Ace Property & Casualty Insurance Company v. Prime Tempus, Inc., Special Deputy Receiver Under Contract to the Permanent Receiver of Highlands Insurance Company And Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2009
Docket03-06-00236-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ace Property & Casualty Insurance Company v. Prime Tempus, Inc., Special Deputy Receiver Under Contract to the Permanent Receiver of Highlands Insurance Company And Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd. (Ace Property & Casualty Insurance Company v. Prime Tempus, Inc., Special Deputy Receiver Under Contract to the Permanent Receiver of Highlands Insurance Company And Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ace Property & Casualty Insurance Company v. Prime Tempus, Inc., Special Deputy Receiver Under Contract to the Permanent Receiver of Highlands Insurance Company And Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-08-00271-CV

Russell Silverman, Appellant

v.

Damaris Johnson, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. C2005-0490A, HONORABLE CHARLES A. STEPHENS II, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Russell Silverman appeals from the trial court’s final order in his suit to modify the

parent-child relationship as governed by the final divorce decree between Silverman and appellee

Damaris Johnson. On appeal, Silverman argues that the trial court erred in making certain

evidentiary rulings prior to and during trial, by including certain findings in the final order, and by

affirming the jury’s verdict that Johnson remain sole managing conservator. We affirm the

trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Silverman and Johnson divorced in March 2006. After a jury trial, the parties entered

an agreed divorce decree that partially incorporated the jury’s verdict appointing Johnson as sole managing conservator of the couple’s 11-year-old son, R.S.,1 and Silverman as possessory

conservator.2 The decree also included a finding that Silverman “has a history or pattern of

committing family violence during the two-year period preceding the filing of this suit or during the

pendency of this suit.” Based on this finding, the decree required Silverman to make an appointment

“within seven (7) days of receiving notice from [Johnson’s] attorney . . . with the psychiatrist

recommended by [Johnson’s] attorney in order to have a psychiatric evaluation performed.” The

decree further stated that Silverman’s failure to obtain a psychiatric evaluation or follow any

resulting recommendations for treatment “shall constitute a basis for the court to limit access under

this standard visitation provision.”

The divorce decree also prohibited Silverman from filing any action for modification

of child custody or conservatorship based on the provisions of the family code that allow a child over

the age of twelve to designate the parent with whom he wishes to reside. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann.

§§ 153.008, 156.101(2), .102(b)(2) (West 2008). In addition, the decree stated that Silverman was

prohibited from filing any action for modification of custody or conservatorship without first paying

Johnson $5,000 for her initial attorney’s fees, and that in the event that “the court finds that

[Silverman] has not brought his action for modification in good faith, [Silverman] shall be liable for

all of the attorneys fees and expenses incurred by [Johnson].”

1 We will refer to the minor child by his initials. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d) (West 2008). 2 In the agreed divorce decree, Johnson waived $450,000 in tort damages that she was awarded by the jury based on physical and mental abuse inflicted by Silverman during the marriage.

2 In November 2006, the parties filed an agreed modification of the property settlement

provisions of the divorce decree, in which Johnson agreed to further reduce the amount awarded to

her in the divorce.

In March 2007, Johnson informed Silverman that she had accepted a new job in

Houston and would be moving there from Comal County with R.S. Both Silverman and R.S., who

was 12 years old at the time, strongly protested the move. The parties’ relationship, which had been

relatively cooperative after the divorce, deteriorated quickly. Johnson and R.S. moved to Houston

on or around June 1, 2007, and a wave of litigation followed. Of relevance to the present appeal,

Johnson filed a petition for enforcement of the divorce decree on June 6, 2007, and requested that

Silverman be held in contempt for failure to abide by certain terms of the decree. After a four-day

evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued a final order on contempt and enforcement (“the

enforcement order”) in January 2008. In the enforcement order, the trial court found that Silverman

had violated the provision of the divorce decree requiring him to make an appointment with a

psychiatrist recommended by Johnson’s counsel for a psychiatric evaluation within seven days of

counsel’s request. The trial court further found that Silverman had violated the visitation order

included in the divorce decree by failing to voluntarily turn R.S. over to Johnson on May 26, 2007,

shortly before Johnson and R.S.’s move to Houston, requiring “a constable to come to the residence

and instruct Mr. Silverman to relinquish physical possession” of R.S. The trial court found

Silverman in contempt for these two violations, imposed a sentence of 60 days’ confinement, and

assessed $38,500 in attorney’s fees and costs against Silverman.3

3 The trial court suspended the first 20 days of Silverman’s sentence, and provided that the remainder of the sentence would be suspended if he complied with the terms of the divorce decree and enforcement order.

3 The trial court also restricted Silverman’s access to R.S., stating, “Unsupervised

possession and communication by [Silverman] shall be suspended. There shall be no contact by

[Silverman] with the child until such time as Dr. Gunzburger/Dr. Murphey, the child’s therapists,

and any persons dealing with [Silverman’s] assessment/therapy below, specifically approve same

in writing . . . .” The trial court further ordered Silverman to undergo an additional psychiatric or

psychological assessment.

In February 2008, after the trial court issued the enforcement order, Silverman filed

an amended motion to modify the parent-child relationship, requesting that he be appointed

sole managing conservator of R.S., or alternatively, joint managing conservator with the exclusive

right to determine R.S.’s primary domicile.4 A five-day jury trial was held, ending on April 4, 2008.

The jury heard from a variety of witnesses, including Johnson, Silverman, R.S.,

one of R.S.’s friends, and three different mental health professionals—a clinical psychologist who

had been appointed by the court to conduct a psychological evaluation of Silverman, a clinical

psychologist who had evaluated and treated Johnson, and R.S.’s therapist. R.S.’s older brother, C.S.,

testified in support of Silverman becoming R.S.’s custodial parent and further stated that he was

estranged from Johnson.5 Meanwhile, R.S.’s paternal grandmother, Chris Silverman, testified in

support of Johnson remaining as custodial parent and stated that she was estranged from Silverman.

Over the course of the five-day jury trial, highly conflicting testimony was presented

on a variety of issues, including R.S.’s hygiene, nutrition, and general demeanor while living with

4 Silverman’s original motion to modify was filed June 12, 2007. 5 The divorce decree did not include a custody provision for C.S. because he was no longer a minor at the time of the divorce.

4 Johnson, the reason for C.S.’s estrangement from Johnson, the mental health of each parent, the

extent to which Silverman had alienated R.S. from Johnson or otherwise “brainwashed” him,

Silverman’s ability and tendency to manipulate others, each parent’s respective level of involvement

with R.S.’s education and recreational activities, each parent’s respective propensity for truthfulness,

each parent’s motives for seeking to retain or obtain custody of R.S., each parent’s smoking habits,

and the amount of financial support each parent provided or offered to R.S.

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