In the Interest of N.R.C. and L.A.C.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Houston (14th Dist.).
*803 Richard N. Countiss, Houston, for appellants.
Marcia L. Zimmerman, Houston, Otto D. Hewitt, Alvin, for appellees.
Panel consists of Justices EDELMAN, SEYMORE, and GUZMAN.
OPINION
EVA M. GUZMAN, Justice.
Rachel appeals from a judgment terminating her parental rights.[1] She challenges the permissibility of the trial court's sanctions and its refusal to grant her request for an independent psychological examination of the children and their father, David. The trial court's sanctions order *804 precluded Rachel from presenting any witnesses other than herself at trial. We find the trial court abused its discretion in imposing sanctions that were both impermissible under the circumstances and violative of the TransAmerican Natural Gas Corporation v. Powell,
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Rachel and David divorced in 1991. At that time, the trial court named them joint managing conservators of their two children, N.R.C. and L.A.C. The children lived with David during the school year and with Rachel during the summer. In August 2000, David sought and subsequently obtained termination of Rachel's parental rights.
Prior to trial on the termination suit, the trial court appointed an attorney ad litem for the children. The attorney ad litem filed a motion for security of costs and attorney's fees. The trial court granted the motion and ordered each party to deposit $2,500 with the ad litem as security. Rachel failed to pay the ad litem's deposit, and therefore, the ad litem filed a motion for enforcement of the trial court's order and for sanctions. In her motion, the ad litem requested that the trial court order Rachel to pay the costs and attorney's fees related to the motion. She also asked the trial court to strike Rachel's pleadings and enter a judgment in favor of David. In the alternative, the ad litem requested that the trial court hold Rachel in contempt and punish her as the trial court deemed just and fair. An associate judge heard the motion and granted the ad litem a judgment for attorney's fees in the amount of $1,048.35. Though the motion did not request such a sanction, the associate judge further sanctioned Rachel by prohibiting her from presenting witnesses on her behalf other than herself. The trial court adopted the associate judge's ruling, ordering that Rachel was "prohibited from presenting any witnesses on her behalf, save and except herself, at the trial on the merits."
At trial, David presented evidence that Rachel had verbally and physically abused the children and that the children did not want to visit Rachel. David introduced the testimony of Toni Jo Lindstrom, a licensed family counselor, and Dr. Grace Jameson, a clinical professor in psychiatry at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Ms. Lindstrom and Dr. Jameson testified that it would be in the best interest of the children to terminate Rachel's parental rights. Rachel testified that she recognized the need to control her anger and that with appropriate psychological help, she could repair the relationship with her children. As per the sanction, Rachel was not allowed to present any other witnesses. The jury unanimously found that Rachel's parental rights should be terminated.
II. ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
Rachel raises four issues on appeal: (1) the striking of witnesses is an impermissible sanction for failing to pay attorney's fees; (2) the trial court did not comply with the TransAmerican standards; (3) the trial court abused its discretion and/or committed errors of law by striking her witnesses without notice; and (4) the trial court abused its discretion by refusing her request for a psychological examination of David and the children.
III. DISCUSSION
Before addressing Rachel's points of error, we first address David's argument *805 that the sanctions issue should not be reached because Rachel failed to adequately perfect her appeal. Specifically, David argues the sanctions issue should not be reached because: (1) Rachel failed to appeal the master's ruling and thus did not adequately preserve error; (2) Rachel's offer of proof of the proposed witnesses' testimony is inadequate; and (3) the proposed witnesses' testimony is cumulative of Rachel's own testimony and, thus, its exclusion, if error, was harmless.
A. FAILURE TO APPEAL THE MASTER'S RULING
David claims Rachel waived her challenge to the sanctions imposed by the associate judge because she did not file an appeal of the associate judge's ruling with the trial court. See Tex. Fam.Code § 201.015. Although section 201.015 indeed states that a party "may appeal an associate judge's report by filing notice not later than the third day after the date the party receives notice of the substance of the associate judge's report," Id. (emphasis added), David fails to address section 201.015 in conjunction with section 201.016, which provides:
(a) Failure to appeal to the referring court, by waiver or otherwise, the approval by the referring court of an associate judge's report does not deprive a party of the right to appeal to or request other relief from a court of appeals or the supreme court.
(b) The date an order or judgment by the referring court is signed is the controlling date for the purposes of appeal to or request for other relief from a court of appeals or the supreme court.
Tex. Fam.Code § 201.016; see also In re S.G.S.,
At submission, David argued that the "other relief" referred to in subsection (a) means relief other than the particular measure which a party failed to appeal to the referring court. We conclude that the phrase "other relief" refers to any and all relief other than relief obtained from the referring court. Any other reading of the statute would defeat the primary purpose of the section 201.016, which is to allow litigants to appeal associate judges' rulings that they did not appeal to the referring court. A plain reading of the statutory language does not support David's interpretation of section 201.016. See State Dept. of Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Gonzales,
B. SUFFICIENCY OF THE OFFER OF PROOF
David also contends that Rachel's offer of proof was incomplete, and thus, the exclusion of her witnesses presents nothing for review. We disagree. Defense counsel began his offer of proof noting that Rachel would have called Paula Hudson, the executive director of the Jameson Center. In summarizing Hudson's proposed testimony, counsel introduced into evidence a letter in which Hudson detailed her observations of Rachel and remarked upon her progress and suitability as a parent. Hudson concluded that supervised visitation with "appropriate structuring" would provide opportunities within a safe environment to enhance both the development of positive relationships between *806 Rachel and her children and to practice skills learned in therapy.
Defense counsel summarized the proposed testimony of Rachel's boyfriend and mother as follows:
"As further proof, had [Rachel] been allowed to call witnesses to testify in her own behalf she would have called Mr. Gregory Wassinger, who, as testimony has revealed, has been her significant other for the past four years, to testify to her actions and to the best interests of the children. Had she also been allowed to put on testimony she would have called Sameline [surname omitted] who has also been referred to in reference to this case as Grandma Sammie, also to testify to the best interests of the children."
Rule 103(a)(2) of the Texas Rules of Evidence provides that error may not be predicated upon a ruling which excludes evidence unless a substantial right of the party is affected, and the substance of the objection was made known to the trial court by offer of proof. Ludlow v. DeBerry,
Counsel referenced the "best interests of the children" standard in his offer of proof. This term immediately invokes the relevant factors promulgated by the supreme court. See Holley v. Adams,
C. CUMULATIVE NATURE OF THE TESTIMONY ON OFFER OF PROOF
In a final attempt to avoid an inquiry into the trial court's sanction, David contends the sanction was harmless, as the testimony sought to be elicited was "clearly cumulative" of that offered by Rachel. *807 Texas courts have long recognized cumulativeness as grounds for the exclusion of probative evidence. Briones v. State,
As a litigant, Rachel retains the right to prove her case in the most persuasive manner possible. See Alvarado v. State,
Based upon her own analysis and observations, Hudson's testimony was unique and not cumulative of any testimony given by Rachel. See Nikoloutsos v. Nikoloutsos,
IV. APPELLANT'S POINTS OF ERROR
A. STRIKING PLEADINGS FOR FAILURE TO PAY AD LITEM FEES
Rachel claims the trial court abused its discretion because the striking of witnesses is an impermissible sanction for failing to pay attorneys fees.[4] We agree.
*808 A trial court has inherent power to impose sanctions on its own motion. In re Bennett,
Particularly instructive is Stubblefield v. Stubblefield, in which this court confronted a sanction based upon similar facts.
In both Saxton and Baluch, trial courts struck the fathers' pleadings for their failure to pay interim attorney's fees. Saxton,
B. THE TRANSAMERICAN INQUIRY
Rachel further contends that even if the trial court acted permissibly or pursuant to its inherent contempt powers in striking all of Rachel's fact witnesses, the sanction violates TransAmerican as an inappropriate death penalty sanction. See TransAmerican Natural Gas v. Powell,
Any sanction that adjudicates a claim and precludes the presentation of the merits of the case constitutes a death penalty sanction. Adkins Servs., Inc. v. Tisdale Co., Inc.,
In TransAmerican, the supreme court promulgated factors for courts to use in weighing whether a discovery sanction is just.
The first standard requires a direct relationship between the offensive conduct and the sanctions. Id. Accordingly, a just sanction must be directed against the abuse and attempt to remedy any prejudice caused to the innocent party. Id. Here, the death penalty sanction of exclusion of witnesses is simply incongruent with the failure to pay the ad litem's fee. The compensation of the attorney ad litem bears no direct relationship to the testimonial evidence Rachel sought to adduce at trial. Were this a case involving misconduct in the discovery process, it might follow that an exclusion of essential evidence would directly relate to the abuse of the discovery process. Yet here, the evidentiary sanction was designed to punish the unrelated procedural obligation to pay the attorney ad litem. We disapprove of a sanction premised upon any such an unrelated connection. In no respect are the two directly related, and thus, the trial court's sanction does not pass the first prong of the TransAmerican test.
Next, the sanction must not be excessive. TransAmerican,
This court has previously reviewed four factors in determining whether a sanction is excessive:
The most important factors to consider in determining whether a sanction is excessive are (1) whether the court considered and/or tested lesser sanctions to see if lesser sanctions would promote compliance and deterrence and discourage further abuse; (2) whether the sanctions are no more severe than necessary *812 to satisfy the legitimate purposes of a sanction (i.e., to secure compliance, to deter others and to punish); and (3) whether the party's hindrance of the discovery process justifies a presumption that its claims or defenses lack merit.
Butan Valley, N.V. v. Smith,
We need only address the first two factors to conclude the sanction was overly severe. Trial courts must consider lesser sanctions before resorting to a death penalty sanction. Butan Valley,
We must also consider whether the sanctions are no more severe than necessary to satisfy the legitimate purposes of a sanction. Butan Valley,
Additionally, to silence witnesses whose testimony is probative of the child's best interest is to do a disservice to the child. We cannot approve of such a sanction considering the interests at stake. As this court has observed:
[T]he best interest of a child can only be attained when a court's decision is as well-informed as the circumstances allow. A decision on custody, possession, or access can rarely be well-informed without consideration of the evidence and perspectives of both parents. Because *813 the exclusion of any important evidence as a discovery sanction can only produce a less-informed decision, contrary to the best interests of the child, we believe that it should be resorted to only where lesser sanctions are either impracticable or have been attempted and proven unsuccessful.
P.M.B.,
C. NOTICE AND DUE PROCESS
Rachel further contends she did not have any notice that her witnesses could be stricken, and thus, her constitutional rights to due process were violated. In support of this argument, Rachel notes that the ad litem's motion for sanctions requested, in addition to the various costs and fees, that Rachel's pleadings be struck and that judgment be granted in favor of David. Nowhere in the motion did the ad litem request that Rachel's witnesses be struck, nor did the ad litem cite any authority for the proposition that courts wield the power to impose such a sanction under the circumstances of this case.
As we have already found the trial court's sanctions impermissible and violative of the TransAmerican standards, we do not find it necessary to address Rachel's notice argument.
D. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION
Rachel complains that the trial court abused its discretion by refusing her pro se request for a psychological examination of David and the children. At the hearing on the motion, Rachel argued:
I would like to see both of my children... and [David] have a thorough and complete battery of tests. They're wanting to prove a certain cause of action and they're saying that I'm to blame. I've caused this, that or the other by making points in their termination and I want to show that my children, number one, aren't damaged, and number two, that I am not the cause of it. There's never been any testing of anybody. There was brief testing of [L.A.C.]. The Court ordered me to have a full battery of tests, and they intend to use and have brought in Toni Jo Lindstrom, Ted Jolly and Dr. Jameson as witnesses in the case who are expected to give testimony so I would like to have an expert evaluate them so that we'll have an independent person who's evaluated it.
In June of 2000, Rachel had been ordered to have psychological evaluations and anger management sessions with Dr. Ted Jolly. Independent medical evaluations are permitted under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 204.1. To obtain an order under Rule 204.1, the requesting party must show both good cause and that the mental condition of a party, or a person in the custody, conservatorship or under the legal control of a party, is in controversy. Id. Family court judges may on their own initiative or on the motion of a party, appoint psychologists *814 or psychiatrists to make any and all appropriate mental examinations of the children who are the subject of the suit or of any other parties. Id 204.4. The family court judge may make such an appointment irrespective of whether a psychologist or psychiatrist has been designated by any party as a testifying expert. Id.
In his First Amended Petition, David averred that Rachel had knowingly jeopardized the emotional well-being of the children. Additionally, when asked by the trial court about the grounds for termination, David's counsel replied that "psychological endangerment" prompted the suit. The jury charge defined "endangerment of emotional well-being" as "the systemic tearing down of another human being." Among the witnesses David produced at trial to support his theory were a licensed professional counselor and a psychiatrist. There is little doubt that the mental condition of Rachel, David and the children were at issue in this proceeding.
In her brief, Rachel relies on In re M.A.C. for the proposition that the trial court placed such a severe restriction on Rachel's ability to discover facts to contradict the other expert witnesses that she was deprived of a "champion in the battle of experts."
Laub, however, is distinguishable in that the wife had employed the experts. We recognize, of course, that the expert witnesses in this case were not David's witnesses in the sense that he sought them out and hired them. These expert witnesses were appointed by the trial court and came to conclusions which favored David. David merely availed himself of their testimony. However, we do find the Laub case sufficiently analogous under these facts. The record reflects that in the termination case the trial court ordered only Rachel to submit to a battery of psychological tests. There is no evidence in the record of any such psychological tests performed on David or the children in connection with the termination proceeding. Although David, Rachel, and the children all attended various counseling sessions, Rachel's motion requested an independent psychological evaluation.
To prevail on her motion, Rachel must show both good cause and that the mental condition of a party, or a person in the custody, conservatorship or under the legal control of a party, is in controversy. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 204.1. Rachel merely sought access to the same type of psychological *815 information that David sought to use against her in alleging "psychological endangerment." Here, the judge ordered that Rachel submit to a battery of psychological tests and then denied her reciprocal request that David do the same. Good cause for a psychological examination is established where the petitioner intends to use expert medical testimony to prove a fact in controversy. Laub,
X. CONCLUSION
In conclusion, we find the trial court abused its discretion in striking all of Rachel's fact witnesses as it was without the power to do so and the measure violated the standards set forth in TransAmerican. We also find the trial court abused its discretion in denying Rachel's pro se motion for an independent psychological examination. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Because of the nature of this case, we refer to the parties by their first names only and the children by their initials only. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(D) (Vernon 1996); see also S.V. v. R.V.,
[2] These factors include (1) the child's desires; (2) the child's physical and emotional needs, now and in the future; (3) the emotional and physical danger to the child, now and in the future; (4) the parental ability of the individuals; (5) the programs available to assist these individuals in promoting the child's best interests; (6) the plans for the child by the individual or agency; (7) the stability of the home or proposed placement; (8) the parent's act or omissions that may indicate the existing parent child relationship is not a proper one; and (9) any excuse for the parent's acts or omissions. Holley,
[3] In 1998, the Texas Rules of Civil and Criminal Evidence were unified into the current Texas Rules of Evidence. See Tex.R. Evid. 101(b). Though this is a civil proceeding (with arguably quasi-criminal underpinnings), we find guidance in the evidentiary analysis of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Cf. In re J.M.S.,
[4] By rule, statute, and their own inherent power, trial courts have broad authority to sanction litigants for specific misconduct. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 215 authorizes sanctions for abuse of discovery, while Rule 13 permits sanctions against attorneys who sign pleadings, motions, or other papers that are both groundless and either brought in bad faith or for the purpose of harassment. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 13, 215. The Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code also allows sanctions for pleadings and motions filed for improper reasons. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 10.001 et seq. The ad litem's motion did not specify a rule or statute upon which the request for sanctions was based.
[5] Although the motion was bare of any allegations of discovery abuse and did not invoke any rules related to discovery, the attorney ad litem did accuse appellant of witness tampering during one proceeding. In explaining the motion to the trial court, the attorney ad litem alleged:
[I]t is not my normal procedure to file a motion for enforcement on ad litem fees.... My biggest concern and the reason I filed that enforcement is that I had been instructed by Ms. Look that I was not to contact witnesses that were going to be billed against her account and that they've been instructed not to speak to me and then that left my hands tied in order to be able to represent the best interests of the children.
However, an attorney's unsworn statements are not evidence. In re Doe 3,
[6] Though holding that the trial court had exceeded its authority, this court did find it "reprehensible" that the father would agree in open court to reimburse the mother for her expenses and then later refuse to do that which he had promised. See Stubblefield,
[7] Assuming the trial court acted pursuant to its inherent power to sanction, we find that it abused in discretion in striking all of appellant's witnesses for the failure to pay the ad litem deposit. Trial courts wield inherent powers not derived from specific legislation or constitutional provisions but necessary for the exercise of the court's jurisdiction, administration of justice, and the preservation of the court's independence and integrity. Eichelberger v. Eichelberger,
[8] No court reporter recorded the hearing at which the associate judge struck all of Rachel's fact witnesses. As appellant, Rachel bears the burden to produce the entire record to prove harmful error that entitles her to reversal of the case. See McFarland v. Szakalun,
[9] Though certainly not dispositive of the issue, David's counsel stated before the trial court that she understood the exclusion constituted "a death penalty sanction and that's very harsh especially when she's paid the trial retainer." Cf. Texas Lawyer's CreedA Mandate for Professionalism, § III(19) ("I will not seek sanctions or disqualification unless it is necessary for the protection of my client's lawful objectives or is fully justified by the circumstances.")
[10] Though Dr. Jolly did not testify, David introduced his June 4, 2000 psychological evaluation of Rachel into evidence.
