in the Interest of E.Y.H.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2019
Docket09-18-00305-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of E.Y.H. (in the Interest of E.Y.H.) 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 E.Y.H., (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00305-CV __________________

IN THE INTEREST OF E.Y.H.

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 279th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. F-222,832 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this suit affecting the parent-child relationship (“SAPCR”), B.V. appeals

from an Order Adjudicating Parentage.1 The Order named T.H. as the father of

E.Y.H. and sole managing conservator, and it named B.V. possessory conservator

and granted her supervised visitation. B.V. raises two issues on appeal asserting: (1)

the trial court erred in denying her request for a continuance after her trial counsel

1 We identify the minor and any family members by an alias, in this case initials, to protect sensitive data. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.9(a)(3).

1 was allowed to withdraw, which required her to immediately proceed pro se at the

jury trial; and (2) T.H. lacked standing as a parent of a child under Chapter 160 of

the Texas Family Code for the reason that he was solely a sperm donor. We affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

I. Background

B.V. and T.H. began a dating relationship, and after approximately a year of

dating, they decided they would like to have children together. Unable to conceive

naturally, the parties decided to try in vitro fertilization (IVF). They agreed to use

T.H.’s sperm and a donor egg to optimize their chances of success. Finding the cost

of IVF in the United States prohibitive, they travelled to a clinic in Matamoros,

Mexico.

While still a couple, B.V. and T.H. underwent two unsuccessful IVF

treatments. Shortly after they ended their relationship, B.V. contacted T.H. and

asked for a ride to the bus stop because she needed to travel to Mexico. She informed

T.H. that she was pregnant and traveling to the IVF clinic. B.V. ultimately

miscarried, and T.H. told her not to use his sperm again. B.V. responded by advising

him that none of his sperm was left.

B.V. did not contact T.H. again until July 2013, when she called and asked

for a loan. T.H. sent B.V. the money she requested to her cousin’s home in

2 Brownsville, Texas, where B.V. lived at the time. Thereafter, B.V.’s cousin called

T.H. and told him B.V. was pregnant with his child. T.H. immediately traveled to

see B.V. and began providing financial assistance so that B.V. could leave the home

she lived in, which T.H. indicated “wasn’t sanitary.” B.V. was in the last trimester

of her pregnancy, and T.H. traveled to see her every weekend. He also went to at

least one medical appointment with her.

B.V. delivered E.Y.H. via c-section, and T.H. attended the birth. T.H. testified

that he was excited and did not really doubt E.Y.H.’s paternity but did not

immediately sign papers at the hospital acknowledging his paternity or allow

hospital staff to list him on the birth certificate. He explained that given his difficulty

trusting B.V. under the circumstances, he felt it prudent to obtain a DNA test. He

did so, and it confirmed his paternity.

Once the hospital released B.V. to travel, they returned to T.H.’s apartment in

Houston and lived together briefly. T.H. testified they attempted to make it work for

E.Y.H. but were unsuccessful, and B.V. moved to Beaumont with E.Y.H. in early

2014. T.H. continued supporting B.V. financially during this period and visited

E.Y.H. often.

In his testimony, T.H. described escalating disagreements with B.V., and one

in particular in which she struck him repeatedly in front of E.Y.H. He testified that

3 after this incident, he determined he needed to formally file to establish his paternity

and a custody arrangement. Initially, B.V. and T.H. agreed she would have E.Y.H.

during the week, and he would have the child on the first, third, and fourth weekends

of the month.

T.H. testified that unbeknownst to him at the time, B.V. took the child to the

hospital repeatedly to be examined by a sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE). She

also called Child Protective Services (CPS) and made allegations of abuse against

him. T.H. testified that each of these CPS investigations “ruled out” sexual and

physical abuse. After two SANE exams did not reveal any trauma, B.V. returned to

the hospital again to have the child undergo a third SANE exam, which the hospital

refused to do. The next Thursday when T.H. traveled to Beaumont to pick up the

child for his scheduled possession period, B.V. refused to surrender E.Y.H. T.H.

called the police, and he was advised to obtain a writ of attachment to force B.V. to

surrender the child. While T.H. was at the courthouse, B.V. disappeared and did not

appear again until the following Monday, when she was served with process at the

bus stop near her home. When a constable executed the writ of attachment, B.V. ran

back to her home. T.H. testified that police arrived, and he ultimately retrieved

E.Y.H.

4 T.H. testified that a third CPS investigation “ruled out” any abuse. Following

the incident with the writ of attachment and forced surrender of E.Y.H., T.H. sought

and obtained temporary orders from the court, and E.Y.H. began living with him

primarily. B.V. only had weekend access to the child.

The court required both parents to undergo psychological evaluations. During

trial, T.H. was allowed to read a portion of B.V.’s psychological evaluation for the

jury, in which the psychologist stated B.V. “seems confused in separating reality

from fantasy and is at risk to display inappropriate behaviors which appear to

constitute a chronic and pervasive source of adjustment difficulties for her.”

Approximately one week before trial started, B.V. again refused to return

E.Y.H. to T.H. following her period of possession. When T.H. arrived at the

designated pick-up location at the scheduled time, B.V. was not there. T.H. testified

he called police, who arrived and contacted B.V. via telephone. When police called

her, B.V. informed them that she would not return E.Y.H. The trial court authorized

a second writ of attachment on March 20, 2018, but T.H. could not locate B.V. to

execute it.

When B.V. arrived at the court on the morning of trial on March 26, 2018, she

did not have E.Y.H. with her. She also would not tell anyone where she had hidden

5 the child. The court ordered B.V. to have the child brought to the courthouse. B.V.

complied with the court’s order and had the child delivered to the courthouse.

Prior to the commencement of trial, the trial court heard B.V.’s counsel’s

second motion to withdraw. The motion to withdraw alleged that circumstances had

arisen making it impossible for him to continue representing B.V., including her

refusal to follow his advice and her repeated unfounded reports to C.P.S. of abuse

by T.H. At the hearing on the motion to withdraw, counsel told the court it was

impossible to represent B.V. and properly prepare for trial when she continued to

deny T.H. access to the child. B.V. testified that counsel was an “excellent attorney,”

and she thanked him for “dealing with her limitation of the language.” B.V. said she

wanted counsel to continue representing her and if counsel wanted to withdraw, she

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