Court Opinion

ID: 3072827
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 00:51:02.319289+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:50:08.617074
License: Public Domain

In The

                                Court of Appeals
                    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
                                ________________

                               NO. 09-12-00464-CV
                                ________________

            IN THE INTEREST OF A.K.M., J.D.M., AND D.M.M.

__________________________________________________________________

                On Appeal from the 252nd District Court
                       Jefferson County, Texas
                     Trial Cause No. F-201,904-H
__________________________________________________________________

                          MEMORANDUM OPINION

      Appellant, the father of the minor children A.K.M., J.D.M., and D.M.M.,

appeals the trial court’s modification order in a suit affecting the parent-child

relationship and the denial of his motion to recuse the trial judge. Appellant raises

ten issues for our consideration. We affirm the trial court’s order denying the

motion to recuse, and we affirm the trial court’s modification order in part and

reverse and remand the order in part for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion.

                                         1
                           FACTUAL BACKGROUND

      Appellant M. and the children’s mother, appellee W., 1 divorced on October

27, 2008. In 2010, M. filed a petition to modify the parent-child relationship. In his

petition, M. sought appointment as sole managing conservator of the children or,

alternatively, appointment as joint managing conservator with the right to

determine the children’s primary residence, as well as child support from W. M.

contended that W. had attempted to alienate him from the children, parented the

children inappropriately, failed to provide proper medical care for the children,

failed to co-parent the children with him, and that W. suffered from Munchausen

syndrome by proxy, “otherwise known as a histrionic personality disorder.”

According to M., W. had falsely insisted to mental health professionals and school

officials that J.D.M. and D.M.M. suffered from Asperger’s syndrome. The judge of

the 279th District Court, where the divorce action was litigated, eventually recused

himself from the case, and the case was reassigned to the 252nd District Court,

although the appellate record does not reflect the precise means by which the

reassignment was accomplished.

      W. filed a counter-petition, in which she sought appointment as sole

managing conservator of the children and contended that “[t]he parties have been

      1
        To protect the children’s privacy, we will refer to the appellant as “M.” and
to the appellee as “W.”
                                          2
unable to communicate in a manner conducive to joint managing conservatorship.”

W. asserted that M. had exposed the children to hostility and alienation against her

by filing “constant and continuing litigation[,]” contacting law enforcement

officers despite the lack of an emergency, having trespass and cease and desist

warnings issued that forbade W. from his residence, “mounting a letter[-]writing

campaign to medical and psychological providers for the children accusing her of

harming the children[,]” sending private emails between the parties to other

individuals, and causing a complaint to be made against W. with the Texas

Department of Family and Protective Services (“CPS”). W. further alleged that M.

had demonstrated an inability to maintain a positive relationship with her “that is

conducive to joint managing conservatorship,” exposed the children to the

overnight stays of his sexual partners, and “exposed the children to unknown and

unchecked individuals during the operation of another’s business” in his residence.

W. requested that M. exercise possession and access pursuant to the standard

possession order “if and only if recommended by the court[-]appointed mental

health professionals[.]”

      The custody case was tried to the bench in January 2012. According to M.,

the trial judge sent M. and W. to Dr. Michelle Douget, who advised the trial court

that M. and W. should cooperate and agree regarding the treatment of the children

                                         3
and recommended that M. and W. have psychological testing for personality traits,

as well as participate in ongoing therapy. M. testified that Douget found he did not

suffer from any mental abnormalities.

      Clinical psychologist Dr. Dan Roberts testified the trial judge asked him to

evaluate M. and W., and that he interviewed both M. and W. for several hours and

asked them to complete two personality inventories. Roberts also testified that he

reviewed a report from Dr. Timothy Bohan, who the trial court had previously

appointed as an expert to evaluate the children. 2 Roberts also testified that he

talked to all three of the children, spoke to several people about M. and W., and

reviewed the children’s medical, pharmacy, counseling, school, and other records.

Roberts also spoke to two of the children’s teachers.

      Roberts recommended that the trial court consider increasing M.’s

possession time with the children, and he explained that the two older children

wanted more time with their father. Roberts also recommended that the court

consider appointing a parenting facilitator rather than a parenting coordinator

because a facilitator is permitted to testify concerning the parents’ progress, which

      2
        Although the trial court stated that it did not intend to consider any of the
opinions Bohan offered with respect to M. or W., the trial court cited Bohan’s
report as evidence in support of its findings of fact. In the report, Bohan stated that
he found some of M.’s responses during the evaluation troubling and indicative of
unusual thought processes.
                                          4
would allow the case to proceed and expose the children to less conflict. In

addition, Roberts testified that prior to the divorce, M. had suffered a bout of major

depression, during which he was delusional. According to Roberts, M. is capable

of making medical and educational decisions for the children “up to a point[,]” but

Roberts explained, “I’m not certain that that’s a capacity or a willingness that is

stable based on his history.” Roberts stated that M. “should have a voice” in

making such decisions.

      In Roberts’s psychological assessment of M., which was based upon his

examination of M. on November 16, 2011, and was introduced into evidence, he

concluded that M. had no “significant current problems” with depression, anxiety,

psychosis, stress management, or anger management, and that M. was currently

participating in counseling to help him manage stress. Roberts later noted in his

assessment that M. was “experiencing symptoms of anxiety and depression

associated with the aftermath of his divorce and his concern about the children’s

welfare[,]” and that M. had “obsessive tendencies, competitiveness, unusual ideas,

and a degree of inflexibility under stressful conditions.” Roberts’s assessment

concluded that “[o]n the whole [M.] appears to be a capable and concerned

parent.”

                                          5
      At the conclusion of the custody trial, the trial court issued temporary orders

awarding W. the exclusive right to consent to medical, dental, psychiatric, and

psychological treatment for the children, as well as the exclusive right to make

decisions concerning their educational needs, and ordered that M. “will not have

any contact with any teacher or medical provider or evaluator.” In a second order,

the trial court ordered that M. and W. would remain joint managing conservators of

the children, a behavior plan should be developed for D.M.M. through the public

school district, any appropriate therapy for D.M.M. shall begin immediately, the

parties shall not publicly discuss the children’s medical issues except with medical

providers or teachers, and the parties shall not discuss medical issues with the

children. The trial court further ordered that M. would have possession of the

children pursuant to the expanded standard possession order “as set out in the

Texas Family Code[,]” A.K.M. and J.D.M. shall have one extra overnight with M.

if they so choose, the parties shall utilize an internet calendaring system with the

amicus attorney for the children’s extracurricular activities, and both M. and W.

shall participate separately in therapy. The trial court set the cause for final hearing

on June 4, 2012.

       In April 2012, M. filed an emergency motion for protection and

appointment of an attorney ad litem, in which he alleged that A.K.M. had made an

                                           6
outcry of sexual abuse against W., and the trial court conducted an emergency

hearing on the motion on April 10 and 11, 2012. At the emergency hearing, M.

testified that he had been exercising visitation with the children since the trial

court’s temporary orders, and he described A.K.M as “in a state of full[-] scale

meltdown” and indicated that A.K.M.’s grades were poor and she was very angry

with her mother and grandmother. According to M., A.K.M. indicated that she

wanted to live with her father, and “she’s afraid to go back to her mother’s.” M.

testified that J.D.M. was also angry that since the temporary orders were entered,

M. had not been participating in his schooling, and he also testified that D.M.M.

was regressing with potty training.

      M. explained that A.K.M.’s condition had deteriorated significantly during

the last month, and she had been “near hysterical[.]” According to M., A.K.M.

made an outcry of sexual abuse against W. to M.’s girlfriend B., and A.K.M. then

continued her outcry to M. M. testified that he had not suspected any abuse and

was shocked by it. M. explained that he took A.K.M. to the police department, and

A.K.M. wrote a statement. M. subsequently received a call from Detective Mark

Hoge, who asked M. to bring B. and A.K.M. to the police station. M. testified that

A.K.M. was interviewed for about two and a half hours, and the investigating

officer also interviewed M. and B. According to M., both Detective Hoge and

                                        7
Sarah Miller from the Lufkin CPS office told M. that CPS would arrive at noon to

do a Priority One removal and have the children professionally interviewed. M.

testified that he wanted the trial court to make him “sole managing conservator

with all powers” during the pendency of the investigation, and that W. have no

visitation during that time.

       The trial court asked the amicus attorney to contact Detective Hoge and

Miller. The trial judge personally questioned both Hoge and Miller on the record

after they were sworn, and both Hoge and Miller denied telling M. that CPS

intended to remove the children. The trial judge then announced his intention to

interview A.K.M. with a court reporter present, and the record reflects that the trial

judge extensively interviewed A.K.M., who was thirteen years old at the time, in

chambers. The reporter’s record of the interview encompasses seventy-nine pages.

The time stamps in the record of the hearing, although less than a model of clarity,

reflect that the interview apparently began at 1:18 p.m. and continued until 2:44

p.m.

       When M. returned to the stand, W.’s counsel asked the court to admonish M.

of “his Fifth Amendment rights for perjury.” W.’s counsel asked M. if he testified

that CPS and the police told him that the children were going to be removed, and

M. testified, “[o]bviously I misspoke or misunderstood” and was “in error.” M.

                                          8
testified that he was on medication for weight loss and acid reflux, but was not

under the influence of drugs or alcohol. M. testified that he thought he recalled

Detective Hoge telling him the case would be treated as a Priority One, but that his

memory was apparently incorrect, and he attributed his faulty recollection to the

fear he had experienced since A.K.M.’s outcry.

      W.’s counsel asked M. whether he had discussed the case with K., a blogger

who M. (an attorney) represents, and M. responded that he had done so, but not in

detail, and M. indicated that he feared K.’s issues with the trial judge would be

taken out on M. M. testified that he had told A.K.M. to tell the truth when she

spoke to the trial judge. W.’s counsel asked M. whether he had anything to do

with “reports in various newspapers and news media . . . about what a bad judge . .

. Layne Walker is[,]” and M. denied having any involvement with those reports or

telling his children that the judge was bad, crazy, or mean. M. testified that he

showed the children one of the trial court’s temporary orders because they were

upset because he was not attending parent-teacher conferences. M. denied asking a

local reporter to publish a story concerning W.’s alleged romantic relationship with

a political figure, but M. admitted that he had discussed the alleged relationship

with the reporter. M. testified that he took A.K.M. on an overnight trip to “have

some fun, to put it out of her mind” after A.K.M. made the outcry. M. denied

                                         9
scheduling the trip as a reward. M. also explained that he “was concerned if [the

outcry] was fabrication that [A.K.M.] needed substantial help.” M. testified that he

had repeatedly asked A.K.M. whether she was sure her allegations were true, and

told her not to say things just because she wanted to live with him. At the

conclusion of the day’s testimony, the trial judge also announced that the record of

his interview with A.K.M. was sealed and “nobody will ask for a copy of it

because you are not going to get it.”

      M. was not present when the proceedings resumed the next morning. M.’s

counsel objected to going forward without M. but did not otherwise object to the

amicus attorney testifying. The amicus attorney, Raquel West, testified that she

had served as an amicus attorney in the case for approximately ten months, and she

had interacted with the children, M., and W. on many occasions.

      According to West, M. called her because he believed he could not attend

one of J.D.M.’s school activities, and West advised M. “that was not the order or

the spirit of the order of the Court[,]” and she testified that she had also spoken

with the trial judge about the issue, and West advised M. that the only restriction

he had was “contacting teachers and medical providers.” West testified that M.

indicated he understood, and M. attended the activity. West explained that she

heard M.’s testimony that he believed he could not be involved with the children’s

                                        10
schooling, including reading, proofing, or approving their homework, and West

testified that she found M.’s testimony incredible and “quite disturbing.”

According to West, J.D.M. and A.K.M. had both been exercising their right to

have an additional day with their father, and A.K.M. “is doing really poorly in

school in several subjects, not just one.”

      West testified that she heard M. say that he was not helping or following

through with checking whether A.K.M. had homework, and West stated, “I truly

believe he was potentially trying to sabotage her school and her grades in an effort

to show that because [W.] got the educational decision-making that he could . . .

show . . . how poorly [A.K.M.] has done.” West also explained that M.’s testimony

about the children being upset about the trial court’s ruling confused her “because

they actually got what they wanted and that was an extra day with their dad.” West

opined that the children should not have seen a change in their daily lives, and that

it was inappropriate for M. to leave a court order out for them to read.

      West testified, “I find . . . that these children are damaged because of him. I

think they are continuing to be damaged even more so since the order. He is taking

out his frustrations in a very conniving way on these children.” In addition, West

opined that M. has permanently changed the direction of A.K.M.’s life, and she

recommended that A.K.M. have intensive psychotherapy. West testified that

                                             11
A.K.M. has been “brainwashed to some extent” and that M. taught her “to be

manipulative to get what you want.” West also opined that most of A.K.M.’s

outcry was false and was promoted by M. West opined that with respect to

A.K.M., “any access to her father needs to be extremely limited and probably

supervised.” West further opined that all of the children could deteriorate under the

circumstances. West testified that A.K.M. is willing to sacrifice herself to protect

her father.

      M. arrived during cross-examination of West. When M. retook the stand for

additional cross-examination, he explained that he passed out on the stand the

previous day and did not have full memory of everything that occurred. M.

explained that taking weight loss medication, only eating a breakfast bar all day,

and dehydration contributed to an anxiety attack. M. denied telling A.K.M. “to do

this[;]” i.e., make an outcry. M. testified, “I always thought from the beginning,

2008, that there would be a relentless attempt to terminate my rights.” When asked

whether he contacted K. after leaving the courtroom, M. responded that K. visited

him at the hospital, and that he spoke with K. that morning and told him he was

scared. M. testified that he did not believe he committed perjury and did not

intentionally lie. When asked whether he should have control of the children when

                                         12
he is under such distress that he was not in control of his faculties, M. testified, “As

I sit here right now, no, I’m too upset.”

      At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court stated as follows:

             I just want an entire copy of this transcript turned over to the
      Jefferson County District Attorney’s office and I want Mr. Maness to
      have his staff or whoever he chooses to review this for perjury and/or
      aggravated perjury. I do claim to be an expert in that area, but I am
      not going to make that decision. If Mr. Maness’s Grand Jury is not
      willing to take a look at it[,] I will be willing to convene a special
      Grand Jury for the sole purpose of taking a look at this.
             . . . I am going to order [M.] to cease and desist from relying on
      hearsay in his life.

           . . . [M.] will have no contact with these children of any nature
      whatsoever until further order of the Court.

      On April 11, 2012, the trial court signed a temporary order that removed the

children from both M. and W., forbade M. and W. from having contact with the

children, and temporarily appointed the children’s maternal grandmother as their

sole managing conservator. On April 19, 2012, the trial court signed an order

denying M.’s motion for protective order and appointment of an attorney ad litem.

In that order, the trial court found that M.’s “acts and manipulations . . . have

placed all of the children at immediate and significant risk of danger to their

physical and emotional welfare and caused the children to be in immediate danger

in [his presence].” The court further found that M. had not acted in the children’s

best interest, and that the children’s present circumstances would significantly
                                            13
impair their physical health and emotional welfare. The trial court removed all

three children from M.’s custody and presence “for the children’s own protection.”

Additionally, the order provided that the provisions in the temporary order of April

10 with regard to W. would remain “until confirmation has been received by this

Court that [CPS] ha[s] ruled out the allegations of abuse against [W.].”

Furthermore, the trial court ordered that upon receipt of such confirmation, W.

“shall have unlimited and unrestricted possession and access of the children subject

of this suit.”

       On April 18, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on W.’s motion to enter

orders. The hearing was scheduled because M. had filed a petition for writ of

mandamus with this Court after the hearing on the emergency motion, and the

purpose of the hearing apparently was to provide this Court with an order to review

in the mandamus proceeding. M. was not present at the hearing. At the hearing,

M.’s counsel acknowledged that the amicus had sent a letter stating that CPS and

the police did not intend to proceed with any allegations of abuse against W. The

trial judge stated,

       I want to make sure that the record is clear as well. . . .
       Correspondence that has been made or phone calls that have been
       made has been from the investigating authorities to the Court. I have
       not been involved in constant conversation. . . . [A]t no time has the
       Court involved itself in the investigation.

                                        14
At one point during the proceedings, when W.’s counsel and the trial judge were

questioning M.’s counsel about the basis for his objections to the proposed order,

the following exchange occurred between M.’s counsel, W.’s counsel, and the trial

judge:

         [W.’s counsel]:    Did you hear . . . [M.]’s response to the question
         when I asked him if he was capable of taking care of the children and
         on the second day he said he wasn’t capable of taking care of himself
         right now and no, he wasn’t capable of taking care of the children?

         [M.’s counsel]:     I heard him say at this point at this time, which is
         [with] reference to his present condition.

         [W.’s counsel]:     So, now, you are making the objection to the Court
         that there was no evidence upon which the Judge can base the ruling
         that the children shouldn’t be around [M.] for their own protection?

         [M.’s counsel]:    Because he was not capable of taking care of the
         children at that point is not grounds for taking away the children
         permanently from him, which this paragraph does.

         THE COURT:         Can I just ask for my protection, is there anything
         now in the record that suggests otherwise?

         [M.’s counsel]:    That the children should not be taken away?

         THE COURT:         The only evidence that I have before me is [M.]
         saying that he is not in a position to take care of them. [M.] has
         voluntarily absen[t]ed himself from the proceeding today. . . . Is there
         anything in the record from the day he testified to that that has
         changed?

M.’s counsel objected “to being put under examination.”

                                           15
      W.’s counsel’s examination of M.’s counsel continued on for dozens of

pages of the reporter’s record, and the trial judge also made comments to M.’s

counsel and questioned M.’s counsel during the examination. The trial judge also

commented that he believed M. made a false report of abuse and “spent an

extended period of time brainwashing [A.K.M.] and spending days rewarding her

for her conduct. . . . [U]nder section 153.013 I find that [M.] definitely made a

false report of abuse. He encouraged it. He assisted it.”

      In June 2012, M. filed a motion to recuse the trial judge. M. asserted in the

motion that the trial judge’s impartiality “may reasonably be questioned.” See Tex.

R. Civ. P. 18b(b)(1). Specifically, M. contended that after the custody trial in

January 2012, K. had published articles which were critical of the trial judge and

had filed a complaint against the trial judge with the State Commission on Judicial

Conduct. M. complained in the motion to recuse that the trial court ordered that

neither M. nor W. have access to the children, “even though there was no

complaint filed against [M.] and no affirmative relief asking that [M.] be denied

access to the children.” In addition, M. complained that the trial judge had ex parte

communications, and he pointed to, among other things, the trial court’s comment

at the April 18, 2012, hearing that “It’s been reported to me that since [A.K.M.]

has been returned that she’s making great strides. Her grades are back in order.

                                          16
Everything is in good shape.” M. also complained of the trial judge’s sealing of

the record of his interview with A.K.M., as well as the judge permitting W.’s

counsel to call the amicus attorney as a witness to testify about “highly contested

issues.” In addition, M. alleged that although no complaint had been filed against

M. and no affirmative relief had been requested concerning denying M. access to

the children, the trial judge sua sponte ordered that neither W. nor M. have access

to the children.

      On June 26, 2012, Judge Olen Underwood conducted a hearing on M.’s

motion to recuse. M.’s counsel testified that the trial judge summoned an attorney

for the City of Beaumont to bring the investigative report concerning A.K.M.’s

outcry to chambers, but never made the file part of the record. In addition, M.’s

counsel testified that during the first day of the hearing, the trial judge commented

to Miller and Hoge about the chance they had to “visit in [c]hambers,” and only the

trial judge questioned Miller and Hoge; the attorneys were not permitted to do so.

M.’s counsel also testified that communications occurred between the trial judge,

Hoge, and Miller on the second day of trial “either by way of telephone or text.”

According to M.’s counsel, the trial judge also received a telephone call from W.’s

mother, and the Court invited the parties to listen to his side of the conversation,

but the parties could not hear what W.’s mother was saying.

                                         17
      M.’s counsel also testified concerning the trial judge’s statements that he

intended to refer the matter to the District Attorney’s office to determine whether

M. had committed perjury or aggravated perjury and that he would convene his

own special grand jury if the District Attorney’s office declined to investigate M.

According to counsel, no party had testified that M. had encouraged A.K.M. to

make false allegations of sexual abuse against W., nor was there any documentary

evidence so indicating.

      M.’s counsel testified that at the April 18 hearing on entry of orders, he was

on the stand for approximately three hours, and both the trial judge and opposing

counsel “aggressively questioned” him concerning a petition for writ of mandamus

he had filed. M.’s counsel testified that a “pervasive bias . . . occurred in that

hearing and questioning of me and to the point of insulting me, insulting my client,

stating that getting the truth out of me was as difficult as extracting a molar without

Novocaine. On numerous occasions saying that [M.] is not capable of telling the

truth.”

      M.’s counsel also testified that the trial judge “repeatedly approached

[A.K.M.] trying to get her to recant her testimony” during the in-chambers

interview, and he explained that even after opposing counsel pointed out that

pursuant to statute, an in-chambers interview of the child shall be made a part of

                                          18
the record, the trial judge still declined to provide the transcript of the interview

and instead sealed it. Counsel testified that A.K.M. never recanted her statements

during the April interview.

      K. testified that he owns a political consulting group that publishes an

internet periodical. When M.’s counsel asked him whether he had published

anything on the internet that was critical of the trial judge, W.’s counsel objected

on the grounds of relevancy, and Judge Underwood sustained the objection. M.’s

counsel asked K. whether he had filed a complaint against the trial judge with the

Judicial Commission, and Judge Underwood again sustained W.’s counsel’s

relevancy objection despite M.’s counsel’s argument that “animosity between [K.]

and . . . Judge Layne Walker has created a problem in our case because the Judge

perceives [M.] as being a close friend of [K.].”

      Miller testified that she had a conversation with the trial judge to which she

and the trial judge were the only participants. According to Miller, the trial judge

asked her if she was investigating the case, and then she answered the same

question again when he posed it to her under oath in the courtroom. M.’s counsel

rested at the conclusion of Miller’s testimony. Judge Underwood denied the

motion to recuse.

                                         19
      On September 14, 2012, W. filed a “request for additional relief in light of

evidence since the date of trial and brief in support[.]” In her request, W. discussed

M.’s testimony at the emergency hearing concerning A.K.M.’s outcry and his

testimony that CPS had told him a removal of the children was imminent, as well

as the CPS caseworker’s testimony that CPS had not told M. that a removal was

imminent. W. also pleaded that CPS had ruled out the alleged abuse by W., and

she contended that “evidence was introduced that would lead a reasonable person

to believe [M.] had encouraged and facilitated [A.K.M.] into making allegations . . .

of sexual abuse” against W.

      W. pointed the trial court to this Court’s opinion in the mandamus

proceeding, in which we held that “the trial court heard evidence from which the

court could reasonably conclude that the order [changing custody] was necessary

to prevent significant impairment of the children’s physical health and emotional

development.” 3 In re M., No. 09-12-00179-CV, 2012 WL 1808236, at *3 (Tex.

App.—Beaumont May 17, 2012, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.). W. asserted that

the trial court “should recognize a need for continued emotional healing for these

children and need for a progressive, gradual return of an aggressively healed and

      3
       The order before this Court in the mandamus proceeding was the trial
court’s initial order that provided neither parent could have contact with the
children, not the order from which M. now appeals.
                                         20
healthy father into their lives and minds.” W. requested “the Court to consider the

children, who . . . experienced this hostile drama . . . for at least the past five years

of their young lives. Five years of rancid feelings carried in the heart and mind of

[M.] exuding from his demeanor and his actions throughout the time spent with his

children. This recognized hatred has worked to harm the children. . . .” According

to W., the evidence adduced in the case had rebutted the presumption that the

standard possession order is in the children’s best interest, and she sought an order

developing a transitory period leading to M. again having possession and access to

the children after therapists determine that possession and access would be

appropriate.

      On September 18, 2012, the trial judge conducted a “Final Orders” hearing.

M. was not present at the hearing. M.’s counsel argued that with respect to

contested matters, an amicus attorney is not permitted to testify pursuant to section

107.007 of the Family Code. 4 See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 107.007(a)(4) (West

2008). The trial court denied M.’s motion to remove the amicus. The trial court

then permitted W.’s counsel and the amicus to introduce evidence concerning the

amount of W.’s attorney’s fees and the amicus’s fees. 5 On the same date, the trial

      4
          M. had filed a motion to remove the amicus attorney.

                                           21
court re-interviewed A.K.M. During the interview, the trial judge told A.K.M. that

the amicus “told me you wanted to tell me something.” A.K.M. then said that none

of her previous outcry was true. A.K.M. told the judge that M. and B. had told her

to make the allegations. When the trial judge asked A.K.M. if she wanted to visit

her father, she said, “No. I couldn’t. . . . He scares me. I don’t like him. He is

mean, and he lied to me.” A.K.M. also told the trial judge that she did not want to

see B., and she described B. as “evil.”

      At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial judge signed an order in the

modification proceeding. In its eighteen-page order, the trial judge found that the

material allegations in M.’s suit to modify are untrue and brought frivolously and

for the purpose of harassment against W., denied M.’s requested modification, and

appointed W. sole managing conservator and M. possessory conservator of the

children. The trial court found that M. made a false report of child abuse against

W., and that it is in the best interest of the children to limit M.’s rights as

possessory conservator. Specifically, the trial court found that the standard

possession order is not in the best interest of the children and determined that good

cause exists “to order that [M.] be temporarily denied access during a period of

      5
       Prior to the hearing, W.’s counsel had filed a motion that sought, among
other things, the right to introduce supplemental evidence on attorney’s fees
concerning “multiple legal proceedings ancillary to the underlying modifications
heard at trial in January 2012[.]”
                                          22
therapeutic intervention leading toward restricted possession and access based on

extreme circumstances found regarding the past behavior of [M.], the

circumstances of the children, and the physical, medical, educational, and

emotional needs of the children.”

      The trial judge appointed a therapist “to develop a transitory program

leading to unsupervised possession and access of the children by [M.]” by

November 1, 2012. The trial court ordered M. to receive therapy from a licensed

mental health care professional, and required M.’s therapist to communicate with

the court-appointed therapist and to “be guided by the direction of the court-

appointed therapist in the areas of counseling and therapy for [M.]” In addition,

the trial court’s order required the children to continue treatment with their current

mental health care professionals, and ordered the court-appointed therapist to

communicate with the children’s therapists concerning the transitory program.

      Under the terms of the order, the court-appointed therapist, M.’s therapist,

and the children’s therapists were to submit reports to the court and to the parties

stating why the modified standard possession order contained within the order

should or should not be instituted. These reports were to be submitted no later than

sixty days before the date the modified standard order should begin. The order

provided that the modified standard possession order would become effective

                                         23
“immediately upon the completion of the transitory program and approval of the

Court as provided above” and required that all periods of possession by M. shall be

supervised at the court-appointed therapist’s discretion for the first six months the

modified standard possession order is exercised. The order also required M. to pay

a civil penalty of $500 for making a false report of child abuse. See Tex. Fam.

Code Ann. § 153.013(c) (West 2008). Finally, the trial court’s order awarded W.

attorney’s fees in the amount of $241,417.59 and ordered M. to transfer exclusive

control of the children’s 529 savings accounts, which M. had established, to W.

      M. filed a motion for new trial. Subsequently, the parties learned that the

case had been reassigned to Judge Douglas Warne. Judge Warne conducted a

hearing on the motion for new trial on November 19, 2012. At the hearing, M.

produced letters from three therapists, each of whom had declined to serve as the

court-appointed therapist under the September 2012 order. Judge Warne denied the

motion for new trial.

      On November 29, 2012, Judge Warne signed a “reformed” order, which

changed the court-appointed therapist to Dr. Lawrence Abrams but kept in place

the provisions from the September order regarding the transitory therapeutic period

and forbidding M. from having any contact with the children. In January 2013,

Judge Warne filed findings of facts and conclusions of law, in which he made the

                                         24
following findings of fact, among others: (1) M. had attempted to permanently

alienate the children from W., publicly disparaged W., placed his sons’ health,

education, and development at risk, and “repeatedly demonstrated bizarre and

troubled behavior in the presence of the Court[;]” (2) it is in the children’s best

interest that M. “be temporarily denied access to the children so that he may seek

his own therapeutic treatment/intervention leading to restricted possession and

access of the children[;]” (3) unrestricted access to the children by M. would

endanger their physical or emotional welfare; (4) “[e]xtreme circumstances exist

sufficient to deny [M.] possession and access of the children until a licensed

mental health professional appointed by the Court determines that it is in the best

interests of the children to have restricted possession and access[;]” and (5) the 529

funds “are the property of the children” so W., as sole managing conservator,

should have “sole unrestricted management and control of said funds.” In its

conclusions of law, the trial court determined that appointing M. as a joint

managing conservator would significantly impair the children’s physical health or

emotional development, and limiting M.’s rights, duties, and access to the children

is in the children’s best interest.

       W. filed a motion for judgment nunc pro tunc and a brief in support. W.

contended that while the judgment awarded attorney’s fees to her, “the order for

                                         25
[M.] to actually pay the award appears to have been inadvertently omitted.”

According to W., the requested change was clerical rather than judicial, since the

trial court stated at the September 2012 hearing that attorney’s fees would be taxed

against M. The trial court granted W.’s motion for judgment nunc pro tunc and

ordered W. to submit a nunc pro tunc judgment that changed only the heading on

page one and the judgment language on page seventeen. The trial judge

subsequently signed a judgment nunc pro tunc, which contained language

explicitly ordering M. to pay W. attorney’s fees in the amount of $241,417.59.

      On February 6, 2013, Dr. Abrams filed the required report with the trial

judge by letter. In the report, Abrams recommended a plan leading to resumption

of contact between M. and the children, and concluding that if M. adhered to the

requirements of the plan and was able to re-establish relationships with the

children, “the court might want to consider going to conventional visitation when

enough time has passed to reassure the court of the father’s stability.” It is unclear

from the record why no action has apparently been taken to begin Abrams’s plan

of reunification. W. contends in her brief that M. “has made NO attempt at proving

his ability to act in the best interest of the children, and therefore have access to the

children, by simply scheduling an appointment with the children’s counselors to

                                           26
begin the plan of reunification.” She cites to nothing in the appellate record that

verifies this assertion.

                                    ISSUE ONE

       In his first issue, M. argues that Judge Underwood abused his discretion by

denying the motion to recuse Judge Walker due to Judge Walker’s alleged “extra-

judicial bias and pervasive antagonism” toward M. We review an order denying a

motion to recuse for abuse of discretion. In re M.C.M., 57 S.W.3d 27, 33 (Tex.

App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2001, pet. denied).

       A judge must recuse himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality

might reasonably be questioned or he has a personal bias or prejudice regarding the

subject matter or a party. Tex. R. Civ. P. 18b(b)(1), (2). A judge is presumed to be

qualified until the contrary is shown. Sparkman v. Peoples Nat’l Bank of Tyler, 553
S.W.2d 680, 681 (Tex. App.—Waco 1977, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Recusal based upon

an allegation of bias “is appropriate only if the movant provides sufficient evidence

to establish that a reasonable person, knowing all the circumstances involved,

would harbor doubts as to the impartiality of the judge.” Abdygapparova v. State,

243 S.W.3d 191, 198 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2007, pet. ref’d). “[J]udicial

rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality motion[,]”

and opinions the judge forms during a trial do not necessitate recusal “unless they

                                          27
display a deep-seated favoritism or antagonism that would make fair judgment

impossible.” Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555 (1994). “Thus, judicial

remarks during the course of a trial that are critical or disapproving of, or even

hostile to, counsel, the parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a bias or

partiality challenge.” Id. Expressions of impatience, dissatisfaction, annoyance,

and anger do not establish bias or partiality when those expressions arise from

events that occurred during trial. Id. at 555-56; Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis, 46
S.W.3d 237, 240 (Tex. 2001).

      In his appellate brief, M. complains of Judge Underwood’s exclusion of K.’s

testimony during the recusal hearing and Judge Walker’s “high degree of

antagonism” against M. “To preserve error concerning the exclusion of evidence,

the complaining party must actually offer the evidence and secure an adverse

ruling from the court.” Perez v. Lopez, 74 S.W.3d 60, 66 (Tex. App.—El Paso

2002, no pet.). With respect to the exclusion of certain testimony from K., the

record reflects that although M.’s counsel argued to the court concerning the

substance of the desired testimony and the reasons counsel believed the testimony

was relevant, M.’s counsel did not make an offer of proof through K. See id.

Because counsel did not make an offer of proof, M. has failed to preserve the issue

for review. See Tex. R. Evid. 103(a)(2); Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(B); Weng

                                         28
Enters., Inc. v. Embassy World Travel, Inc., 837 S.W.2d 217, 221 (Tex. App.—

Houston [1st Dist.] 1992, no writ).

      Undoubtedly, the trial judge frequently and extensively displayed anger,

frustration, annoyance, and dissatisfaction with M. and his attorney, as well as

skepticism and disbelief about M.’s testimony, during the course of the

proceedings. The record of the April 2012 emergency hearing indicates that the

trial judge initially became angry with M. and skeptical of his testimony when

Hoge and Miller contradicted M.’s testimony, and it was at that point when the

trial judge announced his intention to interview A.K.M. in chambers. By the time

the trial judge called Hoge and Miller to testify, he had heard M. testify and

observed M.’s demeanor on the stand for almost three hours. It is clear from the

manner in which the trial judge conducted the interview with A.K.M. that the trial

court disbelieved M.’s testimony concerning A.K.M.’s outcry. However, the record

does not demonstrate that the trial judge’s disbelief of M.’s testimony and his

subsequent displays of anger were derived from an extrajudicial source. Rather, the

record demonstrates that the trial judge’s anger, annoyance, frustration, and

dissatisfaction likely derived from his belief that M. had given false testimony.

While the trial judge undoubtedly displayed anger and a desire to see M. criminally

investigated, his conduct does not demonstrate such a pervasive extrajudicial bias

                                        29
or antagonism that required recusal. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 18b(b)(1), (2); Liteky, 510
U.S. at 555; Abdygapparova, 243 S.W.3d at 198; Francis, 46 S.W.3d at 240.

Accordingly, Judge Underwood did not abuse his discretion by denying M.’s

motion to recuse. We overrule issue one.

                                   ISSUE FIVE

      In his fifth issue, M. argues the trial court erred by permitting W.’s counsel

to call the amicus attorney to testify regarding contested issues of fact. See Tex.

Fam. Code Ann. § 107.007 (West 2008). As discussed above, M.’s counsel did not

object during the emergency hearing to the amicus attorney testifying. Therefore,

M. failed to preserve the issue for appeal. See Conn v. Rhodes, No. 2-08-420-CV,

2009 WL 2579577, at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 20, 2009, no pet.) (mem.

op.) (Failure to object at trial to the admission of an amicus attorney’s report or

testimony waives the complaint on appeal.); see also Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); In re

J.K.F., 345 S.W.3d 706, 717 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2011, no pet.). Accordingly, we

overrule issue five.

                                    ISSUE SIX

      In issue six, M. contends the trial court abused its discretion by ordering M.

to transfer control of the children’s 529 college plans to W. and to pay attorney’s

fees in the amount of $241,417.59. With respect to the 529 accounts, M. argues

                                        30
that no pleadings or evidence support the order. With respect to the attorney’s fees,

M. apparently asserts that no pleadings support an award of any fees other than

those incurred at the January trial, and he maintains that the trial judge lacked

authority to award fees for the mandamus proceeding or the recusal proceeding.

      In her counter-petition, W. pleaded for “reasonable attorney’s fees . . .

through trial and appeal[;]” therefore, M.’s contention that no pleadings support an

award of attorney’s fees is inaccurate. Section 106.002 of the Family Code

provides, “In a suit under this title, the court may render judgment for reasonable

attorney’s fees and expenses . . . .” Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 106.002(a) (West

2008). Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by awarding attorney’s

fees for the January 2012 custody hearing or the April 2012 emergency hearing.

See id. However, we conclude that the trial court lacked the authority to award

attorney’s fees for the mandamus proceeding or the recusal proceeding. A

mandamus proceeding is an original appellate proceeding seeking extraordinary

relief. Tex. R. App. P. 52.1. Although the mandamus was related to the

modification suit, it was an original, separate proceeding within the jurisdiction of

this Court. See In the Interest of V.T., No. 2-03-248-CV, 2004 WL 1353024, at *2

(Tex. App.—Fort Worth June 17, 2004, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (When father filed

a petition for writ of mandamus complaining of the trial court’s order denying his

                                         31
motion to disqualify mother’s attorney in a modification case, trial court lacked

jurisdiction to award attorney’s fees for the mandamus proceeding.).

      With respect to the recusal proceeding, Rule 18a(h) of the Texas Rules of

Civil Procedure provides that the judge who hears the motion to recuse may order

the party or attorney who filed the motion, or both, to pay reasonable attorney’s

fees and expenses incurred by the other party if the judge finds that the motion was

(1) groundless and filed in bad faith, or for the purpose of harassment or (2) clearly

brought for unnecessary delay and without sufficient cause. Tex. R. Civ. P. 18a(h).

Judge Underwood did not award attorney’s fees to M., and the trial judge lacked

authority to assess attorney’s fees for the recusal proceeding. See id.

      With respect to the children’s 529 savings plans, M. argues that the trial

court abused its discretion by requiring M. to sign control of the plans over to W.

because the trial judge “stated no basis for his order, and there were no pleadings

and no evidence to support it.” As discussed above, in her counter-petition, W.

requested appointment as sole managing conservator in her counter-petition, and

the trial court appointed W. sole managing conservator of the children and granted

W. the exclusive right to make decisions concerning the children’s education. The

evidence established that (1) M. opened the plans and was the participant, (2) the

divorce decree provided that M. would control the 529 college savings plans, and

                                          32
(3) for three years, M. put all of his bonuses into the 529 plans, which totaled

approximately $437,000 at the time of trial. The evidence also established that in

2009, as part of an order permitting M. to transfer the accounts to a different

brokerage firm, the trial judge enjoined M. from using any of the 529 funds for any

purpose other than a “qualified higher education expense” as defined by the

investment plan, and also enjoined M. from changing the beneficiary of any of the

accounts without W.’s express written consent.

      W. contends she “specifically placed the 529 accounts into issue in her

Request for Additional Relief[,]”which she filed on September 14, 2012, and she

also points to her general prayer for any and all other relief the trial court

determined to be in the children’s best interest and for their protection. In W.’s

request for additional relief, she asked that the court order M. to provide statements

for the 529 accounts to her by certified mail on the first day of each month “to

insure his fiduciary duties to the children are being met[,]” but she did not request

that control of the 529 plans be transferred to her. W.’s second amended counter

petition, her live pleading at the time of the hearings, also did not request such

relief. We conclude that ownership of the 529 savings accounts was not an issue

raised by the pleadings. Therefore, the trial court abused its discretion by ordering

M. to transfer ownership of the 529 savings accounts to W. See In re Russell, 321

                                         33
S.W.3d 846, 855 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2010, orig. proceeding) (“A trial court

abuses its discretion by awarding relief to a person who has not requested such

relief in a live pleading.”); Tex. R. Civ. P. 301 (The judgment shall conform to the

pleadings.).

      We sustain issue six. Accordingly, we remand the cause to the trial court to

determine the appropriate amount of attorney’s fees consistent with this opinion by

segregating the attorney’s fees that are recoverable from those that are not, as well

as for entry of an order transferring ownership of the 529 savings accounts back to

M. See Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v. Chapa, 212 S.W.3d 299, 313 (Tex. 2006)

(“[I]f any attorney’s fees relate solely to a claim for which such fees are

unrecoverable, a claimant must segregate recoverable from unrecoverable fees.”);

Russell, 321 S.W.3d at 855.

                                  ISSUE SEVEN

      In issue seven, M. complains of the trial court’s entry of a judgment nunc

pro tunc to correct what M. contends was a judicial error. As discussed above,

upon W.’s motion, the trial judge signed a judgment nunc pro tunc, which

contained language explicitly ordering M. to pay W. attorney’s fees in the amount

of $241,417.59. At the September 2012 hearing on final orders, the trial court

                                         34
found that W.’s reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees in the amount of

$241,417.59 “will be taxed against [M].”

      A trial court may correct a clerical error in a judgment at any time by

entering a judgment nunc pro tunc. Tex. R. Civ. P. 316, 329b(f); Escobar v.

Escobar, 711 S.W.2d 230, 231 (Tex. 1986). The determination of whether an error

in a judgment is judicial or clerical is a question of law that we review de novo.

Roan v. Roan, No. 03-09-00155-CV, 2010 WL 4260974, at *5 (Tex. App.—Austin

Oct. 28, 2010, no pet.) (mem. op.); Escobar, 711 S.W.2d at 232. “A clerical error

is a discrepancy between the entry of a judgment in the record and the judgment

that was actually rendered by the court, and does not arise from judicial reasoning

or determination.” Rawlins v. Rawlins, 324 S.W.3d 852, 855 (Tex. App.—Houston

[14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.). “A judicial error, on the other hand, occurs in the

rendering, as opposed to the entering, of a judgment. Id. “A judgment is rendered

when the decision is officially announced either orally in open court or by a

memorandum filed with the clerk.” Id. The trial court “can only correct the entry of

a final written judgment that incorrectly states the judgment actually rendered.”

Escobar, 711 S.W.2d at 231-32.

      We conclude that the trial judge’s pronouncement awarded a judgment in

favor of W. from M. for attorney’s fees, and the failure to include in the written

                                        35
judgment a provision that expressly ordered M. to pay W. attorney’s fees in the

amount of $241,417.59 was a clerical error that the trial court could properly

correct by entry of a judgment nunc pro tunc. See Escobar, 711 S.W.2d at 231-32;

Rawlins, 324 S.W.3d at 855. Accordingly, we overrule issue seven.

                                    ISSUE NINE

      In issue nine, M. challenges the trial court’s conclusions of law regarding

joint managing conservatorship, rights and duties, and possession and access. We

review a trial judge’s decision on a petition to modify under an abuse of discretion

standard. In re W.C.B., 337 S.W.3d 510, 513 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2011, no pet.).

We determine whether the trial judge acted arbitrarily or without reference to any

guiding rules or principles. Id. Because the abuse-of-discretion standard of review

overlaps with traditional sufficiency standards of review in family law cases,

challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence are not independent grounds for

reversal, but instead constitute factors relevant to determining whether the trial

judge abused his discretion. In re A.B.P., 291 S.W.3d 91, 95 (Tex. App.—Dallas

2009, no pet.).

      M. argues that although the order appointed him a possessory conservator,

the trial court’s order also stripped him of nearly all parental rights and effectively

denied him all possession of and access to his children, an outcome not supported

                                          36
by sufficient evidence.      M. points out that “while the denial of access is

purportedly ‘temporary,’ the trial court’s order does not provide any enforceable

provisions for future access. Instead, future access is left to the determination of

the therapist under a poorly defined ‘transitory program’ leading to a modified

possession order on a date that is also to be determined.”

      A parent of the child has the right to have physical possession of the child.

Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 151.001(a)(1) (West 2008). Public policy dictates that

children will have frequent and continuing contact with parents who have shown

the ability to act in the children’s best interest. Id. § 153.001(a)(1); In re C.R.O., 96
S.W.3d 442, 447 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2002, pet. denied). The trial court must

consider the best interest of the children, and there is a rebuttable presumption that

appointment of both parents as joint managing conservators is in the children’s

best interest. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §§ 153.002, 153.131(b). There is also a

rebuttable presumption that the standard possession order is in the children’s best

interest. Id. § 153.252(2). A finding by the court that a report of abuse made during

the pendency of a suit affecting the parent-child relationship was false or lacking

factual foundation may constitute grounds for the court to modify an order

providing for possession of or access to a child who was the subject of the report

                                           37
by restricting further access to the child by the person who made the report. Id. §

261.107(b) (emphasis added).

      “The terms of an order that denies possession of a child to a parent or

imposes restrictions or limitations on a parent’s right to possession of or access to a

child may not exceed those that are required to protect the best interest of the

child.” Id. § 153.193. A trial court’s discretion to make temporary orders is limited

by a fit parent’s right to exercise his parental rights. See In re Scheller, 325 S.W.3d
640, 642 (Tex. 2010) (citing Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 68, 72-73 (2000)).

Using a neutral third party, such as a mental health professional, to assist with

determining the most appropriate possession rights may be necessary in a complex

family law situation. In re J.S.P., 278 S.W.3d 414, 422 (Tex. App.—San Antonio

2008, no pet.). “[D]elegating specific issues related to possession and access [to a

third party] appears to be permissible so long as the parent maintains access to

their child, and only faces the possibility of the denial of specific periods of

possession.” Id. (emphasis added). A trial court’s ability to obtain assistance from a

third party is limited by the requirement that the court must maintain the power to

enforce its judgment; that is, the order must be sufficiently specific to be

enforceable by contempt. Id. at 422-23.

                                          38
       In In re J.S.P., the child’s maternal grandmother was named sole managing

conservator, but the appellant father, who suffered cognitive impairment due to a

head injury prior to J.S.P.’s birth, was permitted supervised visitation. Id. at 417.

The father subsequently filed a petition to modify, in which he requested

appointment as joint managing conservator with the exclusive right to designate

J.S.P.’s primary residence, and he requested a standard possession order. Id. The

trial court entered temporary orders that continued supervised visitation, but on a

schedule. Id. After a jury trial, in which appellant was named a joint managing

conservator along with the grandmother, the trial court conducted a bench trial on

issues of possession and access. Id. At the conclusion of the bench trial, the trial

court continued the supervised visitation schedule and ordered the creation by a

psychologist of a transitory program intended to lead to unsupervised visitation by

the father. Id.

       W. cites In re J.S.P. for the proposition that orders utilizing a mental health

professional to develop a transitory program must state a date by which the

transitory program should be developed, a date by which the standard possession

order should begin, or a deadline by which the therapist must report reasons why

the transitory program could not be developed or why standard possession should

not commence. W. argues that the order the trial court entered in this case meets

                                          39
the requirements set forth in In re J.S.P. W. ignores the fact that In re J.S.P. did

not involve depriving the father of all rights of visitation and access. See id. at 417-

23.

      We conclude that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the

trial court’s determination that the standard possession order would not be in the

children’s best interest. However, there is insufficient evidence to support the trial

court’s order forbidding M. from contacting the children and denying M. all rights

of possession and access, even on an ostensibly temporary basis. See generally

Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 153.193; Moore v. Moore, 383 S.W.3d 190, 198 (Tex.

App.—Dallas 2012, pet. denied) (In family law cases, sufficiency of the evidence

issues are relevant factors in determining whether the trial court abused its

discretion.); In re A.B.P., 291 S.W.3d at 95. The trial court therefore abused its

discretion by forbidding M. from contacting the children and denying M. all rights

of possession or access. Accordingly, we sustain issue nine in part, reverse the

portions of the trial court’s order that provide that M. have no visitation or access

to the children and that M. cannot contact the children, and remand the case to the

trial court for entry of an appropriate order consistent with this opinion. The trial

court may consider the recommendations set forth in Dr. Abrams’s February 2013

report; however, we will leave the specific terms of visitation and access to the trial

                                          40
court’s discretion. We need not address M.’s remaining issues, as they would not

result in greater relief. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.

      AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.

                                               ______________________________
                                                     STEVE McKEITHEN
                                                          Chief Justice

Submitted on December 30, 2013
Opinion Delivered February 27, 2014

Before McKeithen, C.J., Kreger and Horton, JJ.

                                          41