Lindsey Nadine Warner v. Travis Neal Troutman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 2024
Docket01-23-00587-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lindsey Nadine Warner v. Travis Neal Troutman (Lindsey Nadine Warner v. Travis Neal Troutman) 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
Lindsey Nadine Warner v. Travis Neal Troutman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 9, 2024

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-23-00587-CV ——————————— LINDSEY NADINE WARNER, Appellant V. TRAVIS NEAL TROUTMAN, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2 Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 21-FD-0554

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellee Travis Neal Troutman sued Appellant Lindsey Nadine Warner for

dissolution of their marital relationship and for conservatorship of their minor son.

In two issues, Warner argues (1) the trial court erred by failing to make timely

findings supporting its deviation from the standard possession order as required by Section 153.258 of the Texas Family Code, and (2) the trial court abused its

discretion by requiring that her periods of possession over her minor son be

continuously supervised by the Safe Program, Troutman, or an adult designated by

Troutman because this limitation on her right to possession exceeds the level of

restriction required to protect the best interest of the child.

We affirm the trial court’s decree.

Background

Appellee Travis Neal Troutman sued Appellant Lindsey Nadine Warner for

dissolution of their marital relationship, for conservatorship of their minor son,

L.G.T. (“Lance”), and to adjudicate that Troutman is not the father of Warner’s other

child, J.L.W. (“Jason”). The trial court signed temporary orders appointing Warner

and Troutman as Lance’s temporary joint managing conservators and awarding

Warner the exclusive right to designate Lance’s primary residence. The temporary

orders awarded Troutman possession of and access to Lance in accordance with the

Family Code’s standard possession order (“SPO”). See TEX. FAM. CODE §§

153.3101–153.316 (codifying terms of standard possession order); see also id. §

153.316 (setting forth general terms for every standard possession order); Kazmi v.

Kazmi, No. 03-22-00330-CV, 2023 WL 7932473, at *12 (Tex. App.—Austin Nov.

17, 2023, no pet.) (“The standard possession order sets the minimum possessory

2 rights of the parent who does not have the right to establish the child’s primary

residence.”).

On September 23, 2021, Troutman filed an emergency motion for drug testing

of Warner, which the court granted. Warner submitted a hair follicle sample which

tested positive for amphetamine and methamphetamine. After Warner’s positive

drug test, Troutman filed a motion to modify the temporary orders. The trial court

signed an agreed temporary order on November 22, 2021, naming Troutman and

Warner as Lance’s temporary joint managing conservators but giving Troutman the

exclusive right to designate Lance’s primary residence. Later, on December 16,

2021, the trial court signed an agreed order naming Troutman and Warner as Lance’s

temporary joint managing conservators and giving Troutman the exclusive right to

designate Lance’s primary residence. The temporary orders deviated from the SPO

by denying Warner overnight periods of possession. The agreed order also gave

Troutman the right to request that Warner submit to drug testing and stated that if

Warner tested positive for any illegal substance, her right to possession of and access

to Lance would be suspended until she tested negative for drugs and the results were

sent to Troutman.

On March 9, 2022, Warner was arrested and charged with two counts of the

felony offense of burglary of a building. And on March 22, 2022, Warner was

arrested and charged with one count of the felony offense of unauthorized use of a

3 motor vehicle. That same day, Troutman filed an emergency motion to modify the

temporary orders. The trial court held a hearing on Troutman’s motion, which

Warner did not attend.

On April 11, 2022, the trial court signed a “Default Order on Petitioner’s

Emergency Motion to Modify Temporary Orders, Request for Additional

Temporary Orders, and Request for Expedited Hearing” modifying the December

16, 2021 agreed order. In the April 11, 2022 order, the court ordered that Warner

and Troutman “shall have possession of the child at times mutually agreed to in

advance by the parties, and, in the absence of mutual agreement,” Warner and

Troutman would have possession of Lance pursuant to the terms set forth in the

order. Those terms deviated from the SPO by limiting Warner’s right to possession

of and access to Lance to two hours on the Saturday following the first, third, and

fifth Friday of each month and requiring that all periods of possession by Warner

“be supervised by Safe Supervised Visitation, (832)297-0013.” Warner was ordered

to enroll with Safe Supervised Visitation by no later than April 18, 2022, and to send

email confirmation of her enrollment to Troutman, who was then required to enroll

with Safe Supervised Visitation.

On March 28, 2023, Warner and Troutman entered into a partial mediated

settlement agreement that resolved the division of the marital estate in the divorce

and determined that Troutman was not Jason’s father.

4 Trial

The remaining issues of Lance’s conservatorship and possession of and access

to Lance were tried to the bench. Troutman, Warner, and Margaret Watson testified

at trial.

A. Troutman

Troutman testified that he was married to Warner and that Lance is their only

child. Lance is six years old, and he attends kindergarten. Troutman testified that

he and Warner entered into a partial mediated settlement agreement with respect to

the division of the marital estate and he asked the court to approve the agreement

and grant him and Warner a divorce on grounds of irreconcilable differences.

Troutman requested that the court appoint him as Lance’s sole managing

conservator with the exclusive right to designate Lance’s primary residence. He also

asked the court to order that Warner’s periods of possession of Lance be supervised

and that Warner continue to be subject to random hair follicle drug testing.

Troutman explained that he wanted hair follicle testing, as opposed to urinalysis,

because it was easier to cheat on a urinalysis test. When asked what concerns had

arisen during the pendency of the case that led him to seek sole managing

conservatorship of Lance, Troutman explained that where Warner lived during the

pendency of the divorce proceeding, including when she had custody of Lance, was

of concern to him and “obviously, the drug issue.” Troutman also was concerned

5 about the possibility that Warner would engage in criminal activity “in the future

when she’s in possession of [Lance], based on” the three felony offenses she was

arrested for while the case was pending.

On March 9, 2022, Warner was arrested and charged with two counts of the

felony offense of burglary of a building. On March 22, 2022, Warner was arrested

and charged with the felony offense of unlawful use of a vehicle. Warner was

pregnant with Jason when she was arrested. Troutman testified that one of the

charges of burglary of a building and unlawful use of a motor vehicle had been

“dropped” and the other was “set for probation for, I believe, a couple of years.”

According to Troutman, nothing had changed since Warner was arrested for the

three felony offenses that would alleviate his concerns about the possibility that

Warner would engage in criminal activity in the future.

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Lindsey Nadine Warner v. Travis Neal Troutman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsey-nadine-warner-v-travis-neal-troutman-texapp-2024.