in the Interest of J.K.R. and H.L.R., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket13-21-00058-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J.K.R. and H.L.R., Children (in the Interest of J.K.R. and H.L.R., 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 J.K.R. and H.L.R., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-21-00058-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

IN THE INTEREST OF J.K.R. AND H.L.R., CHILDREN

On appeal from the 329th District Court of Wharton County, Texas.

OPINION

Before Justices Longoria, Hinojosa, and Silva Opinion by Justice Silva

Appellant Zane appeals the trial court’s orders modifying the parent-child

relationship and modifying a protective order. 1 By four issues, which we reorganize, Zane

argues that the trial court erred by: (1) extending the original protective order beyond two

years in contravention of Texas Family Code § 87.002, see TEX. FAM. CODE ANN.

§ 87.002; (2) “making the immaterial, yet prejudicial, finding of a felony offense involving

1 We refer to the parties and children by aliases in accordance with the rules of appellate

procedure. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2), cmt. family violence”; (3) finding that Zane’s actions constituted a felony offense involving

family violence without legally or factually sufficient evidence; and (4) awarding appellee

Carla attorney’s fees because there was insufficient evidence to support the award. We

reverse and render in part and affirm in part.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Procedural Background

Zane and Carla were married on July 26, 2003. They had two children, Jace and

Hunter, and divorced pursuant to an agreed divorce decree on March 9, 2017. However,

on February 13, 2019, the trial court entered an agreed protective order that, among other

things, prohibited Zane from communicating with Carla and going within 200 feet of her

residence or place of work or the children’s school. The trial court found that the

“protective order [was] in the best interest of [Carla], the family or household and the

members of the family or household.” The order was set to expire on February 13, 2021.

Subsequently, Zane filed a petition to modify the parent-child relationship and a

motion to review, modify, and reform the protective order, asserting that Carla was “using

the [p]rotective [o]rder to [interfere] with the daily activities of [Zane] and his interaction[s]

with his children.” The motion did not specify which provisions or in what manner Zane

sought to modify the protective order. On October 10, 2019, Carla filed a counterpetition

to modify the parent-child relationship.

B. Factual Background

The trial court held a two-day combined bench trial for the suit affecting the parent-

child relationship (SAPCR) and protective order modifications beginning on October 5,

2 2020. At trial, five witnesses, including the parties, testified and forty exhibits were

admitted. We review the relevant testimony and exhibits admitted therein. 2

1. Carla

Carla testified that she only agreed to the original divorce decree and possession

schedule because Zane threatened to kill her if she did not agree. Carla admitted several

audio recordings and text messages between her and Zane from before and after their

divorce. In a recording preceding the divorce, Zane can be heard telling Carla, “I will

crucify you. I will f—ing kill you, actually.” Later in the same audio, Zane proclaims, “The

second you lie to me . . . I will f—ing crucify you.” Zane assured Carla that “life [is not]

going to be any easier without [him] in the house than [him] within the house. It[ i]s going

to be ten times worse.” When discussing the possibility of Carla getting into a new

romantic relationship, Zane said “if [he] do[es no]t kill [her new partner], [he] will shoot

him. If [he] do[es no]t shoot him, [he] will beat the hell out of him.” Zane proclaimed that

he would control “every aspect” of Carla’s life “until [he] do[es not] want to anymore” and

that “nobody can stop [him].”

According to Carla, two days prior to signing the original divorce decree, Zane went

to Carla’s home, upset after learning that Carla might ask for child support. Zane entered

the home and “before [Carla] knew it, [she] was up against the wall with a forearm.[ 3]”

2 Two expert witnesses testified at trial: Cynthia Chilcote, a licensed clinical social worker, and Linda Butcher, a licensed family and marriage counselor. Chilcote testified to her experience counseling the children while Butcher testified to her experience providing counseling services to Zane. Their testimony is not relevant to the disposition of this appeal. 3 The record does not reflect that Carla made any gestures to explain what “with a forearm” meant, but during cross-examination, the event was referred to as “the choking incident” by Zane’s counsel.

3 Carla said the children were in a nearby room during the assault. Two days later, after

the decree was signed, Zane went back to Carla’s home, but she immediately left when

he entered, found a police officer, and requested assistance in getting Zane to leave.

Carla explained that Zane’s calls and text messages “never stopped” and that “[t]here

was physical abuse . . . every couple [of] months.”

In a recording from March 2017, Zane is heard calling Carla a “f—ing liar,” while

acknowledging that the children are with him and could hear him speak to her. Zane again

iterated that his behavior was “never gonna stop.” An April 2017 recording includes Zane

conceding that he would drink and drive with the children in the car if Carla did not “do

what [she is] supposed to do.[ 4 ]” In the same recording, Zane asked to see Carla’s

pictures, videos, and text messages of his abusive behavior towards her. Carla declined

and accused Zane of “delet[ing]” prior recordings, which Zane initially denied, maintaining

that it was not necessary to do so because they had not been incriminating. Zane later

admitted to deleting the recordings “just to prove [his] point” that he could.

Carla described different situations wherein Zane, unbeknownst to her, had

obtained information about her plans or whereabouts and attempted to interfere. In one

instance, Zane learned that Carla had plans to go to New Orleans, including which hotel

she had reservations with. Zane blocked Carla’s car in with his truck, at her home, so she

did not go to New Orleans. In another situation, Zane was threatening to not take the

children to their baseball practice unless Carla cancelled her dinner plans and took the

4 The recording began immediately before Zane’s statement and it is not apparent from the recording what Carla was “supposed to do.”

4 children to a football game. When she refused, Zane took the children to the restaurant

where Carla was having dinner with friends. While outside the restaurant, Zane had the

children “FaceTime” Carla, which caused her to see they were outside the restaurant.

Fearing Zane would hurt her or her friends, Carla left the restaurant. Carla produced text

messages from the same event where Zane threatened to “expose” her to the children.

Carla later learned that Zane had been accessing her voicemails and other

communications to learn about her plans.

Carla described a series of events in December 2017, the genesis of which

stemmed from Carla going out of town to watch a college football game. Carla testified

that Zane called her “one hundred, two hundred times” and sent her “two hundred, three

hundred text messages telling [her] what was going to happen to [her] whenever [she] got

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