in the Interest of R.A. and T.A.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 2022
Docket09-20-00275-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of R.A. and T.A. (in the Interest of R.A. and T.A.) 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 R.A. and T.A., (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-20-00275-CV ________________

IN THE INTEREST OF R.A. AND T.A. ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 418th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-03-03822-CV ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Mother appeals the trial court’s order denying her modification request of a

February 2018 Order and seeking a standard possession order and to be named R.A.

and T.A.’s joint managing conservator. 1 In four issues, Mother asks whether the trial

court: (1) erred when it failed to include or make separate findings in the possession

order as to the reasons why it deviated from the statutory presumption and failed to

award her access under a standard possession order; (2) abused its discretion and

misapplied the law to the facts of this case when it failed to apply the statutory

1We will refer to the children by their initials and the parents as “Mother” and “Father.” 1 presumptions found in Chapter 153 of the Texas Family Code; (3) abused its

discretion by denying her request to modify the terms of possession and access in

the previous order from supervised to the standard possession order; and (4) abused

its discretion by denying her motion to modify the terms of conservatorship in the

previous order from sole managing conservator to joint managing conservators.2 For

the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. Background

In February 2018, the trial court named Father as R.A. and T.A.’s sole

managing conservator and Mother as possessory conservator with scheduled

supervised visitation and scheduled FaceTime visitation. The underlying suit

affecting parent-child relationship (SAPCR) included allegations by Father that

Mother abused alcohol and prescription medications, drove impaired with the

children in the car, and locked the children in their rooms so she could drink at night

for extended periods such that the children had to relieve themselves in the closet.

The trial court incorporated a finding into its February 2018 Order that the material

allegations were true. Under that Order, the trial court awarded Mother scheduled

supervised visitation two to three times per month at Access Builds Children

(“ABC”) and scheduled FaceTime or Skype visits twice a week. The Order granted

2We have numbered Mother’s issues in the order she presents them in her substantive argument rather than in the order she lists them in her “Issues Presented” section. 2 Mother the right to attend the children’s school activities and obtain information

from the children’s psychologist, pediatrician, dentist, and school, among other

things. In February 2020, Mother filed her Original Petition to Modify Parent-Child

Relationship and Request for Temporary Orders asserting that the modification was

in the children’s best interest and the circumstances have materially and substantially

changed since the rendition of the February 2018 Order.

During trial, Mother and Father testified. Mother introduced records from a

therapist she consulted to prepare for court on one occasion after filing her

modification, and TalkingParents App records were admitted showing the parents’

communications with each other. Additionally, the trial court’s February 2018 Order

was admitted into evidence.

Mother testified that she previously attempted suicide while under the

influence of alcohol, and the records confirm this. Mother testified she does not

believe she has a problem with alcohol, but looking back, she believed she had a

problem in February 2018. Mother testified she has not undergone any therapy since

February 2018, because she “didn’t need it.” Mother also testified she had not

undergone an alcohol evaluation or enrolled in alcohol treatment since February

2018, because she does not believe she has a problem.

Mother testified she only saw a therapist one time in June or July 2020 to

prepare for trial. During that consultation, Mother did not provide the therapist with

3 her prior medical records, and she did not inform the therapist that she drove a

vehicle while under the influence of alcohol with her children present in her vehicle

and she locked the children in their rooms so she could drink alcohol. The therapist

noted, “Mother does not appear to be a danger to herself or others, despite past

suicide attempt which was under the influence of alcohol, and no indications she is

actively suicidal or having impulse control issues.” The therapist’s records also state,

“[I]t is the clinical opinion of this therapist that the client does not present with any

signs or symptoms of a mood or thought disorder at this time.” However, the records

indicated Mother reported alcohol use on the weekends and that she “would benefit

from ongoing counseling and processing of resentment towards Father and her

family regarding them taking children away.” Mother testified she had not attempted

suicide since February 2018 but agreed that someone attempting suicide could cause

the court concern.

Mother admitted she did not exercise any scheduled supervised visitation with

the children at ABC since February 2018, although she had done so prior to the

February 2018 Order. According to Mother, other people at ABC made the children

uncomfortable, and she did not want to create more trauma for them. Mother testified

she did not return to ABC after February 2018, because it was affecting the children,

and she felt it was not in their best interests to see each other in that environment.

4 Mother initially testified that Father refused to work with her when she

attempted to reschedule FaceTime calls; however, the records showed that Mother

frequently rescheduled and called outside designated times. The records and

testimony also established that Father often agreed to Mother rescheduling these

calls. Upon cross examination, Mother admitted that Father only refused to allow

her to reschedule eight to ten times over the course of hundreds of phone calls.

Mother also testified she never attended the children’s school activities

despite the prior Order giving her the right to do so; and when asked if she made that

effort, she indicated she was unaware that she could have. Mother said she had not

accessed the children’s school records or emailed their teachers, but the children told

her about school. Likewise, the prior Order gave her the right to consult with the

children’s psychologist, pediatrician, and dentist, but Mother only visited the

children’s therapist once. 3 Mother did not know the name of the children’s

pediatrician or dentist and had not requested that information.

Father also testified at trial. Although he could not point to any specific

incidents, Father based his opinion that Mother would endanger the physical safety

or emotional well-being of the children on the phone calls he received. Father had

not asked Mother to undergo drug or alcohol testing or evaluation since 2018, even

3Itappeared from the record that Mother’s visit with the children’s therapist occurred before entry of the February 2018 Order, although it is not entirely clear. 5 though he believed she has a problem, because the court told her to get help, which

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