not just to limit parental rights but to
    erase them permanently—to divest the parent and child of all legal rights,
    privileges, duties, and powers normally existing between them, except the child’s
    right to inherit. 
    Id. § 161.206(b)
    (West 2014); Holick v. Smith, 
    685 S.W.2d 18
    , 20
    (Tex. 1985). Consequently, “[w]hen the State seeks to sever permanently the
    relationship between a parent and a child, it must first observe fundamentally fair
    procedures.” In re E.R., 
    385 S.W.3d 552
    , 554 (Tex. 2012) (citing Santosky v.
    Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 747–48, 
    102 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1391–92 (1982)). We strictly
    scrutinize termination proceedings and strictly construe involuntary termination
    statutes in favor of the parent. In re E.N.C., 
    384 S.W.3d 796
    , 802 (Tex. 2012);
    
    E.R., 385 S.W.3d at 554
    –55; 
    Holick, 685 S.W.2d at 20
    –21.
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    In her sixth, seventh, and eighth issues, Mother contends that the evidence
    is legally and factually insufficient to support the termination of her parental rights
    under subsections (D) and (E) of section 161.001(1) and to support the best-
    interest finding under section 161.001(2).
    1. Standards of Review
    Termination decisions must be supported by clear and convincing
    evidence. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001, § 161.206(a) (West 2014); E.N.C.,
    
    12 384 S.W.3d at 802
    . “[C]onjecture is not enough.” 
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 810
    .
    Due process demands this heightened standard because “[a] parental rights
    termination proceeding encumbers a value ‘far more precious than any property
    right.’” 
    E.R., 385 S.W.3d at 555
    (quoting 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 758
    –59, 102
    S. Ct. at 1397); In re J.F.C., 
    96 S.W.3d 256
    , 263 (Tex. 2002); see also 
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 802
    . Evidence is clear and convincing if it “will produce in the
    mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations
    sought to be established.” Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 101.007 (West 2014); 
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 802
    .
    For a trial court to terminate a parent-child relationship, DFPS must
    establish by clear and convincing evidence that the parent’s actions satisfy one
    ground listed in family code section 161.001(1) and that termination is in the best
    interest of the child. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001; 
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 803
    ; In re J.L., 
    163 S.W.3d 79
    , 84 (Tex. 2005).             Both elements must be
    established; termination may not be based solely on the best interest of the child
    as determined by the trier of fact. Tex. Dep’t of Human Servs. v. Boyd, 
    727 S.W.2d 531
    , 533 (Tex. 1987); In re C.D.E., 
    391 S.W.3d 287
    , 295 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth 2012, no pet.).
    In evaluating the evidence for legal sufficiency in parental termination
    cases, we determine whether the evidence is such that a factfinder could
    reasonably form a firm belief or conviction that subsection (D) or (E) of section
    161.001(1) was proven and that termination of parental rights was in the child’s
    13
    best interest under section 161.001(2). In re J.P.B., 
    180 S.W.3d 570
    , 573 (Tex.
    2005).
    We review all the evidence in the light most favorable to the finding and
    judgment.   
    Id. We resolve
    any disputed facts in favor of the finding if a
    reasonable factfinder could have done so. 
    Id. We disregard
    all evidence that a
    reasonable factfinder could have disbelieved.     
    Id. We consider
    undisputed
    evidence even if it is contrary to the finding. 
    Id. That is,
    we consider evidence
    favorable to termination if a reasonable factfinder could, and we disregard
    contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder could not. See 
    id. “A lack
    of
    evidence does not constitute clear and convincing evidence.”         
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 808
    .
    We cannot weigh witness credibility issues that depend on the appearance
    and demeanor of the witnesses because that is the factfinder’s province. 
    J.P.B., 180 S.W.3d at 573
    , 574.         And even when credibility issues appear in the
    appellate record, we defer to the factfinder’s determinations as long as they are
    not unreasonable. 
    Id. at 573.
    In reviewing the evidence for factual sufficiency, we give due deference to
    the factfinder’s findings and do not supplant the verdict with our own.      In re
    H.R.M., 
    209 S.W.3d 105
    , 108 (Tex. 2006). We determine whether, on the entire
    record, a factfinder could reasonably form a firm conviction or belief that Mother
    violated subsection (D) or (E) of section 161.001(1) and that termination of the
    parent-child relationship would be in the best interest of the child. Tex. Fam.
    14
    Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E), (2); In re C.H., 
    89 S.W.3d 17
    , 28 (Tex. 2002). If,
    in light of the entire record, the disputed evidence that a reasonable factfinder
    could not have credited in favor of the finding is so significant that a factfinder
    could not reasonably have formed a firm belief or conviction in the truth of its
    finding, then the evidence is factually insufficient. 
    H.R.M., 209 S.W.3d at 108
    .
    2. Endangerment
    In her sixth and seventh issues, Mother complains that DFPS’s evidence
    failed to satisfy the clear and convincing standard of endangerment with regard
    to environment or conduct.
    Endangerment is defined as exposing to loss or injury, to jeopardize. In re
    J.T.G., 
    121 S.W.3d 117
    , 125 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.); see also
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 161.001(1)(D), (E).        Under subsection (D), we must
    examine evidence related to the child’s environment to determine if the
    environment was the source of endangerment to the child’s physical or emotional
    well-being. In re D.T., 
    34 S.W.3d 625
    , 632 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2000, pet.
    denied) (op. on reh’g). Inappropriate, abusive, or unlawful conduct by persons
    who live in the child’s home or with whom the child is compelled to associate on
    a regular basis in her home is a part of the “conditions or surroundings” of the
    child’s home under section 161.001(1)(D). In re E.M.M., Jr., No. 02-12-00259-
    CV, 
    2012 WL 6632785
    , at *11 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Dec. 21, 2012, no pet.)
    (mem. op.); see also In re W.S., 
    899 S.W.2d 772
    , 776 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    15
    1995, no writ) (stating that “environment” refers not only to the acceptability of
    living conditions but also to a parent’s conduct in the home).
    Under subsection (E), the relevant inquiry is whether evidence exists that
    the endangerment of the child’s physical or emotional well-being was the direct
    result of the parent’s conduct, including acts, omissions, and failures to act.
    
    J.T.G., 121 S.W.3d at 125
    . Termination under subsection (E) must be based on
    more than a single act or omission; a voluntary, deliberate, and conscious course
    of conduct by the parent is required. Id.; 
    D.T., 34 S.W.3d at 634
    . To determine
    whether termination is necessary, courts may look to parental conduct occurring
    both before and after the child’s birth. In re D.M., 
    58 S.W.3d 801
    , 812 (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth 2001, no pet.). The factfinder may infer from past conduct
    endangering the child’s well-being that similar conduct will recur if the child is
    returned to the parent. See In re D.L.N., 
    958 S.W.2d 934
    , 941 (Tex. App.—
    Waco 1997, pet. denied), disapproved on other grounds by 
    J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 267
    n.39, and 
    C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 26
    . To support a finding of endangerment, the
    parent’s conduct does not necessarily have to be directed at the child nor is the
    child required to suffer injury. 
    Boyd, 727 S.W.2d at 533
    .
    Because the evidence pertaining to family code subsections 161.001(1)(D)
    and (E) is interrelated, we may conduct a consolidated review. In re M.C.T., 
    250 S.W.3d 161
    , 169 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2008, no pet.); see also In re M.R., 
    243 S.W.3d 807
    , 819 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2007, no pet.) (holding that there was
    legally and factually sufficient evidence of both endangerment grounds).
    16
    a. Memory Loss and PTSD
    At the December 1, 2011 adversary hearing, when Mother received her
    service plan, Mother’s counsel asked to be present when DFPS, CASA, or P.M.’s
    ad litem attorney was going to speak with Mother “due to the memory situation at
    this time,” and Mother told DFPS that she received disability payments because
    of PTSD and memory loss. Mother testified at the hearing that she was given the
    diagnosis by a “disability person” but that she had not seen a doctor for the
    diagnosis; she had seen a nurse practitioner who was not a psychologist or
    psychiatrist.
    Mother was told at the adversary hearing that she would be able to refer
    back to the written copy of her service plan. Jill Hoenig, P.M.’s CASA volunteer,
    testified that she became aware of Mother’s memory loss and PTSD at the
    adversary hearing and said that Mother talked about it with her. Hoenig said that
    while Mother occasionally might not be able to remember something, she did not
    recall Mother’s forgetting anything significant. Hoenig said that at no point did
    Mother ask her to write down any suggestions CASA had so that she could
    remember them better.
    Dr. Lawrence Sloan, a psychologist, performed a consultative examination
    of Mother for the Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services with regard
    to Mother’s June and July 2011 disability application. He diagnosed Mother with
    amnestic disorder due to head injury, meaning that she would have problems of
    17
    memory functioning, based on her self-report 8 and memory testing that showed
    some scores suggestive of memory impairment. He also diagnosed Mother with
    “acute stress disorder,” which he testified “is essentially PTSD,” and said that he
    had made an error by originally listing the diagnosis as acute stress disorder
    instead of PTSD.
    Dr. Sloan testified that depending on the person, PTSD could interfere with
    the ability to think rationally. He also stated that people with PTSD could have
    memory loss manifesting as the inability to recall an important aspect of the
    trauma. Dr. Sloan stated that there were no overt indicators of malingering or
    symptom exaggeration based on Mother’s apparent effort during the testing.
    However, Mother reported to Dr. Sloan that she took only Xanax—for her nerves
    in trying to raise teenage boys—and indicated that her last drug use was five
    years prior to her examination except for Father’s having drugged her in
    connection with the February 2011 assault.
    Mother exaggerated to Dr. Sloan how many times she went to counseling,
    telling him that she went multiple times a week; her counseling records reflect
    that she attended only eight times over the course of several months. 9 Mother
    8
    Dr. Sloan said that the historical information in the report is almost entirely
    self-reported by the patient and if some items are factually inaccurate, that could
    skew the diagnosis, although that would also go to the self-report’s veracity
    rather than the diagnosis itself.
    9
    From April 2011 to September 2011, Mother attended eight counseling
    sessions.
    18
    told Dr. Sloan that she avoided being touched but did not disclose to him that she
    was in a dating relationship with Ted, who had been emotionally and physically
    abusive to her, at the time of the assessment. 10 Mother also told Dr. Sloan that
    she feared Father’s release from prison but did not disclose that she had been
    visiting Father while he was in jail around the same time that the testing
    occurred.   Dr. Sloan testified that all of this new information would call into
    question Mother’s self-report.
    Jennifer Livings, who counseled Mother from December 2011 to June
    2013, testified that Mother had self-reported her memory loss and PTSD to her
    but that Livings had noticed some symptoms of PTSD on her own. 11 Livings said
    it would have caused her concern if she had known that Mother’s psychological
    evaluation indicated that there was little memory loss because that was contrary
    to what Mother had told her. 12 Livings did not recall witnessing any memory loss
    when working with Mother.
    10
    Denton Police Detective Scott Miller testified that shortly after Father’s
    February 2011 assault on Mother, Mother contacted him with an assault
    complaint against her boyfriend Ted but subsequently asked Detective Miller not
    to pursue the charge.
    11
    Livings testified that some of Mother’s triggers were stressful situations in
    which Mother had to recall lots of information at once or that reminded Mother of
    past trauma.
    12
    The trial court admitted Mother’s March 12, 2012 psychological
    evaluation, in which Mother self-reported being on disability for PTSD and post-
    concussion syndrome. The evaluation stated that Mother “demonstrated little
    difficulty with her immediate, short-term, and long-term memory capacities.”
    19
    CPS program director Teresa Morrow testified that at the June 2012
    permanency conference, when the case goal was originally changed from
    reunification to termination, she had not felt that Mother had been making
    progress on her supportive outpatient treatment or participation in NA and AA
    because Mother had been unable to list the step of the AA program she was on,
    Mother’s attitude that she did not need the services or programs, and CPS’s
    ongoing concerns about Mother’s progress on the domestic-violence issue.
    Morrow said that she was aware that Mother had stress issues but that she was
    not aware of a diagnosed disability.
    Carol Hedtke, a nurse practitioner who had been seeing Mother since
    October 2013, had prescribed Xanax for Mother’s anxiety and hydrocodone for
    pain. At her initial visit with Hedtke, Mother denied any memory loss, told Hedtke
    that she remembered everything about Father’s assault, and told Hedtke about
    having panic attacks; Hedtke did not recall Mother’s mentioning PTSD at the
    initial visit.
    Mother did not tell Hedtke about her drug history although Hedtke said that
    it   would       have   been   important   to    know   whether   Mother   had   used
    methamphetamine. Mother testified that other than the overdose during Father’s
    assault, she had not disclosed her methamphetamine use to Hedtke because
    she was ashamed of it. Mother told Hedtke that she participated in Al-Anon but
    not that she was a recovering addict.
    20
    Mother eventually told Hedtke that she suffered from PTSD, but Hedtke
    testified that she was unable to verify that diagnosis through any other medical
    records, although she agreed in her medical records with the diagnosis. Hedtke
    referred Mother to MHMR for PTSD. Hedtke also gave Mother a memory test in
    the office, and Mother scored twenty-five out of thirty, indicating mild to moderate
    memory loss. Hedtke testified that Mother’s memory loss was consistent with
    and sometimes worse than someone of her age and circumstances and noted
    that there could be a correlation of PTSD and memory loss.
    Dr. Jason West, the Denton Regional Medical Center trauma surgeon who
    treated Mother on February 17, 2011, testified that he noticed soft tissue swelling
    at Mother’s scalp in a CT scan and stated that head trauma could lead to
    memory loss.
    Jacqueline Fox, Mother’s CPS caseworker during most of the case,
    testified that although Mother potentially had a PTSD diagnosis and had
    mentioned memory loss on several occasions, she had seen no outward signs of
    PTSD or memory loss. Instead, she said Mother was able to quote what Fox and
    other parties had said months before and to recite what had happened at specific
    hearings. Livings, however, said that Fox frequently contacted her for updates
    on how Mother was doing and asked her for tips on how to deal with Mother’s
    PTSD.
    Fox described Mother as very active, vocal, and quick to recall events in
    her case and to push for what she wanted. Fox said that Mother never asked her
    21
    for written instructions to help her remember and that no service providers told
    Fox that Mother needed written instructions or mentioned any disability hindering
    Mother’s ability to complete her services; to the contrary, they provided Fox with
    Mother’s service completion reports.
    b. Domestic Violence and Emotional Abuse
    Although Mother testified that her relationship with Father—which had
    been on and off—“wasn’t always bad,” Sherry said that Mother and Father’s
    relationship was bad and they “fussed and fought all the time.” Mother stated
    that the only other time besides the February 2011 assault that Father had
    physically abused her was in 2006, when P.M. was three months old, but in her
    drug and alcohol assessment, Mother reported that she had endured physical
    and emotional abuse by Father from 2007 to 2011. Mother testified that she
    recalled only bits and pieces of the February 2011 assault and said that she did
    not recall telling Hedtke that she remembered everything. 13
    The trial court admitted Mother’s February 3, 2014 application for a
    protective order, including Mother’s affidavit, which presented a detailed account
    of the February 2011 assault, including how Father entered her trailer through
    the back bedroom window at around 2:30 a.m. on February 16, took P.M. to
    Mother’s bedroom and told her to go to sleep and stay there, and then tied
    Mother to a chair with his belt. In the February 2014 affidavit, Mother stated that
    13
    Detective Miller interviewed Mother after the assault and said that she
    was able to recall and recount what happened.
    22
    Father punched her like a punching bag, choked her, threw heavy decorative
    glass balls at her, threw Mother’s countertop microwave oven on her, threatened
    to chop off her hands with a butcher knife, banged Mother’s head against the
    stove hard enough to dent the stove, and hit Mother’s head with a wrought iron
    chair. At one point, Father crushed all of the medication in the house and forced
    Mother to take it. Mother stated in her affidavit, “My daughter had come to my
    bedroom door at this point and witnessed this.” 14 Mother claimed in her 2014
    affidavit that she was in the hospital for three weeks, but Dr. West testified that
    Mother was in the hospital from February 17 to February 23.
    Dr. West testified that Mother had to be intubated because the high level of
    sedatives in her system kept her from breathing for herself. Mother had multiple
    lacerations on her scalp and face; multiple bruises on her face, shoulders, arms,
    and chest; and had benzodiazepines—of which Xanax is one of the most
    common—and amphetamine or methamphetamine in her system. Mother had
    told EMS that someone made her swallow “benzos and speed.” Dr. West was
    unable to specifically say how much medicine Mother had in her system, whether
    she took it willingly or someone made her take it, or exactly in what time frame
    she had received the doses within the previous eight to ten hours. Detective
    14
    Mother acknowledged that P.M. saw, at a minimum, the end of the
    assault; she also said that she learned during the assault that Father had choked
    one of her sons. In her 2014 psychological evaluation, P.M. recounted having
    seen Father attempt to drown Mother in the bathtub.
    23
    Miller testified that Mother was lucky to be alive.      The trial court admitted
    photographs of Mother’s injuries that were taken within a day of the attack.
    Licensed professional counselor Emily Head saw P.M. from December
    2011 to March 2013. When Head began the counseling, P.M. was around five
    years old. P.M.’s aggressive behavior displayed evidence of trauma—during one
    session in January 2012, P.M. pulled Head’s nose and slapped her, placed her
    hand on Head’s throat, and shoved her—and dissociation “to where she wouldn’t
    talk about things in her home” or about Mother. 15 Head conducted play therapy
    and role playing in which Head would be the child and P.M. would be the mother.
    Head said that P.M. exhibited very controlling behavior during role-playing, telling
    Head what to do, how to do it, when to do it, when Head could talk, when Head
    could not talk, and how to draw, correcting Head “quite often.” When Head
    observed P.M. with Mother at a January 2012 visit, P.M. was “stiff and
    nonaffectionate towards [Mother],” the opposite of how P.M. interacted with her
    foster mother, and Mother “was very high strung, talking and moving constantly.”
    Head said that P.M. started to open up a little more in 2012 and became
    calmer, less anxious, and engaged in more cooperative play; Head noted that
    15
    Dr. Susan Talmage administered P.M.’s first psychological evaluation in
    December 2011 and noted that P.M.’s foster mother described P.M.’s social and
    emotional development as that of a two-year-old because P.M. needed constant
    attention, was bossy, and would cry incessantly if she did not get her way. When
    the foster mother made an innocuous suggestion about an art project, P.M.
    punched her in the face. P.M. would also sometimes make “angry animal noises
    that sound[] like growling.”
    24
    P.M. thrived on structure and consistency. Head also noticed that when P.M. did
    not have visits with Mother, she had less anxiety and she was less controlling in
    her play; in contrast, after a visit with Mother, P.M.’s play would become more
    aggressive and controlling. Head said that P.M. would rarely speak about her
    biological family but that she frequently talked about her foster mother. Head
    was concerned about P.M.’s inability or refusal to talk about Mother.
    Head’s counseling notes from June 2012 recorded more role-playing in
    which P.M. was the mother and Head was the child. P.M. “in a harsh voice,
    asked [her], ‘do you want to go to the parade? You’re not going! You will not go
    if you don’t do exactly what I do.’” 16    This behavior continued for the entire
    session. That month, Head suggested filial therapy to aid Mother and P.M. in
    rebuilding a trusting, healthy relationship because the visits between Mother and
    P.M. were very controlled by Mother. 17 Head had noticed that as in P.M.’s role-
    playing, during Mother’s visits with P.M., Mother would tell P.M. exactly what to
    16
    In December 2010, when P.M. and Mother were living in Atlanta, P.M.
    rode in a Christmas parade as “Children’s Queen of Atlanta.”
    17
    In August 2012, the CASA volunteer told Head that Mother had taken
    P.M. by the face and stated things like, “I am your Mom, don’t let anyone tell you
    differently. Do you understand me?” and “What is your name?” When P.M. said
    “G.,” Mother said, “No, your name is [P.L.G.M.]!”, made P.M. repeat the full name
    several times, told her not to let anyone tell her that it’s not “[L.],” and asked her
    again if she understood. In September 2012, in more role-playing, P.M.
    commanded Head to do things in a certain way but then would say “never mind”
    and do it for her, at one point stating under her breath, “You can’t do anything
    right, you are so stupid.” P.M. also made comments like “mommy knows how to
    do it” and “mommy is the artist, not [you].”
    25
    do, how to do it, when to do it, would correct P.M. often, and would take over
    activities and finish them herself. The first session of filial therapy did not occur
    until September 24, 2012. 18
    P.M. expressed to Head that she worried about Father trying to get out of
    jail because she wanted Mother and her foster mother to be safe. In November
    2012, after the trial court approved a monitored return, P.M. told Head that she
    was very excited about going home to be with Mother and that her biggest worry
    was Father getting out of jail.
    Fox stated that after P.M. was returned to Mother, Mother was very
    welcoming and would talk very openly, but P.M. appeared to shut down. Fox
    said that when she went to P.M.’s school to talk with her outside of the home
    environment and see how she was doing, P.M. did not want to see her and told
    her that she did not have to talk to her anymore.
    After P.M. was removed from Mother the second time, she started seeing
    Cruson for counseling weekly from April 2013 until around mid-March or April
    18
    Livings had recommended family therapy but Head recommended filial
    therapy instead because of P.M.’s age and developmental level. Filial therapy “is
    child-centered and revolves around the child, whereas family therapy is more of a
    talk therapy and teaching children and parents how to communicate effectively
    together.” Livings had never met P.M. After Fox spoke with both counselors,
    CPS decided to follow Head’s recommendation. When Mother and her attorney
    resisted, Fox brought Head and Livings together to figure out what was in the
    family’s best interest. Once everyone agreed on filial therapy, Mother resisted
    the location of the therapy and wanted the therapy conducted at Livings’s office,
    even though Livings would not be conducting the sessions. The sessions were
    ultimately held in Livings’s building to accommodate Mother.
    26
    2014, when they modified the schedule to once every two or three weeks
    because P.M.’s therapy needs appeared to be tapering off. P.M. was six years
    old when Cruson started working with her.
    Cruson said that P.M.’s first two play-therapy sessions were fairly intense,
    with aggressive, controlling behavior. When they role-played for several months
    with P.M. in the role of the mother and Cruson in the role of the daughter, P.M.
    was very controlling. Cruson described it as,
    And she would be in another room, and I wasn’t supposed to
    come into the room. The door was locked. Not to bother her. I was
    given a task of cooking or go downstairs. And this progressed—it
    was very intense. And she would play out things.
    She would say things like, [“]If my boyfriend comes, don’t tell
    him you’re my daughter. You’re my sister. If CPS is at the door,
    you’re not to talk to them or you’re to lie to CPS. If it’s cops at the
    door, don’t answer or you’re not to talk to them or you’re to lie to
    them.[”]
    So that progressed. And she would even say he doesn’t—a
    boyfriend, he doesn’t like you. He doesn’t like kids. He doesn’t like
    you.[19] So she would play that out. And even at one point towards
    the end of all that play she had me—she said, [“]Just try to call the
    neighbors. They’re not going to believe you.[”] And she would
    pretend to be the neighbor. Just call. And so I would call. [“]And my
    daughter lies, you know.[”]
    Cruson said that in her “mother” role, P.M. also threatened to cut up her
    toys if she did not clean up, threatened to use a belt on her, and varied in mood
    19
    Mother did not disclose to DFPS that she was dating Roland during the
    monitored return period. Roland testified that Mother’s CPS case began shortly
    after he met her in 2011, that he visited her three times a week when she was in
    jail, and that they began a dating relationship after Mother was released from jail
    in 2012 but were just friends at the time of the trial.
    27
    “from rude to sometimes sweet.” Cruson noted in her counseling notes that P.M.
    expressed that while she sometimes missed Mother and had liked getting
    whatever she wanted, getting to stay up really late, and getting to eat whatever
    she wanted, she had felt scared and confused when Mother had “boyfriends” and
    did not want to live with Mother.
    Cruson stated that domestic violence in the home, even when not directed
    at a child in the home, could make the child hypervigilant, give the child
    nightmares, and prevent the child from integrating her own experiences and from
    self-regulating her emotions.
    c. Drug Use
    Mother used drugs during her relationship with Father 20 but stopped using
    methamphetamine during her pregnancy with P.M. and for six months after
    P.M.’s September 2006 birth.        Mother’s bail bondsman Eileen testified that
    Mother had told her that she and Father at times had not been good parents,
    including on an occasion when drugs were left out on the table.
    20
    Father testified that he and Mother had had an on-and-off relationship for
    over ten years and that they used methamphetamine together “[a] couple times.”
    Mother said that before 2011, she had used cocaine and methamphetamine with
    Father but did not recall how often. Mother, who had her oldest son when she
    was twenty-two years old (she was almost fifty at the time of the trial), admitted
    that she had used methamphetamine and cocaine when her two sons were not in
    her care during her relationship with Father and said that she had used cocaine
    five to seven years before the 2014 trial.
    28
    In October 2011, P.M. tested positive for methamphetamine, 21 and Mother
    signed an acknowledgment-of-substance-abuse form and told CPS investigator
    Tina Harris that she had been using drugs three to four times per week. 22 When
    Harris found Mother and P.M. in October 2011, P.M. appeared very disheveled
    and dirty, with extremely tangled and matted hair, and her skin “had a black
    tint . . . to it like she was very dirty.” Harris testified that Mother also appeared
    very disheveled and was very erratic, unfocused, and belligerent. 23          Sherry
    testified that when she went to pick up P.M. after CPS called her, P.M. was filthy
    and had bruises and scratches all over, her hair was tangled, her clothes were
    filthy, and she had a strong odor. When Sherry bathed P.M. that night, Sherry
    noticed that the top of P.M.’s hair was gone. When Sherry asked P.M. about it,
    P.M. told her that Mother had cut it off because it had tangles and she could not
    comb it.
    Harris testified that Mother told her that Erica and Mitch, who lived in
    Mother’s trailer, supplied her with methamphetamine, and she blamed Father for
    planting Erica and Mitch in her trailer and for any drugs to which P.M. might have
    21
    As we previously stated, Mother pleaded guilty to the lesser-included
    offense of assault under penal code section 22.041, entitled, “Abandoning or
    Endangering Child,” based on P.M.’s positive drug test.
    22
    Mother testified that Harris had exaggerated and that she had told Harris
    that she used methamphetamine two times a week.
    23
    Sherry said that Mother was very unkempt that day, looked like she had
    lost ten or fifteen pounds in two or three weeks, talked rapidly, acted crazy, and
    was difficult to understand “because her voice was squeaking so bad.”
    29
    been exposed. Mother denied having told Harris that she got methamphetamine
    from Erica and Mitch and said that she did not know whether Erica and Mitch
    were using drugs when she left P.M. with them for a couple of hours, even
    though she knew they had a history of drug use.
    Harris testified that a parent who allows known drug users in the home
    endangers a child’s physical or emotional well-being because drug users,
    especially those on methamphetamine, expose the child to the drugs, can be
    overly aggressive, tend to ignore the child, and may involve other crimes by
    those seeking to possess the drugs, including drive-by shootings. Harris stated
    that a parent who uses drugs while caring for a child endangers the child’s
    physical or emotional well-being by having a difficult time meeting her own needs
    in addition to the child’s basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter, as well as by
    having a difficult time staying on schedule and perceiving possible dangers to the
    child. Harris further stated that someone crashing from a methamphetamine high
    tends to sleep for “sometimes hours and days on end,” rendering her unable to
    care for the child, and that children who are exposed to methamphetamine can
    have issues with brain development, behavior, and learning disabilities.           In
    October 2011, P.M.’s developmental level was not on par with other five year
    olds—she was unable to list the alphabet and could not count.
    Cheryl Culberson, First Step of Denton County Outreach’s clinical director,
    testified that because a parent models behavior for her child, a parent’s drug use
    could impede the child’s ability to solve problems and to self-correct because a
    30
    drug user is impulsive and has diminished critical thinking skills. Further, when a
    parent is active in her addiction, the drug of choice comes first before the child,
    interfering with the parent’s ability to meet the child’s emotional needs. And a
    parent supervising a child while under the influence of methamphetamine would
    put that child in a high risk of danger.
    Mother completed her drug and alcohol evaluation with First Step at the
    end of December 2011.         In her evaluation, Mother characterized her drug
    problem as slight, denied that drug use kept her from working or caring for P.M.,
    and stated that she had not used any drugs in the last thirty days. She also
    stated that she had consumed alcohol the day before her chemical-dependency
    evaluation.   The intake clinician noted that Mother appeared guarded and
    minimized her drug usage “due to the fear of further consequences.”           She
    recommended that Mother enroll in supportive outpatient treatment, which
    consisted of twelve once-a-week group counseling sessions and four individual
    counseling sessions along with participation in AA, NA, and Celebrate Recovery,
    free community-based sobriety resources. In her March 12, 2012 psychological
    evaluation, Mother reported using methamphetamine around six months earlier
    (i.e., approximately October 2011) to “self-medicate” and that she had last used
    methamphetamine around four months before the evaluation, which would have
    put her last use in December 2011, around the time of her drug and alcohol
    evaluation.
    31
    Mother initially testified that she did not know how her methamphetamine
    use had affected P.M. other than destabilizing P.M.’s life by leading to P.M.’s
    original removal, but she subsequently admitted that it had affected her parenting
    and impaired her ability to care for the child.
    d. Mother’s Choices
    When Mother and Father started seeing each other and living together in
    2002 or 2003, Mother sent her two sons—ages eight and twelve—to live with
    relatives. Until six or seven months into her relationship with Father, Mother did
    not notice that Father’s behavior could become erratic when he drank alcohol—
    he would get angry and then start yelling. Father was diagnosed with bipolar
    disorder in 2004. 24
    In 2006, when P.M. was three months old, Mother left P.M. in bed while
    she went to fix a bottle for her. Father, who was intoxicated, rolled over and
    knocked the infant from the bed. 25 Mother nonetheless continued to leave P.M.
    24
    In November 2011, Father denied to a CPS investigator that he had ever
    been diagnosed with any mental disorders but told her that Mother had been
    diagnosed with bipolar disorder, that Mother “has always done drugs as far as he
    knows[,] and that her main drugs are prescription that she abuses,” specifically
    Xanax. In a letter from jail, Father told Harris that he had learned that Mother
    had been living with Ted and Debbie, that Debbie ran an unlicensed day care out
    of her mobile home, and that Mother and Ted were using and selling
    methamphetamine and Xanax from Debbie’s home, putting children at risk.
    25
    In an April 2010 affidavit in support of a protective order, Mother
    indicated that Father had been intoxicated on drugs, that he knocked P.M. off the
    bed, and that when Mother tried to get help, he kept her confined to the house
    and broke the phone so that she could not escape or call 911.
    32
    overnight and unsupervised with Father after that.      Sherry said that during
    Mother’s relationship with Father, Mother took Xanax all the time and would call
    the police to intervene in disagreements about Father having P.M. 26
    Mother acknowledged that she had known that Father had been in jail for
    six or eight months in 2008 for attacking Carmen, the mother of his son H.M., 27
    and she said that she had been afraid for her life when she applied for a
    protective order in Georgia in 2010 but then changed her mind. Despite the
    Georgia protective order, Mother continued to have contact with Father—
    initiating it herself at least once. A few weeks before he assaulted Mother in
    February 2011, Father threw a box cutter at the wall; it bounced off the wall and
    hit Mother in the leg. Mother agreed that a protective order does no good if the
    person it is supposed to protect initiates contact.
    Mother’s Georgia protective order expired a week or two before the
    February 2011 assault. Father said that Mother did not tell him that she had
    obtained a protective order against him and that he did not know he was not
    supposed to have contact with her. 28 He helped Mother by working on her car
    26
    Mother denied a history of abusing prescription painkillers and did not
    see taking hydrocodone for her back or having an occasional glass of wine as an
    issue for AA.
    27
    In April 2008, a court ordered Father to pay Mother $411 per month in
    child support for P.M. beginning on the first day of the second month “following
    release from prison.”
    28
    Although Mother contends on rehearing that the Georgia protective order
    stated on its face that Father received notice, this exhibit was admitted into
    33
    and house and said that they were in a relationship with frequent contact in
    January and February 2011. Father said that in his ten-year relationship with
    Mother, prior to his incarceration in February 2011, the longest period of time that
    he and Mother had gone without speaking or seeing each other was “perhaps a
    month.” From March 2011 to at least June 2011, Mother visited Father while he
    was in jail. Mother’s April 2011 counseling notes indicated that she wanted to
    help Father find treatment and that she was not interested in putting him in jail.
    In October 2011, Mother and P.M. stayed with Mother’s boyfriend Ted and
    his mother Debbie because the electricity had been shut off to Mother’s trailer. 29
    P.M. told Harris that Ted scared her when he yelled and screamed at Mother and
    called her names.     When P.M. stayed with Sherry during a four-week safety
    placement, P.M. told Sherry that she did not want Ted blowing smoke in her face
    and begged Sherry not to send her home because Ted would tell her to take a
    walk and eat dog poop. P.M. also told Sherry that she was not afraid to stay
    home alone and knew how to fix a peanut butter sandwich for herself when she
    got hungry.
    evidence at the 2013 bench trial, not the 2014 jury trial, and therefore was not
    considered by the jury in evaluating the evidence.
    29
    Harris testified that when Mother opened the refrigerator in her trailer for
    a bottle of water during Harris’s October 2011 investigation, an “awful stench of
    rotting meat and milk” emerged, and Mother said that she would need to pay
    around $500 to get the electricity turned back on. Mother was unemployed, and
    although Harris asked her several times about how Mother paid bills, she was
    unable to get an answer from Mother.
    34
    Mother’s relationship with Ted ended in November 2011, and in February
    2012, Mother filed an application for a protective order against him.            In the
    affidavit sponsoring her application for protective order, Mother stated that Ted
    had been violent throughout their relationship, pushing her, punching her,
    threatening her with a gun and other weapons, choking her, and confining her
    against her will.
    Around a month after P.M. was placed with Sherry, Sherry told DFPS that
    she could no longer keep P.M. because of Mother’s volatile, confrontational
    behavior and P.M.’s aggressive and violent behavior towards her half-brother
    H.M. Harris testified that Mother’s home was not a viable alternative to foster
    care because of Mother’s behavior—she was aggressive, belligerent, erratic,
    irate, and unfocused, which was consistent with continued drug use —and she
    still had no electricity, was unable to pay her trailer’s electric bill, and was staying
    with Debbie and elsewhere. DFPS decided to legally remove P.M. from Mother
    and place P.M. into foster care for the child’s safety and welfare.
    In an April 2012 progress report, a First Step counselor noted that Mother
    did not see the importance of abstaining from alcohol in her recovery process;
    Mother still did not see the importance of abstaining from alcohol at the time of
    the second termination trial. Mother testified that she could take hydrocodone for
    her back and “the fact that I have a glass of wine, I’m not an alcoholic.” Mother
    said that she was sober from methamphetamine, cocaine, heroin, marijuana “or
    anything like that” and that she was no longer an addict. In contrast, Culberson
    35
    testified that “recovery is about total abstinence,” and said that she would not
    consider a former drug user who engaged in social drinking to be sober.
    Culberson also testified that former drug users should ask their doctors for
    nonnarcotic medication and try to use alternative pain management methods
    because to do otherwise would place them at high risk for relapse. And she
    opined that it is dishonest regardless of guilt and shame for a drug addict to fail to
    disclose the extent of her drug history, as Mother had done with Hedtke.
    Mother delayed the start of filial therapy, but once it finally started,
    everyone noted a huge positive change in the interaction between Mother and
    P.M., leading to the child’s monitored return to Mother. P.M. transitioned back to
    Mother’s home over the course of a month and was home with Mother before
    Christmas. Hoenig stated that it seemed like Mother was on the right track until
    around December 2012, when Mother started talking about wanting P.M. to have
    a relationship with Father. Hoenig testified that this concerned her because of
    Father’s violent past.
    In January 2013, Mother started sending letters to Father in jail. The trial
    court admitted seven letters that Mother sent to Father in January 2013 and two
    letters Father sent to Mother during the same time period. Mother told CPS that
    she had received a letter from Father and that it made her fearful, but she would
    not show the letter to her caseworker. Mother recalled telling Fox and Hoenig
    that she feared for her life when she received one of Father’s letters. Mother
    nonetheless continued to reach out to communicate with Father.
    36
    In a six-page, undated letter, Mother told Father that to nine people,
    “including the D.A., CPS, [P.M.’s] attorneys who favor[ed] her,” she appeared
    insane to want to help him remain in contact with P.M. Mother credited Father’s
    only having received three years’ confinement in his plea bargain with her
    decision to tell the district attorney that she wanted him to have two years of
    treatment instead of the twelve years the State was seeking. Mother told Father
    that P.M. saw too much of the assault and it came out in her counseling and that
    if he went to trial, his parental rights would be terminated. She informed him that
    if he signed DFPS’s offer, then later, as long as he stayed clean, and “when
    these people are not involved in all of our lives,” they could change the order to
    visitation as long as she and P.M. would be safe. Mother also chastised Father
    for not having responded and warned him that eventually she would stop trying
    and would move on. She concluded the letter with, “Come out of there and stay
    clean and be the man I know you can be, because that man is a great man. . . .”
    In a two-page letter dated January 10, 2013, Mother told Father that she
    was working on an appeal for visitation for her and P.M., so if he wanted to see
    them, he needed to put them on his visitation list. Mother gave Father her phone
    number. In a three-page letter also dated January 10, 2013, Mother said that
    she had just gone to the mailbox to send her letter and found his letter and that
    she had given her address to Sherry for him two months before (i.e., around the
    same time that the trial court granted the monitored return).      In her second
    37
    January 10, 2013 letter, Mother told Father that she was sending his parole
    board a letter to help him with early release on parole. 30
    Father replied in a letter dated January 16, 2013, telling Mother that she
    needed to take responsibility for her part in everything that had happened and
    that he just wanted her to give his letters to P.M., stop her visitation appeal, and
    focus on something else because he did not want to see her.
    In a thirteen-page letter dated January 23, 2013, Mother told Father that
    she and P.M. read his cards together, that P.M. was devoted to her and Father,
    and that Mother’s thoughts were filled with questions about what the future held
    for the three of them and whether there was any hope. Mother also stated in the
    letter that Erica had watched P.M. for an hour and that Erica and Mitch had put
    methamphetamine in a bologna sandwich. 31          Mother concluded the letter by
    stating, “I loved you and love you still, you always were the man that I loved with
    all of my heart. . . . You were and are my soul mate.”
    30
    Fox stated that at some point Mother talked about writing to the parole
    board for Father to get an early release. Fox said this was a huge change
    “[b]ecause for the 16 months prior to this point in the case, all that [Fox] had
    heard in reports and from [Mother’s] verbal conversations was how fearful she
    was of [Father].” Father, however, at some point was under the impression that
    Mother had not tried to help him obtain early parole, because in one of his letters,
    he wrote, “[T]hanks for contesting my parole—your [sic] a real peach!” In the
    same letter, he listed personal property that he wanted returned and told Mother
    to bag them up and drop them outside Sherry’s house.
    31
    Mother testified that she did not know how P.M. had tested positive for
    methamphetamine but said possibly by ingesting a sandwich that Erica and Mitch
    had laced with methamphetamine.
    38
    In an eight-page letter dated January 25, 2013, Mother stated that P.M.
    was too informative but was learning to not give out so much information. Mother
    informed Father that she might get P.M. a puppy but it would cost an extra $200
    and money had been tight. Mother closed her letter with, “We love you, [Father],
    we have missed you very much. []Know this, . . . believe this . . . try to begin to
    Forgive . . . so that we can go Forward.”
    In a letter dated February 1, 2013, Father asked Mother if she was
    “promoting” the court to terminate his parental rights. Father also told Mother
    that as much as he would like to see P.M., “this is a prison [Mother], it is an ugly,
    vile, violent, disgusting place and [he did] not want to expose [P.M.] to this putrid
    environment.” Father also told Mother that he did not harbor any resentment
    towards her, that she had nothing to fear from him, and that he just wanted to get
    on with his life, put the experience behind them, and be the best father to P.M.
    that he could.
    In a seventeen-page letter dated February 20, 2013, Mother told Father
    that she had been incarcerated for twenty-nine days so she was confused as to
    why it took him a month to write back when all he had was time. Mother stated,
    My heart still loves you, my mind thinks of you all the time and
    I realize that I am still in love with you . . . that nothing has ever
    taken that away . . . . But everyone tells me that I’m crazy to think
    the way that I do, but tell me “who can change my heart” no one . . .
    but God, and as much as I have requested his help, I remain the
    same.
    39
    Mother told Father that she was against his parental rights being terminated and
    that she had made this clear to CPS, CASA, and P.M.’s ad litem attorney.
    Mother stated in her letter that after the beating, she turned to methamphetamine
    because she was “a zombie[,] no energy” and depressed because she had lost
    him and P.M. had lost him.
    Mother told Father that after two months of deliberation, the prison system
    had decided to grant them visitation and that she wanted to come see him.
    Mother told Father that everything could be changed and “what we choose to do
    after my [CPS] case is closed is up to us.” Mother stated,
    So, do you want to see me now? Do you want any of the
    things I think to have where you and I are concerned or do you still
    wish for me to focus my efforts elsewhere?
    I cannot live here in this City and you live here and have
    nothing to do with you[;] it would never work out that way and you
    know it. My love is to[o] great[;] it would destroy me to even begin to
    see you with another, and I[’]m just being honest. So if this does not
    work out I will have to move away with [P.M.]
    The truth is [Father] if there is no love for you left for me then
    please tell me the truth that I can go away and you can live your life
    and I can go and live mine, and [P.M.] will always be in your life for
    she is always your daughter, just things would be different. But least
    I would know the truth. Please write me and tell me what you wish
    to happen.
    ....
    . . . . It would be a perfect world if we could raise [P.M.]
    together if you could stay clean and sober and I too would be and
    we could love one another as husband and wife but in truth we
    would have to move away from here because I could not risk CPS
    coming again from friends of your past and people who are hateful
    of us both[.] I want a new start, a new beginning. I don’t want to live
    40
    here anymore. If this all sounds crazy to you and it is nothing that
    you want then please by all means tell me . . . it changes nothing in
    regards to your relationship with your daughter[;] it just allows me to
    grieve its loss and force me to move on. I cannot lie to myself and I
    care nothing about what others think. I only care about my daughter
    and hers and my futures.
    Mother testified that she sent her address to Father via his mother so that
    he would respond and communicate with her about the CPS case and because
    she was trying to figure out “where he was at” as to their relationship. She
    petitioned the parole board to allow her and P.M. to visit Father in jail because
    she wanted closure and continued to write to Father after he asked her not to
    and after he told her not to try to visit him because she needed to know that he
    was not going to come after her out of anger.
    Mother acknowledged that she wrote the letters when P.M. was with her
    on a monitored return, that DFPS was still the child’s managing conservator at
    the time, and that she never asked DFPS for permission to take the child to jail to
    visit Father but claimed that DFPS never told her she would have to ask
    permission to do that. When DFPS’s counsel asked Mother why she believed
    that it was in P.M.’s best interest to go to jail to see Father, Mother replied, “It
    was just a bad choice,” and said that she did not know why she thought it was
    appropriate at the time.
    Mother started calling Sherry, first about CPS’s having mailed some forms
    to Father regarding his parental rights and then to tell Sherry, “You know you can
    visit [P.M.] anytime you want to. . . . You can pick her up and you can take her
    wherever you want to, but don’t tell me where you’re taking her.” Sherry said that
    41
    she believed Mother meant that she could take P.M. to jail to see Father. Mother
    recalled leaving Sherry a voicemail in March 2013 stating that Sherry could take
    P.M. wherever she wanted and said that she had asked not to let her know
    where “[b]ecause it was less for [Mother] to concern [her]self with.”            Mother
    agreed that it would not have been in P.M.’s best interest for Sherry to take her
    wherever she wanted without telling Mother.          Mother did not ask DFPS for
    permission to let Sherry take P.M. “because [she] didn’t believe that [she] had
    to.”
    When Father was brought back to Denton County, Mother’s friend Betty
    put money in his county jail account so that he could call Mother. Mother denied
    asking Betty to put money on Father’s account although she told Father that she
    had asked Betty to do it and that she went with Betty to the jail to do it. 32
    Mother said that in seven phone conversations in February and March
    2013, she and Father talked about P.M., about the case, about Mother trying to
    get Father to sign “the papers,” about their past relationship, and about what their
    relationship would look like in the future. 33 With regard to one of the phone
    32
    Betty also denied that Mother had asked her to put the money in Father’s
    account. Betty did not know Father, had never spoken with him, and put the
    money on his account because Mother and Father had not had a chance to talk.
    33
    The trial court admitted the recorded phone calls over Mother’s objection
    and allowed publication to the jury. DFPS and CASA became aware of Mother’s
    and P.M.’s phone contact with Father in early March 2013.
    Fox described her reaction to the calls as very surprised and said that
    DFPS had concerns about the calls’ contents because “the level of interaction,
    42
    conversations, when DFPS’s counsel asked Mother if she thought it was
    appropriate to talk about drugs and living in hell with P.M. in front of her, Mother
    said, “No. I wouldn’t do that today.” Mother said the heat of the moment and her
    conversation with Father for the first time in two years made her do it. Mother
    said that she did not know how that affected P.M. but she was sure it made P.M.
    sad.
    Mother did not recall telling Father in one of the phone conversations that
    she had been mad all week because he had taken so long to call her. Mother
    attributed her giggling in the phone calls to a nervous reaction and said that she
    “laughed pretty much through” the calls because of nerves and not because she
    was happy to talk to him. 34 Mother stated that the phone calls and letters were
    intimate interaction, between the two of them was pretty surprising for somebody
    who was telling [Fox] as recently as a few weeks prior to hearing those calls that
    she was very fearful of this man.” Mother’s comments to Father about wanting to
    be with him and wanting a family concerned DFPS because Fox had recently
    talked with Mother about what her plans were to maintain her protectiveness
    when Father was released.
    Hoenig said the letters between Mother and Father were surprising
    because Mother had conveyed her fear of Father and had at one point talked
    about possibly moving out of state when he was released from jail. Mother never
    told Hoenig that she was having conversations with Father and never asked
    Hoenig whether it would have been in P.M.’s best interest to have those phone
    calls.
    34
    Livings gave the following description of Mother’s responses when
    uncomfortable:
    Sometimes she loses her words. I think sometimes she
    confuses herself sometimes when she gets very flustered or
    stressed out. Also, traditional communication patterns that most
    43
    for closure and because she did not want Father to blame her for DFPS’s
    terminating his parental rights. Mother said that because she could not get help
    from anyone else, she took it upon herself “to find out where he was at and if he
    would hold that against [her].”
    DFPS then asked Mother why she told Father in the phone calls that she
    still loved him and that she would have a hard time seeing him with another
    woman. Mother said that she would not deny that she had loved Father and that
    she was being honest when she told him that it would be very difficult for her to
    see him with someone else but that she knew that she could not be around him.
    Mother said that she was trying to find out whether he really meant it when he
    said he did not want a relationship with her or if he was going to come back after
    her for the termination.
    Mother said that she knew the major reason Father had called her was
    because he wanted to talk to P.M. When DFPS then stated, “And yet you made
    people follow, sometimes defensiveness. But there’s also other
    sides with very lighthearted behavior, a lot of laughter as well when
    she gets very anxious.
    Livings said that she had listened to Mother’s jail calls with Father and opined
    that Mother “was very inquisitive and hopeful to find out and assess [Father’s]
    approach to her, what he—how he would respond to her, the things that he
    would say when they spoke on the phone that would help her assess what could
    happen if he were released from prison.” Livings said that Mother’s laughter on
    the calls could be very similar to her laughter when uncomfortable. Heather
    Ryan, Mother’s counselor at Denton County Friends of the Family since January
    2014, said that when Mother is nervous or feels emotionally vulnerable, she
    giggles to release tension.
    44
    it your darnedest effort to make it about you,” Mother replied, “It would appear
    that way, yes.” Father said that Mother was putting her own needs first when he
    called from jail and wanted to speak with P.M. but Mother would not pass her the
    phone.
    Mother said that when she initiated contact with Father in February 2013,
    she did not want Father’s rights terminated and wanted him to be able to have
    visitation with P.M. “[i]f he had corrected his life.” Mother let P.M. talk with Father
    and said that she had not known that she needed DFPS’s permission to do that
    because no one had given her anything in writing that stated P.M. could not talk
    to Father. Mother nonetheless acknowledged that the letters and phone calls
    were not a good idea. 35
    Mother read from the trial court’s November 2, 2012 monitored return
    order, in which Mother was “prohibited from allowing any adult to remain
    overnight at her residence unless prior approval from the Department caseworker
    is received in writing.”   Mother said she did not recall whether she was told
    anything about DFPS’s prior approval being required before allowing anyone
    unsupervised access to P.M. when the order was entered but that she had not
    received written instructions when P.M. was returned to her. The trial court then
    35
    During cross-examination, Livings acknowledged that she had previously
    testified that she did not believe that Mother was being protective of P.M. when
    she sent letters to Father and spoke with him on the phone. Livings had not
    foreseen that Mother would communicate with Father and testified that she would
    not have recommended that Mother attempt to do so.
    45
    admitted a certified copy of the hearing on Mother’s motion to return and monitor
    as Petitioner’s Exhibit 67.   That exhibit contains the following testimony by
    Mother:
    Q. Now, as far as [P.M.]’s development and what she needs
    and who she needs to be around, do you understand the limitations
    that the Department is keeping in place on people who supervise her
    or baby-sit her?
    A. I do.
    Q. And do you understand that there are to be no adults
    overnight in the household and nobody supervising her without prior
    approval of the Department.
    A. Yes, I understand.
    Q. And that includes any family members, friends, anybody
    else who you meet or may work with.
    A. Yes.
    Mother claimed that she had forgotten about this, but she recalled that DFPS had
    had to approve Betty to travel with Mother and P.M. when they attended an out-
    of-state funeral.
    When asked why, if Betty had to be approved by DFPS, Mother thought
    anyone else could be around P.M. without prior approval by DFPS, Mother
    replied,
    Because under my assumption, which evidently was wrong, I
    believed that my daughter was my daughter. I believed that I was to
    keep her safe, that I was to protect her, that she was to go to school,
    and that I was to be her mother like all mothers would be to their
    children, and pretty much that she was mine.
    46
    Mother said that she knew under “monitoring” that she would be watched closely
    to make sure that P.M. was safe and that if she did anything to put P.M.’s best
    interest in jeopardy, DFPS would remove the child from her. However, Mother
    also said that she did not think that the child would be removed from her when
    Mother let P.M. spend the night at someone’s house without seeking prior DFPS
    approval.
    Fox said that after learning of the phone calls, DFPS’s view started to
    change with regard to whether P.M. should remain with Mother. 36 On March 7,
    2013, Mother left Head a message about seeing P.M. 37 Head was fully booked
    that week and could not fit her in.     On March 8, the trial court entered an
    injunction to prevent P.M. and Mother from having contact with Father, and
    Mother said that she had obeyed the injunction. On March 9, Mother sent Head
    a text to see if she could fit P.M. in soon because she was afraid P.M. might have
    heard something that might upset her.
    Head was able to get P.M. in on March 11. Head noted,
    When they arrived[,] they were in the lobby having a snack
    from Chicken Express. [P.M.] appeared happy. Joking and smiling
    with her mom. [Mother] was talkative and did not relay too much
    information as to the current situation. It was all kind of in code to
    protect her daughter. She did say she was not sleeping, and that
    after making the “decision” her depression had lifted. In our previous
    36
    DFPS changed its goal back to termination on March 6, 2013, after
    learning of the jail phone calls.
    37
    Head did not see P.M. as much after P.M.’s return to Mother but had
    stayed in touch with Mother through phone and text.
    47
    talks in the lobby at [P.M.]’s appointments, [Mother] often expressed
    concerns regarding [Father]. She was fearful, but also wanted to
    forgive and show grace. She seemed to be battling with fear for her
    life and not denying [Father] or [P.M.] of a relationship.
    During [P.M.]’s session[,] her biggest worry was going back to
    live with [her foster mother]. [Head] asked her what made her
    believe that was possible. She just gave [Head] an “I don’t know.”
    [P.M.] said she loves her mommy and wants to stay with her. [Head]
    also told [P.M.] that [she] heard [P.M.] got to speak with [Father] and
    how nice that must have been. [P.M.] told [Head] she was happy to
    talk to him. She stated that he said he would not be able to send
    cards or talk to her anymore and this made her sad. . . . [P.M.] did
    state that her mom was fighting in court for her.
    Head reflected that it was possible that Mother had been coaching P.M., and she
    was concerned that P.M. was displaying codependent behavior with regard to
    her need to protect Mother. Head testified that it was not appropriate or in P.M.’s
    best interest to involve P.M. in the phone conversations between Mother and
    Father without checking with a counselor first because the conversations could
    have been detrimental to the child in light of P.M.’s fear of Father getting out of
    jail and being worried about her safety and Mother’s safety.
    On the evening of March 11, because Mother was concerned that P.M.
    would be returned to foster care, Mother sent P.M. to dinner with her bail
    bondsman Eileen and her family to meet Eileen’s niece as a potential adoptive
    parent. 38 Eileen said that P.M. did not appear uncomfortable when Mother left
    38
    Eileen met P.M. when P.M. was returned to Mother in November 2012,
    and she saw P.M. four to six times when Mother was at her office to conduct bail
    bonds business until Mother’s criminal case closed on December 10, 2012; those
    visits lasted no longer than an hour. Eileen said that during one of Mother’s
    visits, Mother asked her if she and her husband would take care of P.M. if
    48
    her. P.M. and Eileen joined Eileen’s son, his wife, his six children (ages two to
    fifteen), and Eileen’s niece and her niece’s husband at a restaurant. The children
    that were roughly P.M.’s age were female, and P.M. had a great time at dinner.
    After dinner, the niece and her husband took P.M. out by herself for ice cream to
    see how they would interact with each other. They were gone for around an hour
    and then came back, and Eileen took P.M. to play with the other girls at her son’s
    house. Mother called twice that night—once before dinner and once at 10:00
    p.m.
    Eileen said that when her daughter-in-law suggested P.M.’s staying
    overnight because all of the girls were playing, Eileen agreed. However, upon
    reviewing her prior testimony, Eileen said that dinner was preplanned and that
    she had actually thought that she was taking P.M. overnight. Eileen said that
    Mother was fine with the idea of P.M. spending the night at Eileen’s son’s house.
    When Eileen picked up P.M. the next morning, she was in good condition and did
    not seem traumatized. Eileen said that she never gave CPS a thought because
    she did not know that CPS was still the child’s managing conservator.
    Mother later told Eileen that P.M. had asked her whether that was the
    family she was supposed to live with and that Mother said, “Yes.” Eileen said
    that she and P.M. had talked on the way to dinner about whether P.M. would like
    something should happen to Mother. Eileen also said that she and Mother had
    discussed this to different extents more than once; P.M. was present for one of
    these conversations but was wearing headphones.
    49
    to come to Eileen’s house if something happened to Mother. P.M. told Eileen
    that she would be okay with living with her.
    P.M.’s ad litem attorney asked Eileen, “If you met someone five times over
    the course of a year, do you just leave your child to spend the night with them
    overnight?” Eileen responded, “Possibly. It would depend on what I knew of that
    person and any contact I have. Now, [Mother] had a lot more contact with me
    outside of [P.M.] being there because I was her bail bondsman.” Eileen said that
    she and Mother had considered scenarios in which Eileen and her husband
    would make sure P.M. was cared for if Mother were convicted or if Mother died
    and left P.M. an orphan.
    Mother said that she had been asking Eileen to adopt P.M. for around a
    year and that she was trying to have P.M. visit people who might want to adopt
    her while still in the CPS case because she did not want P.M. in foster care.
    Mother said that she had panicked when DFPS’s goal changed to termination,
    which was why she sent P.M. with Eileen. She told P.M. that if DFPS took P.M.
    away from her, she wanted her to go live with a good family instead of in foster
    care. Mother herself had only met two of the people that P.M. went to dinner with
    that night—Eileen and Eileen’s son, who was the judge in Mother’s criminal
    case—and she knew nothing else about Eileen’s family. Mother said she did not
    think to ask Eileen whether Eileen was going to allow the niece and nephew to
    be alone with P.M.
    50
    Mother said that she did not think there was anything wrong with letting
    P.M. go unsupervised with someone who had not been approved by DFPS and
    spend the night. 39 The following dialogue between Mother and DFPS’s counsel
    then ensued:
    Q. Well, I asked you if there’s a lot that’s gone on in this case
    and that you’ve testified to that you apparently just didn’t see a
    problem with.
    A. I didn’t believe there was anything wrong with it.
    Q. Okay. You didn’t see a problem in how meth affected your
    parenting.
    A. I didn’t say that.
    Q. Okay. But you said you didn’t see an effect at the time; it
    was only after the fact. Correct?
    A. Correct.
    Q. And you didn’t really see a problem at the time of initiating
    contact with [Father] after the Georgia protective order, but after the
    fact. Right?
    A. I see where you’re going.
    Q. Okay. Well, is that after the fact, is that correct, what
    you’re saying?
    A. Correct.
    39
    Head testified that it was not appropriate for Mother to let P.M. stay
    overnight without approval because that could have created some instability or
    anxiety for P.M. And Head said that if P.M. was told that she would be adopted
    by that family if CPS took her away from Mother, this would have devastated the
    child, made her aggressive and anxious, and caused her to lose trust and have
    nightmares.
    51
    Q. So do you understand why the Department had concerns
    about your ability to make decisions in your child’s best interest?
    A. No.
    Fox said that Mother’s act of sending P.M. off unsupervised to meet a
    potential adoptive family and spend the night at someone else’s home without
    notifying DFPS led to the decision to remove the child. When Fox learned of the
    event after the fact, she contacted her supervisor, who contacted their program
    director and the legal team, and the decision was made to remove P.M. out of
    concern for her safety and Mother’s lack of protectiveness, a decision influenced
    by Mother’s previous phone contacts with Father. Fox said that anything could
    have happened when Mother allowed P.M. to go out unsupervised and spend the
    night with people that DFPS had not approved.
    Morrow concurred that although the jail calls were concerning, it was
    Mother’s decision to let P.M. go with Eileen for dinner and an overnight visit
    without notifying DFPS or allowing them to run a background check on Eileen,
    along with Mother’s talk about adoption with the child, that raised flags about
    stability and the bond between Mother and P.M. Morrow said that a parent who
    has a strong bond with her child would not seek out an adoptive home for the
    child and that she did not think it was a good idea for Mother or anyone else to
    groom the child for adoption. Morrow stated that she had been unaware of any
    relationship between Mother and Eileen but said that if she had known, she did
    52
    not think it would have changed her decision because it was still done without
    DFPS’s approval. 40
    Morrow agreed that Mother had stayed drug-free during the CPS case but
    said that Mother had not necessarily worked on the “other part [, which] is to work
    on the issues why you’re using in the first place to refrain from using and staying
    clean and sober for the rest of your life.” Morrow also said that Mother was not
    forthcoming, open, and honest with DFPS during her case, and the things that
    she had failed to disclose—her communications with Father and allowing an
    adoption visit between P.M. and strangers—showed that Mother had not
    necessarily accepted responsibility for her behavior and why P.M. came into
    care. Morrow said that as a result, P.M. had experienced the emotional turmoil
    of being in foster care, returning home, returning to foster care, and possibly
    facing adoption. When asked whether it was Mother’s relationship with Father
    that concerned DFPS or Mother’s inability to see how that could endanger her
    and P.M. by engaging him in communication again, Veronica Tackett, Fox’s CPS
    supervisor, replied, “It’s more about her decision making and how she fails to
    realize that can endanger her child, as well as her.”
    40
    Mother sought to admit CPS’s policy on removing a child from the home
    and evaluating the need for removal. The trial court sustained DFPS’s and the
    ad litem attorney’s objections to relevance. The trial court initially admitted
    CPS’s policy in determining neglectful supervision despite DFPS’s relevance
    objection, but after Morrow testified that this policy was not used to determine
    whether a child should be re-removed from a parent’s home when DFPS had
    temporary managing conservatorship, the trial court changed its ruling and
    sustained DFPS’s objection.
    53
    Cheri Fry, the CASA supervisor, testified that CASA was concerned, based
    on Mother’s begging Father to have a relationship again after a year and a half of
    counseling, classes, and services, that if Mother retained her rights, she would
    allow Father to see P.M. in the future. Fry said that CASA was also concerned
    that Mother was a danger to P.M. because her decision-making skills appeared
    to be impulse-driven, which could put P.M.’s safety and well-being in jeopardy,
    citing as examples Mother’s decisions to write letters and communicate with
    Father by phone and to allow P.M. to spend the night with people that Mother did
    not know.
    Fry met with Father in March 2013 while he was incarcerated, both before
    and after he signed his affidavit relinquishing his parental rights to P.M. During
    one of those meetings, Father told her that he hoped Mother would get P.M. back
    because then he would still be able to be a part of P.M.’s life. Fry said that based
    on her conversation with Father around two weeks before the jury trial, Father
    appeared to believe that if Mother received custody of P.M., she would eventually
    allow Father to see P.M. despite the no-contact protective order.
    Father testified that he had not communicated with Mother since his
    release from jail and that she had not communicated with him. He claimed that
    he did not recall telling CASA that Mother would let him see P.M. if she retained
    her rights to the child, said that he did not believe Mother would allow him to see
    P.M., and that he and Mother did not intend to pursue a relationship together.
    54
    e. Analysis
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the finding and the judgment, a
    factfinder could reasonably form a firm belief or conviction with regard to
    endangerment under both subsections (D) and (E), from the physically and
    emotionally abusive environment and conduct from which P.M. was removed
    initially to Mother’s poor decisions during the monitored return that subjected
    P.M. to uncertainty, emotional danger, and the potential physical danger involved
    in sending a child out overnight with strangers.     See, e.g., In re J.O.A., 
    283 S.W.3d 336
    , 346 (Tex. 2009) (stating that evidence of improved conduct,
    especially of short-duration, does not conclusively negate the probative value of
    a long history of drug use and irresponsible choices). And giving due deference
    to the jury’s findings—particularly with regard to witness credibility—we conclude
    that a factfinder could reasonably conclude that Mother’s purported memory loss
    and PTSD either did not exist or were insufficient to justify any of her
    endangering conduct or the endangering environment that she created for P.M.
    before or after either time the child was removed. See, e.g., In re S.D., 
    980 S.W.2d 758
    , 763 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998, pet. denied) (stating that
    conduct that subjects a child to a life of uncertainty and instability endangers her
    physical and emotional well-being). Therefore, we conclude that the evidence is
    legally and factually sufficient with regard to both grounds of endangerment, and
    we overrule Mother’s sixth and seventh issues.
    55
    3. Best Interest
    There is a strong presumption that keeping a child with a parent is in the
    child’s best interest. In re R.R., 
    209 S.W.3d 112
    , 116 (Tex. 2006). Prompt and
    permanent placement of the child in a safe environment is also presumed to be
    in the child’s best interest. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 263.307(a) (West 2014). We
    review the entire record to determine the child’s best interest. In re E.C.R., 
    402 S.W.3d 239
    , 250 (Tex. 2013). The same evidence may be probative of both the
    subsection (1) ground and best interest. 
    C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 28
    ; see 
    E.C.R., 402 S.W.3d at 249
    . Nonexclusive factors that the trier of fact in a termination case
    may also use in determining the best interest of the child include:
    (A)   the desires of the child;
    (B)   the emotional and physical needs of the child now and in the
    future;
    (C)   the emotional and physical danger to the child now and in the
    future;
    (D)   the parental abilities of the individuals seeking custody;
    (E)   the programs available to assist these individuals to promote
    the best interest of the child;
    (F)   the plans for the child by these individuals or by the agency
    seeking custody;
    (G)   the stability of the home or proposed placement;
    (H)   the acts or omissions of the parent which may indicate that the
    existing parent-child relationship is not a proper one; and
    (I)   any excuse for the acts or omissions of the parent.
    56
    Holley v. Adams, 
    544 S.W.2d 367
    , 371–72 (Tex. 1976) (citations omitted); see
    
    E.C.R., 402 S.W.3d at 249
    (stating that in reviewing a best interest finding, “we
    consider, among other evidence, the Holley factors”); 
    E.N.C., 384 S.W.3d at 807
    .
    These factors are not exhaustive; some listed factors may be inapplicable to
    some cases. 
    C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 27
    . Furthermore, undisputed evidence of just
    one factor may be sufficient in a particular case to support a finding that
    termination is in the best interest of the child.    
    Id. On the
    other hand, the
    presence of scant evidence relevant to each factor will not support such a
    finding. 
    Id. In her
    eighth issue, Mother argues that the evidence was insufficient to
    show termination was in P.M.’s best interest. 41
    41
    Mother also argues that the denial of access and visitation “has so
    significantly impaired the ability to present current evidence on the parent-child
    relationship that it is nearly impossible to adequately determine best interest of
    the child to a clear and convincing level of proof.” We disagree. We reversed
    the trial court’s original judgment so that Mother could have her disputed fact
    issues resolved by a jury, not so that Mother could redo the original CPS case in
    which she had already completed her service plan. And Mother could have filed
    a petition for writ of mandamus seeking to vacate any of the trial court’s orders
    pertaining to access and visitation pending the new trial but failed to do so. Cf. In
    re Stearns, No. 02-14-00079-CV, 
    2014 WL 1510059
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth Apr. 17, 2014, orig. proceeding [mand. denied]) (mem. op.) (noting that in
    custody cases, courts often grant mandamus relief because appeals are
    frequently inadequate to protect the rights of parents and children and stating
    that “[t]he further delay of a new trial and appeal and the related potential
    emotional hardship on the child are enough for this court to conclude that an
    appeal would not be an adequate remedy in this case”); In re Allen, 
    359 S.W.3d 284
    , 288, 291 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2012, orig. proceeding) (op. on reh’g)
    (reviewing temporary orders in termination-of-parental-rights case and granting
    conditional relief to return child to mother); In re J.W.L., 
    291 S.W.3d 79
    , 83 (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth 2009, orig. proceeding [mand. denied]) (stating that because
    57
    While no one disputes that Mother completed her required services—one
    of the reasons DFPS recommended the monitored return to the trial court—in
    addition to all of the evidence set out above in our sufficiency review of the
    endangerment findings, the jurors heard testimony that P.M. wanted to be
    adopted by her foster family, heard about Mother’s behavior at her last visit with
    P.M. after the removal, and judged the credibility of Mother, her witnesses, and
    DFPS’s witnesses in making their best-interest determination.
    P.M.’s ad litem attorney asked Mother about the last time she saw P.M.,
    and Mother testified about the same event that the parties discussed at the April
    30, 2014 temporary orders hearing, when she threw a “celebrate life” party,
    putting pictures of Mother and P.M. on the wall and bringing cake and balloons
    “and everything you would want to give your child” that Mother could fit in the
    room. Mother said that because she wanted to celebrate the birthdays that she
    might not get to have with P.M., she sang “Happy Birthday” to P.M. from P.M.’s
    age that day to age eighteen, adding a candle to the cake for each year after
    singing for that year. Mother said that she did not know how that might have
    affected P.M.
    When asked whether P.M. stopped singing at age twelve and said “Mom, I
    don’t want to do this anymore,” Mother said, “She may have.” Mother also had
    temporary orders entered in family law cases are not appealable, they are
    potentially subject to mandamus review to determine whether the trial court
    abused its discretion).
    58
    P.M. sign a Mother’s Day card for Mother since Mother’s Day was the following
    week and told P.M. that some of the gifts in the room were for P.M. to give back
    to her for Mother’s Day. Mother gave P.M. several T-shirts that she had made
    with P.M. and Mother’s photo on them.
    P.M.’s foster mother Katie, a registered nurse who was dual-licensed to
    foster and adopt, testified that she had been P.M.’s foster mother since April
    2013 and that her family wanted to adopt P.M. Katie explained the extensive
    training and background checks required to become a foster parent and said that
    her family included her husband, who is retired, a biological child, an adopted
    child, and foster children. Katie said that P.M. was a part of the family and was
    happy and healthy and that she and her husband could provide for P.M.’s
    physical and emotional needs in a safe and stable environment. When Katie and
    her husband bought a new house, P.M. and the rest of the children helped in
    making the decision of which house to buy, and P.M. selected her bedroom.
    Katie testified that when P.M. came to live with them, their sole purpose was to
    give P.M. “a safe, happy environment where she could be a child of her age, give
    her educational opportunities.”
    When P.M. came to stay with Katie’s family, they enrolled P.M. in her
    fourth kindergarten that year, taught her healthy eating habits, 42 and started
    42
    Katie stated that P.M. told her that when she lived with Mother they ate
    out most meals. Mother denied taking P.M. to eat fast food when P.M. lived with
    her and said that she only ate fast food once in a while.
    59
    taking her to church. Katie gave P.M. other options for clothing because when
    she came into the home, some of P.M.’s T-shirts were too low cut and her shorts
    too short, and P.M. did not feel comfortable wearing them. 43 P.M. told Katie that
    Mother would not let her wear her hair the way she wanted to—P.M.’s hair was
    very long when she came into care and difficult for P.M. to care for. Katie let
    P.M. have a haircut. 44
    P.M. had lived with Katie’s family for over a year, celebrated her seventh
    birthday with her foster family, 45 and completed her first-grade year before the
    trial.   P.M. was on the A-B honor roll at school. 46       Katie stated that P.M.
    43
    Mother denied dressing P.M. in clothing that was inappropriately short or
    low cut.
    44
    Mother testified that when P.M. was removed a second time, she
    stressed to DFPS that she did not want P.M.’s hair to be cut. Mother stated that
    P.M. loved for her to fix P.M.’s long hair in ringlets every morning.
    45
    Diane Greene, the current CPS caseworker, testified that she had not
    given P.M. any of Mother’s gifts and that she put them in Tackett’s office to be
    given to P.M. at some point, but Katie said that P.M. had received gifts from
    Mother at the beginning of her stay, for her birthday, and on other occasions.
    Katie testified that P.M. put Mother’s gifts in her “memory box,” a large box that
    Katie and her husband bought for P.M. to keep mementos from her family. Katie
    said that as time went by, P.M. threw away some of the stuff, including T-shirts
    that had photos of her and Mother on them.
    46
    Mother called as witnesses the elementary school counselor and P.M.’s
    kindergarten teacher from the school that P.M. had attended for around sixty
    days on the monitored return. The counselor stated that she did not receive any
    referrals about P.M., had very little contact with the child, and did not know
    anything about P.M.’s living environment. The teacher recalled that P.M. had
    done well academically, did not recall any discipline problems, and said that
    Mother had seemed supportive of P.M. She did not recall why P.M. was absent
    for fifteen days out of the sixty that she attended the school. P.M.’s student
    60
    occasionally mentioned Mother or her grandmother but “the only thing she talks
    about a lot is missing a dog that she had.” Katie said that P.M. did not tell her
    that she missed Mother or wanted to see her. P.M. had asked Katie when she
    would be adopted.
    Cruson said that based on her interactions with P.M., P.M. seemed to be
    bonded with her foster family. Cruson said that P.M.’s foster parents seemed
    very supportive of P.M. and that P.M. had told her that she was tired of going
    from house to house, wanted to stay with her current foster parents, and wanted
    to be adopted by her foster family.
    Hoenig testified that she had put in over 430 hours in the case, attending
    all of the hearings, observing visits between Mother and P.M., visiting foster
    homes, speaking with professionals about P.M., and reviewing documentation
    regarding P.M. Hoenig had observed P.M. in her current foster home, said that
    she was a “very peaceful, happy little girl,” and said that there were no concerns
    about that home’s ability to meet P.M.’s physical and emotional needs. Hoenig
    said that she thought what CASA wanted for P.M. and what P.M. wanted for
    herself was the same: to be adopted by her foster family.
    records reflect that P.M. was out in December 2012 on December 5, 6, and 7 for
    a funeral and from December 12 to December 13 for illness; she was tardy on
    December 17. P.M. was out for a doctor’s visit on January 9 and for illness on
    January 10, 22, and 24. P.M. was out for doctor’s visits on February 5 and 11
    and for illness on February 1, 6, and 22; and she was out on March 1 for illness
    and was tardy on March 4.
    61
    Tackett stated that when DFPS is looking at a home—either a parent’s or a
    foster parent’s—for stability, it looks at whether the child’s basic needs for food,
    clothing, and shelter can be met; whether the child’s emotional needs can be
    met; whether the child’s educational, medical, and social needs can be met; and
    whether the child will be provided with structure, stability, consistency, love,
    nurturing, “all the things that a child deserves to have when being raised by a
    parent.” DFPS evaluates safety by looking for any physical hazards as well as
    the parents’ choices and behaviors that might put the child at emotional or
    physical risk.
    Tackett stated that while Mother was able to meet P.M.’s physical needs
    by seeking medical care when P.M. was sick, keeping the home clean and the
    child clean, clothed, and fed, and P.M.’s attending school during the monitored
    return, some of Mother’s parenting choices were not good. Tackett said that
    during the most recent hearing regarding visitation, when Mother testified, “it was
    I, I, I, I, and it was all about what she needed, what she wanted, what was best
    for [Mother], and not what was best for the child or what the child needed.”
    Tackett also stated that DFPS had not asked Mother to participate in any
    services since March 2014 because there were no additional resources in the
    community in which Mother could participate that she had not already utilized.
    Tackett stated that DFPS had not been in agreement that allowing Mother to
    have visits with P.M. since April 2013 was in P.M.’s best interest. DFPS’s current
    plan was for P.M. to be adopted by her foster parents if Mother’s rights were
    62
    terminated.   Tackett stated that this was in P.M.’s best interest because the
    foster family could provide P.M. with security, love, stability, and safety and
    because Mother had not been able to show that she could provide these things
    to P.M. or to make appropriate choices on P.M.’s behalf. To the contrary, in
    Tackett’s opinion, Mother had continued to show that she thought her needs
    were more important than P.M.’s.
    Dr. Talmage said that in her April 2014 psychological evaluation, P.M. was
    diagnosed with “[a]djustment disorder with anxiety, upbringing away from
    parents, high expressed emotion level within family, child neglect.” Dr. Talmage
    said that her first recommendation was to resolve the custody matter because
    P.M. had been in limbo since she was five years old and had had multiple
    caretakers. P.M.’s 2014 evaluation reflected that P.M. called Katie and her foster
    father “Mama and Daddy,” and began referring to them as such immediately after
    she was placed in their home. It also noted that since P.M.’s placement in that
    home, she had “experienced a great deal of healing from her early childhood
    trauma of physical abuse and domestic violence. She is happy in the home and
    functioning well within the family,” but was still experiencing a moderate-to-high
    level of hidden anxiety due in part to the uncertainty of her family status.
    Sherry said that it would not be best for P.M. to go home with Mother
    because Mother had not been able to take care of P.M. before the case and the
    child was in a good home now, was happy, and had a chance “to go to school
    and to become something.”        When asked whether she believed that if P.M.
    63
    remained in her current placement she would have a much better life, Sherry
    replied that she did, even if it meant Sherry did not get to see her again. During
    cross-examination, Sherry agreed that she had not seen P.M. in a year and did
    not know how she was currently doing in the foster home. Sherry asserted that
    the fact that she did not like Mother or get along with her was not the reason she
    did not want Mother to have P.M. back. Sherry said she did not know anything
    about Mother right now but that it would be easier for P.M. to stay where she is.
    Mother said that she had learned how to be a better parent, how to
    communicate better with P.M., and how to have healthier relationships through
    completing the service plan. Mother said that her memory was improving and
    had improved since February 2011 but that she had not been employed since
    April 2013 because the stress from a regular job was too much for her. 47 She
    performed volunteer work instead. Mother acknowledged that taking care of a
    child could be extremely stressful but said that she would manage due to the
    skills she had learned. Mother said that she had finally gotten her closure and
    that she did not want a relationship with Father going forward. Mother said that
    47
    Mother was rarely employed, which had concerned DFPS throughout the
    case. When P.M. was born, Sherry agreed to buy all of P.M.’s diapers and
    formula because Mother was unemployed and had no income. Sherry said that
    Mother made money for her trips to Atlanta by having garage sales. On one or
    two occasions, Mother had to ask Sherry to wire money to her so that she and
    P.M. could get back to Texas. Sherry stated, “[Mother] had no money. They had
    nothing to eat and no gas.”
    64
    she was no longer in love with Father and that she had finished processing
    things in the last year, and had learned from her past.
    Mother testified that when P.M. lived with her, she took her to school and
    picked her up afterwards or walked with her to wait for the bus and met her at the
    bus after school. They went to the park and would go shopping together. P.M.
    loved to paint, so they would paint together and sing, dance, and read. Mother
    said that she had not changed P.M.’s room and that it was a room for a princess,
    with a canopy bed, dolls, and tiaras. No one else lived with Mother, and she still
    had P.M.’s dog. Mother stated that although she had moved her trailer, P.M.’s
    elementary school would be the same one she had attended before. Mother had
    health insurance and said that P.M. would have health insurance and that she
    would be able to take care of P.M.’s financial needs.
    Mother described her stress management techniques, said that she
    attended two to four AA/Al-Anon meetings per week, and was able to describe
    working various steps in AA’s 12-step program. 48 When her counsel asked her
    how she was able to remember that, Mother replied, “Because you’re asking me
    questions to talk about my life on a nondefensive mode, whereas when they
    [DFPS] are addressing me, they’re very attackive [sic] and defense—you know,
    my defense mechanism comes up because I’ve had to deal with them for two-
    and-a-half years.”
    48
    Mother said that she had been attending AA for around two-and-a-half
    years, was working on all twelve steps, and had had a sponsor for almost a year.
    65
    Mother said that Roland was supportive and that she was in a dating
    relationship with him but said that her focus and priority was P.M. Mother said
    that her life felt unsettled because she had been fighting DFPS for two-and-a-half
    years and “[t]here’s so much injustice in it.” Mother said that her plan to deal with
    P.M.’s stress was
    To be able to comfort her, to listen, to understand and express
    and help her with everything that’s taken place. I’m the most
    qualified to do that because I’ve been exactly where she’s at. So
    together I can help her to understand to some degree as best as
    possible everything that’s taken place.
    Mother said that P.M. would need counseling and “most assuredly needs that
    now every week as opposed to the foster mom addressing that it’s every other
    week.” With regard to other needs besides counseling, Mother said,
    Well, she needs her mommy. She needs me to tuck her in at bed, at
    nighttime, to have the time to play with her hair, to spend that time
    with her. And I have that time. I’m able with what I make from my
    disability to be able to give her that time that I don’t believe she’s
    actually getting right now.
    Mother said that she would be able to meet the demands of being a parent
    despite her PTSD.
    Mother testified that she had previously taken P.M. to counseling at
    Denton County Friends of the Family and would take P.M. back there
    consistently if P.M. were returned to her.      During cross-examination, Mother
    admitted that she had only taken P.M. for counseling twice from May 17, 2011 to
    September 6, 2011, and had no-showed on four occasions and cancelled the
    66
    other appointments. Mother agreed that the only time she had consistently taken
    P.M. for counseling was when CPS had ordered it to happen.
    Livings testified that Mother had consistently met her counseling goals
    throughout the process—Mother addressed sobriety, healthy relationships,
    communication skills, healing from trauma, and parenting skills in their
    sessions—and she stated that she believed that Mother was able to make good
    parenting decisions. Livings acknowledged that she had never gone to Mother’s
    home and observed her parenting.
    From January 2014 onward, Mother attended counseling at Denton County
    Friends of the Family with Ryan and said that they discussed PTSD. Mother had
    not been ordered or referred to counseling but was engaging in it voluntarily and
    consistently.   Ryan said that she had seen Mother grow personally since
    January, developing her determination, openness to education, communication
    skills, and that Mother was focused on taking care of herself and becoming a
    better parent by healing and becoming protective of her daughter.
    Based on the evidence, the factfinder could have reasonably formed a firm
    belief or conviction that P.M.’s desires and her emotional and physical needs
    now and in the future could be best satisfied by her foster family. It could also
    have formed that same firm belief or conviction with regard to whether Mother
    still presented an emotional and physical danger to the child and whether,
    despite having completed all of her CPS services, Mother still lacked parental
    abilities and stability, particularly in comparison to the foster family.   P.M.’s
    67
    counseling records demonstrated, from P.M.’s role-playing, that there was some
    evidence that the parent-child relationship between Mother and P.M. was not a
    proper one, and the jury could have reasonably formed a firm belief or conviction
    that Mother lacked any excuse for her acts and failures to act over the course of
    the case.    Therefore, viewed in the light most favorable to the finding and
    judgment, we conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient to support the best
    interest finding. Further, giving due deference to the jury’s findings and credibility
    determinations, the jury could have reasonably formed the same firm conviction
    or belief that termination would be in P.M.’s best interest despite the evidence
    produced by Mother and her counselors to the contrary. Therefore, we conclude
    that the evidence is also factually sufficient to support the best-interest finding,
    and we overrule Mother’s eighth issue.
    B. Mother’s Remaining Issues
    1. Due Process, Possession, and Access
    In her second issue, Mother claims that DFPS’s March 2013 removal of
    P.M. was illegal because there were no exigent circumstances and DFPS did not
    give her proper notice, secure the trial court’s permission before removing the
    child, or conduct the removal pursuant to the family code. In her first issue,
    Mother argues that the trial court wrongfully denied her visitation and access to
    P.M. by not returning P.M. to her when the case was remanded and by not
    enforcing supervised visitation from the temporary orders in place before the
    monitored return order.
    68
    The trial court’s November 2, 2012 order modifying temporary orders,
    which set out increased visitation followed by the monitored return, specifically
    stated that DFPS “shall continue to serve as Temporary Managing Conservator
    of the child, shall monitor the placement to ensure that the child is in a safe
    environment, and shall, if circumstances indicate that the home is no longer a
    safe environment, remove the child from the home.”              [Emphasis added.]
    Compare Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 264.107(e)(1) (West 2014) (stating that in
    making placement decisions, DFPS shall, except when making an emergency
    placement that does not allow time for required consultations, consult with the
    child’s caseworker, attorney ad litem, and guardian ad litem, and with any court-
    appointed volunteer advocate for the child, and use clinical protocols to match
    the child to the most appropriate placement resource), with 
    id. §§ 262.101–
    .105, .109 (West 2014) (setting out procedures that DFPS must follow before it
    becomes child’s managing conservator, including written notice to parent or
    child’s conservator when agency takes possession of child “under this chapter”),
    and 
    id. § 263.403(c)
    (West 2014) (stating that if a child placed with a parent on a
    monitored return must be moved from that home by DFPS before the suit is
    dismissed or trial on the merits commences, the trial court shall, at the time of the
    move, schedule a new date for dismissal).         As P.M.’s temporary managing
    conservator, DFPS did not have to obtain a court order prior to removing P.M.
    from Mother in March 2013, and the trial court’s November 2, 2012 order
    authorized the removal. And because a temporary order is valid and enforceable
    69
    only until properly superseded, and the trial court’s November 2, 2012 order
    superseded the December 1, 2011 order, Mother cannot rely on the December
    order to support her visitation argument. See 
    id. § 262.204(a)
    (West 2014).
    Further, on March 25, 2013, after having previously granted Mother a
    continuance of the bench trial, the parties agreed to carry Mother’s motion to
    return the child and set aside emergency removal with the trial, Mother’s counsel
    stated that she was ready to proceed on the issue, and the case ultimately
    resulted in the trial court’s termination of Mother’s parental rights. Mother then
    received a second hearing on the same issue in February 2014, and the trial
    court denied her motion after DFPS informed the trial court that it merely made a
    placement change because it remained the child’s managing conservator when
    P.M. was placed with Mother on the monitored return. Under the circumstances
    here, we cannot say that Mother’s due-process rights were violated when Mother
    had the opportunity to be heard on the removal issue twice.         See generally
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 333, 
    96 S. Ct. 893
    , 902 (1976) (stating that
    the fundamental requirement of due process is the opportunity to be heard at a
    meaningful time and in a meaningful manner). 49 We overrule Mother’s second
    issue.
    49
    “Due process” expresses the requirement of “fundamental fairness”
    within a given situation and requires weighing the private interests at stake, the
    government’s interests, and the risk that the procedures used will lead to an
    erroneous deprivation and then assessing the net weight of these interests
    against the presumption that the procedure applied did not violate due process.
    
    J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 303
    (citing Lassiter v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    452 U.S. 18
    , 24–
    70
    Finally, when a trial court is asked to determine issues related to
    possession of and access to a child, its primary consideration must be the child’s
    best interest under the Holley factors set out above in our best-interest analysis.
    See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 153.002 (West 2014); see also 
    id. § 153.001(a)(1)
    (West 2014) (stating that Texas’s public policy is to assure that children will have
    frequent and continuing contact with parents “who have shown the ability to act in
    the best interest of the child”). Trial courts have broad discretion to determine
    what is in the child’s best interest and to determine frequency and duration of
    visitation rights. In re E.N.C., No. 03-07-00099-CV, 
    2009 WL 638188
    , at *15
    (Tex. App.—Austin Mar. 13, 2009, no pet.) (mem. op.). An abuse of discretion
    does not occur when the trial court bases its decision on conflicting evidence and
    some evidence of substantive and probative character supports its decision.
    Unifund CCR Partners v. Villa, 
    299 S.W.3d 92
    , 97 (Tex. 2009); Butnaru v. Ford
    Motor Co., 
    84 S.W.3d 198
    , 211 (Tex. 2002) (op. on reh’g).
    25, 27, 
    101 S. Ct. 2153
    , 2158–59 (1981)). In J.F.C., the court concluded that in a
    termination-of-parental-rights case, the first factor—that of parent and child—
    reflects a desire for an accurate and just decision that does not unduly prolong a
    final decision about the child’s permanent home, and the second factor is
    characterized by the child’s best interest as the State’s primary concern and the
    State’s secondary concern that proceedings not unduly prolong a final decision
    about the child’s future. 
    Id. at 304–05.
    The third factor here is DFPS’s removal
    of P.M. from Mother upon discovering that Mother had allowed P.M. to stay
    overnight with strangers without DFPS’s prior approval as the child’s managing
    conservator. The balance of these factors, along with Mother’s two hearings on
    the issue, demonstrates that she was not deprived of due process.
    71
    Although complete denial of parental access should be reserved for
    situations rising nearly to the level that would call for a termination of parental
    rights, see Philipp v. Tex. Dep’t of Family & Protective Servs., No. 03-11-00418-
    CV, 
    2012 WL 1149291
    , at *8 (Tex. App.—Austin Apr. 4, 2012, no pet.) (mem.
    op.), here, the trial court denied access and visitation when the termination trial
    was a few weeks away and after hearing conflicting evidence that seeing Mother
    before the trial would not be in P.M.’s best interest. See 
    id. at *9
    (concluding that
    the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying mother any access to child
    when evidence supported implied finding that any contact with mother would not
    be in child’s best interest); In re C.W., 
    39 S.W.3d 280
    , 286 n.2 (Tex. App.—
    Texarkana 2001, no pet.) (“[A] severe restriction or limitation, even one that
    amounts to a denial of access, is permissible if it is in the best interest of the
    child.”); cf. E.N.C., 
    2009 WL 638188
    , at *18 (reversing trial court’s order to the
    extent that it denied parent all access in light of little evidence that parent had
    been a perpetrator of harm and remanding case for trial court to determine what
    amount and type of access were appropriate under the circumstances). 50
    Therefore, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, and we
    overrule Mother’s first issue.
    50
    Although Mother filed her motions in January and February 2014, and the
    trial court did not hold a hearing on temporary orders until April 29, 2014, nothing
    in the record shows that Mother tried to obtain an earlier hearing date and, as
    pointed out above, Mother did not file a petition for writ of mandamus in this court
    to vacate the trial court’s order denying visitation before the June 2, 2014 trial or
    to force the trial court to rule on her motions sooner.
    72
    2. P.M.’s Attorney ad Litem’s Performance
    In her third issue, Mother contends that P.M.’s legal objectives were not
    properly represented on remand by her ad litem attorney. However, a party may
    not complain of errors that affect only the rights of others. In re T.N., 
    142 S.W.3d 522
    , 524 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2004, no pet.) (holding that mother had no
    standing to raise claims on appeal about the performance of children’s ad litem
    attorney on the children’s behalf). Because Mother has no standing to complain
    about P.M.’s ad litem attorney, we overrule her third issue. See 
    id. 3. Recusal
    and Judicial Bias
    In her fourth issue, Mother argues that the denial of her motion to recuse
    the trial judge was improper, and in her fifth issue, she complains that there was
    evidence of judicial bias against her to such a degree during trial that it amounted
    to harmful error.
    In her verified motion to recuse the trial judge, Mother stated that the trial
    judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned in the new trial and attached
    a copy of our opinion as an exhibit to her motion. Mother further stated that the
    trial judge had a personal bias or prejudice against her “in that he stated on the
    record while delivering his ruling that he believed she had lied so much that she
    did not know what the truth was.” Mother attached an excerpt of the reporter’s
    record from the previous trial and a copy of her DFPS acknowledgment-of-
    substance-use form in which she admitted to using methamphetamine in October
    2011, as exhibits to the motion to show that while the trial judge had stated that
    73
    she had lied about using methamphetamine, Mother had in fact not denied its
    use.
    The Honorable Jeff Walker, then-presiding judge for the 8th Judicial
    Administrative Region, heard Mother’s recusal motion on December 17, 2013.
    Mother testified that although the trial judge had said at the end of her trial that
    she had lied about drug use, she had not lied, had admitted using drugs when
    CPS first removed P.M., and had never lied about her drug use to CPS. Mother
    stated that she believed the trial judge “was very partial to the DA’s office” and
    could not provide her with a fair trial. During cross-examination, Mother said she
    could not recall if the trial judge had made any rulings in her favor during the
    bench trial but agreed that he had admitted evidence in her favor.          Mother
    testified that she believed the trial judge did not listen to or consider all of the
    evidence before terminating her parental rights, but she agreed that there were
    disagreements at trial between the parties with regard to whether Mother had told
    the truth on certain matters. Judge Walker noted that the trial judge had heard
    everything in the previous trial and “obviously, did not believe [Mother].      But
    there’s nothing in the record that says that was based upon extrajudicial bias or
    extrajudicial impartiality.” Judge Walker denied the motion.
    An order denying a motion to recuse may be reviewed only for an abuse of
    discretion on appeal from the final judgment. Tex. R. Civ. P. 18a(j)(1)(A). A
    judge must recuse in any proceeding in which his or her impartiality might
    reasonably be questioned or in which he or she has a personal bias or prejudice
    74
    concerning the subject matter or a party. Tex. R. Civ. P. 18b(b)(1)–(2). When a
    request for recusal is based on the trial judge’s alleged bias, the bias must be
    extrajudicial and not based on in-court rulings. Franklin v. City of Fort Worth, No.
    02-12-00453-CV, 
    2014 WL 3696092
    , at *4 n.3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 24,
    2014, no pet.) (mem. op.). The standard for recusal on an assertion of bias or
    impartiality is whether a reasonable person in the community would believe that
    the judge’s recusal is required. Garrett v. Macha, No. 02-09-00443-CV, 
    2010 WL 3432826
    , at *2 & n.11 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 31, 2010, no pet.) (mem. op.)
    (citing Kirby v. Chapman, 
    917 S.W.2d 902
    , 909 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1996, no
    writ)).
    A judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned “only if it appears
    that he or she harbors an aversion, hostility[,] or disposition of a kind that a fair-
    minded person could not set aside when judging the dispute.” Liteky v. United
    States, 
    510 U.S. 540
    , 558, 
    114 S. Ct. 1147
    , 1158 (1994) (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring). Generally, however, recusal is not required when based solely on
    judicial rulings, remarks, or actions; in and of themselves, these cannot show
    reliance upon an extrajudicial source and can only in the rarest circumstances
    evidence the degree of favoritism or antagonism required when no extrajudicial
    source is involved. 
    Id. at 555–56,
    114 S. Ct. at 1157 (“[J]udicial remarks during
    the course of a trial that are critical or disapproving of, or even hostile to, counsel,
    the parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a bias or partiality
    challenge.”). Based on the evidence presented by Mother at the recusal hearing,
    75
    we cannot say that Judge Walker abused his discretion by denying Mother’s
    motion, and we overrule Mother’s fourth issue.
    Although we have stated that an appellant cannot show bias based on in-
    court rulings, see Franklin, 
    2014 WL 3696092
    , at *4 n.3, Mother contends that
    the trial judge showed bias against her in his jury trial rulings by sustaining
    DFPS’s objection “calls for a legal conclusion” on nine different occasions and
    preventing her expert, Dr. Talmage, from reviewing P.M.’s psychological
    evaluation after the child was removed from Mother while allowing DFPS’s expert
    to review Mother’s drug and alcohol evaluation on the same basis.
    With regard to the trial court’s nine rulings pointed out by Mother, most
    appear to have been properly sustained and appear to relate to the trial court’s
    ruling on the parties’ motions in limine with regard to any mention of the prior
    termination trial. However, because Mother did not make any offers of proof of
    what she proposed to show with the evidence excluded by the objections, cf.
    Tex. R. App. P. 33.1; Tex. R. Evid. 103(a)(2), and because Mother did not ensure
    that the court reporter recorded the bench conferences during which the
    objections were discussed, she cannot show us how these rulings constituted
    bias against her. See In re D.J.M., 
    114 S.W.3d 637
    , 639 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2003, pet. denied) (stating that a party may waive the making of a record by
    failing to object to its lack during the hearing, and when a party is present before
    the court, due diligence must be exercised in seeking a record); see also In re
    D.C., No. 05-12-01574-CV, 
    2014 WL 1887611
    , at *8 (Tex. App.—Dallas May 9,
    76
    2014, no pet.) (mem. op.). Compare Stubbs v. Stubbs, 
    685 S.W.2d 643
    , 645
    (Tex. 1985) (construing family code section 105.003’s predecessor as requiring
    all oral testimony to be recorded), with Valle v. State, 
    109 S.W.3d 500
    , 508–09
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (stating that to preserve error for appeal, criminal
    appellant was required to object if bench conferences were not being
    recorded). 51 Because the rulings themselves show no bias or such deep-seated
    favoritism or antagonism that making a fair judgment would be impossible, we
    overrule this portion of Mother’s fifth issue. See Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis, 
    46 S.W.3d 237
    , 240 (Tex. 2001) (citing 
    Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555
    , 114 S. Ct. at 1157).
    With regard to Mother’s other instance of alleged bias, the record reflects
    that Mother objected that Culberson had not performed the evaluation on Mother
    and so was not the proper person to testify regarding the actual document and
    diagnosis and that the trial court overruled Mother’s objection because DFPS had
    asked Culberson to “explain the manner in which a drug and alcohol evaluation is
    conducted.” Mother’s drug and alcohol evaluation had already been admitted
    51
    Mother did not file a formal bill of exception to show us what those bench
    conferences contained, and she does not explain how the trial court showed bias
    by ruling on these objections when most, if not all, were properly sustained. See
    Tex. R. App. P. 33.2 (stating that to complain on appeal about a matter that
    would not otherwise appear in the record, a party must file a formal bill of
    exception); see also Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i); Heimendinger v. Tex. Dep’t of
    Protective & Regulatory Servs., No. 03-97-00079-CV, 
    1999 WL 274061
    , at *2
    (Tex. App.—Austin May 6, 1999, pet. denied) (not designated for publication)
    (stating that even without a record of the bench conferences, parent’s counsel
    could have reviewed the record to see what testimonial evidence was presented
    after an objection followed by a bench discussion and presented arguments that
    the testimony was improperly admitted over objection).
    77
    into evidence as a business record, and Culberson’s direct testimony was limited
    to generalities pertaining to chemical dependency evaluations; she did not
    address Mother’s specific evaluation other than to note the recommendation for
    supportive outpatient treatment and then to explain generally what supportive
    outpatient treatment involved.     During cross-examination, Mother’s counsel
    asked specific questions about Mother’s program participation, and Culberson
    testified about that from personal knowledge. The record does not reflect that
    Culberson testified about the contents of Mother’s evaluation other than that First
    Step had recommended supportive outpatient treatment.
    The next day, during Dr. Talmage’s testimony, the trial court admitted
    P.M.’s psychological evaluations from 2011, 2013, and 2014. When the trial
    court allowed DFPS’s counsel to take Dr. Talmage on voir dire, Dr. Talmage
    revealed that although she had conducted the 2011 evaluation herself, the 2013
    and 2014 evaluations were performed by postdoctoral interns under Dr.
    Talmage’s supervision.    At the conclusion of this voir dire, Mother had the
    following dialogue with Dr. Talmage:
    Q. Did you say you brought with you the person who
    conducted the most current evaluation?
    A. That is correct.
    Q. And she would be available to testify.
    A. Well, normally my students do not testify, but if the court
    required it—
    78
    Q. So that she could explain these results with firsthand
    knowledge. She would be able to do that.
    A. Yes, that’s correct.
    After Dr. Talmage’s testimony about the 2011 evaluation, P.M.’s ad litem attorney
    stated, “I think we have a quick point to address with your Honor if we don’t have
    an agreement.” Mother’s counsel stated, “I would like to call the assistant that’s
    here.”    DFPS’s counsel responded, “And, Judge, may we approach on that
    issue?” The bench conference was not recorded, and Mother did not object to
    the court reporter’s failure to record it. See 
    D.J.M., 114 S.W.3d at 639
    .
    After the bench conference, Dr. Talmage was recalled, Mother asked Dr.
    Talmage questions about the 2014 evaluation, and DFPS’s counsel cross-
    examined Dr. Talmage. Mother did not make an offer of proof with regard to
    what the assistant would have testified and did not file a formal bill of exception
    with regard to what was raised and ruled upon during the bench conference.
    Cf. Tex. R. App. P. 33.2; Tex. R. Evid. 103(a)(2).       And Mother states in her
    appellate brief that she did not disclose the assistant as a witness, contrary to the
    trial court’s order at the May 14, 2014 hearing on DFPS’s motion to compel. See
    Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a), 194.2(f), 195.6. Therefore, based on our entire review
    of the record, including Mother’s specifically highlighted instances set out above,
    we conclude that there was no showing of bias against Mother by the trial judge,
    and we overrule Mother’s fifth issue.
    79
    4. ADA Violation
    In her ninth issue, Mother complains that DFPS violated her rights under
    the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by failing to accommodate her
    disability. However, she also acknowledges that this court has previously held
    that in a termination-of-parental-rights case, an ADA complaint is an affirmative
    defense that must be pleaded and proven and for which findings must be
    secured to preserve error for appeal. See In re J.I., No. 02-04-00299-CV, 
    2005 WL 1047891
    , at *14 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 5, 2005, no pet.) (mem. op.);
    see also In re B.L.M., 
    114 S.W.3d 641
    , 649 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no
    pet.); In re C.M., 
    996 S.W.2d 269
    , 270 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1999, no
    pet.).
    Mother did not plead this affirmative defense, the record does not contain
    any requests for inclusion of an ADA question in the jury charge, and Mother did
    not make any objections to the jury charge that was submitted to the jury.
    Therefore, although Mother brought forth some evidence at trial regarding
    DFPS’s list of available accommodations under the ADA, 52 she has failed to
    52
    Mother did not show how the accommodations on the list applied to her
    situation. See 
    B.L.M., 114 S.W.3d at 649
    . That is, Mother states that her
    attorney asked for communications to go through counsel because of Mother’s
    memory loss and argues that all requirements should have been given to her in
    writing, but the list of accommodations itself contains such items as “reasonable
    service modifications” (without definition), identifying needs for modified services,
    making reasonable efforts to coordinate with public and private agencies that
    provide treatment or support services and to obtain suggestions from service
    providers, increasing the frequency with which a service is provided or extending
    the length of time that the service is provided, providing reminders for
    80
    preserve this issue for our review because she did not plead, prove, or obtain a
    finding on the affirmative defense. We overrule Mother’s ninth issue.
    IV. Conclusion
    Having overruled all of Mother’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s
    judgment.
    /s/ Bob McCoy
    BOB MCCOY
    JUSTICE
    PANEL: LIVINGSTON, C.J.; DAUPHINOT and MCCOY, JJ.
    DELIVERED: December 31, 2014
    appointments or services on a more frequent and intensive basis, relocating a
    service to an accessible facility, and providing program information in large print,
    audio tape, or Braille, among others that do not necessarily translate into the
    accommodations requested by Mother.
    Although Fox testified that she had seen no outward signs of PTSD or
    memory loss, to accommodate Mother, Fox talked with Mother’s counselor on
    several occasions about what she could do to provide Mother with additional
    help. Fox also said that CPS tried to accommodate Mother with the “stress”
    factor by offering a more private place for filial therapy and then also
    accommodating her with the filial therapy by having it in her counselor’s building.
    After Mother’s counsel allowed CPS to have open communication with Mother,
    Fox tried to build a relationship with Mother to better assess what Mother
    needed. She also worked with Mother to obtain community resources, such as
    the food bank and getting a subsidized-aid cell phone.
    81