Mark Swanberg v. Jennifer Swanberg and Andrew Swanberg

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 22, 2013
Docket01-12-00375-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mark Swanberg v. Jennifer Swanberg and Andrew Swanberg (Mark Swanberg v. Jennifer Swanberg and Andrew Swanberg) 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
Mark Swanberg v. Jennifer Swanberg and Andrew Swanberg, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 22, 2013

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00375-CV ——————————— MARK SWANBERG, Appellant V. ANDREW SWANBERG AND JENNIFER SWANBERG, Appellees

On Appeal from the 245th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2010-19881

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case arises from the attempt of a grandparent, Mark Swanberg, to

obtain sole managing conservatorship of his young grandchild. The child’s

divorced parents, Andrew and Jennifer Swanberg, filed a plea to the jurisdiction

seeking dismissal based on Mark’s lack of standing. The trial court granted the plea, dismissed Mark’s suit, and, after a hearing, granted Andrew and Jennifer’s

motion for sanctions. Because the trial court was presented with evidence showing

that the child’s present circumstances were not significantly impairing her health or

development, we affirm the trial court’s order dismissing the suit. See TEX. FAM.

CODE ANN. § 102.004 (West 2008). We reverse the sanctions order.

Background

Andrew and Jennifer divorced in 2010, and they agreed to share custody of

their young daughter. Jennifer retained the right to determine residency. More

than a year later, Andrew’s father, Mark, filed a petition to modify that parent-

child relationship, seeking appointment as his granddaughter’s sole managing

conservator. Mark and his wife Paula had often taken care of the child after the

divorce, although they lived several hundred miles away from her and Jennifer. In

his petition, Mark requested a temporary restraining order giving him access to the

child and her medical information, while denying possession to the child’s parents.

He alleged that the child’s present circumstances would significantly impair her

health and development, but he provided no details supporting that assertion until

he filed a separate affidavit more than two weeks later. Andrew and Jennifer filed

a plea to the jurisdiction challenging Mark’s standing to bring suit and moving for

sanctions for filing improper pleadings.

2 After a hearing on the plea to the jurisdiction, the trial court dismissed

Mark’s suit. The trial court expressed concern that the only factual allegations

supporting Mark’s standing were contained in his affidavit, which was not file-

stamped and was not served on Andrew and Jennifer with the petition. A month

later, the trial court conducted a hearing on Andrew and Jennifer’s motion for

sanctions against Mark and his attorney. The court awarded attorney’s fees to

Andrew and Jennifer as a sanction under the Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 10.001, 10.004 (West 2002).

The next month, Mark filed a motion to reconsider the sanctions award,

arguing he should have had the opportunity to present testimony to support his

standing claim. The trial court held hearings on the issues of Mark’s standing and

sanctions, treating the reconsideration motion as a motion for new trial. See TEX.

R. CIV. P. 329b(d) (providing that the trial court has plenary power to modify and

correct its judgments).

At the hearing and in affidavits, Mark made several allegations supporting

his contention that the child’s circumstances would significantly impair her

physical health and mental development. He testified that Jennifer and the child’s

main residence, Jennifer’s grandmother’s house, was a rural location with old car

parts strewn about the yard. He also complained that after Jennifer allowed him

and his wife to take the child for visits, Jennifer would ask them to return the child

3 to her at numerous different locations—sometimes in San Antonio, sometimes at

restaurants in Katy, sometimes at the child’s other grandparents’ residences.

Several times, Mark and his wife had returned the child to Jennifer’s grandmother

or aunt because Jennifer was not present to pick her up. Mark generally alleged

that Jennifer’s living conditions were chaotic: Jennifer had told him she and the

child stayed with several different men, one time at a hotel. He felt the movement

from house to house was harmful to the child. His wife testified that once Jennifer

had told her that she had not seen the child for three months.

Mark also had complaints concerning the child’s physical condition. Once

after picking the child up from Jennifer, he took her to the doctor to get a boil

lanced and to obtain treatment for a staph infection. He testified that three or four

times when he and his wife picked up the child for a visit, the child had a fever or

flu. Mark had purchased medications on multiple occasions to treat the child’s flu

and yeast infections. Mark had informed Jennifer of these ailments and obtained

her permission to treat the child. He and his wife testified that the child often

looked unkempt and dirty, smelling of cigarette smoke. He saw that some of the

child’s baby bottles had mold on them.

To rebut Mark’s allegations, Andrew and Jennifer presented several pieces

of evidence. They introduced pictures of the child taken at the same time that

Mark alleged she was dirty. The parents also introduced pictures of Jennifer’s

4 grandmother’s house, the alleged “junkyard,” that showed a wooded yard free from

any car parts or junk. Patty Norrell, Andrew’s mother and Mark’s former wife,

testified that the house where Jennifer and child usually resided was a “nice” house

with hardwood floors. She said that she had never seen the child appearing dirty

and that the child knows the alphabet, nursery rhymes, directions, and other

information that a child of her age would normally know. Andrew denied having

any concerns about the child’s appearance, health, or mental development,

although he acknowledged he would often return the child to someone other than

Jennifer when his periods of possession were over.

Jennifer’s testimony also contradicted many of Mark’s allegations.

According to her, there had never been a period when she had not seen the child

for three months. The longest she had spent nights away from the child was for 11

days when the child was staying with Mark and Paula. Other than that, she had

spent four or five nights in a row apart from the child for a period around October

2011 when the lawsuit was filed, because she did not have a car and the child was

staying with Jennifer’s mother, far from Jennifer’s work. She had never taken the

child with her to stay at a stranger’s house. Although she had stayed at a friend’s

house for a month, she testified that she was alone there with the child, house-

sitting. She explained that she had often not been present when Mark or Andrew

returned the child because she works until 8 p.m. She also testified that she did not

5 smoke in the car or house around the child. There was a time when the child’s

booster shots were delayed, but that was due to medical advice Jennifer received

from a doctor informing her to wait until the child was no longer sick to administer

her shots.

After the hearings, the trial court found that Mark had failed to establish

standing. Accordingly, it denied his motion for reconsideration. Mark then

brought this timely appeal.

Analysis

I. Standing

Standing, which is implicit in the concept of subject-matter jurisdiction, is a

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