in the Interest of K.R. and A.R., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2016
Docket02-14-00275-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of K.R. and A.R., Children (in the Interest of K.R. and A.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 K.R. and A.R., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-14-00275-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.R. AND A.R., CHILDREN

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FROM THE 233RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. 233-423731-07

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

Appellant A.M. (Mother) appeals the trial court’s order that modified her

parental relationships with her children, K.R. and A.R. In eight issues, she

contends that the trial court abused its discretion by striking her pleadings and by

awarding a judgment against her as a sanction for failing to comply with the

court’s order concerning discovery; that the evidence is insufficient to support the

modification order; that she received insufficient notice that evidence would be

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. presented at the final hearing that led to the modification order; and that her

husband, who is a medical doctor, should not have been allowed to testify about

matters related to her mental health. We affirm.

Background Facts

In April 2009, Mother, while represented by counsel, sought a divorce from

S.R. (Father). Among other requested relief, she asked to be named with Father

as joint managing conservators of the children and to be named as the

conservator who had the right to establish their domicile. She also asked the trial

court to order Father to pay child support. Mother’s divorce petition recited that

she owned two real properties in Corpus Christi. Father filed a counterpetition for

divorce in which he also sought to be named as the children’s primary managing

conservator.

During the course of the divorce case, Father filed a motion to compel

discovery and for sanctions, contending that Mother had not responded to a

request for disclosure and for production. Based on an agreement by the parties,

the trial court required Mother to respond to the discovery requests.

Mother and Father eventually entered into a settlement agreement that

incorporated a parenting plan. The parenting plan asked the trial court to make

Mother and Father joint managing conservators of the children. It also asked the

court to render an order on many other provisions concerning Mother’s and

Father’s relationships with the children, including designating particular times in

2 which Mother and Father were entitled to possess them and ordering Father to

pay child support.

In May 2009, the trial court entered a final divorce decree. The decree

followed the terms of the settlement agreement; among other provisions, it

named Mother and Father as joint managing conservators of the children and

ordered Father to pay child support. Mother and Father signed the decree, and

counsel for each of them also signed it.

In the spring of 2013, Father filed a petition to modify the parental

relationships with the children. He pled that the children’s and parents’

circumstances had materially and substantially changed since the signing of the

divorce decree. Specifically, he contended that Mother had been involuntarily

committed because of mental health issues and that she was not physically or

mentally able to care for the children. He asked to be appointed as the children’s

sole managing conservator, for the court to order Mother to pay child support,

and for the court to grant Mother only limited and supervised visitation with the

children. To the petition, Father attached an affidavit in which he asserted that

Mother had been sleeping on a porch to avoid being poisoned from gases and

had painted her car “with house paint to obscure political messages.” The trial

court signed an ex parte order temporarily suspending Father’s obligation to pay

child support.

Through counsel, Mother filed an answer to Father’s modification petition.

After she did so, the trial court signed an order in which it named Father as the

3 children’s temporary sole managing conservator and named Mother as their

temporary possessory conservator. In September 2013, the trial court held a

hearing because Mother had resisted Father’s request for her to produce her

mental health records. Mother’s counsel eventually withdrew, stating that she

was unable to communicate with Mother “in a manner consistent with good

attorney-client relations.”

In June 2014, Father filed a motion to compel discovery and for sanctions.

He contended that Mother had refused to appear at a noticed deposition and

asked the trial court to order her to appear at a deposition or to strike her

pleadings and grant a final judgment in his favor. The next month, the trial court

signed an order requiring Mother to appear for a deposition to be held on July 17,

2014. The court also required her to pay expenses and attorney’s fees

associated with the previously scheduled deposition.

Mother did not appear at the rescheduled deposition, so Father filed a

second motion for sanctions. He asked the court to strike Mother’s pleadings, to

grant a final modification judgment, and to prohibit her from conducting any

discovery or presenting any evidence.

The trial court held a hearing on Father’s second motion for sanctions and

granted the motion. The court’s July 29, 2014 order stated that Mother was

“disallowed from any further discovery of any kind” and was “prohibited from

introducing or presenting evidence of any kind.” It also stated, “The pleadings of

[Mother] are stricken, and a Final Judgment of Modification is GRANTED in favor

4 of [Father], together with a judgment for all of his attorney’s fees expended

herein, . . . for which let execution issue.”

A little more than a month later, on September 3, 2014, the trial court held

a hearing on Father’s August 2014 motion to sign a final order in the modification

suit. Mother did not attend. The court received testimony from Father and

granted his petition for modification of Mother’s and Father’s parental

relationships with the children. In its final modification order, the trial court

appointed Father as the children’s sole managing conservator with the right to

designate their primary residence and appointed Mother as a possessory

conservator with a limited right of supervised visitation. The court also ordered

Mother to pay monthly child support and to pay Father’s attorney’s fees. Mother

brought this appeal.

The Trial Court’s Discovery Sanction

In her first two issues, Mother contends that the trial court’s sanction for

her failure to participate in a deposition was unjust and was an abuse of

discretion. When a party abuses the discovery process by resisting discovery

(such as by failing to attend a deposition), a trial court may impose sanctions.

Tex. R. Civ. P. 215.3; see Sheffield Dev. Co. v. Carter & Burgess, Inc., No. 02-

11-00204-CV, 2012 WL 6632500, at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Dec. 21, 2012,

pet. dism’d) (mem. op.) (“Trial courts have broad discretion to impose discovery

sanctions to secure compliance with discovery rules, to deter other litigants from

similar misconduct, and to punish violators.”). In appropriate cases, these

5 sanctions may include disallowing further discovery by the resisting party,

refusing to allow the resisting party to oppose claims or present evidence, striking

the resisting party’s pleadings, and rendering a default judgment against the

resisting party. Tex. R. Civ. P. 215.2(b)(1), (4)–(5); see also Hernandez v. Mid-

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