Court Opinion

ID: 9964870
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-05-01 06:10:47.234666+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:44.880436
License: Public Domain

Concurring Opinion Filed April 25, 2024

                                    S  In The
                            Court of Appeals
                     Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                               No. 05-23-00392-CV

          IN THE INTEREST OF C.J., P.J., AND M.J., CHILDREN

               On Appeal from the 469th Judicial District Court
                            Collin County, Texas
                   Trial Court Cause No. 469-54733-2018

                          CONCURRING OPINION

             Before Justices Partida-Kipness, Pedersen, III, and Garcia
                   Concurring Opinion by Justice Pedersen, III

      I write separately to raise my concerns about the practical effect of our legally

required disposition. So far as I know, Texas Family Code § 153.009 establishes a

unique procedure in Texas law. When applicable, the court (as opposed to a party)

shall interview in chambers a child 12 years of age or older and may interview in

chambers a child under 12 years of age. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 153.009(a).

The child is neither placed under oath nor subject to cross-examination. The rules of

evidence do not apply. Unlike the rest of the proceeding, this interview is not open

to the public. The statutory justification for this procedural unicorn is so that the

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child may advise the court as to the child’s wishes as to conservatorship or as to the

person who shall have the exclusive right to determine the child’s primary

residence. See id. Texas Family Code § 153.009(b) authorizes the court to interview

the child in chambers to determine the child’s wishes as to possession, access, or any

other issue in the suit affecting the parent–child relationship. See id. § 153.009(b).

A record must be made upon request when the child is 12 years of age or older, and

it shall be made part of the record of the case. See id. § 153.009(f).

      Formality is a necessary feature of our judicial process, but it often makes

witnesses, especially children, uncomfortable. Our law reflects conflicted opinions

about the proper role of children in litigation. In family law litigation between private

parties, children’s participation in court tends to be infrequent, and it would be

uncommon for a child to give sworn testimony. However, that norm is exactly

opposite in child welfare proceedings initiated by the government—there, the

Family Code mandates that all children must appear in court and participate in every

permanency hearing unless the court specifically excuses the child’s attendance. See

id. § 263.302.

      The in-chambers interview process had the potential to offer a more sensitive

alternative to calling a child to the witness stand to provide traditional sworn

testimony. However, the law now holds that the closed interview amounts to

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testimony and evidence, yet is subject to none of the procedural protections afforded

to traditional testimony.

      Sending a child into a black-robed stranger’s office to talk about family

dynamics (often to explain which parent he or she likes better) is a fraught enterprise

under the best of circumstances. Making a record increases formality, if only to

require speakers to avoid talking over one another. Making a record also ensures that

the parents will know everything that was said by the child, often placing the child

in an impossible position. Our opinion acknowledges that the parents could have

told the children enough about their financial situations for the children to reveal a

change in circumstances to the judge. I worry this might have the effect of

incentivizing parents to tell children inadmissible information about the parents’

conflict, in the hopes that a child will reveal the information to the judge outside of

the rules of the courtroom. The fact that the interview is occurring guarantees an

existing atmosphere of discord between the two people (who should be) closest to

the child. Texas law, as construed by this panel, now requires a party to demand a

record or hazard waiver of appellate review of the family court’s judgment.

      The Texas Legislature may consider ameliorative action to address

meritorious concerns about the effect of current Texas law. I might suggest defining

the issues to which the interview may be legally relevant. For example, a child

interview might be excluded as competent testimony or evidence related to child

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support, characterization of property, or a just and right disposition of the marital

estate. One could credibly argue that children are simply inappropriate sources of

“evidence” related to these matters.

       Texas statutes are the product of the policy preferences of the people of the

State of Texas, as manifested by the finely crafted process of bicameralism and

presentment. It is beyond our authority to deviate from the statute’s plain language.

I am concerned that our decision will have practical consequences that a future Texas

Legislature may well address.

230392f.p05                                 /Bill Pedersen, III/
                                            BILL PEDERSEN, III
                                            JUSTICE

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