In the Interest of S.C.T. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2025
Docket09-23-00044-CV
StatusPublished

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In the Interest of S.C.T. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-23-00044-CV ________________

IN THE INTEREST OF S.C.T. ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 279th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. C-223,529-C ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This litigation began when Mother filed a modification proceeding in a suit

affecting the parent-child relationship (“SAPCR”) pertaining to the parties’ minor

daughter, Sara.1 Mother ultimately sought to reduce Father’s expanded possession

to supervised visitation, but requested that the parties remain joint managing

conservators with Mother retaining the right to designate the child’s primary

residence and that she be given the exclusive right to make certain decisions for the

child. Mother also sought to permanently enjoin Father from meeting with school

1For purposes of privacy, we refer to the child by a pseudonym and the parties

by their relationship to the child. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d). 1 personnel, coming on school premises, contacting the child’s medical or mental

health providers, and attending the child’s extracurricular activities. Father filed a

counter-petition, seeking to be named sole managing conservator. After a protracted

dispute that involved the trial court designating the matter as “high-conflict,” the

issues of conservatorship and who would be the primary conservator were submitted

to a jury, while the trial court determined issues of possession, access, and the

parties’ rights and duties. The jury denied Father’s requested modification to be

appointed sole managing conservator and determined the parties should remain joint

managing conservators with Mother retaining the exclusive right to designate the

child’s primary residence. The trial court then decided issues of possession, access,

the parents’ rights and duties, and attorney’s fees.

The trial court signed an Order in Suit Affecting Parent-Child Relationship

granting Mother’s requested modification, incorporating the jury’s finding regarding

conservatorship and the trial court’s determinations on the remaining issues. This

included restricting Father’s possession and access of Sara to fifteen-minute

FaceTime visits on the first, third, and fifth Saturdays of every month but allowing

for the possibility of additional visitation as mutually agreed by the parties. The trial

court’s Order also included a permanent injunction prohibiting Father from, among

other things: (1) attending school activities, (2) contacting the child’s teachers, (3)

attending the child’s extracurricular activities, and (4) contacting the child’s medical

2 or psychological providers. The Order also required Father to secure any firearms

during his periods of possession. The trial court issued extensive Findings of Fact

and Conclusions of Law. In seven issues, Father appeals the trial court’s Order. For

the reasons discussed below, we will affirm the trial court’s Order.

I. Background and Procedural Posture2

A. Initial Pleadings and Initial Temporary Orders

Mother and Father divorced in 2015, and the divorce decree named the parents

joint managing conservators of Sara with Mother having the exclusive right to

designate Sara’s primary residence. Father was given expanded standard possession.

In June 2019, Mother filed her Petition to Modify Parent-Child Relationship. On

June 27, 2019, on Mother’s application, the trial court signed a “Temporary

Restraining Order and Order Setting Hearing for Temporary Orders” scheduling the

temporary orders hearing for September 17, 2019. The trial court’s temporary

restraining order granted Mother’s requested relief that Father be denied access

during her periods of possession for Sara’s school and extracurricular activities and

undergo an updated psychological evaluation.

On July 26, 2019, Father filed Respondent’s Original Answer pro se, which

contains a general denial. Less than a month later, an attorney entered an appearance

2We limit our discussion of the background and procedural posture to those

matters necessary to this appeal’s resolution. 3 on Father’s behalf. On August 29, 2019, Father filed his Counterpetition to Modify

Parent-Child Relationship asking to be appointed as the person having the right to

designate the child’s primary residence and asking the Court to clarify that he can

attend Sara’s school activities, lunch at school, and extracurricular activities. On

Father’s application, the trial court also signed his Temporary Restraining Order and

Order Setting Hearing for Temporary Orders and set it for hearing the same day as

Mother’s. On September 13, 2019, Mother filed Counterrespondent’s Original

Answer which includes a general denial and requests attorney’s fees.

After the initial temporary orders hearing, on October 30, 2019, the trial court

signed Temporary Orders in Suit to Modify Parent-Child Relationship. That

temporary order essentially precluded the parents from interfering with the other

parent’s periods of possession and prohibited the non-possessory parent from: (1)

being present at school drop-offs or pick-ups; (2) taking physical possession of Sara

during the other parent’s period of possession, including at games, practices, or

medical appointments; (3) performing any act that causes Sara to be confused or

upset during the other parent’s period of possession; and (4) making derogatory

comments about the other parent in Sara’s presence or outside Sara’s presence while

attending Sara’s activities, among other things. The trial court determined that the

“case is a high-conflict case” and ordered the parties to use a parenting facilitator.

4 B. February 2020 Temporary Orders Reducing Father’s Visitation

On January 27, 2020, Mother filed an Emergency Motion for Temporary

Orders alleging that Father “engaged in conduct that could significantly impa[i]r the

child’s physical and emotional development and wellbeing.” In her Emergency

Motion, Mother asks that Father be excluded from possession and access to the child

and that he submit to a comprehensive psychological evaluation as part of a court-

ordered custody evaluation. Mother also asks that Sara remain exclusively in her

possession until the trial court can conduct a hearing. Mother supported the

Emergency Motion with her affidavit and the “Affidavit of Erica Duckworth, LPC.”

In her affidavit, Duckworth states that she is Sara’s counselor and fears for

Sara’s safety. She asserts that Sara “has been consistent in expressing her fear of her

father . . . in describing his anger and aggressive behaviors in her presence, some

bizarre behaviors towards her, his constant questioning [of Sara] about her mother,

his constant recording of her mother, and his hatred of her mother.” Duckworth

describes a threatening incident where Father “showed up unannounced” in her

office. Duckworth explains that due to Father’s behavior, she took “unprecedented

measures” for her safety, for her clients, and for her assistant. In her affidavit,

Duckworth states,

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