Rosita Johnson v. Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 2023
Docket03-22-00100-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rosita Johnson v. Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough (Rosita Johnson v. Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough) 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
Rosita Johnson v. Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-22-00100-CV

Rosita Johnson, Appellant

v.

Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough, Appellee

FROM THE 20TH DISTRICT COURT OF MILAM COUNTY NO. CV40692, THE HONORABLE JOHN YOUNGBLOOD, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Rosita Johnson, the maternal great-grandmother of the child the subject of this

suit, appeals from the trial court’s order modifying the parent–child relationship. Rosita sought

to modify the prior order appointing her and the child’s mother, Sara Johnson, as joint managing

conservators and the child’s father as possessory conservator.1 Sara passed away in March 2020,

spurring Rosita’s modification suit. The child’s father, Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough, filed a

counterpetition to modify. Rosita contends that the trial court abused its discretion in applying

the fit-parent presumption to appoint Kimbrough as the child’s sole managing conservator.

We agree. For the following reasons, we reverse the order and remand this case for further

proceedings.

1 Because Rosita Johnson and Sara Johnson share the same last name, for clarity we refer to them by their first names. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Kimbrough and Sara are the parents of G.K., who was five years old when this

modification suit was tried. G.K.’s parents were divorced per a 2016 divorce decree in which

Sara was appointed sole managing conservator and Kimbrough possessory conservator. In an

April 2018 order, Sara and Kimbrough were appointed temporary joint managing conservators of

G.K., and Rosita was granted exclusive sole possession of the child. Under that order, visitation

with G.K. for either Sara or Kimbrough was to be at Rosita’s discretion, and Sara’s visitation

was to be supervised by Rosita. Less than a week later, Sara and Rosita filed a petition for

writ of habeas corpus alleging that Kimbrough had refused to surrender G.K. and was illegally

restraining her in contravention of the order. Shortly thereafter, the court issued a writ of

attachment and a writ of habeas corpus, commanding Kimbrough to produce G.K. to the court.

In a July 2019 order, Sara and Rosita were appointed joint managing

conservators, Rosita was granted the exclusive right to designate G.K.’s primary residence, and

Kimbrough was appointed possessory conservator.2 In April 2020, shortly after Sara’s death,

Rosita filed a petition to modify the parent–child relationship, seeking to be appointed sole

managing conservator and alleging that Kimbrough “has engaged in a history or pattern of child

neglect.” In June 2020, Kimbrough, who lives in Georgia, filed a counterpetition to modify

seeking to be appointed sole managing conservator and attaching an affidavit purportedly

“setting forth the statutory allegations and supporting facts” to allow modification of the party

having the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the child within one year after

the date of the rendition of the order sought to be modified. See Tex. Fam. Code § 156.102.

2 The order recited that Kimbrough had made a general appearance and was duly notified of trial but failed to appear and defaulted.

2 A final hearing on the parties’ competing petitions occurred October 29, 2021.

The court initially swore in seven witnesses, some of whom had flown in from out of town and

two of whom were G.K.’s teachers. Then, in answer to the trial court’s query about what “the

issue” was, Rosita’s counsel explained that Rosita was seeking sole managing conservatorship of

G.K. while Kimbrough was seeking that the child live with him in Georgia. The trial court

inquired of Rosita, “And what issues are you going to be alleging that doesn’t [sic] make it

appropriate for the child to live with [her] father[?]” Rosita’s counsel summarized the evidence

that would be forthcoming—including that G.K. had lived with Rosita nearly her entire life and

is thriving there—and Kimbrough’s counsel explained that pursuant to either Chapter 151 or 153

of the Family Code, the court “is compelled” to grant a parent custody “in the absence of any

compelling evidence” against that parent.

The court then asked Rosita whether she wanted to call her first witness, and

Rosita attempted to call Kim Pizana, one of G.K.’s teachers. However, before Pizana began to

testify, the trial court stated that it was going to try to “pare this down a little bit” by taking it “as

basically a given that the child is doing well” under Rosita’s custody. The trial court further

explained, “[T]his case is going to turn on whether there is some pretty significant reason to

place the child with a relative as opposed to a parent, and that burden is going to be pretty high.”

The court continued,

So you can go on and on about how great the [great-]grandmother is and the appraisement and all that, but again, I take that as a given, and itself really not at issue as far as I’m concerned, so if you have got fifteen witnesses lined up to say how great she is, I’m not going to need to hear a lot of that.

Rosita’s counsel asked whether the court would hear evidence such as “[h]ow the child is doing

in school and that kind of thing,” to which the court replied, “That’s part in partial [sic] of her

3 current location but I will hear some of it.” Rosita’s counsel then stated that if the court “would

just like to hear from the parties,” she was “open to that” but that she did have some testimony

about Kimbrough in 2017 having custody of G.K. for “a couple of months and basically

[leaving] her back with her mother and that’s how she ended up back with” Rosita. The court

responded, “That’s the kind of stuff I do need.” Rosita’s counsel then offered to “excuse the

teachers” if the court wanted to hear testimony solely from the parties, which the court

represented was “the way [it] would prefer it.” Rosita’s counsel then proceeded to call

Kimbrough to testify and thereafter Rosita.

After the close of evidence, the trial court made the following remarks and ruled

in favor of Kimbrough:

[To Rosita:] Ma’am, I can’t say enough good things about you. . . . But at the end of the day, this child has a parent and children belong with their parents or suitable, of course, and, yes, this gentleman may have not did what we would like to see preferably with regard to raising a child to date, but he is still her parent and I don’t think he has disqualified himself as being a parent to the child. So I am ordering that the—he be given custody of the child.

The trial court further stated that the effective date of Kimbrough’s custody would be in early

January “because of the school year” but that the court was also “in favor of giving [Rosita]

more time with the child and transitioning into this situation” and that it was going to leave it

up to the parties to “come up with a visitation schedule or agreement between” them regarding

Rosita’s possession periods.

On December 20, 2021, before the trial court signed its final order on review

before us, Rosita filed a motion to stay the court’s ruling pending its entry of an order and a

motion to reconsider asking the court to “reopen the evidence,” attaching affidavits from “some

of the witnesses who were unable to testify at trial” due to the court’s decision to not hear them.

4 In her motion to reconsider, Rosita argued that the “fit parent presumption” does not apply in this

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Rosita Johnson v. Raymond Nicholas Kimbrough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosita-johnson-v-raymond-nicholas-kimbrough-texapp-2023.