Court Opinion

ID: 8407044
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-01 10:10:27.816842+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:47:23.370614
License: Public Domain

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

                                     NO. 03-22-00327-CV

                                        J. G., Appellant

                                                v.

               Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellee

              FROM THE 250TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY
   NO. D-1-FM-20-005673, THE HONORABLE CATHERINE MAUZY, JUDGE PRESIDING

                            MEMORANDUM OPINION

               J.G. (Father) appeals from the trial court’s decree terminating his parental rights

to his two children, Pedro and Ilana.1 See Tex. Fam. Code. § 161.001(b). Father challenges the

trial court’s denial of his motion for continuance and its in-chambers, non-transcribed interview

of Pedro. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s termination decree.

                    EVIDENTIARY AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

               On October 14, 2020, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

filed its “Original Petition in a Suit Affecting the Parent-Child Relationship—Termination

Petition And / Or Managing Conservatorship.” In the affidavit supporting its request for an

ex parte order appointing it as the children’s temporary managing conservator (TMC), the

Department alleged that the children had been living with their maternal great-aunt, who was no

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          For the children’s privacy, we will refer to them by aliases and to their family members
by their relationships to them or by aliases. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8.
longer able to care for them; that no parent was able to pick up the children or agree to a

placement; that Father was suspected of using illegal drugs, including methamphetamine, and

neglectfully supervising the children, including leaving them unattended; and that the children’s

residence was in poor condition without working electricity and was known for drug activity.2

When the suit was filed, the children were fourteen and nine. The trial court issued a fourteen-

day ex parte and show-cause order that same day, appointing the Department as the children’s

TMC, and later extended the ex parte order by the parties’ agreement until November 18, when

the first contested adversary hearing occurred. At the hearing, the Department abandoned its

request to be appointed TMC, the TMC order expired on its own terms, and the trial court signed

an order under Section 264.203 of the Family Code, containing the requisite findings and settings

for a case brought pursuant to Chapter 264 of the Family Code (a court-ordered services (COS)

case) and ordering Father to complete specified services and requirements such as drug testing,

therapy, and a psychological examination. See id. §§ 264.201–.207. The children were placed

with a paternal aunt, and Father was permitted unsupervised visitation. The trial court signed an

“Order Appointing Parent Attorney” for Father on November 23, 2020, and the same date signed

orders appointing an attorney ad litem and guardian ad litem for the children.

                On January 4, 2021, the trial court conducted a hearing, and on January 19 signed

an order requiring Father to continue to participate in his court-ordered services and assigning

all managing-conservator rights and duties to him. On March 12, after a review hearing, the

trial court ordered Father’s continued participation in services provided by the Department.

However, on March 24, 2021, the Department filed an affidavit in support of extraordinary relief

asking the court to remove the children from Father’s custody and again appoint the Department

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           The children’s mother passed away in 2017.

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as TMC, alleging that Father had recently tested positive for methamphetamine on a hair-

strand test and had not complied with prior drug-testing requirements. On April 12, the court

conducted an adversary hearing at which it appointed the Department as TMC of Pedro and

Ilana. It issued a scheduling order, setting various hearings and identifying the dismissal date

under Family Code Section 263.401(a) as October 18, 2021. See id. § 263.401 (providing for

automatic dismissal of termination suit if trial court has not commenced trial on merits or granted

180-day extension by first Monday after first anniversary of “the date the court rendered a

temporary order appointing the [D]epartment as temporary managing conservator”).

               The court conducted a status hearing on May 25, 2021, and the status-hearing

order signed after that hearing identified the dismissal date as April 18, 2022. In its August 31,

2021 “Order Granting Extension of Dismissal Date,” the trial court set jury and non-jury dates

for final trial on the merits and “extended” the dismissal date to the same date previously

identified in the May 25 order as the dismissal date: April 18, 2022. The order recites that at a

recent hearing “an extension came on for consideration,” but the record contains no extension

request by any party.

               On September 28, 2021, the Department served all parties with a “Notice of

Setting” for trial on the merits, which included two non-jury dates—March 21 and April 4,

2022—and two jury dates—March 28 and April 11, 2022. On December 22, 2021, the trial court

signed a “Permanency Hearing Order before Final Hearing,” again identifying the dismissal date

as April 18, 2022, noting the same four trial settings set out in the Department’s “Notice of

Setting,” and setting the next permanency hearing for April 12, 2022.

               On March 18, 2022, Father’s counsel filed a motion for withdrawal and

substitution of counsel, which set forth the same four previously noticed jury and non-jury trial

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settings, and which the trial court granted that same day. On March 28, Father’s new counsel

filed on his behalf an original answer and counter-petition. The pleading did not contain a jury

demand. On April 7, 2022, the Department served all parties with another Notice of Setting for

trial on the merits, including one jury date (April 11, 2022) and one non-jury date (April 18,

2022). On April 14, Father’s attorney filed a motion for continuance, reciting that the case was

set for a non-jury trial on April 18, that the dismissal date was April 18, and that Father “believed

that a jury demand had been filed in this case” and informed his new counsel of such belief on

April 14. In the motion, Father requested a continuance so that his new counsel could “become

more familiar with the facts and history of the case” and so that “a jury demand can be filed and

a jury of his peers can be convened.” No jury demand appears in the clerk’s record.

               On April 18, the day of the bench trial, Pedro’s attorney ad litem filed a motion

for the court to confer with the child, reciting that “parental rights and possession / access to the

child in this case is contested” and that Pedro was fifteen. The motion requested that the attorney

ad litem be present at the interview but made no mention of a record being made. At the

beginning of trial, the court addressed both the ad litem’s motion and Father’s motion for a

continuance, granting the ad litem’s motion and denying Father’s. After the two-day bench trial,

the court rendered judgment terminating Father’s parental rights to both children.           See id.

§ 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E), (O), (b)(2). After timely requesting findings of fact and conclusions of

law, Father perfected this appeal.

                                          DISCUSSION

Motion for continuance

               In his first issue, Father contends that by “miscalculating the dismissal deadline,”

the trial court wrongly denied him his “right to a jury trial.” He argues that the trial court

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conflated the dismissal deadlines in the COS case and the termination case and thus concluded

that it could not extend the dismissal deadline to accommodate his motion for continuance.

See id. § 263.401(b) (permitting trial court to extend automatic dismissal date prescribed in

Subsection (a) for up to 180 days if it finds that “extraordinary circumstances necessitate the

child remaining in the temporary managing conservatorship of the [D]epartment” and that such

appointment is in child’s best interest). He explains that, while the trial court’s August 31, 2021

order purported to “extend” the dismissal deadline to April 18, 2022, such date did not constitute

an extension but merely the ordinary automatic dismissal date under Subsection (a) of Section

263.401 because the April 12, 2021 order appointing the Department as the children’s TMC

was the operative order, not the previous order appointing the Department as TMC that expired

on November 18, 2020, by operation of law. However, we need not determine which order

appointing the Department as TMC was the operative one for purposes of calculating the

automatic dismissal date and any potential extension because, as explained below, we conclude

that regardless of the dismissal date the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Father’s

motion for continuance. See Villegas v. Carter, 711 S.W.2d 624, 626 (Tex. 1986) (noting that

appellate courts review ruling on motion for continuance for abuse of discretion); R.J.R. v. Texas

Dep’t of Fam. & Protective Servs., No. 03-21-00245-CV, 2021 WL 4775570, at *2 (Tex. App.—

Austin Oct. 13, 2021, no pet.) (mem. op.) (same). Moreover, neither Father’s original attorney

nor his substituting counsel ever filed a jury demand—timely or untimely—with an answer,

counter-petition, affidavit of inability to pay costs, or as a separate pleading.

               While Father frames his issue on appeal as the “wrongful denial of his right to a

jury trial,” the procedural vehicle he employed in the trial court was a motion for continuance,

and we therefore review the trial court’s challenged ruling under the standards of review

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applicable to such motions. A motion for continuance may not be granted except for sufficient

cause supported by affidavit, by the parties’ consent, or by operation of law. See Tex. R. Civ.

P. 251. When a motion for continuance does not comply with Rule 251, “reviewing courts

generally presume that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion.” Sheen

v. Sheen, No. 03-18-00358-CV, 2019 WL 2554570 at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin June 21, 2019,

no pet.) (mem. op.) (citing Villegas, 711 S.W.2d at 626). Father’s motion was not supported by

affidavit and was not granted by operation of law. Furthermore, the Department and children’s

attorneys ad litem opposed it. We thus presume that the trial court did not abuse its discretion

in denying Father’s motion, and we will not disturb the trial court’s action unless the record

discloses a clear abuse of discretion. See Villegas, 711 S.W.2d at 626.

                Father’s former attorney had notice, since September 28, 2021, of the earliest

possible jury setting of March 28, 2022 and the latest possible non-jury setting of April 11 but

never filed a jury demand. Cf. Tex. R. Civ. P. 216(a) (“No jury trial shall be had in any civil

suit, unless a written request for a jury trial is filed with the clerk of the court within a reasonable

time before the date set for trial of the cause on the non-jury docket, but not less than thirty

days in advance.”). That attorney’s motion for withdrawal and substitution of counsel recited the

pending non-jury and jury settings. Father’s new attorney, substituted in on March 18, 2022,

also had notice of those settings but did not file a jury demand, even untimely. This Court has

held that a party’s failure to timely file a jury demand in a parental-rights-termination case, when

her counsel has been aware of the trial settings throughout the case, is not—without more—

sufficient to support a complaint that a trial court abused its discretion in denying a motion for

continuance to allow the filing of a jury demand. See K.J. v. Texas Dep’t of Fam. & Protective

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Servs., No. 03-18-00556-CV, 2018 WL 6816795, at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec. 28, 2018,

pet. denied) (mem. op.).

                Finally—even assuming that the automatic dismissal date could have been

extended in compliance with Section 263.401—Father did not request an extension beyond the

April 18, 2022 “deadline,” as his counsel referred to the date, or attempt to demonstrate the

existence of extraordinary circumstances or that such extension would be in the children’s best

interests. See Tex. Fam. Code § 263.401(b). In light of the information before the trial court, the

absence of a jury demand on file or an extension request, the objections by the Department and

the children’s respective attorneys ad litem to a continuance, and Father’s failure to support

his motion for continuance with an affidavit, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in denying Father’s motion.

In-chambers interview

                In his second issue, Father argues that the trial court violated his due-process

rights and abused its discretion by interviewing Pedro in chambers, per the motion of the child’s

attorney ad litem, without providing Father a record of the interview or the opportunity to cross-

examine or rebut the child’s statements. Family Code Section 153.009 (“Interview of Child in

Chambers”) provides, “In a nonjury trial or at a hearing, on the application of a party . . . or the

attorney ad litem for the child, the court shall interview in chambers a child 12 years of age or

older,” and, “On the motion of a party . . . or the attorney ad litem for the child . . . the court shall

cause a record of the interview to be made when the child is 12 years of age or older . . . .” Tex.

Fam. Code § 153.009(a), (f).

                Father admits that he “may have failed to preserve this complaint” because he did

not object to the interview, file a response to the motion, request that a transcript be made of the

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interview, request to be present during the interview, or raise the complaint in a motion for new

trial. Section 153.009 permits any party to make application for any of the relief set forth in that

statute, and the trial court’s interview of a child “does not diminish the discretion of the court in

determining the best interests of a child.” Id. Nonetheless, Father contends that the trial court,

“in the interest of justice,” “should have afforded [him] the opportunity to know what his son

stated” in the interview.

               The record reflects that Father has, indeed, waived the issue because he did not

object to the interview or otherwise raise the issue below, see Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); Smuts v.

Caracheo, No. 03-20-00559-CV, 2021 WL 3743831, at *5 (Tex. App.—Austin Aug. 25, 2021,

no pet.) (mem. op.), and the case he cites for support of his position is thus not on point,

cf. Gabel v. Gabel-Koehne, 649 S.W.3d 590, 597–98 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2022, no

pet.) (concluding that, by raising issue in motion for new trial, appellant preserved complaint that

no record was made of in-chambers interview despite trial court’s prior contrary representations

because it was appellant’s first opportunity to object after learning about such alleged error).

Because Father waived error as to this complaint, we overrule his second issue.

                                         CONCLUSION

               Having overruled Father’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s final decree

terminating Father’s parental rights to Pedro and Ilana.

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                                            __________________________________________
                                            Thomas J. Baker, Justice

Before Justices Goodwin, Baker, and Kelly

Affirmed

Filed: October 26, 2022

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