Jonathan Jones v. Laury Carson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 2023
Docket03-22-00086-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jonathan Jones v. Laury Carson (Jonathan Jones v. Laury Carson) 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
Jonathan Jones v. Laury Carson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-22-00086-CV

Jonathan Jones, Appellant

v.

Laury Carson, Appellee

FROM THE 353RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-FM-17-004533, THE HONORABLE MADELEINE CONNOR, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Years after their 2018 divorce, Jonathan Jones and Laury Carson petitioned for

relief against one another in the underlying suit affecting the parent-child relationship (SAPCR),

which included Carson’s petition for a modification of the conservatorship and custody provisions

of their divorce decree. See Tex. Fam. Code Ch. 156. After a two-day bench trial, the trial

court, awarded Carson her requested modification; named her as the children’s sole managing

conservator, with Jones as a possessory conservator; ordered that Jones’s visitations be supervised

under a new custody schedule; and granted other relief ordering Jones to take certain actions

and to refrain from others. Jones has appealed, appearing pro se, challenging several aspects of

the court’s judgment in numerous appellate issues. Because none of the issues raised require

reversal, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Jones and Carson are the parents of three children together—a daughter who was

10 years old at the time of trial, a daughter who was then nine years old, and a son who was then

six. Jones lives in central Texas and Carson in Kaufman County. The two have been joint

managing conservators for their children since their 2018 divorce. Jones has other children by

other women, and Carson lives with her current husband. Their coparenting relationship appears

to have broken down in early 2020, when Jones began filing pleadings of various kinds against

Carson, mostly involving disputes over conservatorship and possession of their children.

Carson’s request for modification, as well as Jones’s numerous pleadings, went to

trial in early October 2021. At several points during the trial, Jones told the court that he had

just recently gone to the hospital and needed a continuance because he was not prepared for trial.

Carson’s current husband testified that day, and although Jones said that he was not ready for the

testimony because of his health issues, he made objections during the direct examination and then

cross-examined Carson’s husband. The court granted Jones’s request for a continuance because

of his health issues.

The bench trial resumed just over two weeks later. On the second day of trial, Jones

and Carson testified and offered exhibits that were admitted into evidence. The court asked the

children’s guardian ad litem to offer her thoughts: “[T]he Court is going to allow you to present

any—in narrative form, your thought—anything that you think the Court would need to know, and

the parties, of course, can object, but you may proceed, please, quickly.” Jones made objections

during the guardian ad litem’s presentation, and although the court at first refused to allow Jones

to cross-examine the guardian ad litem because the court’s time limits for the trial had expired,

the court later “allow[ed] Mr. Jones to cross-examine [the guardian ad litem] for ten minutes.”

2 Immediately before making this statement, the court took “judicial notice of the guardian

ad litem’s report dated August 5th that has been filed.” Jones did not object.

After the time limit for the cross-examination expired, the court orally rendered

judgment granting Carson’s requested modification and awarding relief largely in line with the

guardian ad litem’s recommendations. The court later signed its final Order Modifying the

Parent-Child Relationship, with its Supervised Possession Order, Conservatorship Order, and

Child Support Order attachments. Jones appeals this Order.

DISCUSSION

Jones divides his brief’s arguments into a Summary of the Argument section and

an Argument section divided into subsections corresponding with numbered Issues 1 through 7.

Within these portions of his brief, however, he often argues more than one discrete appellate issue.

Issue 3

In his Issue 3, Jones contends that Carson did not plead and prove her standing to

maintain this SAPCR modification suit. But the statutes he cites to support his argument concern

standing for grandparents, other extended relatives of the children, or other nonparents. See Tex.

Family Code §§ 153.432, .433. Those statutes aside, a parent has standing to maintain a SAPCR

modification suit, under other statutes. See id. §§ 102.003(a)(1), 156.002(b). And Carson pleaded

that she was the children’s mother, and testimony—including from Jones himself—showed that

Carson is the children’s mother. We overrule this issue.

Issues 1 and 2

Jones’s next two discrete appellate issues concern the subject of his health issue

during the first day of trial and the witness examination that same day of Carson’s husband. In his

3 Issue 1 and in a portion of Issue 2, Jones contends that “[t]he trial court violated [his] right to due

process and abused its discretion by requiring [him] to continue with examination after objections

and pleadings made under oath by [him] and disregarding visual and material evidence to that

fact.” We first note that the court granted Jones’s request for a continuance during the first day of

trial because of his health issues. The only witness examination conducted before that point was of

Carson’s husband, but because of the grant of the continuance, there remained another day of trial

during which Jones could have re-called the husband to testify, but he did not do so. In any event,

Jones has not cited any authorities to support his Issue 1, so it is waived for inadequate briefing.

See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i); see also Caldwell v. Garfutt, No. 03-14-00019-CV, 2016 WL 105920,

at *3 (Tex. App.—Austin Jan. 7, 2016, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (holding pro se appellant to

requirements of Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.1(i) in appeal arising out of SAPCR

modification suit).

In another portion of his Issue 2, Jones contends that he was denied due process

because the trial court did not strike from the record portions of Carson’s husband’s testimony

after Jones explained his health issues to the court. Yet the record contains no trial-court motion

or request by Jones to strike the husband’s testimony. After the husband testified on direct

examination, Jones used his opportunity to cross-examine the husband, and his cross-examination

ended after telling the court that he had asked “all my questions for” the husband. Because Jones

did not make a motion or request to strike in the trial court, or otherwise bring this due-process

issue about the husband’s testimony to the trial court’s attention, he has not preserved this

issue for appellate review. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1); Cyree v. Cyree, No. 03-21-00319-CV,

2022 WL 17835215, at *5 n.6 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec. 22, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding

due-process issue waived if not first presented to trial court).

4 In another portion of his Issue 2, Jones contends that the trial court erred by denying

his motion for a continuance filed the day before the second day of trial and his oral requests for a

continuance made during the second day of trial so he could subpoena the Department of Family

and Protective Services. The motion states that “[n]ew evidence and witnesses in the case have

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