in the Interest of J.W.T., Adult Disabled Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 2019
Docket10-17-00267-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of J.W.T., Adult Disabled Child (in the Interest of J.W.T., Adult Disabled Child) 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.W.T., Adult Disabled Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-17-00267-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF JACK WAYNE TURNER, ADULT DISABLED CHILD

From the 13th District Court Navarro County, Texas Trial Court No. 93-00-03222-CV

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Marceia Bonin-Turner (“Bonin”),1 the mother of Jack Wayne Turner

(“Jack”), appeals the trial court’s dismissal of her petition to modify parent-child

relationship and imposition of sanctions. We will affirm.

Background

Bonin and Bruce Wayne Turner (“Turner”) were divorced in 1994. The divorce

was filed in the 13th Judicial District Court of Navarro County, Texas. Bonin and Turner

had two minor children—Jack and an older sibling. The divorce decree awarded

managing conservatorship of both children to Bonin. Jack was born on May 25, 1988 with

Down syndrome, but the divorce decree did not specifically identify Jack as disabled.

1 Rule 9.8 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure requires the use of initials or pseudonyms in cases involving minors. TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8. Jack Wayne Turner is no longer a minor. Turner moved to Dallas County, and the case was transferred to the 303rd Judicial

District Court of Dallas county and assigned case number 9811088-V. The Dallas County

proceeding was eventually dismissed for want of prosecution on January 16, 2001. Both

of the children began to live with Turner full time after they moved to Dallas. When Jack

was fifteen years old, Turner and the children moved to Nashville and Bonin soon

followed. After a short stay in Nashville, Turner and the children moved to Westland,

Michigan. Seven years later, when Jack was twenty-three years old, Bonin did not return

Jack after a scheduled visitation and took him to live with her in Nashville. Turner filed

an application for a conservatorship2 in the Seventh Circuit Court for Davidson County,

Tennessee, Probate Division, Case No. 12P-305. Bonin registered the Navarro County

divorce decree in Davidson County and sought to enforce her role as managing

conservator of Jack. Ultimately, the Tennessee probate court denied Bonin’s request and

appointed Turner as Jack’s conservator. The conservatorship order additionally

provided Bonin with a schedule of unsupervised visitation with Jack.

Less than a month after entry of the order of conservatorship, Turner filed an

Emergency Motion for Suspension of Parenting Time, which the Tennessee probate court

granted. The court suspended Bonin’s unsupervised visitations with Jack and limited

2 Bonin confuses her role as managing conservator in the Texas divorce decree with a conservator appointed in Tennessee. Under Tennessee law, the term conservator is used in place of “guardian” when the ward is an adult. See TENN. CODE ANN. § 34-1-101(4) (“Conservator” . . . means a person . . . appointed by the court to exercise the decision-making rights and duties of the person with a disability in one or more areas in which the person lacks capacity as determined and required by the orders of the court. . . .”) and (9) (“Guardian” . . . means a person . . . appointed by the court to provide partial or full supervision, protection and assistance of the person or property, or both, of a minor. . . “) (emphasis added). Bonin’s assertion that the Tennessee conservatorship equates with her role as managing conservator under Texas law is without merit. her to one four-hour, supervised visit per month in Detroit. Approximately seven

months after the Tennessee probate court’s Order altering Bonin’s visitation, Turner filed

a Motion for Immediate and Emergency Relief after Bonin filed a Motion for Restoration

of Visitation/Parenting Time. After a hearing, the Tennessee probate court granted

Turner’s motion, enjoined Bonin from making further scurrilous and false claims against

her older child on social media and other public forums, and granted Turner authority to

record Bonin’s telephone conversations with Jack. The probate court’s judgment was

affirmed by the Tennessee Court of Appeals. See In re Conservatorship of Turner, No.

M2013-01665-COA-R3-CV, 2014 Tenn. App. LEXIS 278, 2014 WL 1901115 (Tenn. Ct. App.

May 9, 2014).3 Turner filed a motion for contempt on August 12, 2013, which was heard

by the Tennessee probate court on September 4, 2014. The Tennessee probate court found

Bonin in contempt after she was recorded trying to convince Jack to make further baseless

allegations against his older sibling. The Tennessee probate court orally imposed a ten-

day sentence of confinement on Bonin, suspended for 180 days.

In October 2015, Bonin filed a Petition for Developmental Disability Guardianship

over Jack in the probate court of Oakland County, Michigan, File No. 2015-366134-DD.

Bonin also filed numerous unfounded complaints with adult protective services in both

Michigan and Tennessee. Bonin moved back to Navarro County in December 2015. In

April 2016, after a hearing, the Tennessee probate court found Bonin in contempt for

continuing to repeat the malicious falsehoods regarding her older child on internet sites.

3 The Tennessee appellate court’s opinion includes a much more detailed factual rendering.

In the Interest of Jack Wayne Turner Page 3 The Tennessee probate court reduced Bonin’s contact with Jack to one thirty-minute

telephone call per month and ordered Bonin to pay the attorney’s fees Turner had

incurred in the courts of Tennessee and Michigan. On July 29, 2016, the Tennessee

probate court again found Bonin in contempt of court for giving Turner a false address

and enjoined Bonin from having any further contact with Jack.

Bonin initiated the present action in Navarro County on June 9, 2017. The

Michigan probate court held a hearing on Bonin’s guardianship application on August

16, 2017 and denied her petition. After learning of Bonin’s litigation history in Tennessee,

the Michigan probate court ordered that any further proceedings regarding Jack should

take place in Nashville and awarded Turner his attorney’s fees. On August 17, 2017, after

a hearing, the Navarro County court sustained Turner’s special appearance and found

that it had no jurisdiction to consider Bonin’s claims. The Navarro Court additionally

sanctioned Bonin for attempting to circumvent the Tennessee courts and ordered her to

pay Turner’s attorney’s fees. The Navarro County court entered the following findings

of fact on October 15, 2017:

1. This case was filed in the 13th District Court of Navarro County as a divorce with children.

2. The 13th District Court granted the divorce on March 17, 1994 with the final decree signed on April 6, 1994.

3. The 13th District Court signed an Order Transferring Venue to Dallas County on June 9, 1998.

4. On June 26, 1998, the 303rd District Court in Dallas County placed the case on its docket.

In the Interest of Jack Wayne Turner Page 4 5. A Court in Tennessee, finding that neither of the parties nor their child lived in the State of Texas, entered orders regarding the parties and the child in the State of Tennessee.

6. The Respondent and the child then moved to the State of Michigan whereby the Petitioner attempted to modify the Tennessee orders in a Michigan court.

7. The Michigan court dismissed the Petitioner’s case in Michigan and ordered the Petitioner to pursue her case in Tennessee.

8. On June 9, 2017, the Petitioner filed a Petition to Modify Parent-Child Relationship in the 13th District Court knowing that the case remained in the State of Tennessee.

9.

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