in Re Debra Shifflet and George Shifflet

462 S.W.3d 528, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1963, 2015 WL 967556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 2015
DocketNO. 01-14-00929-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 462 S.W.3d 528 (in Re Debra Shifflet and George Shifflet) 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
in Re Debra Shifflet and George Shifflet, 462 S.W.3d 528, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1963, 2015 WL 967556 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Laura Carter Higley, Justice

This original mandamus proceeding arises from an underlying motion to modify a suit affecting the parent-child relationship (“SAPCR”) filed by the real party in interest, Dawn Renee Cantrell (“Dawn”). 1 Dawn had previously obtained a temporary order in June 2014 enjoining possession or access by the father, and then filed a motion to modify the SAPCR as to her children, B.R.M. and T.S.M. The relators, Debra and George Shifflet (collectively, the *532 “Shifflets”), the paternal step-grandfather of the children in question and his wife, filed a petition in intervention in the modification action. After a non-evidentiary hearing on standing, the trial court granted Dawn’s motion to dismiss the intervention for lack of standing.

In this petition for a writ of mandamus, the Shifflets seek to vacate the trial court’s October 22, 2014 order granting Dawn’s motion to dismiss their intervention for lack of standing. We conditionally grant the petition.

BACKGROUND

The underlying case is a modification of the SAPCR involving two teenage children, a 16 year-old girl, B.R.M., and a 13 year-old boy, T.S.M. The parents, Dawn and the father, Willie E. Moore (“Willie”), were divorced in 2004 and agreed by order to modify the parent-child relationship on December 29, 2009 (“2009 Order”). In the 2009 Order, the parents were named joint managing conservators and Willie was granted the exclusive right to establish the primary residence of the children. The 2009 Order contained a single provision relating to the Shifflets, Willie’s step-father and his current wife, providing them reasonable phone access to the children, including without limitation phone access three evenings a week, and allowing this provision to be enforced by either parent or by the Shifflets, singularly and together, in their own name.

On May 1, 2014, Willie filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with respect to the children alleging that Dawn had illegally kept their children from him. On June 2, 2014, the trial court signed an order requiring Dawn to be at the courthouse on June 10, 2014, with the children.

On June 9, 2014, Dawn filed an answer to the habeas petition asserting, among other things, that she “has been in possession of the children to protect their safety,” because Willie had been convicted of domestic violence and he had “relinquished control of [B.R.M.] for more than six months prior to the filing of the Writ of Habeas Corpus.” In her affidavit attached to her habeas answer, she also alleged her possession of T.S.M. since March of 2014.

On June 10, 2014, Willie and his counsel failed to appear at the hearing. The Shif-flets were not noticed and, consequently, did not appear at this hearing either.

The trial court signed an order on June 18, 2014, denying Willie’s habeas petition. In this June 18th Order, the trial court also made factual findings that are relevant to this mandamus petition, including that B.R.M. had been in Dawn’s possession for over six months before the filing of the habeas petition, that Willie had not had any possession of B.R.M. since July 2013, and that T.S.M. had been in Dawn’s possession since March 2014 and Willie had not had any possession of T.S.M. since March 2014. The trial court also entered Temporary Orders in the same June 18, 2014 order denying Willie’s habeas petition (collectively, the “June 18th Temporary Order”). The order appointed Dawn as temporary sole managing conservator and Willie as temporary possessory conservator, but enjoined Willie from having any access or possession of the children until further court order.

Later on the same day, Dawn filed a motion to modify the parent-child relationship seeking to be named the permanent sole managing and possessory conservator over her two children. Dawn’s motion also sought temporary restraining orders against Willie and his current wife, Kelly Moore (“Kelly”), to prevent them from accessing or possessing the children. As support, Dawn’s motion attached Willie’s underlying criminal proceeding papers *533 showing that he had been twice convicted of assaulting Kelly for which he was placed on three years community supervision in May 2012. Dawn also attached photos showing bruises on her children that she claimed were caused by Willie.

On September 21, 2014, the Shifflets filed a Petition in Intervention (“Intervention”), seeking to intervene in Dawn’s modification action and to be named sole managing conservators of the grandson, T.S.M. The Shifflets’ Intervention claimed standing because they were parties affected by the 2009 Order and because they have had actual care, control, and possession of T.S.M. for at least six months. They further contended that Willie had voluntarily relinquished the actual care, control, and possession of T.S.M. for at least six months and that they had had actual care, control, and possession of him for more than that period. In their affidavit in support of their Intervention, the Shifflets stated that T.S.M. had lived with them from May 2004 to August 2008 and again from March 2014 until September 15, 2014, both times with the permission of both parents, and that Dawn had also lived with them from March 2014 until June 5, 2014. The Shifflets’ affidavit admitted that they were step-grandparents, but claimed that they needed to be named temporary conservators because of Willie’s convictions, because Dawn and her current husband were currently living in a hotel with the two children in living conditions that were “very unpleasant and unsafe,” and because neither child was enrolled in school. The Shifflets requested that the Court render a temporary possession order designed to protect the safety and well-being of children because of family violence committed against them and others by Willie.

That same day, on September 21, 2014, the Shifflets also sought a temporary restraining order (“T.R.O.”) restraining both Willie and Dawn from disturbing the peace of the children or another party, withdrawing the children from enrollment in the school or day-care facility in which they were enrolled, hiding the children, making disparaging remarks about the other parties within the hearing of the children, and changing the child’s usual place of abode, and requested that both Willie and Dawn be ordered to pay child support while the case was pending. On October 2, 2014, the trial court signed both the T.R.O. and Notice of Hearing for Temporary Orders, setting them for an October 22, 2014 hearing to determine whether the T.R.O. should be made a temporary injunction pending final hearing.

On October 8, 2014, Dawn filed her answer to the Shifflets’ petition in intervention, arguing that the Shifflets lacked standing to file the Intervention, under Section 102.004 of the Texas Family Code, 2 because they were not biologically related to their step-grandson, T.S.M. Dawn further argued that the Shifflets did not have actual care, control, or possession of T.S.M. for at least six months ending not more than ninety days before filing their petition in intervention, under Section 102.003(a)(9). 3

*534

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
462 S.W.3d 528, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1963, 2015 WL 967556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-debra-shifflet-and-george-shifflet-texapp-2015.