Julie A. Ketterman v. Department of Family and Protective Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
Docket01-12-00883-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Julie A. Ketterman v. Department of Family and Protective Services (Julie A. Ketterman v. Department of Family and Protective Services) 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
Julie A. Ketterman v. Department of Family and Protective Services, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 30, 2014.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00883-CV ——————————— JULIE A. KETTERMAN, Appellant V. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND PROTECTIVE SERVICES, Appellee

On Appeal from the 314th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2011-03307J

MEMORANDUM OPINION The trial court sanctioned attorney Julie Ketterman for two pleadings filed in a parental termination case and statements she made in open court.1 Ketterman

argues that the trial court abused its discretion and violated the trial court’s

inherent authority.

We affirm the trial court’s order imposing sanctions against Ketterman.

Because we do not reach the ultimate merits of Ketterman’s allegations, we

express no opinion as to the veracity of her claims with respect to any of the parties

involved.

Background

The Harris County Child Protective Services (CPS) interposed in D.G.C.’s

life when she was born on August 28, 2009, and she and her mother, Ashley, tested

positive for drugs. CPS thereafter agreed to temporarily place D.G.C. with her

maternal grandmother, Rebecca Kellett, allowing Ashley to maintain access to and

visitation with D.G.C. while Ashley underwent drug treatment. In November

2010, D.G.C. was taken to the emergency room after she accessed blood pressure

medication that she found in the Kellett home. D.G.C. was taken to the emergency

room again in April 2011 with a staph infection, necessitating partial amputation of

her finger.

1 The trial court imposed sanctions pursuant to Rule 13 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, and the trial court’s inherent power. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 10.001–.006 (West 2002). 2 On May 12, 2011, D.G.C. was taken again to the emergency room after

Ashley observed the child alternately lying unresponsive, gasping for air, shaking,

and turning purple. Ashley reported to hospital staff that D.G.C. had been running

a high fever hours earlier and her eyes had been rolling up with a dazed stare.

D.G.C., then only twenty-months old, tested positive for both opiates and cocaine.

Ashley behaved erratically at the hospital and eventually admitted to

hospital staff that the night before she had taken D.G.C. to a house where she knew

that people gathered and used drugs. Ashley told the hospital staff that she saw

drug paraphernalia in the house and believed that the four persons there were using

crack cocaine. Ashley said that she left D.G.C. only long enough to use the

bathroom. When informed that her twenty-month-old granddaughter had tested

positive for opiates and cocaine, Kellett claimed that she was unaware that her

daughter, Ashley, was using drugs again.

On May 12, 2011, CPS removed D.G.C. from Ashley’s custody and placed

the child with Kellett, as Ashley requested.

A. Suit to Terminate Parental Rights of D.G.C.’s parents

On May 13, 2011, Texas Department of Protective Services (DFPS) filed an

Original Petition for Protection of a Child, for Conservatorship, and for

Termination in Suit Affecting the Parent Child Relationship. The petition sought,

among other things, to terminate the biological parents’ rights, the appointment of

3 DFPS as the child’s temporary sole conservator, the appointment of a permanent

managing conservator, and the appointment of an attorney ad litem for the child.

Three months later—on August 18, 2011—D.G.C. was removed from the

Kellett home by CPS and placed with a foster family, Ben and Melissa Knight,

after one of the Kelletts’ five dogs bit D.G.C.’s face. The bite, for which the

Kelletts did not seek medical treatment, left D.G.C. scarred. The caseworker who

went to the Kellett home to investigate was instructed by the attorney ad litem to

remove the child after the caseworker saw one of the Kelletts’ dogs growling at the

toddler. The next day, Ketterman filed a petition in intervention on the Kelletts’

behalf.2 Six months later, the parties reached a tentative agreement to allow the

Kelletts visitation with D.G.C., if permitted by the child’s therapist. D.G.C.’s

attorney ad litem agreed to contact the therapist and ask for a recommendation

regarding visitation by the Kelletts. The attorney ad litem was to circulate to the

parties a plan, pursuant to the therapist’s recommendation, to be implemented by

March 30, 2012. The partial agreement regarding visitation, however, was never

approved by the Court or implemented.

On March 20, 2012, attorney Gary Polland filed a petition in intervention on

behalf of the Knights, D.G.C.’s foster parents. The Kelletts filed a motion to strike

2 Although the original petition in intervention was filed on Rebecca Kellett’s behalf, Ketterman later filed an amended petition adding Kellett’s husband— D.G.C.’s step-grandfather—as an intervener.

4 the Knights’ petition that same day, alleging that the Knights lacked standing to

intervene. The next month, the Kelletts filed a petition for writ of mandamus and

request for emergency relief with this Court challenging the associate judge’s

denial of that motion to strike. Both the petition and the request for emergency

relief were ultimately denied.3

1. Second and Third Amended Petitions

On April 11, 2012, a week before a scheduled pre-trial conference,

Ketterman filed a Second Amended Petition in Intervention on the Kelletts’ behalf.

This amended petition was filed after the trial court sustained the special

exceptions to the Kelletts’ petition that Polland had filed on the Knights’ behalf.4

In the Second Amended Petition in Intervention Ketterman asked that the Kelletts

be appointed as D.G.C.’s temporary joint managing conservators, and that the

court restrict D.G.C.’s residence to the Kelletts’ home and give the Kelletts

immediate possession of the child. Ketterman also made numerous allegations of

bias and corruption with respect to CPS, Polland, the Harris County juvenile

courts, and child abuse or neglect by the Knights and CPS, including:5

3 See In re D.C., No. 01-12-00385-CV, 2012 WL 2150904, *1 (Tex. App.— Houston [1st Dist.] Jun. 14, 2012, orig. proceeding [mand. denied]) (mem. op.). 4 Neither the special exceptions nor a transcript of the hearing during which the special exceptions were addressed is included in the appellate record. 5 The Second and Third Amended Petitions in Intervention both contain other allegations of bias and corruption with respect to CPS, Polland, the Harris County juvenile courts, and child abuse or neglect by the Knights and CPS—all of which 5 1. “[CPS] committed child abuse and/or neglect in that they have removed [D.G.C.] from [the Kelletts] and placed [D.G.C.] in a stranger-foster home without exercising all means necessary to prevent the removal of the child from [the Kelletts]. The abuse and/or neglect is emotional.”

2. “They [the Knights] have employed Gary Polland, who is in the middle of the corruption . . . . Indeed, Polland orchestrates most of the adoption scandal.”

Two days later, Ketterman filed a motion to withdraw the Second Amended

Petition in Intervention. She also filed a Third Amended Petition in Intervention,

which omits the prior petition’s allegations against Polland, but continues to allege

bias in favor of adoption in general, and the Knights in particular, and wrongdoing

on behalf of CPS/DFPS.

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