in the Interest of B.F. and P.F., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 2017
Docket07-16-00282-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of B.F. and P.F., Children (in the Interest of B.F. and P.F., Children) 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 the Interest of B.F. and P.F., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-16-00282-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF B.F. AND P.F., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 47th District Court Randall County, Texas Trial Court No. 66404-A, Honorable Dan L. Schaap, Presiding

March 29, 2017

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ.

Appellants Debbie and Keith Finch (the grandparents) are the paternal

grandparents of B.F. and P.F. Appellee Kaysee Chandler f/k/a Kaysee Finch (the

mother) is the children’s biological mother. In July 2012 Dean Finch (the father), the

children’s biological father and the mother’s then husband, was tragically killed. In 2013

the grandparents filed suit seeking court-ordered grandparental access to the children.

After a bench trial in May 2016, the trial court rendered judgment denying the

grandparents’ request. They appeal. We will affirm the trial court’s judgment. Background

The father and the mother married in 2004. B.F. was born in 2009 and P.F., in

2010. At the time of the father’s death the children were about three-and-a-half years

and two years old, respectively.

Before the father’s death, the grandparents had regular contact with the children.

Debbie Finch (the grandmother) daily cared for B.F. for fifteen months while the mother

prepared for a teaching career. After P.F. was born the children began daycare. The

grandparents provided transportation for the children to activities such as daycare and

medical appointments. During the work-week, the grandparents usually had dinner with

the mother and father and B.F. Following P.F.’s birth, the grandmother prepared dinner

for the mother, father, and children. She fixed special foods according to the mother’s

recipes because B.F. had a food allergy. The father worked out of town and picked up

the prepared meals on his way home. At times, the grandparents kept the children in

their home to assist the mother and father. Often the grandparents saw the children on

weekends as well. According to the grandmother’s testimony, they engaged in such

activities as fishing, going to an amusement park, or playing in the barn. The father’s

hobby was drag racing and sometimes during the summer they took the children to the

races.

Immediately after the father’s death a conflict arose between the grandparents

and the mother. The mother testified she believed the residence she and the father and

children occupied had been a gift. She learned after the father’s death that the house

was encumbered by a deed of trust securing a note held by the grandmother.

2 Testimony indicated there may also have been a dispute over the ownership of a

vehicle. The grandparents apparently eventually initiated litigation against the mother

over the property matters. It appears the children continued having visits with the

grandparents from the time of the father’s death until Christmas 2012. The mother

testified she allowed “quite a few” visits during this time while the grandparents say in

their brief the mother rarely allowed visits. According to the testimony of the

grandmother and her sister, Rita Ward, after the family exchanged Christmas gifts that

year the mother told the grandparents they would not see the children again. At trial the

mother denied this version of events.

The parties stipulated that the last intentional visit between the grandparents and

the children occurred in January or February 2013. The grandparents presented

testimony of three unplanned encounters with the children thereafter, at a wedding, a

hardware store and a restaurant. The grandparents and Rita Ward attended a 2013

wedding and testified that the mother held the children back from seeing them. At the

hardware store, the children were happy to see the grandmother and Ward but the

mother was in a hurry and as they left, the grandmother, Ward, and one, or both, of the

children cried. Within the year before trial, the grandmother, Ward, and their friend

Shelly McCune encountered the mother, her new husband Colby Chandler, and the

children at a pizza restaurant. According to testimony from the grandmother, Ward, and

McCune, B.F. appeared “real nervous, just rubbing his hands,” the kids looked “like they

[were] beat down or been told something,” B.F. was “rocking back and forth” and was

“wringing his hands,” B.F. appeared “terrified” and the children appeared “emotionally

distraught.”

3 The grandparents also presented the testimony of Christy Bradshaw Schmidt, a

licensed professional counselor. Through her testimony, Schmidt generally informed

the court of emotional and developmental problems that children who are denied

grandparental access may face. She conceded peer-reviewed research in the area

does not offer a great deal of assistance. By analogy she looked to research involving

adoptions. Schmidt expressed a “concern” if the children had no connection with the

paternal side of the family. But she acknowledged she had not “met,” “interviewed,” or

“assessed” B.F. and P.F., and acknowledged she knew nothing about them except for

the testimony she heard during trial. She was therefore unable to render an opinion

about these children. On cross-examination she acknowledged that if the children were

anxious she could not speak to the cause of their anxiety. When asked on redirect-

examination if quarterly grandparental visits “could have a dramatic effect,” Schmidt

responded, “I can’t answer that question specific to these children.”

The grandparents called the mother and Chandler adversely in their case-in-

chief. Chandler and the mother married in 2014 but he had known the children since

July 2013. He is a teacher and coach. Chandler testified he had not observed any

physical or emotional problems with the children. He saw no “acting-out” behavior or

depression. Chandler believed the children had not recently asked about the

grandparents. In her testimony, the mother agreed that the children had a “significant”

relationship with the grandparents before the father’s death. She testified that at the

time of trial B.P. was in the first grade, making all A’s, and having no health or behavior

problems. P.F. was in kindergarten. He received good reports from school with no

behavior problems. She denied either child seemed depressed and agreed both were

4 happy. The mother agreed that being involved in two lawsuits with the grandparents

“put a damper” on her interaction with them and, to some extent, her desire to allow

their interaction with the children. The mother testified after the financial dispute arose

after father’s death she felt “personally attacked” by the grandparents and felt a need to

protect the children from them.

In her case-in-chief, the mother presented the testimony of Paula Adcock, the

former director of the daycare center the children attended. Because of her position she

was not directly in classrooms with the children. Adcock testified the children attended

the center before and after the father’s death. She believed the children handled their

father’s death, “better than [she] could ever imagine.” She observed no reclusiveness

or lashing out. And saw no inappropriate behavior by the children. In her opinion, the

children “came back [from the father’s death] just as normal kids as they were before.”

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