Court Opinion

ID: 2989329
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-23 02:43:23.841087+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:44:58.162517
License: Public Domain

Dismissed and Memorandum Opinion filed July 10, 2012.

                                            In The

                       Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                                      NO. 14-12-00014-CV

                       IN THE INTEREST OF R.S.T., A CHILD

                        On Appeal from the 309th District Court
                                Harris County, Texas
                          Trial Court Cause No. 2005-33604

                    MEMORANDUM OPINION

       The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services initiated this suit by
petitioning for conservatorship and termination of the parent-child relationship. The trial
court appointed the Department as the temporary managing conservator of the Child, and
the case proceeded to a jury trial. The trial court signed a final decree consistent with the
jury’s verdict to remove Mother and appoint Father as the Child’s sole managing
conservator. We hold this appeal is accelerated, and Mother failed to file her notice of
appeal by the date required under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. The appeal is
dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
                                      BACKGROUND

      In 2005, the trial court appointed Mother and Father as joint managing
conservators after the Office of the Attorney General of Texas petitioned to establish
Father’s parent-child relationship.   In 2010, the Texas Department of Family and
Protective Services initiated a suit affecting the parent-child relationship seeking
conservatorship and termination of both parents’ parental rights to the Child. The trial
court held an adversary hearing and appointed the Department as the temporary
managing conservator of the Child.

      The case proceeded to a jury trial. Mother alleges that during voir dire the
Department “made the announcement that it did not choose to prosecute its suit as a
party,” but the Department participated during trial as “de facto counsel” for Father, who
was pro se. Mother asserts that the trial court denied her objection to the Department’s
continued participation at trial. On October 7, 2011, the court signed a final decree
appointing Father as sole managing conservator, removing Mother as sole managing
conservator, and appointing Mother as possessory conservator. The court also dismissed
the Department as a party in the decree. The decree included the following:

      22.    WARNING: APPEAL OF FINAL ORDER, PURSUANT TO §§
             263.405, TEXAS FAMILY CODE
             22.1. PURSUANT TO §§ 109.002 AND 263.405, TEXAS
                   FAMILY CODE, APPEALS OF FINAL ORDERS
                   INVOLVING THE DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND
                   PROTECTIVE    SERVICES    ARE    ACCELERATED
                   APPEALS. A NOTICE OF APPEAL MUST BE FILED NO
                   LATER THAN THE 20TH DAY AFTER THE DATE A
                   FINAL ORDER IS SIGNED BY THE TRIAL JUDGE.

Mother filed a motion for new trial on October 28, 2011, arguing among other things that
the trial court’s decree incorrectly stated an appeal would be accelerated. The trial court
denied the motion on November 30, 2011, and Mother filed a notice of appeal on

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December 30, 2011. 1

                                             ANALYSIS

         The Department argues that this appeal is accelerated and that Mother filed her
notice of appeal too late. Mother argues that the Department should not have been a
party to this case in the trial court, and thus, the appeal should not be accelerated.
Following binding precedent from this court, we hold that the appeal is accelerated, and
Mother’s notice of appeal is untimely.

         Section 263.405(a) of the Family Code states, “An appeal of a final order rendered
under this subchapter is governed by the procedures for accelerated appeals in civil cases
under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.” Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 263.405(a)
(Vernon Supp. 2011).          Under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure governing
accelerated appeals, a notice of appeal must be filed within twenty days of the date on
which the trial court’s judgment is signed. Tex. R. App. P. 26.1(b). Post-trial motions do
not extend the time for perfecting an accelerated appeal. Tex. R. App. P. 28.1(b). We
lack jurisdiction when a party fails to file a notice of appeal within the appropriate time
period. See In re A.J.K., 116 S.W.3d 165 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2003, no
pet.).

         In In re A.J.K., this court held that the appeal was from a “final order”
contemplated by section 263.405(a) “[b]ecause this suit started out as both a termination
and a custody request, and the [Department] remained in the suit — dropping only the
termination request.” Id. at 170. Thus, the appeal was accelerated. Id. In In re A.J.K.,
the Department initially sought termination of the parent-child relationship, and the trial
court named the Department as the child’s temporary managing conservator. Id. at 166.
The Department abandoned its request for termination, and after a jury trial, the trial
court signed a final decree naming the child’s grandparents as managing conservators and
the child’s parents as possessory conservators. Id. at 166–67.
         1
          Mother also filed a motion to modify, correct, or reform the judgment to delete the provision
identifying this case as an accelerated appeal.

                                                  3
        This court first evaluated the statutory framework, noting the titles of the relevant
subchapter, “Final Order for Child under Department Care,” and Chapter 263, “Review
of Placement of Children under care of [the Department].” Id. at 169. The court looked
to the related section 263.401, which establishes deadlines for disposing of a suit in
which the Department is named the temporary managing conservator of a child and
requests termination of the parent-child relationship or to be named conservator. See id.;
Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 263.401 (Vernon 2008).                      The version of section 263.401
applicable in In re A.J.K. required dismissal of a case unless the trial court signed a “final
order” within certain time periods; the statute defined the term “final order” as one that
(1) required the child to be returned to the child’s parents; (2) named a relative of the
child or another person as the child’s managing conservator; (3) appointed the
Department as the managing conservator of the child without terminating the parent-child
relationship; or (4) terminated the parent-child relationship and appointed a relative of the
child, another suitable person, or the Department as managing conservator. 116 S.W.3d
at 169–70.2 The court held that even though the Department abandoned its request for
termination, the trial court’s final decree was a “final order rendered under this
subchapter” because the Department initiated the suit under the applicable subchapter and
remained a party to the suit as the temporary managing conservator of the child at the
time of trial. See id. at 170.

        Further, the court observed several policy-based and practical reasons for applying
the accelerated appeal rules. Id. at 170–71. The court reasoned that “it is perfectly
reasonable to require an appeal to be taken within a short time period” when the suit was
governed by timetables in the trial court because doing so furthers the purpose of the
statute: “to resolve these cases as quickly as feasible.” Id. at 170–71; see Tex. Fam. Code
        2
          The statute was amended later to create deadlines for the commencement of trials rather than for
the signing of final orders. See Act of May 27, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 866, § 2, 2007 Tex. Gen. Laws
1837, 1837–38. Accordingly, the legislature deleted the definition of “final order” found in Section
263.401. See In re G.J.P., 314 S.W.3d 217, 220 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2010, pet. denied). Mother does
not contend this amendment should alter our analysis, and nothing in the legislative history indicates
disapproval of In re A.J.K. The analysis remains sound. See id. (adopting In re A.J.K.’s interpretation
despite repeal of the definition of “final order”).

                                                    4
Ann. § 263.401. When the suit is governed by Chapter 263 in the trial court, with strict
disposition time limits, “logically, we should apply the appeal provision contained in that
chapter — § 263.405.” In re A.J.K., 116 S.W.3d at 171. These types of cases — “when a
child is in the care of the [Department]” — are highly emotional and disruptive for the
entire family unit, especially the child. Id. “Thus, because of the emotional impact,
whenever the [Department] has intervened in the family unit — whether or not it requests
termination — the legislature has required prompt disposition, both at the trial level and
at the appellate level.” Id. Finally, cases in which the Department has intervened are
“fundamentally different than a custody battle between two parents.” Id. In such a case,
the Department, “being a party to the suit,” may appeal an award of custody to the parent.
Id. An accelerated appeal helps to hasten the resolution and lessen uncertainty when the
Department is a party to the suit. See id.

       Mother contends that the circumstances of this case are distinguishable because
the Department “remained as a party to the lawsuit” in In re A.J.K., but here the
Department “did not remain a party to the suit by its own declaration to the jury in voir
dire.” Mother acknowledges, however, that the Department called witnesses, cross-
examined witnesses, submitted exhibits, and “became the de facto attorney” for Father.
Further, the record shows that the trial court dismissed the Department as a party only
when the court signed the final decree. Thus, Mother more accurately argues in her
responsive brief that the Department “should have been excused from the lawsuit.” A
complaint that the Department should have been dismissed from the case acknowledges
the fact that the Department was not dismissed and, therefore, remained a party until the
trial court signed the final decree.

       Mother’s objection to the Department’s continued participation at trial does not
make the trial court’s decree any less of a “final order” for purposes of Section
263.405(a). The Department initiated the suit “under this subchapter” pursuant to Section
263.405(a) by petitioning for termination and custody. See In re A.J.K., 116 S.W.3d at
170. At the time of trial, the Department was the temporary managing conservator of the

                                             5
child — the child was “under Department care.”                      See id. at 166.        Assuming for
argument’s sake that the Department abandoned its request for termination and
conservatorship,3 the Department nonetheless remained a party to the suit. The final
decree itself warned Mother that an appeal would be accelerated and a notice of appeal
would be required within twenty days. This appeal is accelerated.

                                              CONCLUSION

        Mother failed to file a timely notice of appeal. Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction
and dismiss the appeal.

                                                  /s/       William J. Boyce
                                                            Justice

Panel consists of Justices Boyce, Christopher, and Jamison.

        3
          The reporter’s record filed in this appeal does not contain a transcript of the proceedings during
voir dire or trial, and the clerk’s record does not contain the jury charge or verdict. Mother failed to cite
to any portion of the record in her brief. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(g), (i). The Department disagrees with
Mother’s contention that the Department abandoned its request for termination and modification. Indeed,
at the hearing on the motion for new trial, the court explained to Mother’s counsel that “there was no
indication to this Court in or out of the presence of the jury that they were abandoning their pleadings.”

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