Kristalyn Harrison v. Luke Harrison, James Allen Garner and Vickie Ann Garner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 2012
Docket14-11-00403-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kristalyn Harrison v. Luke Harrison, James Allen Garner and Vickie Ann Garner (Kristalyn Harrison v. Luke Harrison, James Allen Garner and Vickie Ann Garner) 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
Kristalyn Harrison v. Luke Harrison, James Allen Garner and Vickie Ann Garner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Opinion filed March 13, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-11-00403-CV

KRISTALYN HARRISON, Appellant

V.

LUKE HARRISON, JAMES ALLEN GARNER AND VICKIE ANN GARNER, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Washington County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 6518

OPINION

Appellant, Kristalyn Harrison (Kristalyn), filed this cause, a bill for review, against appellees, Luke Harrison (Luke), James Allen Garner, and Vickie Ann Garner (the Garners). By her bill of review, Kristalyn attacked the notice provided to her in proceedings that ultimately terminated her parental rights to her child, D.H. The trial court granted appellees’ Rule 13 motion for sanctions and ordered Kristalyn’s bill of review dismissed as a sanction. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13. Kristalyn appeals the sanction order. We reverse and remand. BACKGROUND

The following timeline illustrates the course of the legal proceedings, the operative addresses to which notice was sent, and the totality of the circumstances before the trial court when it sanctioned Kristalyn.

2/2005 Kristalyn and Luke divorce. Kristalyn is named managing conservator of D.H. Kristalyn and D.H. live with Kristalyn’s mother, Karen Neumann, at her home located at 1025 Old Burton Road, Brenham, Texas, 77833, though D.H. is occasionally with a babysitter for some time.

3/2005 Luke picks up D.H. for visitation at the babysitter’s but does not return him. D.H. and Luke live with the Garners, and they enroll D.H. in daycare.

1/3/2006 James and Vicki Garner (step grandparent and grandparent) file a petition in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship, seeking termination of the parent-child relationship between Kristalyn and DH in Cause No. CCL-4902.

1/30/2006 Kristalyn files a petition for writ of habeas corpus and/or for enforcement of child custody determination in Cause No. CCL-4428. Cause Nos. CCL-4902 and CCL-4428 are ultimately ordered consolidated on Kristalyn’s motion.

2/7, 9, 15/2006 Following several days of testimony, the trial court grants Kristalyn’s motion for enforcement and denies the Garners’ motion for temporary orders. Kristalyn is present at the hearing. D.H. is returned to Kristalyn pending trial on the merits.

8/21/2006 Kristalyn’s attorney, Jamie Elick, files a motion to withdraw. Elick lists Kristalyn’s last known address as 1025 Old Burton Road, Brenham, Texas, 77833. Elick also states that he has provided Kristalyn with a copy of a deposition notice for Kristalyn’s deposition scheduled on October 6, 2006.

8/31/2006 Luke files a petition seeking sole managing conservatorship of D.H.

9/7/2006 The trial court grants Elick’s motion to withdraw.

10/6/2006 Kristalyn fails to appear for her deposition.

2 11/16/2006 The trial court holds a hearing on Luke’s motion to compel and motion for temporary orders. Kristalyn does not appear. The trial court grants the motion to compel, strikes Kristalyn’s pleadings, but does not enter a default order. Instead, the trial court grants Luke’s motion for temporary orders, names Luke temporary managing conservator, and issues a writ of attachment for D.H., but orders D.H. brought before the trial court within 72 hours to provide Kristalyn a chance to present evidence.

11/22/2006 The Austin County Sheriff executes the writ and picks up D.H. at Kristalyn’s new residence, Bell Oaks Village, Apartment No. 705, 890 High Oaks Drive, Bellville, Texas, 77418. The Sheriff delivers D.H. to Luke at the premises of the Austin County jail at 417 North Chesley, Bellville, Texas, 77418, as arranged.

11/28/2006 Luke appears before the trial court with D.H. Kristalyn does not appear. The trial court sets the petition seeking termination of Kristalyn’s parental rights for a mandatory pretrial hearing on December 19, 2006, and orders specific admonishments to Kristalyn. Regarding service of this notice, the trial court inquires about where the writ was executed, and counsel indicates the writ was served at the Bell Oaks Apartments, Apartment No. 705, 890 High Oaks Drive, Bellville, Texas, 77418. Counsel acknowledges that this is not the address listed as the last known address. When counsel offers to send notice of the pretrial conference and trial to ―both addresses . . . regular mail and certified mail,‖ the Court indicates: ―That would be fine. . . . Let’s do that. Wherever the writ of attachment was served.‖

12/13/2006 Luke’s counsel serves the following notice of the pretrial hearing to Kristalyn:

Notice is given that all parties are to appear in the County Court at Law, Washington County, Texas in the above captioned matter for a mandatory pretrial conference on December 19, 2006 at 9:00 o’clock a.m. In addition, Final Trial is set for January 29, 2007 at 9:00 a[.]m.

In the event that a party fails to appear at the mandatory pretrial conference then a default judgment may be taken, including but not limited to the termination of

3 parental rights of KRYSTALYN HARRISON.1

The notice states that it was sent to ―KRYSTALYN HARRISON, at 1025 Old Burton Rd., Brenham, Texas 77833 and 417 North Chesley, Bellville, Texas 77418.‖

12/19/2006 Kristalyn does not appear at the hearing. Counsel indicates to the trial court that he has served the notice ―at 1025 Old Burton Road, Brenham, Texas, 77833, and also to 417 North Chesley, Bellville, Texas, 77418.‖ The trial court inquires about why notice has been sent to ―the place in Bellville,‖ and counsel reminds that the trial court ―[t]hat is the location where the child was picked up on the writ of attachment.‖

Concerned about Kristalyn’s failure to appear and the absence of green cards documenting notice, the trial court inquires of Kristalyn’s whereabouts. Luke testifies that Kristalyn moves around a lot and he does not know where she is.

The trial court then hears uncontested testimony regarding bruises and cigarette burns on D.H.; Kristalyn’s drug use; Luke’s efforts to return D.H. as scheduled without appearance or call from Kristalyn; and Kristalyn’s absence without calling for long periods of time.

Concluding that Kristalyn was ―duly and properly cited, [but] did not appear and wholly made default,‖ the trial court enters an order terminating the parent-child relationship between D.H. and Kristalyn, but declines to order any further costs or fees.

12/17/2010 Kristalyn, through her attorney, Jamie Elick, files a petition for bill of review against the Garners and Luke, alleging a failure to serve her with notice almost four years earlier.

1/11/2011 The Garners file an answer and a motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule 13, alleging that Harrison’s petition is groundless and filed in bad faith and for the purpose of harassment, and requesting that the trial court strike Harrison’s petition and award them attorney’s fees. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13.

1 Emphasis in original. 4 2/11/2011 The trial court holds an evidentiary hearing on the sanctions motion, grants the motion, and strikes Kristalyn’s petition for bill of review as the sanction.

In three issues, Harrison contends that the trial court erred in finding that her petition for bill of review was groundless; the trial court abused its discretion by imposing Rule 13 sanctions without any evidence of bad faith; and the trial court abused its discretion by striking the petition for bill of review without testing lesser sanctions.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Rule 13 authorizes a trial court to impose sanctions against an attorney, a represented party, or both, who files a pleading that is groundless and brought in bad faith or for the purpose of harassment. TEX. R. CIV. P. 13.

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Kristalyn Harrison v. Luke Harrison, James Allen Garner and Vickie Ann Garner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristalyn-harrison-v-luke-harrison-james-allen-garner-and-vickie-ann-texapp-2012.