Romelia Morales v. Juan Arias

2022 Ark. App. 174, 643 S.W.3d 883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 20, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 174 (Romelia Morales v. Juan Arias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Romelia Morales v. Juan Arias, 2022 Ark. App. 174, 643 S.W.3d 883 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 174 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-21-248

ROMELIA MORALES Opinion Delivered April 20, 2022 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SECOND V. DIVISION [NO. 60DR-19-4210] JUAN ARIAS APPELLEE HONORABLE CASEY R. TUCKER, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Appellant Romelia Morales brings this interlocutory appeal from the order of the

Pulaski County Circuit Court disqualifying her attorney, Angela Schnuerle, from

representing her in a lawsuit to establish appellee Juan Arias’s paternity, custody, child

support, and visitation with M.R.A.M. For reversal, Morales argues that (1) Arias failed to

demonstrate that Ms. Schnuerle’s testimony would satisfy the Weigel factors; (2) the circuit

court failed to properly consider the Weigel factors before granting the disqualification of Ms.

Schnuerle; (3) the circuit court erred by disqualifying Ms. Schnuerle because the issue being

testified to is uncontested; (4) the circuit court committed a legal error by its analysis of the

Rule 3.7 substantial-hardship exception; (5) the circuit court abused its discretion by failing

to consider alternatives to disqualification; (6) the circuit court abused its discretion by ordering Ms. Schnuerle’s disqualification on a discovery issue; and (7) the circuit court

abused its discretion by disqualifying Ms. Schnuerle’s associate attorney. Our jurisdiction of

this appeal is pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Appellate Procedure–Civil 2(a)(8). We affirm

the order of disqualification.

Morales and Arias had one child out of wedlock, M.R.A.M, who was born on July 29,

2018. On November 4, 2019, Arias filed a petition to establish paternity, custody, child

support, and visitation. On December 14, 2020, the circuit court entered an order

establishing Arias as the father of M.R.A.M.; awarded physical custody to Morales subject to

Arias’s visitation, which would be on the same schedule as his other child; and ordered Arias

to pay child support in accordance with the guidelines set forth in Arkansas Supreme Court

Administrative Order No. 10.

On April 12, 2021, Morales filed an ex parte motion for emergency hearing to

suspend visitation. In this motion, Morales alleged that M.R.A.M. was terrified of Arias and

cried each time she had to go with him. She alleged that M.R.A.M. was potty trained before

beginning visitation with Arias but has now regressed and has become incontinent when

emotionally distressed. She alleged that M.R.A.M.’s behavior has changed since she began

visiting with Arias and has returned with bruises and scratches. At the initial hearing on the

ex parte motion, the circuit court suspended Arias’s visitation until April 23 and set a final

hearing for that date.

On April 27, Arias filed a verified motion requesting disqualification of counsel and

plaintiff’s intent to call attorney Angela Galvis Schnuerle as witness. Arias argued that upon

2 review of M.R.A.M.’s medical records received from UAMS, he discovered direct

communication between Ms. Schnuerle and UAMS. He alleged that Ms. Schnuerle made

false statements concerning Arias directly to Audra Gately, licensed master of social work

(LMSW). A portion of that communication noted in Gately’s clinical notes includes:

a. Encounter date of April 12, 2021, Page 38, under Clinical Notes: . . . Please note that this child was potty trained before visitations. Also, I remembered there was testimony that the judge disregarded a 16 year old who claimed to have been molested by the child’s father when she was younger and living with Morelia. This same guy was sent to jail about 4 years ago for domestic abuse.

Arias had never been arrested or gone to jail for domestic abuse as M.R.A.M.’s medical

records indicated. He argued that Ms. Schnuerle’s direct communication of false

information with UAMS made her a necessary witness, and as such, she should be

disqualified from representing Morales.

The motion to disqualify Ms. Schnuerle was heard on April 29, 2021. Ms. Schnuerle

admitted to the circuit court that the statement found in M.R.A.M.’s medical records that

Arias had been convicted of domestic abuse four years earlier had come from her. She stated,

“I misread the statement, and it said sentenced for domestic abuse,” but argued that it did

not matter because a hotline report was made on April 1, eleven days before she

communicated with the medical provider.

Audra Gately testified that M.R.A.M. is her patient. Gately stated that she initiated

a hotline call on April 2 after her first session with M.R.A.M. and Morales. She said her first

communication with Ms. Schnuerle occurred on April 12, 2021, during her second session

3 with the child. Gately said that the hotline report had been accepted when she had her first

contact with Ms. Schnuerle.

Gately testified that Ms. Schnuerle told her that a judge had disregarded a sixteen-

year-old girl’s claim that Arias had molested her and that he had been sent to jail four years

earlier for domestic abuse. Gately said this information concerned her and could be a red

flag that there was potential ongoing abuse of the child. She said that she would not

necessarily believe the statement about Arias going to jail for domestic abuse if it was

provided by counsel but would document what she was told for the record. Gately said her

decision to make a hotline report was made independently and not due to anything Ms.

Schnuerle had told her.

Gately testified that her last contact with Ms. Schnuerle was on April 19 during which

they discussed this hearing. Gately explained that the second contact with Ms. Schnuerle

was after she had asked Morales if an attorney was involved because she was worried about

M.R.A.M.’s safety after coming home from visits with Arias with reported behavioral changes

and new bruises. Ms. Schnuerle told Gately that once a hotline report was accepted, she

would file a petition with the circuit court. Gately subsequently received an unfiled copy of

an ex parte motion for emergency hearing to suspend visitation signed by Ms. Schnuerle

along with potential exhibits, which she placed in M.R.A.M.’s medical records.

The circuit court granted the motion for disqualification and found that Ms.

Schnuerle made herself a necessary witness under Arkansas Rule of Professional Conduct

3.7 as a result of “involving herself into her client’s treatment plan and providing inaccurate

4 and damaging information on a party.” The circuit court found that the damage caused by

the communication outweighed the potential for undue hardship to Morales. The circuit

court did not change custody of the child; however, visitation was still suspended given the

weight of the allegations in the records presented. Morales now brings this interlocutory

appeal.

The disqualification of an attorney is an absolutely necessary measure to protect and

preserve the integrity of the attorney-client relationship; yet it is a drastic measure to be

imposed only when it is clearly required by the circumstances. Minor v. Barnes, 2020 Ark.

App. 415, 609 S.W.3d 449. A circuit court’s decision to disqualify an attorney is reviewed

under an abuse-of-discretion standard. Id. An abuse of discretion may be manifested by an

erroneous interpretation of the law. Id. We have held that the Arkansas Rules of

Professional Conduct are applicable in disqualification proceedings. Id. However, a

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