in the Interest of S.V & S v. Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 21, 2014
Docket05-12-00663-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of S.V & S v. Children (in the Interest of S.V & S v. 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 S.V & S v. Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 21, 2014.

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-12-00663-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF S.V. & S.V.

On Appeal from the 303rd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DF-04-11968-V

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices O’Neill, Lang, and Brown Opinion by Justice O’Neill This is a high-conflict custody case. Father appeals an order modifying conservatorship

and appointing Mother sole managing conservator and Father possessory conservator of their

two daughters. In two issues, Father generally contends the trial court abused its discretion in

modifying the conservatorship because the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to

support the trial court’s finding of physical abuse and family violence and therefore to show a

change of circumstances. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order.

Following a contentious divorce in 2005, Mother and Father were appointed joint

managing conservators of their daughters, Anna and Zoe, 1 aged six and three at that time. The

trial court granted Father possession of the children consistent with the Expanded Standard

Possession Order. After their divorce, conflict between the parties continued. In particular, 1 As the children have the same initials, we will use pseudonyms to refer to them for clarity. disputes arose concerning the children’s doctors, travel outside the United States, their cell phone

usage, and extracurricular activities. In April 2010, when the girls were nine and twelve-years-

old, the parties entered into an Agreement Incident to Modification. The Agreement Incident

included provisions concerning the parties’ interaction with each other, including agreements not

to discuss their disputes with the children and not to disparage each other in front of the children.

The Agreement also contained comprehensive provisions about the children’s use of their cell

phones. In essence, the children were to be allowed to carry their cell phones with them at all

times, the parents were to make their “best efforts” to ensure the cell phone ringers were on when

possible, either parent was to be permitted to speak to the children in private on that parent’s

request, and the children were to be allowed to communicate with either parent by phone for as

long as they desired. However, the children were not allowed to use their cell phones to talk to

Mother except in the case of an emergency.

The trial court entered an “Agreed Order on Petition to Modify/Clarify Parent-Child

Relationship” incorporating the terms of the Agreement Incident. 2 The Agreed Order also

included provisions requiring Father to pay for the cell phones, prohibiting the parties from

changing the children’s pediatrician, and limiting the time in which the children could participate

in mutually agreed upon extra-curricular activities.

Father subsequently filed a motion for enforcement and breach of contract asserting

various violations of the cell phone provisions in the Agreement Incident. Mother did not appear

at the hearing on the motion to enforce and she was arrested and jailed briefly for her failure to

do so. 3 Mother subsequently filed the instant Petition to Modify the Parent Child Relationship.

In it, she alleged the circumstances of the children or the conservators have materially and

2 The Agreement Incident itself stated it would not be filed with the court, its terms would not be incorporated into an Agreed Order, and provided it would be enforceable only under the law of contracts. 3 Mother filed a response to Father’s motion alleging her attorney told her she did not have to appear because she was not properly served.

–2– substantially changed since the date of the order to be modified. She requested to be appointed

sole managing conservator. She also alleged Father had a history or had engaged in a pattern of

physical and emotional abuse directed against the children. 4 She requested the court to deny

Father access to the children or order that his visitation be supervised. Mother also sought a

Temporary Restraining Order prohibiting Father’s communication with and access to the

children.

The Associate Judge issued a TRO granting Mother’s requested injunctions. In

subsequent orders, Father was granted visitation with the girls, but only during the day. The

Associate Judge issued several additional orders during the pendency of the modification

proceedings regarding the parties conduct and communications with each other and their

children. For example, phone contact between the children and the parent not in possession was

to be discretionary, Father was only permitted to talk to the girls on Mother’s landline or her cell

phone, and Father was prohibited from questioning the girls about what they said in counseling

with their therapist. The Associate Judge also appointed a Parenting Facilitator to assist the

parties in resolving their disputes and to manage communications between them.

At trial, Mother sought to be named sole managing conservator, and requested Father

only be permitted visitation during the day, but she no longer requested that visitation be

supervised. 5 The evidence she presented focused primarily on Father’s inappropriate interactions

with the children, his discussion of legal issues with the children, his actions in hindering the

children’s counseling, and other controlling and emotionally abusive behavior. Mother also

4 Father asserts Mother first alleged physical and emotional abuse in her 2010 modification suit as retribution for her having been jailed for failing to appear at the hearing on his motion for enforcement. However, Mother had previously complained of Father’s use of corporal punishment and had requested the trial court to limit Father’s access to the children and allow only supervised visitation to protect their well- being. 5 Father filed de novo appeals of the Associate Judge’s various rulings which were heard by the trial court shortly before the final modification hearing. The parties agreed the trial court would take judicial notice of all the evidence presented at the de novo appeal and could consider it as evidence in the final hearing. Thus, we consider it in our review.

–3– presented evidence of family violence. Mother’s evidence consisted primarily of statements the

children had made to Mother and Shannon Bradshaw, their court-appointed therapist. 6 For

example, Anna told Bradshaw that Father told her she needed to say “nice things” about him in

counseling, questioned her about what she said, and warned that he had ways of finding out.

Anna also told Bradshaw that Father blames her for “everything that has happened,” including

all the money he has had to spend on attorneys and professionals. Bradshaw was so concerned

that Father’s statements to the children were interfering with their counseling that she requested

he no longer be permitted to bring them to their appointments.

Evidence was also presented that Father refused to speak to the girls if they called him on

their landline instead of their cell phones. Father told Anna if she did not call him on her cell

phone, he would go to her school for lunch to talk to her. In the nine weeks since school had

started, Father had lunch at each girl’s school three or four times. Mother testified that Anna was

very embarrassed when Father went to school for lunch, and her school counselor testified that

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