J.A.T. v. C.S.t

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 2022
Docket14-19-00766-CV
StatusPublished

This text of J.A.T. v. C.S.t (J.A.T. v. C.S.t) 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.A.T. v. C.S.t, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed February 25, 2022.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-19-00766-CV

J.A.T., Appellant

V. C.S.T, Appellee

On Appeal from the 280th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2019-21894

OPINION A father appeals a family-violence protective order issued by the trial court under title 4 of the Family Code. In the order the trial court found that the father had committed family violence and that family violence is likely to occur in the future. The trial court ordered the father not to (1) communicate directly with his daughter, (2) go within 400 feet of any location where the daughter is known by the father to be, (3) remain within 400 feet after the father becomes aware of his daughter’s presence, or (4) go to or near his daughter’s residence or school. The trial court determined that the order would continue in full force and effect for eighteen years or until further order of the trial court. The daughter was twelve years old when the trial court issued the order. After carefully considering the arguments briefed by the father on appeal, we conclude that the father has not shown that the trial court erred in issuing the order. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Appellant J.A.T. (hereinafter “Father”) and appellee C.S.T. (hereinafter “Mother”) divorced in February 2014 when their daughter C.T. (hereinafter “Daughter”) was seven years old. Under the parties agreed divorce decree, Father and Mother were appointed as joint managing conservators of Daughter with Father being awarded a standard possession order. Between the rendition of the divorce decree and December 2017, Father regularly exercised his periods of possession.

In August 2015 Mother and Father sought therapeutic treatment for Daughter with Dr. Staci A. Passe (“Passe”) because Daughter was having difficulty making the transition through her parents’ divorce and Daughter has “ADHD.” Daughter began having periodic therapy sessions with Passe.

Father’s Decision to Start Paying Only for the Required Expenses

Father had been voluntarily paying for the entire amount of Daughter’s school tuition and the entire amount of Daughter’s uninsured medical expenses, even though Father was required under the divorce decree only to pay half of the tuition and sixty percent of the uninsured medical expenses. In the parties’ divorce decree, the court ordered that neither Mother nor Father shall schedule any extracurricular activity for Daughter during the other party’s periods of possession. According to Father, Mother had a penchant for scheduling various extracurricular

2 activities for Daughter during Father’s periods of possession. Father complained to Mother about this issue. Eventually, Father sent an email to Mother stating that starting on September 1, 2017, Father would only pay for the expenses that he is responsible for paying under the divorce decree.

Daughter’s Alleged Outcry

Mother stated that on December 6, 2017, Daughter told Mother that one night when Daughter had fallen asleep at Father’s house, Father entered her room. According to Mother, in describing what happened next, Daughter “talked about her legs being lifted up and feeling her — she said her dad’s private parts between her legs and pushing into her.” Mother stated that according to Daughter this incident occurred one to three months before December 6, 2017, and that Daughter begged Mother not to tell anyone about the incident because Daughter would “get in so much trouble.” Daughter was ten years old when she made this outcry of alleged sexual abuse.

Mother did not contact any law enforcement entity that night but she emailed Passe explaining that she needed to talk to Passe right away. The next day, Daughter went to school, and Passe called Mother. Passe testified that during this phone call Mother told Passe that Daughter had disclosed that Father had engaged in a sexually inappropriate act with Daughter. According to Passe, Mother said that it seemed like Daughter was describing penetration. Passe and Mother agreed that Mother, Daughter, and Passe would meet the following day and then the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (“CPS”) would then be contacted.

Meeting with Passe

On December 8, 2017, Mother and Daughter met with Passe. Daughter was crying and said she did not want to talk. Passe told Daughter that Passe “was just a

3 supporter, that [her] role was just a supporter.” Daughter requested that Passe not ask her questions, and Passe told her that asking questions was not Passe’s role. Passe then told Daughter that Mother had already told Passe that Father had engaged in inappropriate behavior with Daughter. According to Passe, she told Daughter this to alleviate Daughter’s fear and remind Daughter that she did not need to report her story to Passe and that Passe was not an investigator. Daughter told Passe that Father’s personal trainer, K.M. (“Trainer”) was present during the alleged sexual abuse by Father. Passe told Daughter that Passe would have to report the alleged sexual abuse, and according to Passe, Daughter stated that she was not going to talk with anyone else and that maybe it was a dream.

CPS Investigation

Passe reported the alleged sexual abuse to CPS on December 8, 2017. According to CPS records, Passe told CPS that (1) two days earlier Daughter stated that Father had sexually abused her and penetrated her one time, early in the morning; (2) Daughter “was unsure if it were a dream and believes it did happen”; and (3) the Trainer was in the room during the alleged sexual abuse.

CPS caseworker Cassandra Osborne set up a forensic interview of Daughter that took place on December 21, 2017. The CPS records describe Daughter’s description of the alleged sexual abuse during this interview as follows:

[Daughter] stated that one night when she was at her [Father’s] house she had a dream that [Father] and [Trainer] came into her room. She stated that [Father] and [Trainer] were not wearing pants. She stated that [Father] picked her up by her ankles. She stated that [Father] did something inappropriate. She stated that [Father] touched her with his private part. She stated that she woke up and she not sure if it was a dream or not. She stated that [Father] lifted her upside down and she thinks that his private part went inside of her. She stated that [Trainer] was next to [Father] talking while this was going on. She stated that

4 she is not sure what they were talking about. [Daughter] stated that [Father’s] penis touched her private part and the inside of her legs. According to the CPS records, Daughter also told the interviewer that Daughter thinks the abuse was a dream because everything was normal the next day.

The day after Daughter’s forensic interview, Daughter had a medical examination, and the CPS records reflect that Daughter made the same outcry to the medical staff that she had made in the forensic interview. Osborne testified that she did not review the medical report, but she heard that the medical examination found no evidence of abuse.

The day after the medical examination, CPS caseworker Osborne interviewed Father and Trainer. Father stated that the sexual abuse allegation is absolutely false and that he would never do anything like that to Daughter. Trainer stated that he is Father’s personal trainer and that he and Father work out every morning at 5 a.m. Trainer said that he has known Daughter since she was a baby and that the sexual abuse allegation is false. Trainer stated that Trainer would never be involved in witnessing a child being abused. According to Trainer, Father is a good father, and Trainer has never witnessed Father being inappropriate with Daughter.

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J.A.T. v. C.S.t, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jat-v-cst-texapp-2022.