Cody Neil Taylor v. Erica Duckworth and Leigh Peaster

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2025
Docket09-24-00003-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cody Neil Taylor v. Erica Duckworth and Leigh Peaster (Cody Neil Taylor v. Erica Duckworth and Leigh Peaster) 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.

Bluebook
Cody Neil Taylor v. Erica Duckworth and Leigh Peaster, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-24-00003-CV ________________

CODY NEIL TAYLOR, Appellant

V.

ERICA DUCKWORTH AND LEIGH PEASTER, Appellees ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 172nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 23DCCV0756 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The underlying litigation began when Appellant Cody Neil Taylor (“Taylor”)

became dissatisfied with the outcome of a modification proceeding in a suit affecting

his parent-child relationship with his minor daughter. After the modification

proceeding, Taylor sued his daughter’s licensed professional counselor (“LPC”),

Erica Duckworth (“Duckworth”) and her assistant, Leigh Peaster (“Peaster”), for

intentional infliction of emotional distress, alleging their “conduct was malicious”

and that they intentionally and negligently mispresented facts to the court, which

1 damaged his relationship with his daughter.1 Duckworth counterclaimed for

defamation, and Taylor moved to dismiss the counterclaim under the Texas Citizens’

Participation Act (TCPA). 2 See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 27.001–.011.

In this interlocutory appeal, we must decide whether the trial court erroneously

denied Taylor’s TCPA Motion to Dismiss Duckworth’s counterclaim for

defamation. See id. § 27.005 (outlining process for motions to dismiss under the

TCPA and trial court’s ruling), 51.014(a)(12) (allowing for interlocutory appeal of

denial of TCPA motion to dismiss). In one issue, Appellant asks whether the trial

court should have dismissed Duckworth’s counterclaim and more specifically

whether: (1) Duckworth’s counterclaim against Taylor was “based on” his exercise

of the right of free speech or his exercise of the right to petition; (2) Duckworth

failed to establish by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case for each essential

element of her defamation claim; and (3) if Duckworth established a prima facie

case, did Taylor establish an affirmative defense. See id. § 27.005. For the reasons

discussed below, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Taylor’s TCPA Motion to

Dismiss Duckworth’s counterclaim.

1The trial court granted Duckworth’s and Peaster’s Rule 91a Motion to

Dismiss Taylor’s claims. That interlocutory order is not a subject of this appeal. 2Peaster did not counterclaim for defamation, yet she was included in Taylor’s

TCPA Motion to Dismiss. 2 I. Background

Taylor lost custody of his daughter, “Sara,” when a separate protracted legal

dispute resulted in an Order in Suit to Modify Parent-Child Relationship dated

November 21, 2022. 3 Duckworth is an LPC who began counseling Sara in 2019

during the modification proceeding. After the modification order was entered in the

SAPCR, Taylor sued Duckworth and Peaster.

A. Taylor’s Claims

Taylor alleges that throughout the custody proceeding, “Defendants provided

malicious, fraudulent, and deceiving testimony, affidavits, and/or evidence in

support of [Mother’s] effort to limit and later restrict Plaintiff’s parenting time with

his daughter.” He also claims that in the custody case Duckworth violated her

licensing statutes and ethics “to provide the court with misleading evaluations,

testimony, reports to law enforcement, and opinions in which she was never in a

position to provide.”

Taylor complains that in early 2020, Duckworth submitted an affidavit that

was attached to Mother’s request for a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) in the

custody proceeding that described an incident where he entered her office.

3To protect the child’s privacy, we use a pseudonym to identify her and other

family members who were involved in the SAPCR but are not parties to this appeal. See Cunningham v. Waymore, 612 S.W.3d 47, 52 n.1 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2019, no pet.). 3 Duckworth reported this incident to the Beaumont Police Department. Taylor asserts

that Duckworth’s account of the events in her affidavit were not “truthful or factual.”

Duckworth and Peaster also testified at the TRO hearing, and Taylor claims this

testimony was false. Taylor alleges this testimony resulted in the judge in the custody

proceeding ruling for Mother and in February 2020, restricting his access to his

daughter to two eight-hour visits per month.

Taylor outlines that in May 2020, he filed a “criminal complaint” with the

Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department alleging that Duckworth committed perjury,

among other things. He also alleges that the District Attorney took his complaint to

the Jefferson County Grand Jury. 4

B. Duckworth’s Counterclaim

In September 2023, Duckworth and Peaster filed “Defendants’ First Amended

Answer, Verified Plea, Affirmative Defenses, Counterclaim, and Amended Special

Exceptions.” That pleading included Duckworth’s counterclaim for defamation.

In her counterclaim, Duckworth states that she is an LPC in private practice

and first saw Sara in June 2019 due to Mother’s concerns. Mother brought Sara to

see Duckworth, “who was one of many counselors [Sara] saw over a period of time.”

Among other things, Duckworth explains that Sara “exhibited symptoms of anxiety,

4On October 13, 2021, the Grand Jury no-billed the charge, and the District

Attorney’s office advised no other charges against Duckworth were pending.

4 guilt, irritability, and tearfulness.” Duckworth describes Sara as “expressive,

talkative, and able to participate in sessions,” although “she exhibited signs of worry

and anxiety when discussing her father[.]” Duckworth also states in the petition that

the parents had been divorced about four years when she saw Sara, and “the divorce

had been described as a high-conflict divorce and had continued into a long, bitter

custody battle.” Duckworth notes that in February 2016, the Final Decree of Divorce

ordered that Sara’s parents would be joint managing conservators with a standard

possession order and giving Mother the exclusive right to designate Sara’s primary

residence. Since then, the parties have been embroiled in a “bitter custody battle

resulting in the filing of multiple Motions and hearings including Motions for

Psychological Examinations, Motions to Modify the Parent-Child Relationship, and

numerous enforcement orders.”

Duckworth explains that in February 2020, after hearings where she and

others testified, including other counselors who saw Sara, the family court entered

temporary orders “that significantly reduced Mr. Taylor’s right to possession of

Sara[.]” The court also ordered Taylor to: (1) secure his firearms in a locked gun

safe during his possession of Sara; (2) cease videotaping or recording the other party;

(3) cease questioning Sara regarding events at the other parent’s home; and (4) stop

appearing at Sara’s school. Duckworth alleges that after a multi-day hearing, the

judge in the custody case denied Taylor access to Sara’s records maintained by

5 Duckworth, because “the production of those records to Mr. Taylor would be

detrimental to [Sara]” and later entered a second order denying Taylor access to the

records.

In her counterclaim, Duckworth describes an incident in December 2019

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Cody Neil Taylor v. Erica Duckworth and Leigh Peaster, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-neil-taylor-v-erica-duckworth-and-leigh-peaster-texapp-2025.