Robert Gerald Sherwood Sr. v. Janet Lynne Sherwood ( 2014 )


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  •                                            In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    ____________________
    NO. 09-13-00453-CV
    ____________________
    ROBERT GERALD SHERWOOD SR., Appellant
    V.
    JANET LYNNE SHERWOOD, Appellee
    ________________________________________________________________ __
    On Appeal from the 1A District Court
    Tyler County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 22498
    _________________________________________________________________ _
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    In this appeal, we address whether the trial court erred by imposing a death
    penalty sanction due to the appellant’s failure to fully answer the appellee’s
    discovery. We hold the trial court abused its discretion by imposing a death penalty
    sanction; we reverse and remand that portion of the trial court’s judgment dividing
    the parties’ property for a new trial to allow the trial court to make a just and right
    division of the parties’ marital estate.
    1
    Background
    In issue one, Robert Gerald Sherwood Sr., complains the judgment should
    be reversed because the trial court failed to consider or attempt lesser sanctions
    before it signed an order striking his pleadings. In issue two, Robert complains the
    trial court abused its discretion by classifying all of the parties’ property in the
    decree as community property.
    In April 2012, Janet Lynne Sherwood sued Robert for divorce. After Robert
    answered, Janet served him with interrogatories and a request for production. By
    agreement, Janet gave Robert an extension to answer her discovery. After the
    deadline for answering the discovery had passed, Janet filed a motion to compel
    discovery; she requested that the trial court order Robert to file responses. During
    the hearing on Janet’s motion to compel, Robert indicated that he would file
    answers to Janet’s discovery requests in eighteen days. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 11.
    However, the record does not contain an order signed by the trial court regarding
    the agreement the parties reached at the hearing.
    Several days after the agreed deadline to answer Janet’s discovery had
    passed, Robert’s attorney filed a motion to withdraw. The motion to withdraw
    states that the trial court “ordered all discovery documents to be compelled to
    opposing counsel by October 1, 2012[,]” and that because of counsel’s “inability to
    2
    effectively communicate with [Robert], [Robert’s attorney] has been unable to
    meet this deadline.” The trial court signed an order allowing Robert’s attorney to
    withdraw on October 22.
    On the same day the trial court signed the order allowing Robert’s attorney
    to withdraw, Janet filed a motion requesting that the trial court sign an order to
    modify the temporary orders governing the parties’ divorce. Janet’s proposed order
    on that motion asked the trial court to order Robert to answer Janet’s discovery on
    October 1, a date that at that point had already passed. The clerk scheduled a
    hearing to occur in November on Janet’s motion to modify temporary orders.
    When Robert appeared for the November hearing, acting without the benefit of
    counsel, he advised the trial court that he had not received proper notice regarding
    the purpose of the November hearing. When the trial court noted that its file also
    did not have the documents referred to in the motion, the trial court suggested that
    Janet’s attorney and Robert confer. Janet’s attorney replied to that suggestion,
    stating: “I’ll visit with him, Judge. If we can’t get it worked out, we’ll be back.”
    Less than an hour later, Janet’s attorney advised the court that Robert left the
    courthouse without talking to him. At Janet’s attorney’s request, the trial court then
    signed Janet’s proposed order, which ordered Robert to answer Janet’s discovery,
    albeit in October, a date that by the November hearing had passed.
    3
    Approximately three weeks after the trial court signed the order compelling
    Robert’s answers, Janet filed a motion for sanctions and requested that the trial
    court strike Robert’s pleadings. The certificate of service accompanying the motion
    reflects that Robert was served by certified mail with the motion to strike. The
    motion asserts that Robert had failed to comply with a court order regarding
    discovery, but a copy of the trial court’s order compelling Robert to comply with
    Janet’s discovery was not attached as an exhibit to Janet’s motion for sanctions. On
    the same day Janet filed her motion to strike Robert’s pleadings, the trial court’s
    clerk signed a notice of hearing, which advised that the trial court would hear the
    motion for sanctions in December.
    At the December hearing on the motion for sanctions, Robert (still without
    counsel) did not appear. 1 At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court signed an
    1
    Although the motion to withdraw filed by Robert’s attorney lists 321 White
    Oak Trail as Robert’s address, and the order on the motion to withdraw recites that
    Robert’s last known address is 321 White Oak Trail, the certificate of service on
    Janet’s motion for sanctions reflects that Janet sent the motion to Robert at 321
    White Oak Drive. While Robert notes this discrepancy in his reply brief, asserting
    that “Janet’s attorney should have known something was amiss” when he did not
    appear at the December hearing, the clerk’s record shows that Robert listed his
    address as 321 White Oak Drive in a pro se motion that he filed shortly after the
    trial court granted his attorney’s motion to withdraw. Moreover, the brief Robert
    filed on the merits does not assert that Robert did not receive Janet’s motion for
    sanctions, nor did Robert complain in the trial court that he did not receive a copy
    of the motion. Given our resolution of Robert’s appeal, we need not address
    4
    order striking all of Robert’s pleadings for his abuse of the discovery process. The
    transcript from the hearing on Janet’s motion to strike does not show that the trial
    court contemplated any sanction other than a sanction striking all of Robert’s
    pleadings.
    Approximately two weeks after the trial court struck Robert’s pleadings,
    Robert (acting without benefit of counsel) filed a motion stating that he had “only
    now become aware of this damaging fact which has put me at a serious
    disadvantage.” Robert’s motion states that he could provide “the facts and details
    of this vital evidence when it is requested by the court.” Robert’s motion, when
    liberally construed, seeks relief from the order striking his pleadings and asks that
    he be allowed to show that some of the property being claimed as community
    property was actually his separate property. The record does not show that the trial
    court ever considered or ruled on Robert’s motion.
    Approximately two weeks before the final hearing, Robert filed his
    “COUNTER CLAIM AGAINST ORIGINAL PETITION FOR DIVORCE.” The
    counterclaim asserts that Janet, as a result of the divorce proceedings, denied
    Robert access to the documentation he needed to present his claim that some of the
    Robert’s argument that he was not properly served with Janet’s motion for
    sanctions, an argument he first raised in his reply brief. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.
    5
    property at issue in the divorce was his separate property; the counterclaim also
    asserts that Robert’s prior counsel failed to assist him in presenting this claim. The
    record does not show that after the trial court ordered Robert’s pleadings stricken,
    that it ever gave Robert permission to file additional pleadings.
    In March 2013, the trial court conducted a final hearing on the parties
    divorce. At the beginning of the final hearing, Robert (without the benefit of
    counsel) asked the trial court to continue the case until April so that he could
    “assemble all of the information that [he had] for separate property, because
    everything other than the one house up in Arkansas is separate property.” Robert
    also stated during the final hearing that “I’ve got the only documents and
    information that I need for that; and I just need time to assemble all that stuff, put it
    together.” The trial court denied Robert’s request to continue the final hearing.
    During the final hearing, Janet testified that she wanted the trial court to
    classify all of the assets of the parties as community property. Although given the
    opportunity to do so, Robert did not cross-examine Janet during the hearing.
    Additionally, the trial court advised Robert that he could call witnesses or
    introduce evidence during the hearing; but, Robert did not attempt to introduce any
    of the documents that he apparently had with him during the hearing. Although
    Robert did testify during the hearing, his testimony does not address his claim that
    6
    some of the property at issue in the divorce should be classified as his separate
    property. Instead, he only addressed in his testimony whether his attorney, who had
    intervened to collect unpaid attorney’s fees, had properly credited his account with
    the payments that he claimed he had made.
    Following the trial, Robert, acting with counsel, filed a motion for new trial.
    Robert’s motion asserts that the “[f]ailure to properly designate certain properties
    as separate to [Robert] is a miscarriage of justice and against the facts which can be
    presented in a new trial.” The motion for new trial does not contain any exhibits
    relevant to his claim that some of the property at issue was his separate property.
    In Janet’s reply to Robert’s motion for new trial, Janet asserts that “[Robert]
    was given ample opportunity through two other attorneys to respond to discovery
    and to present his case to the Court. [Robert] has intentionally ignored and failed to
    cooperate with the Court’s rulings and deadlines.” Asserting that Robert’s failure
    to provide discovery was intentional, Janet requested that Robert’s motion for new
    trial be denied. Subsequently, the trial court denied Robert’s motion for new trial,
    and Robert appealed.
    Analysis
    Generally, trial courts are not allowed to use sanctions to prevent a party
    from presenting the merits of that party’s claims. The Texas Supreme Court has
    7
    explained: “Discovery sanctions cannot be used to adjudicate the merits of a
    party’s claims or defenses unless a party’s hindrance of the discovery process
    justifies a presumption that its claims or defenses lack merit.” TransAmerican
    Natural Gas Corp. v. Powell, 
    811 S.W.2d 913
    , 918 (Tex. 1991). A death penalty
    sanction is permissible if it is “no more severe than required to satisfy legitimate
    purposes.” Chrysler Corp. v. Blackmon, 
    841 S.W.2d 844
    , 849 (Tex. 1992).
    On the dissolution of a marriage, all of the property possessed by either
    spouse is presumed to be community property; the spouse who claims that some of
    the property is separate must prove the property is separate by clear and convincing
    evidence. 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 3.003
     (West 2006). A general denial “properly
    raises the issue of ownership of the property.” Anderson v. Anderson, 
    282 S.W.3d 150
    , 155 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2009, no pet.); Chavez v. Chavez, 
    269 S.W.3d 763
    ,
    766 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.); see also Tex. R. Civ. P. 92 (“A general
    denial of matters pleaded by the adverse party which are not required to be denied
    under oath, shall be sufficient to put the same in issue.”). In the absence of a
    pleading, which may consist of a general denial, which puts the character of the
    property in issue, the trial court cannot render a judgment characterizing parts of
    the divorcing couple’s property as separate. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 301 (requiring the
    8
    judgment to “conform to the pleadings”); see also Starr v. Ferguson, 
    166 S.W.2d 130
    , 132 (Tex. 1942) (“There must be pleadings as well as proof.”).
    The sanction the trial court imposed on Robert in this divorce case relates to
    Robert’s failure to answer Janet’s discovery. “The legitimate purposes of discovery
    sanctions are threefold: 1) to secure compliance with discovery rules; 2) to deter
    other litigants from similar misconduct; and 3) to punish violators.” Blackmon, 841
    S.W.2d at 849. Because the trial court struck Robert’s original answer, a general
    denial, and never granted him the permission he requested on several occasions to
    amend and present evidence regarding his claim, Robert never presented any
    evidence to support his claim that some of the property at issue was actually his
    separate property. Thus, under the circumstances presented on this record, the trial
    court’s order striking Robert’s pleadings operated as a death penalty sanction
    regarding his proof relating to the property classification of the divorcing couple’s
    property. The trial court never withdrew the sanction despite Robert’s requests to
    be allowed to proceed on his claim, and it appears that Robert did not understand
    whether the trial court would permit him to present evidence on his claim that
    some of the property at issue was not community property.
    Even if a party’s conduct for abusing the discovery process should be
    sanctioned, the sanction the trial court imposes must be “‘just.’” Id. For a sanction
    9
    to meet that standard, there must be a direct relationship between the party’s
    offensive conduct and the sanction imposed, and the sanction the trial court
    chooses to impose must not be excessive. Id.; TransAmerican, 811 S.W.2d at 917.
    Even when a party has acted in flagrant bad faith or with a callous disregard for the
    rules of discovery, a “lesser sanction[] must first be tested to determine whether
    they are adequate to secure compliance, deterrence, and punishment of the
    offender.” Blackmon, 841 S.W.2d at 849.
    According to Janet, Robert’s failure to request a lesser sanction constitutes a
    waiver of any appellate complaint regarding the sanction. But, we cannot conclude
    on the record before us that Robert never asked the trial court to impose a lesser
    sanction. The record shows that Robert asked the trial court to reconsider its
    decision to strike his pleadings (1) in a motion filed approximately two weeks after
    the trial court struck his pleadings, (2) in his counterclaim, which he filed
    approximately two weeks before the final hearing, and (3) during the final hearing.
    While none of Robert’s subsequent pleadings or requests used the term “lesser
    sanctions,” they apprised the trial court that Robert wanted permission to proceed
    on his claim that some of the property at issue was actually his separate property.
    Given that Robert acted without the benefit of counsel with respect to these
    requests, we conclude that collectively, they were sufficient to make the trial court
    10
    aware that he wanted to present a claim that some of the property was separate
    property, even though the trial court had sanctioned him by striking his pleadings.
    See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A). We are not persuaded that Robert waived his
    right to complain on appeal of the trial court’s decision striking his pleadings.
    The parties disagree about whether the trial court attempted to impose a
    lesser sanction. In her brief, Janet did not assert the trial court tested or considered
    a less stringent sanction before it struck all of Robert’s pleadings. But, in oral
    argument, Janet’s counsel suggested that the trial court’s order compelling Robert
    to answer the discovery constitutes the trial court’s attempt to test a lesser sanction.
    That order, however, did not punish Robert for failing to comply with any prior
    court orders, so it was not a sanction, much less a lesser one. And, before the trial
    court struck Robert’s pleadings, there were no orders punishing Robert for
    discovery abuse. We conclude the record shows the trial court did not test any
    lesser sanction before striking all of Robert’s pleadings.
    Janet also argues that the trial court’s sanction did not operate as a death
    penalty sanction. In support of her argument, Janet points to the trial court’s
    invitation to Robert to testify during the final divorce hearing. The record shows
    that when Janet rested, the trial court asked Robert whether he had any witnesses
    and advised him that he could take the stand. When Robert responded that he did
    11
    not know anyone in the area, the trial court asked if he wanted to put anything into
    evidence. Robert responded that he could make some copies of his original
    documents and have them sent, but the trial court responded: “No. At the hearing.
    I’m talking about: Do you have any evidence you want to put on right now?” After
    Robert stated, “Well, I don’t know[,]” the trial court replied, “All right. Thank
    you.” Then, the trial court allowed Robert’s former attorney, who had intervened
    seeking to recover unpaid fees, to testify. After Robert’s former attorney testified,
    Robert testified that he had paid his former attorney more money than the attorney
    acknowledged that he had been paid.
    It is not apparent from the final hearing that during the final hearing the trial
    court would have admitted the documents Robert apparently had in his possession
    that he indicated related to his separate property claim, nor did the trial court ever
    state during the hearing that it was reversing course from its prior ruling and that it
    would actually consider whatever evidence or testimony Robert wanted to provide
    regarding his claim about how the property at issue should be classified. The trial
    court failed to explain to Robert that it would consider the originals of the
    documents he had with him if they were introduced, and instead, the trial court’s
    reaction was that the court would not delay the proceedings to allow Robert to
    provide copies. Finally, without pleadings, any proof on the issue regarding the
    12
    characterization of the divorcing couple’s property was irrelevant to the judgment
    the trial court would have been required to enter, as once the trial court struck all of
    Robert’s pleadings, Robert’s claim that he had separate property was not at issue.
    See Tex. R. Civ. P. 301 (requiring the trial court’s judgment to conform to the
    pleadings); see also Tex. R. Civ. P. 63 (requiring leave of court to file amended
    pleadings within seven days of trial).
    Although Janet has not argued that the order striking Robert’s pleadings was
    based on Rule 193.6 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, in evaluating whether
    the judgment should be reversed, we also consider if the judgment can be affirmed
    under that rule. Rule 193.6(a) provides that “[a] party who fails to make, amend, or
    supplement a discovery response in a timely manner may not introduce in evidence
    the material or information that was not timely disclosed, or offer the testimony of
    a witness (other than a named party) who was not timely identified” unless the trial
    court finds good cause for the delay or the absence of unfair prejudice to the
    requesting party. Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a). The analysis that applies concerning
    death penalty sanctions does not apply if the evidence at issue was excluded under
    Rule 193.6. See Campos v. State Farm Gen. Ins. Co., 
    943 S.W.2d 52
    , 55 (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio 1997, writ denied) (concluding that the TransAmerican
    13
    analysis that concerns the review of a death penalty sanction did not apply where
    the testimony was excluded at trial because it was not properly disclosed).
    In this case, the trial court signed an order striking all of Robert’s pleadings
    as a death penalty sanction before the trial occurred. Additionally, while the trial
    court gave Robert the opportunity to testify, it did not exclude any of his evidence
    at the final hearing under Rule 193.6. Finally, the discovery instruments that Janet
    served on Robert are not in the clerk’s record, so it does not appear they were ever
    before the trial court. Therefore, even had Robert attempted to offer his evidence,
    the record before us does not support any claim that the trial court excluded
    because it addressed information regarding Robert’s separate property claim on
    which Janet sought discovery. Based on the information before use, we conclude
    the trial court did not exclude any evidence based on Rule 193.6.
    We must also consider whether the trial court’s decision to strike Robert’s
    pleadings caused any harm. Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a) (requiring the appellant to
    show on appeal that the error being complained of “probably caused the rendition
    of an improper judgment” or “probably prevented the appellant from properly
    presenting the case to the court of appeals”). As previously explained, it appears
    that Robert failed to present any evidence he might have had regarding his separate
    property claim because the trial court struck his pleadings and then never granted
    14
    leave to allow Robert the right to file additional pleadings. In conjunction with
    Robert’s first attempt to get relief from the trial court’s order, Robert alleged that
    some of the property that Janet characterized as marital property was “purchased
    with the funds from my inheritance[.]” Additionally, the inventory Janet offered
    into evidence at trial lists one of the assets of the marital estate, valued at
    approximately $30,000, as property traceable to the estate of Charles and Della
    Sherwood. This information, although meager, prevents our engaging in the
    presumption that Robert’s claim regarding separate property lacks merit.
    The divorce decree the trial court rendered treats all of the divorcing
    couple’s property as community property. While the judgment recites there was no
    evidence that the parties owned separate property, the lack of evidence is
    explained, in part, by the court’s sanction. Therefore, we are also unable to hold
    Robert wholly responsible for the state of the record regarding Robert’s separate
    property claim. We conclude the judgment the trial court rendered was improper
    because the sanction deprived Robert of the opportunity to have the trial court hear
    evidence and adjudicate his separate property claim. 2 Under the circumstances
    2
    We do not hold or imply that any of the property at issue is separate
    property. Assuming that Robert is granted leave to file amended pleadings on
    remand, and that the evidence concerning Robert’s separate property claim is not
    excluded under Rule 193.6, Robert’s separate property claim is to be resolved on
    retrial.
    15
    shown here, we hold that the trial court’s order striking all of Robert’s pleadings
    probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment and prevented Robert from
    properly presenting his case on appeal. See 
    id.
    We conclude the trial court abused its discretion by imposing a death penalty
    sanction without first considering a lesser sanction, and we further conclude that
    the error was harmful. We affirm that portion of the judgment dissolving the
    marriage between the parties, and that portion of the judgment awarding attorneys’
    fees to Robert’s former attorney. That portion of the judgment dividing the parties’
    marital estate is severed and reversed, and the issue of the division of the parties’
    property is remanded to the trial court for a new trial.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    ______________________________
    HOLLIS HORTON
    Justice
    Submitted on May 1, 2014
    Opinion Delivered August 21, 2014
    Before McKeithen, C.J., Horton and Johnson, JJ.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-13-00453-CV

Filed Date: 8/21/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021