In Re Interdiction of Stephens

930 So. 2d 1222, 2006 WL 1514286
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 2006
Docket40,965-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 930 So. 2d 1222 (In Re Interdiction of Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Interdiction of Stephens, 930 So. 2d 1222, 2006 WL 1514286 (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

930 So.2d 1222 (2006)

INTERDICTION OF James Allen STEPHENS.

No. 40,965-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 2, 2006.

*1223 Lloyd Theland Stephens, In Proper Person.

Daniel Joseph Ellender, Monroe, for Appellees, Linda Norris, Susan McNair, and Violet Flanagan.

Before STEWART, CARAWAY and DREW, JJ.

DREW, J.

At issue between his parents is the curatorship of James Allen Stephens, a disabled adult who was interdicted as a result of catastrophic injuries received in a July 3, 1988, traffic accident. Lloyd Stephens appealed the August 31, 2005, judgment which rejected his petition to remove his son's curatrixes. Allen's mother, Linda Norris, serves as curatrix of his person while Allen's sisters, Susan McNair and Violet Flanagan, are curatrixes of his finances.

On appeal the father complained, inter alia, that the trial court erred in:

• failing to grant the parents joint curatorship which would be in Allen's best interests;
• failing to recognize an agreement between the parents to facilitate meaningful contact with both parents;
• disregarding evidence of financial misconduct and physical neglect;
• refusing to permit a physical therapist to testify as an expert; and
• awarding fees for the curatrix's attorney from the interdict's funds.

For the following reasons, the judgment is affirmed at Lloyd Stephens' costs.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The parties' son was severely injured in the auto crash which rendered him essentially helpless, bedridden, and totally dependent on others for care. Medical records stated that Allen sustained a closed head injury with brain stem damage which left him severely debilitated. Unable to swallow, Allen is fed through a tube in his abdomen and requires periodic hospitalization for tube changing and care. Due to severe contractions, he had surgery in 2003 to release his wrists and elbows. Allen retains movement in his legs, but he is unable to walk. He cannot stand without total support and has little or no control over his body. Unable to speak, his ability to communicate is severely impaired with the family reporting he can blink to indicate yes and no and can indicate whether or not he is pleased or unhappy by facial expressions.

This interdiction dispute has continued intermittently since 1988. Via a consent judgment, the parents initially were appointed provisional joint curators. Following a 1990 trial, Allen was interdicted and his mother and father were appointed joint curators. At the same time, the parties settled a damage claim for the auto accident that resulted in the interdict's injuries. In addition to a lump sum payment, an annuity was purchased to provide monthly income.

Shortly after the interdiction, the parents began disagreeing on where Allen should live and Allen's care. Arrangements varied from Allen being in a nursing home to the parents alternating physical custody every four months. The father also sought to litigate the matter in federal court in Texas while he resided there. *1224 The father then moved to the state of Louisiana and testified he intended to reside permanently in Louisiana. The mother and father had a contentious relationship and were consistently unable to get along, having married and divorced each other twice in the past. Both remarried other spouses.

In the March 19, 1999, judgment, the court terminated the joint curatorship and named the mother sole curatrix. Rotating physical custody every four months continued. The annuity was apportioned 54% to the party with physical custody, 21% for Allen's daily expenses and 25% in an interest bearing account for Allen's benefit. Allen's sisters were named joint custodians of Allen's funds. The father was held in contempt of court for litigating the interdiction in Texas contrary to previous court orders giving Louisiana exclusive jurisdiction over Allen's interdiction. In addition, the father refused to return Allen when the mother's physical custody commenced. The father also was ordered to pay the mother's Texas legal expenses. In addition to a number of other orders, the judgment again provided Louisiana's exclusive jurisdiction in this interdiction.

In the mother's contempt proceedings filed against the father for violation of the March 1999 judgment, the court awarded sole custody to the mother and granted the father supervised visitation one weekend a month at the mother's home.

This stage of the litigation began in 2002 when the father sought to remove the mother as curatrix along with his daughters, who had the financial responsibilities for Allen. The mother sought payment of past due fees. Trial was held in 2005 and the trial court denied the father's demands. The father appealed.

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

The father made a laundry list of complaints about the mother's care of Allen and objected to interference by Allen's sisters concerning his care and the management of his money. Specifically, the father asserted that the mother failed to engage a primary care physician for Allen and failed to secure and maintain Allen in physical, speech and occupational therapy. According to the father, the mother failed to make annual reports, and abused Allen by denying him a relationship with his father. As to his daughters who managed Allen's money, the father contended that they misapplied funds which they failed to spend for Allen's benefit and did not reimburse his expenses for building a shower for Allen. The father also sought a court-ordered medical evaluation of Allen. He wanted the under-curator, Richard Thompson, replaced for failure to complain about any of the foregoing.

Adult Protection workers made unannounced visits to the mother's home and found no problems, no abuse, and an adequate home. One worker testified she saw a bruise on the son's leg in May 2005 and at an unannounced visit in June 2005, she saw the interdict and did not believe abuse existed.

The trial court noted that the doctor who had ordered physical therapy decided the interdict need not subject himself to the therapy and its expense, since there was no improvement after two and one half years. Another doctor installed a feeding tube which was changed every two years. Further, a nurse practitioner saw the interdict on a regular basis.

Observing that many of the father's pleadings were frivolous, the trial court rejected the father's demands, concluding it was in the interdict's best interest to remain with his mother who took care of his personal needs and his two sisters who took care of his financial needs. The trial court ordered a $7,245.00 bill from the attorney for the curatrix be paid by the *1225 interdict through the curatrix either by monthly payments or in a lump sum.

DISCUSSION

In his pleadings, the father sought to have the mother and sisters removed as curatrixes of Allen's person and finances. However, the father urged in appellate briefs that he be appointed co-curator with the mother. Without citing any authority, the father urged that the child custody laws favoring joint custody be applied in this dispute. La. C.C. art. 132. We reject the father's argument that the difference between child custody and interdiction of an adult are a distinction without a difference.

The laws governing interdiction regulate appointment and removal of the curator for the interdict. La. C.C.P.

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Related

Guerrero v. Guerrero
110 So. 3d 723 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2013)
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Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2006
Andrews v. Wells (In Re Wells)
368 B.R. 506 (M.D. Louisiana, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
930 So. 2d 1222, 2006 WL 1514286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interdiction-of-stephens-lactapp-2006.