J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer v. Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2008
Docket03-05-00077-CV
StatusPublished

This text of J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer v. Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats (J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer v. Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats) 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
J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer v. Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-05-00077-CV

J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer, Appellants



v.



Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HAYS COUNTY, 274TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 2003-0161, HONORABLE DON B. MORGAN, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Appellants J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer appeal from the trial court's orders, entered after a jury trial, granting appellees Noel Douglas Vaughn and Catherine Gay Vaughn, Kippling Spencer's parents, access to their grandchildren M.N.Y. and S.N.S. They argue that the grandparent visitation statute then in effect is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to them. They further argue that it was an abuse of discretion to modify M.N.Y.'s conservatorship and to award $100,000 in attorney's fees. We affirm the trial court's orders.



Factual and procedural background

M.N.Y. was born in December 1994, and S.N.S. was born in August 1997. Mrs. Spencer is the mother of both children. Appellee Scott Alan Yeats is M.N.Y.'s biological father. Mr. Yeats and Mrs. Spencer were divorced in early 1996, and Mrs. Spencer was appointed sole managing conservator of M.N.Y., while Mr. Yeats was named possessory conservator and given weekend and summer visitation consistent with the family code. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 153.312 (West Supp. 2007), .313 (West 2002). After the divorce, Mrs. Spencer and M.N.Y. lived with the Vaughns for a while before she married Mr. Spencer in July 1996. Mr. Spencer is S.N.S.'s biological father and M.N.Y.'s stepfather.

Relations between the Vaughns and their daughter soured after her marriage to Mr. Spencer, and in 1998, the Vaughns sued for grandparent access under former sections 153.432 and 153.433 of the family code. See Act of May 27, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 484, §§ 3, 4, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 1345, 1345-46 (amending sections 153.432 and 153.433; current versions at Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 153.432, .433 (West Supp. 2007)). (1) The Spencers and the Vaughns settled their dispute, and on August 20, 1998, the trial court signed an order agreed to by the Spencers, the Vaughns, and Mr. Yeats. Under the agreed order, the Vaughns were given access to the children as follows: for the first six months, the Vaughns were granted one full day of visitation with M.N.Y. each month, the first three hours of which were to occur in the Spencers' home and were to overlap with the Vaughns' visitation with S.N.S., with whom they also had another half-day of separate and in-home visitation later in the month. After six months, the Vaughns were to have one full day with both children once a month and two forty-eight-hour periods each year with thirty days' notice to the Spencers, provided that the two-day visits did not conflict with the Spencers' plans or Mr. Yeats's visitation with M.N.Y. If the Vaughns' proposed forty-eight hours conflicted with existing plans, the Spencers were to notify the Vaughns within five days and seek a substitute period. The Vaughns were to reimburse the Spencers $211 in court costs and were ordered to "allow" the Spencers to retrieve a television set, two bicycles, and any other property that was in the Vaughns' possession. The parties agreed to enter into a confidentiality agreement and to notify each other sixty days before any intended change of address or, if such notice was impossible, soon after learning of the change. (2) At the time the order was signed, the Spencers, the Vaughns, and Mr. Yeats all lived in Texas. At the time of trial, the Spencers lived in Dripping Springs, the Vaughns lived in Corpus Christi, and Mr. Yeats had remarried and lived in League City.

Very soon after signing the agreed visitation order, the Spencers moved to Utah without informing the Vaughns, who learned of the move when they arrived for their first visitation under the order. Mrs. Vaughn testified that the Spencers did not provide a mailing address until October 26, 1998, when Mr. Spencer provided a post office box address in Roy, Utah. The Spencers did not provide a phone number or physical address, and the Vaughns tried unsuccessfully to find a phone number for the Spencers in Roy. In July 1999, Mr. Spencer informed the Vaughns that "our family's physical address is: 203 North 1600 West," but did not provide a city, state, or zip code. A letter sent to that address in Roy was returned, stamped, "No such address." In affidavits signed in March 2003, the Spencers stated that their physical address had been in West Point, Utah.

Mr. Yeats testified that on August 27, 1998, one week after the trial court signed the agreed order, the Spencers informed him that they were moving to Utah in three days. Mr. Yeats visited M.N.Y. in Utah in September and testified that the Spencers threatened several times to move and not tell him where they lived if he told anyone their address. Mr. Spencer told Mr. Yeats that they had moved to Utah to get away from the Vaughns.

Mr. Spencer wrote the Vaughns several letters in 1998 and 1999 complaining that the Vaughns had not returned the Spencers' property and were obligated to ship the property to the Spencers in Utah, had failed to pay $211 in court costs, (3) and had breached the confidentiality agreement. Mrs. Vaughn testified that the agreed order required the Vaughns to allow the Spencers to pick up their property, but that the Spencers never did so and that the items were still in the Vaughns' possession. In May 1999, Mr. Spencer wrote again, stating that because the Vaughns had not paid the court costs or shipped the Spencers' property, they were barred from contacting, visiting, or "attempt[ing] to carry on a relationship" with the children.

In early August 1999, the Vaughns sent the Spencers a letter providing thirty days' notice that they intended to exercise their visitation rights by coming to Utah for a weekend in September 1999. This letter was sent by certified and regular mail to the Spencers' post office box in Roy, Utah, and the certified letter was returned to the Vaughns as unclaimed. On August 27, 1999, Mr. Spencer wrote the Vaughns, stating that the Spencers had not received the Vaughns' letter until August 27 because the Spencers had been out of town. Mr. Spencer said they had other plans for the weekend proposed by the Vaughns but did not propose alternative dates. Mr. Spencer also said that because the Vaughns had not complied with the agreed order's visitation schedule for the first six months following its issuance, the Vaughns were "not entitled to see" the children.

The Spencers returned to Texas in late 1999 or early 2000, but the Vaughns did not learn of the Spencers' new address until several years later. Mr. Yeats testified that although he knew the Spencers had moved back to Texas, they did not provide him with a new physical address until late 2002. Mr. Yeats thought the Vaughns learned that the Spencers had returned to Texas when the Spencers sued Mr. Yeats for increased child support in early January 2003.

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J. Stephen Spencer and Kippling L. Spencer v. Noel Douglas Vaughn, Catherine Gay Vaughn and Scott Alan Yeats, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-stephen-spencer-and-kippling-l-spencer-v-noel-douglas-vaughn-texapp-2008.