Gary W. Gates, Jr., as Next Friend of Derodrick Gates and Marcus Gates, Minors v. Fort Bend Child Advocates, Inc., Linda Shulz, and Bonnie Martin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 2005
Docket01-03-01298-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gary W. Gates, Jr., as Next Friend of Derodrick Gates and Marcus Gates, Minors v. Fort Bend Child Advocates, Inc., Linda Shulz, and Bonnie Martin (Gary W. Gates, Jr., as Next Friend of Derodrick Gates and Marcus Gates, Minors v. Fort Bend Child Advocates, Inc., Linda Shulz, and Bonnie Martin) 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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Gary W. Gates, Jr., as Next Friend of Derodrick Gates and Marcus Gates, Minors v. Fort Bend Child Advocates, Inc., Linda Shulz, and Bonnie Martin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 26, 2005




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-03-01298-CV





GARY W. GATES JR., AS NEXT FRIEND OF D.G. AND M.G., MINORS, Appellant


v.


FORT BEND COUNTY CHILD ADVOCATES, INC., LINDA SCHULTZ, AND BONNIE MARTIN, Appellees





On Appeal from the 240th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 01-CV-119502





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Gary Gates Jr., as next friend of D.G. and M.G., his minor sons (“the Gateses”), appeals from a final summary judgment denying the Gateses’ motion for partial summary judgment, granting the summary judgment motion of appellees, Fort Bend County Child Advocates, Inc. (“FBCCA”), Linda Schultz, and Bonnie Martin (together, “appellees”), and rendering a take-nothing judgment on all of the Gateses’ claims against appellees. We determine whether (1) the Gateses have raised a meritorious appellate challenge to the summary judgment rendered on their claims for breach of contract; (2) the trial court erred in rendering summary judgment on the Gateses’ remaining claims on the ground of lack of duty; (3) the trial court erred in failing to make the declarations that the Gateses had requested; and (4) the trial court abused its discretion in denying the Gateses’ request for a continuance to take certain depositions. We affirm.

Background

          FBCCA was a non-profit corporation founded in 1991 to work on behalf of abused, neglected, and abandoned children in Fort Bend County. FBCCA ran four programs under its corporate umbrella: (1) a Court-Appointed Special Advocates (“CASA”) program for Fort Bend County, (2) a Children’s Advocacy Center (“CAC”) for Fort Bend County, (3) Diligent Search, and (4) Family Assistance. Only the first two programs are at issue in this case.

          FBCCA’s CAC, established in 1996, was established and operated pursuant to chapter 264 of the Family Code. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 264.401-.411 (Vernon 2002) (providing for establishment of CACs). This CAC’s goals included minimizing the number of interviews of alleged child-abuse victims, enhancing communications among investigators and agencies, facilitating abused children’s timely and effective access to services, allowing for improved prosecution of child-abuse cases, providing victims and their families referrals and information, and educating community professionals involved in child abuse. FBCCA’s CAC would often perform child-abuse interviews pursuant to court order and at the request of Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“TDFPS”).

          FBCCA’s CASA program was also established and operated pursuant to chapter 264 of the Family Code. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 264.601-.613 (Vernon 2002) (providing for establishment of court-appointed volunteer advocate programs). This CASA program’s mission was to advocate for the best interest of children in the custody of Children’s Protective Services (“CPS”). Its volunteers were assigned to act as guardians ad litem for children in CPS’s custody and also to gather and to provide courts with information regarding abused children.

          A.G. was the daughter, and one of 13 children, of Gary and Melissa Gates. In late January 2001, a school employee noticed a bruise on A.G.’s cheek. After A.G. gave conflicting reports of how the bruise happened—A.G. may have indicated that her father, her brother (D.G.), or a classmate caused or aggravated the bruisethe school contacted TDFPS, which removed A.G. from her classroom and took her to FBCCA. Bonnie Martin, a forensic interviewer with CAC, interviewed A.G. about the bruise. A.G. told Martin that another brother, M.G., had caused the bruise. Martin did not ask A.G. any body-inventory or sexual-abuse questions.

          TDFPS then requested that Mr. Gates allow it to interview his family members. Mr. Gates refused. Accordingly, within a matter of days, TDFPS filed in district court a “petition in aid of investigation of a report of child abuse,” in an attempt to obtain interviews of the Gates children and parents in support of the investigation of the possible physical abuse of A.G. Schultz, FBCCA’s then-executive director, was present at the hearing, though neither she nor FBCCA was a party to the proceeding. Mr. and Mrs. Gates and TDFPS agreed in open court that TDFPS would interview Mr. and Mrs. Gates and their two sons, M.G. and D.G., and could then interview the other Gates children if it chose. The Gateses alleged and presented summary-judgment evidence that Mr. and Mrs. Gates understood that the questioning would relate only to the alleged physical abuse of A.G., that they did not know that TDFPS would ask sexual-abuse or body-inventory questions during the court-ordered interviews, and that they would not have agreed to the interviews had they known that these questions would be asked. However, the record from the hearing, which was also made part of the summary-judgment evidence, showed that the parties did not mention what questions would be asked of M.G. and D.G. The hearing record also showed that the parties agreed that neither Mr. nor Mrs. Gates would be allowed to attend the interviews and that one of the Gateses’ counsel would be allowed to observe the interview from an adjacent room. The trial court adopted the parties’ agreement as its order.

          The CAC conducted the court-ordered interviews of M.G. and D.G. at TDFPS’s request in early February 2001. FBCCA admitted that the interviews’ purpose was “to discover the source of the bruise to [A.G.].” As part of the interview, Martin also asked each boy body-inventory and sexual-abuse questions. That particular aspect of Martin’s questioning lasted about five minutes with M.G. and about two minutes with D.G. The Gateses alleged that both children were uncomfortable with these questions; the summary-judgment evidence indicated that at least D.G. was uncomfortable with these questions. D.G. asked toward the end of his interview if his mother could be present, which request Martin denied. Pursuant to the court’s order, the Gateses’ attorney, Mr. Gibson, sat in an adjacent interview room from which he could both hear and see the interviews, including the sexual-abuse and body-inventory questions, by closed-circuit television. Mr. Gibson did not try to interrupt the interviews or comment in any way about the interviews’ conduct or the questioning format either during or right after the interviews.

          Nonetheless, in June 2001, about four months after the interviews, the Gateses sued FBCCA for Martin’s having asked M.G. and D.G.

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Gary W. Gates, Jr., as Next Friend of Derodrick Gates and Marcus Gates, Minors v. Fort Bend Child Advocates, Inc., Linda Shulz, and Bonnie Martin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-w-gates-jr-as-next-friend-of-derodrick-gates-and-marcus-gates-texapp-2005.