John Stritzinger v. Katherine Wright

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 2011
Docket03-10-00455-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John Stritzinger v. Katherine Wright (John Stritzinger v. Katherine Wright) 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
John Stritzinger v. Katherine Wright, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-10-00455-CV



John Stritzinger, Appellant



v.



Katherine Wright, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 345TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-FM-04-004690, HONORABLE STEPHEN YELENOSKY, JUDGE PRESIDING



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



John Stritzinger appeals a final district court order (1) modifying the child-custody provisions of his divorce decree to appoint his ex-wife, appellee Katherine Wright, sole managing conservator of their children. Stritzinger asserts that the district court committed procedural and evidentiary errors impacting trial of the modification issue and abused its discretion in naming Wright sole managing conservator. Stritzinger also complains of other provisions of the order that increased his monthly child-support obligation, required him to pay certain insurance and medical expenses as additional child support, granted a motion for enforcement filed by Wright and denied one he had filed, awarded attorney's fees to Wright, and imposed sanctions and other punitive relief against him. (2) We will affirm the district court's judgment.



MODIFICATION OF CONSERVATORSHIP

The present conservatorship dispute is the latest of several that have arisen since Stritzinger and Wright divorced in 2005. There were three children of the marriage, H.S., J.S., and L.S. When the divorce became final, H.S. was six, J.S. was four, and L.S. was two. By this time, concerns had arisen that H.S. might have some learning disabilities.

In an agreed final divorce decree, signed on May 5, 2005, the district court had appointed Stritzinger and Wright joint managing conservators of the children. The decree provided that each parent had the right to make educational decisions for the children, subject to the other parent's agreement and to conditions set out in an "Orders Regarding Educational Testing, Educational Consultant, Decisions and Expenses" section of the decree. In these provisions, the parties agreed upon the appointment of Dr. Nancy Nussbaum to conduct an evaluation of and educational testing on H.S. to determine whether she had any learning disabilities or special educational needs and that Nussbaum would provide the results to them and to Roberta Rosen, who was appointed as an educational consultant for all three children. The parties agreed that Rosen would use the test results to assess H.S.'s educational needs and recommend a school or schools most able to accommodate H.S.'s needs. They also agreed that Rosen would recommend school placement for J.S. and L.S. based on her assessment of the best educational program available to meet each child's needs. Stritzinger and Wright were ordered to follow Rosen's recommendation if they were unable to agree on a school or schools for one or more of the children. The decree provided that Rosen would immediately begin working to determine appropriate schools for H.S. and J.S. for the school year beginning in fall 2005. They also agreed that L.S. would remain in her current preschool until the spring of 2006.

The parties also agreed in the decree that Dr. Susan McMillan--a child psychologist who evidently had been providing services to the children--would remain the children's therapist, and that neither parent would take the children to see or be evaluated by any other mental health professional unless specifically referred by McMillan. Both parties were also required to consult with McMillan regarding any recommendations she had for counseling and other therapy for the children and to make themselves and the children available for appointments with her. The court also designated McMillan as the parties' parenting communication facilitator and ordered them to attend joint sessions with her on at least a quarterly basis.

After testing, H.S. was diagnosed with specific language impairment ("SLI"), a condition characterized by difficulty with oral language expression. (3) In 2006, Wright moved to modify the decree, asserting that the severity of H.S.'s language processing issues had become clearer, but that Rosen's school recommendation for H.S. was inconsistent with her diagnosis. The parties were also aware by now that H.S.'s condition might be genetic and affect her siblings. A professional assessment had been recommended for J.S., and Wright complained that Rosen had recommended a school for him without requesting a professional assessment. Wright sought to keep H.S. and J.S. at their current school, the Austin Waldorf School, and that L.S. be directed to attend the Waldorf School, too.

After a July 2006 hearing, the district court, the Honorable John Dietz presiding, modified the decree. The court removed Rosen as educational consultant. The court further ordered that H.S. attend the Rawson-Saunders School, which specializes in teaching students with dyslexia and other learning disabilities, and that J.S. and L.S. attend the Waldorf School. The court ordered that Dr. Linda Swank, H.S.'s speech language pathologist, would perform a speech and language evaluation on J.S. in January 2007 and that H.S. would continue to receive private speech therapy from Swank. Both parents were enjoined from retaining any new therapists, counselors, consultants, or forensic experts except by agreement or court order. In the order, Judge Dietz retained the case on his docket and ordered the parties to begin attending quarterly status conferences with him. McMillan, Swank, and Pat Sekel, the director of the Rawson-Saunders School, were ordered to provide monthly written status reports about H.S.'s progress to Judge Dietz and the parties. Stritzinger and Wright were also instructed that they were to cooperate with and not interfere with McMillan's, Swank's, or Sekel's recommendations or treatment of the children.

In March 2007, Wright again moved to modify the parent-child relationship and to enforce the agreed final divorce decree, alleging that Stritzinger was harassing Swank. Judge Dietz sent the parties to joint counseling with Dr. Caryl Dalton to resolve Stritzinger's opposition to private speech therapy for J.S. In May 2007, the parties and Dalton entered into a rule 11 agreement in which they agreed that J.S. would stop speech therapy at the end of the month. They also agreed that if J.S.'s teacher at any time recommended that he needed additional help outside of the Waldorf School, they would seek a recommendation from McMillan for a professional that neither party had previously consulted. If McMillan did not wish to make a referral, they agreed to accept a referral from J.S.'s teacher. In a November 2007 agreed order, Judge Dietz ordered that H.S. would remain at the Rawson-Saunders School and J.S. and L.S. would remain at the Waldorf School. The order enjoined the parties from filing a motion to modify for reasons related to whether Rawson-Saunders School was a proper school for H.S. until after the end of her third-grade year. It also enjoined them from moving to modify for reasons related to whether Waldorf was a proper school for J.S. and L.S.

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John Stritzinger v. Katherine Wright, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-stritzinger-v-katherine-wright-texapp-2011.