in the Interest of J.A.T., a Minor Child , 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 10177 ( 2016 )


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  • Affirmed and Opinion filed September 15, 2016.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-15-00515-CV
    IN THE INTEREST OF J.A.T., A MINOR CHILD
    On Appeal from the 300th District Court
    Brazoria County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 74447
    OPINION
    Zarena Allen filed an original suit affecting the parent-child relationship
    concerning J.A.T., a child not related to her. After the child’s father filed a
    counterpetition, the trial court dismissed Allen’s petition for lack of standing.
    When she later attempted to intervene, the trial court denied her leave to do so.
    She appeals both rulings. We affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In October 2013, Zarena Allen filed an original petition in a suit affecting
    the parent-child relationship (“SAPCR”) in which she asked the trial court to name
    her and J.A.T.’s father as J.A.T.’s joint managing conservators. Allen is not
    related to J.A.T., but alleged that she had actual care, control, and possession of the
    child for at least six months ending not more than ninety days before she filed the
    suit. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 102.003(a)(9) (West Supp. 2016). Ten days
    after the suit was filed, an associate judge issued temporary orders naming Allen
    J.A.T.’s sole managing conservator.
    The child’s father A.T. (“Father”) answered the suit, filed a counterpetition,
    and requested a de novo hearing on the temporary orders. Father also filed a
    motion to vacate the temporary orders on the ground that Allen lacked standing to
    initiate this suit. The associate judge denied the motion to vacate, and Father
    requested a de novo hearing on that matter as well. The record indicates that an
    evidentiary hearing was held on Father’s motion to vacate on June 10, 2014, and
    that on June 17, 2014, the presiding judge granted the motion and dismissed
    Allen’s petition. Allen filed a petition for writ of mandamus, which was denied.
    See In re Allen, No. 01-14-00492-CV, 
    2014 WL 3827525
    (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] Aug. 5, 2014, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
    While Allen’s case was pending before the First Court of Appeals, she
    continued attempting to litigate J.A.T.’s conservatorship in the trial court by filing
    a petition in intervention and a motion for leave to intervene on June 25, 2014.
    Father responded by nonsuiting his counterpetition and filing a motion to deny
    Allen leave to intervene. A contested hearing on the motion for leave to intervene
    was held over the course of three days, and the associate judge denied Allen’s
    motion. Allen requested a de novo hearing, and by agreement of the parties, the
    matter was determined by submitting a transcript of the three-day hearing to the
    presiding judge. The trial court likewise denied Allen leave to intervene.
    2
    In a single issue, Allen contends that the trial court erred in denying her
    motion for leave to intervene and in finding that she lacked standing to bring an
    original action.
    II. STANDING TO BRING AN ORIGINAL SAPCR
    When the trial court’s determination of a person’s standing to file an original
    SAPCR is challenged, we review the trial court’s ruling de novo by construing the
    petition in the pleader’s favor and looking to the pleader’s intent. See In re M.J.G.,
    
    248 S.W.3d 753
    , 757 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2008, no pet.). Standing is essential
    to subject-matter jurisdiction, see Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    ,
    553–54 (Tex. 2000), and a trial court must consider evidence when necessary to
    determine whether subject-matter jurisdiction exists. See 
    id. at 554–55.
    As the basis for standing to file an original SAPCR, Allen relies on a
    provision that permits such a suit to be filed by “a person, other than a foster
    parent, who has had actual care, control, and possession of the child for at least six
    months ending not more than 90 days preceding the date of the filing of the
    petition.” See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 102.003(a)(9). The record shows that
    Father filed a motion to vacate the court’s temporary orders on the ground that
    Allen lacked standing to initiate a SAPCR. The record further shows that after
    Father’s original challenge to Allen’s standing was denied, he filed a request for a
    hearing de novo. According to representations in Father’s subsequent motion for
    writ of attachment as well as the case summary included in the clerk’s record, an
    evidentiary hearing on the motion was held on June 10, 2014; however, the
    appellate record does not contain a transcript of the hearing.
    A complete reporter’s record is not always necessary. If the parties have
    filed a written stipulation agreeing on the contents of a partial record, then the
    appellate court will presume that the agreed record contains “all evidence and
    3
    filings relevant to the appeal.” TEX. R. APP. P. 34.2. The parties also can agree to,
    and file, an agreed statement of the case. TEX. R. APP. P. 34.3. Even in the
    absence of an agreement between the parties, the appellant can request a partial
    reporter’s record and “include in the request a statement of the points or issues to
    be presented on appeal and will then be limited to those points or issues.” TEX. R.
    APP. P. 34.6(c)(1). But in the absence of an agreement between the parties or a
    statement of the appellant’s issues to be presented on appeal, “we must presume
    that the omitted portions of the record are relevant and would support the
    judgment.” Mason v. Our Lady Star of the Sea Catholic Church, 
    154 S.W.3d 816
    ,
    822 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, no pet.).
    The record before us does not contain the parties’ agreement to a partial
    reporter’s record or to a statement of the case. It also does not contain a statement
    of Allen’s issues to be presented on appeal. We therefore must presume that a
    record of the hearing on Allen’s standing to file the original SAPCR would support
    the trial court’s judgment that she lacked standing. See Bennett v. Cochran, 
    96 S.W.3d 227
    , 229 (Tex. 2002) (per curiam) (“There is no question that, had Bennett
    completely failed to submit his statement of points or issues, Rule 34.6 would
    require the appellate court to affirm the trial court’s judgment.”).        Thus, we
    presume that at the evidentiary hearing on June 10, 2014, Allen failed to produce
    evidence sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact about whether she had
    actual care, control, and possession of J.A.T. for at least six months ending not
    more than ninety days before she filed her original petition in 2013. We therefore
    overrule Allen’s challenge to the trial court’s ruling that she lacked standing to file
    an original SAPCR.
    4
    III. STANDING TO INTERVENE
    On appeal, Allen contends that she had standing to intervene on June 25,
    2014 because as a result of the trial court’s temporary orders, she had been J.A.T.’s
    sole managing conservator with actual care, control, and possession of him for the
    eight months immediately preceding that date, and thus, she had standing to file an
    original SAPCR under Texas Family Code section 102.003(a)(9).             For us to
    reverse the judgment on that basis, we would have to conclude that, even though
    we must presume that the omitted portion of the record supports the trial court’s
    finding that Allen lacked standing when she filed this lawsuit, she nevertheless
    acquired standing to intervene—in the same proceeding she initiated and in which
    she still was named as a respondent—because she was named J.A.T.’s managing
    conservator in a temporary order that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to issue.
    We cannot agree. We instead conclude that Allen’s argument impermissibly relies
    on selected parts of sections 102.003 and 102.004 while overlooking others.
    Section 102.003 concerns standing to file an original suit, and provides that
    “[i]n computing the time necessary for standing under Subsection[] (a)(9) . . . , the
    court may not require that the time be continuous and uninterrupted but shall
    consider the child’s principal residence during the relevant time preceding the date
    of commencement of the suit.” TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 102.003(b) (emphasis
    added); see also In re Vogel, 
    261 S.W.3d 917
    , 921 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
    Dist.] 2008, no pet.) (orig. proceeding) (stating that standing to file suit is
    determined as of the time the suit was filed (citing Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air
    Control Bd., 
    852 S.W.2d 440
    , 446 n.9 (Tex. 1993))). Although Allen relies on
    section 102.003(a)(9), she attempts to establish standing to intervene based solely
    on events that occurred after suit was filed.
    5
    In contrast to section 102.003, section 102.004(b) addresses the standing of a
    non-parent to intervene in a pending SAPCR. The relevant language from that
    subsection is as follows:
    [T]he court may grant a grandparent or other person deemed by the
    court to have had substantial past contact with the child leave to
    intervene in a pending suit filed by a person authorized to do so under
    this subchapter if there is satisfactory proof to the court that
    appointment of a parent as a sole managing conservator or both
    parents as joint managing conservators would significantly impair the
    child’s physical health or emotional development.
    TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 102.004(b). Allen does not contend that she met her
    burden to show that appointment of one or both of J.A.T.’s parents as managing
    conservator would significantly impair his physical health or emotional
    development, but instead argues only that at the time she intervened, she had
    standing to file an original suit.
    We agree that a person who has standing to file an original petition under
    section 102.003(a)(9) generally may instead file a petition in intervention;1
    however, Allen could not intervene in this lawsuit because section 102.004(b) only
    permits the trial court to grant leave to intervene “in a pending suit filed by a
    person authorized to do so under this subchapter.” See 
    id. Because Allen
    lacked
    standing when she originally filed this SAPCR, this was not a “suit filed by a
    person authorized to do so,” so she did not acquire standing to intervene in this suit
    while the case was pending.
    We overrule the sole issue presented.
    1
    See In re A.T., No. 14-14-00071-CV, 
    2014 WL 11153028
    , at *9–11 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [14th Dist.] July 15, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op. on reh’g) (reversing dismissal of plea in
    intervention where intervenors’ plea reasonably could be viewed as raising issues of standing
    under both the “intervention” and “original suit” provisions and the intervenors argued standing
    under both provisions at the hearing, but the trial court declined to consider evidence that
    intervenors had standing to bring an original suit).
    6
    IV. CONCLUSION
    On the record before us, we must presume that Allen failed to establish that
    she had actual care, control, and possession of J.A.T. for at least six months ending
    no more than 90 days before she filed this original SAPCR. Because Allen lacked
    standing when she initiated this suit, she could not intervene in it. We accordingly
    affirm the trial court’s orders dismissing her original petition and denying her leave
    to intervene.
    /s/       Tracy Christopher
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Boyce, Christopher, and Jamison.
    7