Fox v. Anonymous

869 S.W.2d 499, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3498, 1993 WL 561636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1993
Docket04-93-00155-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 869 S.W.2d 499 (Fox v. Anonymous) 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
Fox v. Anonymous, 869 S.W.2d 499, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3498, 1993 WL 561636 (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

BUTTS, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order granting the guardian ad litem’s motion to seal court records pursuant to rule 76a of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Appellant, Kym Fox, intervened in the record sealing proceedings but her motions to strike were overruled. 1 Ms. Fox contends the trial court committed procedural and evidentiary errors in granting the motion to seal. We affirm in part and reverse in part the order of the trial court.

In September of 1992, a “friendly suit” was filed on behalf of Anonymous Individual, Individually, and as Next Friend of Anonymous Minor Child against Anonymous Health Care Facility and Anonymous Employee to implement the settlement of a minor’s tort claims against a health care facility and its insurers. The minor had been an in-patient at a psychiatric hospital and was sexually assaulted by an AIDS-infected counselor employed by the hospital. A guardian ad litem was appointed to represent the interests of the minor child.

Prior to the hearing approving the settlement, 2 the plaintiffs’ attorney filed a motion to seal the court records pursuant to rule 76a. A temporary sealing order was issued which listed the documents sought to be sealed as: (1) the application for the establishment of a trust, (2) the order creating the trust agreement, (8) the trust agreement, and (4) the friendly suit judgment awarding the minor plaintiff the settlement funds. The order further required that the movant give public notice, and the order set the hearing for October 28, 1992.

On October 27, 1992, Ms. Fox intervened. In her motion, Ms. Fox asked the court to withdraw the temporary sealing order because: (1) it was not issued upon “a party’s written motion,” but rather upon the motion of an attorney; (2) the order did not require nor was there a notice posted indicating the identity of the movant; and (3) the order did not require and there was not a filing of a verified copy of the posted notice with the Clerk of the Supreme Court of Texas. At the call of the case the next day, the attorney for the plaintiffs announced not ready because of the intervention, and the hearing was continued until November 17, 1992. Two days after the continuance was granted, plaintiffs filed an amended motion to seal the court records. Seven days prior to the scheduled hearing, intervenor again filed a motion to dissolve the temporary sealing order claiming that: (1) the final order of the court, encompassed in the judgment, was included in the matters to be sealed which is in direct violation of rule 76a; (2) the petition did not identify the parties; (3) the motion before the court was filed by the attorney for the plaintiff despite the fact that rule 76a states that the records may be sealed upon the motion of a party; and (4) the notice given was not specific enough to provide meaningful public notice.

The hearing was held as scheduled on November 17. The court heard testimony from Ms. Fox and the first assistant Bexar *502 County District Attorney, Mr. Dennis McKnight. Ms. Fox testified about her concern, both as a citizen and journalist, in monitoring the records of the Bexar County trial courts. Mr. McKnight described the policies of the district attorney’s office in protecting the identities of sexual assault victims. 3 Thereafter, the court found that rule 76a had not been complied with but noticed that the guardian ad litem representing the minor had not been present at the hearing. The court gave the guardian thirty days to file any request he may have under rule 76a to seal the records. The court also continued the sealing order in effect until such time as the ad litem made a motion. The court advised both sides that if no motion was made, the information would be released.

The guardian ad litem filed a motion to seal court records. In his motion he sought to protect the identity of the minor victim as well as the provisions of the settlement and trust agreement. The guardian stated that a specific, serious and substantial interest in sealing a portion of the records clearly outweighed the presumption of openness and no less restrictive means existed to adequately and effectively protect the specific interests of the minor other than sealing the records. The hearing was set for January 29, 1993. Prior to the hearing, Ms. Fox filed her motion to strike the guardian ad litem’s motion to seal the court records. She asserted that the motion sought a rehearing of matters previously considered by the court by a party who had actual notice of the prior hearing and there was no allegation of materially changed circumstances. She also asserted that the motion was not the motion of an identified party to the underlying cause of action, and there was no notice which set out the specific information required for adequate and meaningful notice to the general public.

At the January hearing, the guardian ad litem called Dr. Harry Croft, a prominent psychiatrist, to testify. Dr. Croft testified that he assisted the guardian ad litem in this matter by interviewing the minor’s parents, talking to a number of the minor’s treating physicians, and reviewing the minor’s records from previous treatments. Upon completing his review of the case, Dr. Croft advised the guardian as to the best treatment for the minor in terms of changing treatment facilities. Dr. Croft then reinterviewed the parents, talked to the treating physicians at the hospital where the minor was currently being treated, and talked to the minor. Based on these conferences, Dr. Croft testified that as a result of the incident, the minor stopped trusting adults, and his negative behavior escalated in terms of having to be physically restrained.

Dr. Croft also testified that the minor has been diagnosed as having oppositional defiance disorder, behavior discontrol problem. The doctor stated that the minor was not just the typical young person with behavior problems but was a “real disturbed adolescent.” The minor’s psychiatric problems before the incident have been compounded by the incident, and his course since that time has been marked by ups and downs. The minor has had trouble controlling his thoughts and impulses and prior to the incident, had engaged in suicidal gestures and behavior. In Dr. Croft’s view, if the facts and circumstances surrounding the incident became known to the public, it could be devastating to the minor especially if it made the minor the brunt of ridicule by his peers.

Dr. Croft also opined that he did not think the minor could handle his business affairs or money very well. Dr. Croft stated “I think that this young man is a set up. He is so needy that I think he is a setup for people to take advantage of him.” The doctor expressed concern that if the terms of the settlement are made known, the minor’s progress and treatment might be disturbed.

*503 Ms. Fox also testified at the hearing. She stated that based on something she saw on the district clerk’s computer screen, a criminal indictment handed down in March of 1992, and the stories surrounding that criminal case, she knew the identity of the anonymous minor. Several attempts were made to confirm the identity of the minor, but the guardian and the trial judge refused to allow the minor’s name to be revealed in open court.

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869 S.W.2d 499, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3498, 1993 WL 561636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-anonymous-texapp-1993.