in Re Lonnie Schuttpelz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2015
Docket10-15-00072-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Lonnie Schuttpelz (in Re Lonnie Schuttpelz) 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 Lonnie Schuttpelz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-15-00072-CV

IN RE LONNIE SCHUTTPELZ

Original Proceeding

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this original proceeding for a writ of mandamus, Relator Lonnie Schuttpelz

complains of two sua sponte orders of Respondent Daniel Burkeen, the County Court

Judge of Limestone County in the guardianship proceeding of Amandalee Ellen

Sommerville. Six days later, Respondent signed another sua sponte order appointing an

attorney ad litem for Sommerville.1

1 We requested a response to the petition from the Respondent and from the attorney ad litem for Sommerville, but none has been filed. A respondent trial court judge typically does not file a response to a mandamus petition because the real party in interest typically does when one is requested. In this case, the Court expected the attorney ad litem for Sommerville, who is at least one of the real parties in interest, to file a response. Other real parties in interest may be Cen-Tex ARC and the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, but that cannot be ascertained from the almost nonexistent record before us. Schuttpelz’s record shows that she was appointed the guardian of the person and

estate of Amandalee Ellen Sommerville, an incapacitated person, in April 2008.

Schuttpelz states elsewhere in the record that she is Sommerville’s mother.

Respondent signed a sua sponte order on February 3, 2015; it orders that

Sommerville “not be removed from Limestone County, pending the outcome of

investigations currently underway by the State” and that “any visitation of the ward by

any person not associated with the ward’s current living placement, be supervised by

personnel of Cen-Tex ARC or by the Texas Department of Family and Protective

Services.”

In response to the February 3, 2015 order, Schuttpelz filed an “emergency motion

for status conference” in the guardianship proceeding on February 4 and requested an

emergency status conference pertaining to the order and to pending allegations and

investigations of sexual abuse of Sommerville. To date, Schuttpelz has not

supplemented the record in this original proceeding with any other pleadings or

records pertaining to her emergency motion, and Schuttpelz has not presented any

evidence that she requested Respondent to schedule and hold a status conference or

hearing and that Respondent failed or refused to do so.

In her petition’s first issue, Schuttpelz complains that Respondent’s February 3

sua sponte order violates due process because it was entered without notice to her, but

no evidence in the record supports that assertion.2 Schuttpelz asserts that the

2 Schuttpelz’s emergency motion for status conference complains that the order was ex parte, but it is not supported by her or her counsel’s affidavit.

In re Schuttpelz Page 2 guardianship case is “closed,” but nothing in the record supports that allegation.

Schuttpelz’s record includes her “Letters of Guardianship.” That document does state

that her appointment will expire on April 3, 2014 “unless renewed,” but there is no

evidence that it was not renewed or that the guardianship has been settled and closed

under the Estates Code. See TEX. EST. & G’SHIP CODE ANN. §§ 1202.001, 1204.001 (West

2014). In fact, her record includes a December 18, 2014 “order approving report of

guardian of the person;” this order seems to indicate that the guardianship was open as

of that date. Respondent’s two orders at issue also indicate that the guardianship is still

open, as does Schuttpelz’s filing of the emergency motion for status conference in the

guardianship proceeding. If, however, the guardianship has been closed or

Schuttpelz’s appointment as guardian has expired, Schuttpelz does not explain how she

would be entitled to notice or how she has the legal capacity to bring this original

proceeding.

There is also a dearth of evidence in Schuttpelz’s record regarding her

guardianship of Sommerville and regarding Sommerville’s condition, location, and

current situation with respect to the allegations of sexual abuse and a pending

investigation of those allegations.3 Furthermore, nothing in the petition or the

mandamus record provides any indication why Respondent might have signed the sua

sponte order on February 3, 2015. While this Court is concerned about the apparent

3 For example, Schuttpelz did not file an affidavit (her own or that of someone else with personal knowledge) that sets forth any of these matters.

In re Schuttpelz Page 3 entry of such an order without notice or hearing, it is difficult to conceive that

Respondent entered such an order without a request or a basis for doing so.4

Schuttpelz bears the burden of providing a sufficient record to establish her right

to mandamus relief. See In re Mullins, 10-09-00143-CV, 2009 WL 2959716, at *1, n.1 (Tex.

App.—Waco Sept. 16, 2009, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.); In re Blakeney, 254 S.W.3d 659,

661 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2008, orig. proceeding). With no evidence of entitlement to

notice and lack of notice, and with no evidence about Sommerville or the circumstances

surrounding the entry of Respondent’s February 3 sua sponte order, Schuttpelz has not

met her burden of providing a sufficient record to establish her right to mandamus

relief.5 Issue one is overruled.

Respondent signed another sua sponte order on February 9, 2015 that appoints

Scott Wilson as attorney ad litem for Sommerville on the belief that a need to protect her

interests exists. In her second issue, Schuttpelz complains that this order removed her

as Sommerville’s guardian without notice or cause. We disagree with Schuttpelz’s

characterization of the order. By its own terms, it does not remove her as guardian; it

merely appoints Wilson as attorney ad litem for Sommerville. Moreover, if, as

Schuttpelz asserts, the guardianship has been “closed,” or if her appointment as

guardian has expired, this complaint would appear to lack merit. Issue two is

overruled.

4 The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services has filed a response and states that it did not file an action and request the relief granted in either order at issue.

5 The Department’s response also states that it does not oppose the mandamus relief requested by Schuttpelz, but nothing before us indicates the Department’s roles, if any, in the guardianship proceeding or with Sommerville.

In re Schuttpelz Page 4 Having overruled both issues, we deny the petition for writ of mandamus

without prejudice. Schuttpelz’s motion for emergency relief is dismissed as moot.

REX D. DAVIS Justice

Before Chief Justice Gray, Justice Davis, and Justice Scoggins (Chief Justice Gray dissents with a note)* Petition denied Opinion delivered and filed April 30, 2015 [OT06]

*(Chief Justice Gray notes that the brief in response filed by Texas Department of Family and Protective Services states: “A review of the record shows that the Department had not filed an action requesting the relief granted prior to entry of the orders, no hearing was held, and thus the record does not contain evidence to support the orders. For these reasons, the Department does not oppose this Honorable Court granting mandamus relief to vacate the orders.” The February 3, 2015 order prohibiting the removal of the ward is an ex parte temporary restraining order and as such it must set a date for a hearing. Because it does not, that order is void.

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Related

In Re Blakeney
254 S.W.3d 659 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2008)

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