In the
Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
at Fort Worth
___________________________
No. 02-19-00233-CV
___________________________
IN THE GUARDIANSHIP OF N.P., AN INCAPACITATED PERSON
On Appeal from Probate Court No. 2
Tarrant County, Texas
Trial Court No. 2018-GD00257-2
Before Sudderth, C.J.; Gabriel and Kerr, JJ.
Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr
Dissenting Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is an appeal from an order creating a limited guardianship of the person of
N.P. (Noelle)1 under Section 1101.152 of the Estates Code. See Tex. Est. Code Ann.
§ 1101.152. The probate court declined to grant the full guardianship, see id. § 1101.151,
that was recommended by her treating physician of roughly ten years, the court’s
investigator, and Noelle’s parents, and which Noelle’s attorney ad litem did not argue
against or refute. In multiple issues, Appellants M.P. (Mother) and J.P. (Father)
challenge the probate court’s denial of their application to be appointed full guardians
of the person of their intellectually disabled adult daughter. Because we hold that the
probate court abused its discretion in not appointing guardians with full authority when
the need was uncontested and the evidence supported it, we reverse.
Background
With an IQ between 50 and 70, Noelle has been diagnosed with a mild
intellectual disability as well as autism, disruptive mood dysregulation, attention-
deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and anxiety disorder. Noelle lives with her Mother and
Father. In September 2018, shortly before Noelle’s eighteenth birthday, her parents
applied to be appointed guardians of her person. See id. § 1103.001 (providing that
within 180 days of a minor’s 18th birthday, a person may file an application for a minor
who, because of an incapacity, will require a guardianship after turning 18).
1
“Noelle” is a pseudonym.
2
The day after the application was filed, the probate court appointed Arlene
Shorter—who at the time was a 20-year assistant court investigator for Tarrant County
Probate Court No. 2—to function as the Court Visitor.2 See id. § 1054.103.
Shorter filed the statutorily required sworn court-visitor report after meeting with
Noelle, Father, and Mother in their home. See id. §§ 1054.103, .104. Shorter’s report
recommended the appointment of a full guardianship, stating that (a) supports and
services were considered and were not sufficient; (b) alternatives to guardianship were
considered but were not feasible; (c) Noelle needed a guardian to make placement
(residential) decisions, medical decisions, and financial decisions; and (d) Noelle’s rights
to drive, vote, dispose of property, and marry should be removed.
Among many other things, Shorter’s report noted that
• Noelle’s parents reported Noelle’s age equivalent as that of a third- or
fourth-grader;
2
The hearing record does not really distinguish between Shorter’s role as assistant
court investigator and court visitor, although the latter position carries with it the
obligation to file the detailed written evaluation that Shorter provided. See id. § 1054.104.
A court investigator, on the other hand, is charged with filing “a report containing the
court investigator’s findings and conclusions after conducting an investigation” under
(as applicable here) Section 1054.151 into the “circumstances alleged in the application
to determine whether a less restrictive alternative to guardianship is appropriate.” See id.
§§ 1054.153(a), .151. Two and a half weeks after the guardianship application was filed,
the probate court’s chief court investigator filed a one-page report in which he noted
that “Court Investigator is undertaking investigation into less restrictive alternatives to
a guardianship of the person through appointment of a Court Visitor.” From that point,
the chief court investigator deferred entirely to Shorter. We will refer to Shorter as either
court visitor or court investigator where appropriate.
3
• Noelle could not give informed consent for medical care; had several
medical concerns; was frequently dehydrated because she would not drink
water without prompting or reinforcement, leading to as many as 10–
12 emergency-room visits per year; and had seen several cardiologists
during the past year;
• Noelle “did not assess risk in her environment” and according to her
parents was “very trusting of strangers”;
• Noelle self-reported that she could not take care of herself because of her
autism and that she had memory problems and would forget things she
was told to do;
• Noelle did not require assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) but
did need “a lot of prompting”;
• Noelle could not, with supports and services, meet her needs for food,
clothing, or shelter; care for her physical or mental health; manage her
financial affairs; or make decisions concerning her residence, voting,
operating a motor vehicle, and marriage;
• although some supports and services were available and being used by
Noelle and her parents, Noelle did not have the requisite mental capacity
to consent to allow her parents to assist with accessing them; and
• because Noelle’s cognitive impairments precluded her from executing any
legal documents, none of the listed alternatives to guardianship was a
possibility.
The court separately appointed Bonny Link as Noelle’s attorney ad litem, a
mandatory appointment “to represent the proposed ward’s interests.” See id. § 1054.001;
see also id. § 1002.002 (defining attorney ad litem). The appointment order set out the
duties required of that position under the Estates Code, among other instructions. See
id. § 1054.004. The order specified that Link was not to file a written report, and she
did not do so.
4
1. Noelle’s parents’ evidence
At the March 2019 hearing, Noelle’s parents testified about the need for a
guardianship and introduced the statutorily required Physician’s Certificate of Medical
Examination (CME) from Noelle’s long-time treating physician Dr. Shanti Nagireddy.
See id. § 1101.103.3 Dr. Nagireddy, who did not testify at the hearing, also provided an
affidavit. The attorney ad litem stipulated to the admissibility of both the CME and
affidavit, and she voiced no objection to their being admitted.
Like Shorter’s report, Dr. Nagireddy’s CME supported a full guardianship,
describing Noelle as totally incapacitated. The CME diagnosed Noelle with the mental
conditions described previously, noted “moderate” severity and a poor prognosis, and
found no possibility for improvement. According to the CME, Noelle cannot initiate
and make responsible decisions regarding:
• making complex business, managerial, and financial decisions;
• managing a personal bank account;
• safely operating a motor vehicle;
• voting in a public election;
• making decisions about marriage;
3
Dr. Nagireddy used the prescribed CME form posted on the website of Tarrant
County Probate Court No. 2. See https://www.tarrantcounty.com
/content/dam/main/probate-courts/probate-court-2/CME_2015_with_legislative_
changes.pdf (last visited Nov. 30, 2020). Alternatively, a physician may file a letter
containing the same information. See id. § 1101.103.
5
• determining her own residence;
• administering her own medications;
• attending to basic ADLs—for example, bathing, grooming, dressing,
walking, toileting—with and without4 supports and services;
• attending to instrumental activities of daily living (like shopping, cooking,
traveling, and cleaning); and
• consenting to medical, dental, psychological, or psychiatric treatment.
Dr. Nagireddy also indicated on the CME that Noelle would not be able to
“attend, understand, and participate” in the guardianship hearing and recommended
against her attending the hearing. 5 The doctor concluded that Noelle is totally
incapacitated. The least restrictive placement the doctor considered appropriate for
Noelle is with her family.
4
Dr. Nagireddy apparently checked both boxes on this part of the CME form in
error rather than selecting only one of those two options. The probate court pointed to
this mistake as making the CME “inconsistent within itself in that it indicates [Noelle]
cannot attend to her own ADLs without and with supports and services indicating
[Noelle’s] ADLs are not taken care of which conflicts with other evidence including
[Noelle’s] appearance in court.” Within the context of the CME as a whole, we do not
find this error to be material or to otherwise render the CME unreliable or incompetent,
particularly since neither the court investigator nor the attorney ad litem disagreed with
the recommendation of a full guardianship.
5
The fact that Noelle did attend and participate in the hearing (though how much
she understood is not apparent) does not negate Dr. Nagireddy’s opinion that Noelle
is totally incapacitated and that no feasible alternatives or supports and services exist
that would avoid the need for a full guardianship.
6
Dr. Nagireddy’s affidavit stated that based on her medical expertise and to a
reasonable medical probability, Noelle is totally incapacitated. She further opined that
Noelle is unable to make any decisions for herself even with assistance and that Noelle
does not have the capacity to execute a power of attorney or a supported decision-
making agreement, nor does Noelle have the capacity to understand a simple or
complex legal document.
Dr. Nagireddy also opined that she did not believe that Noelle has the “ability to
consent to educational decisions, consent to receive governmental services, or consent
to employment.” Similarly, no supports and services were available that would enable
Noelle to “(a) meet her needs for food, clothing, or shelter, (b) care for her physical or
mental health, (c) manage her financial affairs, and (d) make personal decisions
regarding residence, voting, operating a motor vehicle, or marriage.” Dr. Nagireddy’s
affidavit additionally expressed her belief that Noelle would be susceptible to abuse and
exploitation unless a guardian was appointed to make decisions on Noelle’s behalf and
concluded by stating that “it is [Noelle’s] best interest for a guardian of the person with
full authority be appointed for her.”
Father’s testimony corroborated Noelle’s need for a guardianship. In answers to
a series of leading questions, Father agreed with Dr. Nagireddy that Noelle could not
meet her own needs for food, clothing, or shelter; could not care for her physical or
mental health or manage her own financial affairs, see id. § 1002.017 (defining
“incapacitated person” as including an adult who cannot do those things due to a
7
physical or mental condition); and could not make personal decisions regarding
residence, voting, operating a motor vehicle, or marriage, see id. § 1002.031 (describing
“supports and services” as including formal and informal resources and assistance that
enable a person to make those particular decisions). Father concurred with the doctor’s
assessment that Noelle should not retain the rights to vote, determine whether she gets
married, determine her residence, or operate a motor vehicle.
In Father’s view, after considering guardianship alternatives and other supports
and services, none were workable because his daughter would not comprehend them,
nor was she capable of giving informed consent. By way of example, Father opined that
his daughter would not comprehend the legal significance of a power of attorney, would
not understand a “supported decision-making agreement,” and, generally, does not
understand the significance of delegating decisions. Father stated that if Noelle agreed
to something he suggested, it would be because she is “just a passive participant and
doesn’t fully understand what she’s consenting to.” According to Father, Noelle could
not independently vote without undue influence.
Father acknowledged that neither he nor anyone else had tried to explain a power
of attorney or a “supported assisted decision-making agreement” to Noelle, because
Noelle “would not be able to understand it.” Father testified that until a decision on
guardianship was made, the plan at the time of the hearing was to work with the Texas
8
Workforce Commission6 to try to find employment for Noelle after she got out of
school that May or perhaps have her attend community college, although he expressed
doubts about the latter as a viable option. Father did not envision Noelle’s being able
to live in an apartment by herself or with a roommate and to function, either then or in
ten years. Father was not asked on cross-examination whether he thought that by
accessing and using some sort of formal or informal supports and services, Noelle could
make personal decisions about voting, driving a car, or getting married.
Mother then testified briefly, answering some of the same leading questions that
Father had been asked and agreeing that, having heard her husband’s testimony, her
answers would be substantially the same if she were asked the same questions. The only
question posed to Mother on cross-examination was whether she would characterize
Noelle as a “high-functioning person,” to which Mother responded, “Yes.” 7
2. The attorney ad litem’s evidence presented on Noelle’s behalf
Link put on testimony from Noelle and Shorter, neither of whom contradicted
or disagreed with Dr. Nagireddy, Father, or Mother on the need for a full guardianship
6
The Texas Workforce Commission has several programs that help disabled
adults find employment. See https://www.twc.texas.gov/partners/programs-people-
disabilities (last visited Dec. 1, 2020).
7
The record does not indicate what Mother meant by “high-functioning,”
whether there is some legal significance to being “high-functioning,” or what it means
(if anything) in the context of a proceeding to establish the need for a full versus a
limited guardianship.
9
and the lack of feasible alternatives or supports and services that could avoid the need
for a full guardianship.
The probate court asked Noelle about her understanding of the truth, which
Noelle said was “[s]omething that’s not a lie,” although Noelle was not asked what she
thought a lie was. Consistent with the CME’s reflecting that Noelle has no long-term-
memory deficits, she described having worked at a grocery store for three or four weeks
the past summer, apparently through the Texas Workforce Commission, later saying
both that the store “actually let everyone go after three or four weeks” and
simultaneously that she was let go because of her “heart problem.” Noelle said that
although she was “grateful” for her parents’ advice and “wouldn’t be anything” without
them, she “probably wouldn’t” comply if they told her to do (or not to do) something.
But Noelle also acknowledged that even though she was now an adult, she did not
believe that she would make the right decisions and that she looks to her parents for
help. Noelle stated that she planned to continue living with her parents for the time
being but could not predict what things would “look like in [her] 30s.”8 Noelle
expressed a desire to maybe attend community college or get a job that she would be
able to do, and agreed that she had heard her father’s earlier testimony about that being
the plan although she “didn’t really understand everything he was saying.”
Father testified that Noelle had commented that she might want to move into
8
an apartment. The probate court ultimately removed Noelle’s right to determine her
residence.
10
Noelle described enjoying hanging out with friends and her boyfriend at her
house, where her parents would “make sure [she was] safe” by reminding her to always
keep her door open. Noelle attended a church youth program and sometimes went to
movies with church friends without her parents’ being there, although they would check
the ratings to ensure that a movie was appropriate for her to see.
Link concluded her direct examination by eliciting Noelle’s agreement that she
wanted the probate court to appoint her parents as her guardians because she is “not
capable of doing things without my family.”
The probate court asked Noelle about her grocery-store job and whether anyone
had ever offered her drugs, to which Noelle answered no, volunteering that she would
never take drugs even if someone offered them to her.9 As for doctor visits, Noelle
recounted that the doctor would talk to both her and her parents but mostly to her
parents and that she felt “okay” with that because she “would not understand anything
the doctor was saying if [her] parents weren’t there.” No one questioned Noelle about
voting, driving, or marriage.
The final witness was Shorter, whom the attorney ad litem offered as an “expert
in the field of social work, and especially in the area of guardianship.” Without
Father had expressed his fears that without a guardianship Noelle might
9
“become homeless on the streets and then into drugs or prostitution.” Father conceded
that Noelle’s being under a guardianship would not prevent those things from
happening.
11
objection, the probate court designated Shorter as an expert. Testifying in narrative
form from her report on file, Shorter recapped what she had learned and observed
during her October 2018 visit with Mother, Father, and Noelle. Shorter agreed that
Noelle functions at a third- or fourth-grade level. Asked about the advisability of
Noelle’s leaving her school program in May 2019 as opposed to remaining there until
the permitted age of 21, see Tex. Educ. Code Ann. § 25.001, Shorter opined that if
getting a job was being pursued, that would be a viable option to encourage self-
sufficiency. Shorter further opined about Noelle’s need for a guardian:
Q. . . . Based on your knowledge of the Texas Workforce
Commission, do you need a guardian -- would someone in this situation
need a guardian to help them get into that program and pursue some type
of employment?
A. Just generally speaking, a person doesn’t need it. Do I think
[Noelle] needs it? Yes, I think she does.
Q. Okay. So you would agree, as well, that we need a guardianship
for [Noelle]?
A. Yes.
Neither the parents’ counsel nor the probate court had any questions for Shorter.
Both sides rested without giving closing remarks, and the probate court took the matter
under advisement. No witness or report or medical evaluation suggested that anything
less than a full guardianship of the person would be appropriate for Noelle or that any
feasible alternatives to guardianship or feasible supports and services existed that would
12
avoid the need for a full guardianship, which was the unanimous conclusion of everyone
who opined on the matter.
3. The probate court’s order and findings of fact and conclusions of law
A little over two weeks later, the probate court signed an order granting a limited
guardianship. As relevant to this appeal, the order recited that (a) by clear and
convincing evidence, alternatives to guardianship and supports and services available to
Noelle that would “avoid the need for the appointment of a limited guardian have been
considered and determined not feasible for medical, employment, and residential
decisions” only; and (b) by a preponderance of the evidence, Noelle lacks capacity to
make personal decisions regarding her medical care, employment, and residence, but
there was “not sufficient evidence presented that [Noelle] lacked the capacity, or
sufficient capacity with supports and services, to make decisions regarding marriage[,]
and the Court finds there are alternatives to the Court taking away [Noelle’s] right to
operate a motor vehicle and vote.” At Noelle’s parents’ request, the probate court
entered findings of fact and conclusions of law, which were later amended.
Mother and Father then appealed.
Standard of Review
We review a probate court’s guardianship determinations for an abuse of
discretion. In re Guardianship of A.E., 552 S.W.3d 873, 876 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
2018, no pet.). A trial court abuses its discretion if the court acts without reference to
any guiding rules or principles, that is, if the act is arbitrary or unreasonable. Low v.
13
Henry, 221 S.W.3d 609, 614 (Tex. 2007); Cire v. Cummings, 134 S.W.3d 835, 838–39 (Tex.
2004). A trial court also abuses its discretion by ruling without supporting evidence or
by misapplying the law to undisputed facts. See Fuller v. State Farm Cty. Mut. Ins. Co.,
156 S.W.3d 658, 660 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005, no pet.). But discretion is not
abused when the trial court bases its decision on conflicting evidence and some
evidence of substantive and probative character supports its decision. Unifund CCR
Partners v. Villa, 299 S.W.3d 92, 97 (Tex. 2009); Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W.3d 198,
211 (Tex. 2002) (op. on reh’g).
In guardianship proceedings, legal and factual sufficiency are not independent
reversible grounds of error but are factors to consider in assessing whether the trial
court abused its discretion. In re A.E., 552 S.W.3d at 877; see In re J.P.C., 261 S.W.3d
334, 336 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2008, no pet.) (noting that in appropriate cases, legal
and factual sufficiency are relevant factors in assessing whether the trial court abused
its discretion). “We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the probate court’s
decision, and an abuse of discretion does not occur when the court’s decision is based
on conflicting evidence.” In re Guardianship of Laroe, No. 05-15-01006-CV,
2017 WL 511156, at *5 (Tex. App.—Dallas Feb. 8, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.)
(reciting and applying this principle in context of never-married parents’ ongoing battle
over guardianship of disabled adult daughter).
When our review is for abuse of discretion, findings of fact and conclusions of
law help us review the propriety of the trial court’s ruling by providing us with an
14
explanation for the ruling. In re J.P.C., 261 S.W.3d at 336–37. But “fact findings are not
necessary when the matters in question are not disputed.” Barker v. Eckman, 213 S.W.3d
306, 310 (Tex. 2006) (citing Sullivan v. Barnett, 471 S.W.2d 39, 44 (Tex. 1971)).
Issues
In six issues,10 Mother and Father argue that the probate court abused its
discretion by: (1) not finding that Noelle is totally incapacitated; (2) not finding that it
is in Noelle’s best interest to have Mother and Father appointed with full authority as
her guardians; (3) not finding that Noelle’s rights or property will be protected by the
appointment of a guardian with full authority; (4) not finding that alternatives to
guardianship that would avoid the need for the appointment of a guardian with full
authority have been considered and are infeasible; (5) not finding that supports and
services available to Noelle that would avoid the need for the appointment of a guardian
with full authority have been considered and are infeasible; and (6) concluding that the
CME, the treating physician’s affidavit, and the parents’ testimony are not probative
evidence.
The ad litem representing Noelle on appeal distilled the issues into one: Did the
probate court abuse its discretion in partially granting the parents’ application and
10
Mother and Father raise a seventh and final issue complaining that the probate
court incorrectly issued findings and conclusions that related to matters occurring after
the court rendered judgment. We will not consider this issue, though, because we need
not address extraneous findings and conclusions that would not form a ground for
reversal, even if erroneous. See Tex. R. App. P. 44.1, 47.1.
15
appointing them as permanent guardians of Noelle’s person with limited authority?
Because that is the fundamental issue before us, we will consider all six of the appellants’
issues together under this overarching question.
Discussion
1. Applicable Estates Code provisions
A guardianship over an incapacitated person should be tailored based on the
person’s “actual mental or physical limitations and only as necessary to promote and
protect the well-being of the incapacitated person.” Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 1001.001(a).
If creating a limited guardianship, the court must design it to “encourage the
development or maintenance of maximum self-reliance and independence in the
incapacitated person, including by presuming that the incapacitated person retains
capacity to make personal decisions regarding the person’s residence.”11 Id.
§ 1001.001(b). As relevant here, an “incapacitated person” is an adult who, because of
a physical or mental condition, is substantially unable to provide food, clothing, or
shelter for herself; care for her own physical health; or manage her own financial affairs.
See id. § 1002.017(2).
By removing Noelle’s right to decide her residence, the probate court implicitly
11
held that this presumption had been overcome and that Noelle lacked capacity in that
regard. At the same time, the probate court allowed Noelle to retain her right to decide
on marriage, which would seemingly extend to deciding where to live if she did get
married; but under the limited-guardianship order, Noelle has the right to do one but
not the other.
16
Under the Code, the probate court could not establish a guardianship of the
person for Noelle unless it found by clear and convincing evidence that:
• Noelle is an incapacitated person;
• it is in Noelle’s best interest to have the court appoint someone to
be her guardian;
• Noelle’s rights will be protected by the appointment of a guardian;
• alternatives to guardianship that would avoid the need for the
appointment of a guardian have been considered and determined
not to be feasible; and
• supports and services available to Noelle that would avoid the need
for the appointment of a guardian have been considered and
determined not to be feasible.
See id. § 1101.101(a)(1)(A)–(E).
The probate court was further required to find by a preponderance of evidence
that—among other things not at issue here—Noelle either (i) is totally without capacity
to care for herself and to manage her property, or (ii) lacks the capacity to do some, but
not all, of the tasks necessary to care for herself or to manage her property. See id.
§ 1101.101(a)(2)(D)(i), (ii). When a court opts for (ii), it must further “specifically state
whether the proposed ward lacks the capacity, or lacks sufficient capacity with supports
and services, to make personal decisions regarding residence, voting, operating a motor
vehicle, and marriage.” Id. § 1101.101(c).
“Alternatives to guardianship” are listed in Section 1002.0015 and include such
things as executing a medical power of attorney, appointing an attorney in fact or agent
17
under a durable power of attorney, establishing a joint bank account, and the like—
alternatives that presuppose one’s having sufficient contractual capacity to enter into
such arrangements. See id. § 1002.0015(1)–(9). “Supports and services” are those formal
and informal resources and assistance that enable someone to (1) meet one’s needs for
food, clothing, or shelter; (2) care for one’s physical or mental health; (3) manage one’s
financial affairs; or (4) make personal decisions about residence, voting, driving, and
marriage. See id. § 1002.031.
The Estates Code also requires that “[a] determination of incapacity of an adult
proposed ward . . . must be evidenced by recurring acts or occurrences in the preceding
six months and not by isolated instances of negligence or bad judgment.” See id.
§ 1101.102.
2. The evidence at the hearing and in the probate court’s file
The probate court admitted without objection Dr. Nagireddy’s statutorily
compliant CME, in which Dr. Nagireddy opined on Noelle’s need for a guardian. See
id. § 1101.103. In her separate affidavit, Dr. Nagireddy stated among other things that
she might decline to treat Noelle in the future due to Noelle’s inability to give informed
consent, and she offered her opinions of Noelle’s total incapacity; inability to consent
to certain decisions and services; absence of supports and services that would enable
Noelle to (among other things) make personal decisions about residence, voting,
driving, or getting married; and Noelle’s susceptibility to abuse and exploitation without
a guardian to make decisions on her behalf.
18
Concurring with Dr. Nagireddy’s assessment, Father testified that Noelle is
totally incapacitated and cannot make decisions for herself even with assistance, could
not consent to a medical procedure even if someone explained it to her, and is not able
to consent to employment. Noelle does not have the capacity to execute a power of
attorney or supported decision-making agreement and would not understand such a
document even if it were explained to her. Father had considered guardianship
alternatives and supports and services, but Noelle’s condition made them “not
workable.” When Noelle goes along with something she is told to do, it is because
Noelle is a “passive participant” who does not fully understand what she is consenting
to. Somewhat relatedly, Noelle cannot independently vote without undue influence
according to Father. Father feared that Noelle would be vulnerable to exploitation
without a guardianship. Mother testified that she had heard and agreed with Father’s
testimony.
The probate court had in its file Shorter’s Initial Court Visitor’s report, and
because the Estates Code mandates such a filing, see id. § 1054.104, we presume that
even though it was not put into evidence at the hearing, the probate court reviewed it.
Cf. In re Guardianship of Parker, 275 S.W.3d 623, 629 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2008, no pet.)
(noting that because physician’s letter or CME is statutorily required to be presented to
the court, it would be reasonable to conclude that “the legislature intended the court to
consider the contents of the letter or certificate” even if not formally admitted as
exhibit). The report stated that Noelle does not understand guardianship and is
19
incapacitated; supports and services “were considered and were not sufficient”;
alternatives to guardianship “were considered but were not feasible”; and Noelle needs
a guardian and would consent to one. According to Shorter, and consistent with the
CME, Noelle needs a guardian to make placement, medical, and financial decisions,
and, like Dr. Nagireddy, Shorter recommended that Noelle’s rights to drive, vote,
dispose of property, and marry should be removed.
At the hearing, Shorter briefly summarized her report and agreed with the
attorney ad litem that “we need a guardianship” for Noelle. Neither applicants’ counsel
nor the probate court asked Shorter anything.
Noelle was able to answer questions about her job the previous summer and
about things she enjoyed doing; she expressed a desire for her parents to be her
guardians because she was not capable of doing things without her family. As the
probate court noted, Noelle “admitted not understanding everything” at the hearing.
3. Noelle’s parents satisfied their statutory burden of proof for a full
guardianship, and there was no conflicting evidence that justified a
limited guardianship.
A. The interplay between Section 1101.101’s evidentiary
standards and uncontested guardianship proceedings
This case presents us with a novel question: if a guardianship is uncontested, to
satisfy the “clear and convincing” standard must applicants nonetheless put on their
evidence as though the proceeding is adversarial and subject to the usual prohibitions
against seemingly conclusory testimony in the form of answers to leading questions?
20
See, e.g., Transp. Ins. Co. v. Moriel, 879 S.W.2d 10, 31 (Tex. 1994) (explaining that clear
and convincing evidence is that measure or degree of proof that will produce in the
mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations
sought to be established). As we will explain, our answer to that question is no.
Although the guardianship proceeding was uncontested, the probate court’s legal
conclusions included a statement that “[s]o long as an answer is filed, a guardianship is
not ‘uncontested.’” It’s true that a general denial puts the onus on any plaintiff or
applicant to prove his or her case, but Noelle’s parents’ application did not become
“contested” merely because the attorney ad litem filed a general denial. See Lesley v.
Lesley, 664 S.W.2d 437, 439 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1984, no writ) (noting, in
guardianship case, that “[a] probate matter is contested when the pleadings on file
demonstrate that the parties to the suit have adopted adversary positions”); see also
Contested Hearing, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining term as “[a] hearing
in which at least one of the parties has objections regarding one or more matters before
the court”). Because everyone who had cared for or evaluated Noelle—whether as
parent, physician, court visitor/investigator, or attorney ad litem—all concluded that a
full guardianship was necessary, it is most accurate to describe the proceeding as
uncontested.12
12
This view finds further support in the fact that even though Link had been
appointed as Noelle’s attorney ad litem on October 4, 2018, her handwritten general
denial was not filed until March 22, 2019, shortly before the hearing began that same
day, indicating that it was simply a housekeeping matter and not designed to create an
21
When the need for a full guardianship is uncontested, the requisite levels of proof
are, in a sense, front-loaded by the Estates Code, beginning with the fact that the CME
requirement obviates the need for live testimony from a physician (or even, it seems,
for an accompanying affidavit). See Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 1101.103(b). One can quarrel
with the notion that a physician is qualified to opine on the “degree . . . of the proposed
ward’s incapacity,” including capacity to vote or drive or get married, but through the
Estates Code, the legislature has seen fit to have medical doctors do just that. See id.
§ 1101.103(b)(1)(C), (D) (CME must address, among other things, the proposed ward’s
functional deficits (if any) regarding the ability to operate a motor vehicle and “make
personal decisions regarding residence, voting, and marriage”). The CME form
adversarial posture. In a comprehensive ad litem manual that a great many Texas
probate courts provide as a resource on which to rely, retired Judge Steve M. King
advises attorneys ad litem about filing an answer as follows:
It’s generally difficult to convince the court to order payment for a lawyer if no
one ever appeared on behalf of the client.
File at least a general denial to the application to properly join issues. (Appendix
M) However, if you are actively contesting the application, it would be even better to
file an answer that states whether the Proposed Ward objects to the guardianship, the
proposed guardian, or both, and send a copy to the court investigator. (Appendix N)
...
If no answer has been filed at the time of the prove-up, there will be no prove-
up.
Steve M. King, The Ad Litem Manual for 2018 for Guardianship & Heirship
Proceedings in Texas Probate Courts 17–18 (rev. date June 2019).
22
promulgated under this section also asks physicians to specifically indicate whether the
proposed ward’s incapacity is total or partial.13
Under Section 1101.103(c), a probate court may appoint an independent
physician to conduct an examination, but that seems to be the court’s only avenue if it
sua sponte finds fault with a CME. This makes sense: judges are not doctors and are not
positioned to second-guess a medical evaluation by picking and choosing among some
but not others of uncontested CME findings.
And by allowing contests to guardianship proceedings, see id. § 1055.001(a)(2),
the statutory scheme strikes a balance between safeguarding against a proposed ward’s
being railroaded into an unnecessary guardianship—either altogether or in its scope—
and allowing a streamlined proceeding when all constituencies are unanimous in their
recommendations. This is particularly true considering that two of those constituencies,
the court visitor/investigator and the attorney ad litem, work for or are appointed by
the probate court and are wholly independent of the guardianship applicants and their
wishes.
Because of the often time-sensitive need to create legal protections for a
proposed ward, in our view an uncontested proceeding allows the clear and convincing
13
Although another part of the Code, Section 1101.053(c), provides that
“findings and recommendations contained in the medical, psychological, and
intellectual testing records are not binding on the court,” that section deals with
“records,” which are not the same as a CME. Compare id. § 1101.053 with id. § 1101.103.
23
evidence called for by Section 1101.101(a)(1) to be “baked in” through the CME and a
court visitor’s report (or court investigator’s findings), along with the attorney ad litem’s
critical prehearing role in ensuring that proposed wards’ rights are not compromised
nor their autonomy wrongly restricted.14 If clear and convincing evidence in its more
usual adversarial sense—requiring a factfinder to weigh and resolve conflicting
evidence—were necessary in uncontested guardianship proceedings, they would
become unwieldy and protracted, perhaps even requiring physicians to testify in person.
Instead, uncontested proceedings should ideally be smooth and expeditious. Indeed,
the latter goal is apparent in a variety of Texas counties whose courts have promulgated
checklists and other procedures for setting guardianship proceedings on the
uncontested docket.15
We emphasize that our view concerns uncontested proceedings only.
14
15
For example, in Travis County’s form, the applicant’s attorney is required,
among other things, to confirm that the ad litem agrees that the case does not have any
contested issues regarding the proposed ward’s incapacity or regarding the scope of the
guardianship; that the CME has been filed and “clearly supports the scope” of the
guardianship being sought; that nothing in the file suggests that less restrictive
alternatives might be available; that the case has no contested issues regarding the
applicant’s suitability to serve as guardian; that except for the proposed ward, everyone
required to be served by the Estates Code has filed a waiver; and that the case can be
heard in no more than 15 to 20 minutes. See https://www.traviscountytx.gov/
images/probate/Docs/uncontested-guardianship-docket-procedures.pdf (last visited
Dec. 3, 2020). Grimes County uses essentially the same form for its uncontested-
guardianship docket. See https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/9bf95e49-62ee-4653-
980d-bb042b589c74/downloads/Setting%20Request%20Uncontested%20
Guardianship%20Docke.pdf?ver=1553207108134 (last visited Dec. 3, 2020). Bexar
County has its own uncontested-guardianship checklist, which does not appear to
contemplate much in the way of live testimony to satisfy Section 1101.101’s evidentiary
24
Moreover, the Estates Code provides that “[t]he rules relating to witnesses and
evidence that apply in the district court apply in a guardianship proceeding to the extent
practicable.” Id. § 1055.101 (emphasis added). We take it that this flexibility exists in part
to accommodate expedited uncontested proceedings when appropriate.
Whether the Estates Code embodies the clearest and wisest of procedures is not
the question before us, and we of course do not suggest that a probate court must
simply rubber-stamp an uncontested guardianship and its agreed-upon scope. A
probate court can always order an independent medical examination and appoint the
necessary physicians on its own motion. See id. § 1101.103(c); see also King, The Ad
Litem Manual for 2018, at 23 (“If the court determines it is necessary, or if the ad litems
or a contestant wants a ‘second opinion,’ the court may order an [IME] and appoint the
necessary physicians.”). And, certainly, a probate court that senses mischief afoot or
even just a lax process can—and should—closely question not only the applicants but
also any court personnel or ad litems who seem to be rolling over or paying insufficient
burdens. See https://www.bexar.org/DocumentCenter/View/25977/Uncontested-
Guardianship-Docket-Procedures (last visited Dec. 3, 2020). Harris County Probate
Court No. 4 sets uncontested guardianships for a set time every Wednesday morning,
with streamlined checklist and final-hearing procedures. See https://probate
crt4.harriscountytx.gov/pages/Dockets.aspx & https://probatecrt4.harriscounty
tx.gov/Documents/Requirements%20to%20Attorney%20Application%20for%20Gu
ardianship%20and%20Attorney%20Check%20List%20for%20Final%20Hearing.pdf
(last visited Dec. 3, 2020). Ellis County’s guide to guardianships seems similarly
designed for expeditious proceedings. See http://co.ellis.tx.us/
DocumentCenter/View/6582/Guardianship-Guide?bidId= (last visited Dec. 3, 2020).
25
attention to their duties (if not replace them with someone else). But here, because the
probate court did not ask any questions of the court investigator or ad litem, we assume
that their impartiality, thoroughness, and attentiveness were not in doubt.
B. The evidence was not conclusory and thus was probative.
One of the probate court’s central legal conclusions was that Mother’s and
Father’s testimony and Dr. Nagireddy’s affidavit were not probative evidence of
Noelle’s need for a full guardianship and could thus be disregarded.
i. Father’s and Mother’s responses to leading questions
The probate court determined that “[c]onclusory questions without expansive
answers are not competent evidence,” citing specific pages and lines of Father’s and
Mother’s testimony that, in the court’s view, constituted “bare conclusions that were
factually unsubstantiated and, therefore, did not constitute probative evidence.”16 Every
question within the cited pages was a leading one, eliciting a simple yes (or the
occasional no). Presumably because the hearing bore all the hallmarks of the
uncontested proceeding it was, the attorney ad litem never objected on that or any other
basis.
The probate court identified only two questions put to Mother as yielding
16
factually unsubstantiated and thus nonprobative responses: “And you believe you are
qualified and not disqualified to serve as guardian of the person of your daughter. Is
that correct?” “If I ask you those same questions [as put to Father], or they ask you
those same questions, would your answers be substantially the same?” Regarding the
first question, the probate court nonetheless concluded that Mother was “not
disqualified” under the Code and appointed her accordingly.
26
The questioning on direct examination established first that Father was familiar
with Dr. Nagireddy and had reviewed her CME and then guided Father through the
findings and recommendations in the CME and in Dr. Nagireddy’s accompanying
affidavit. This questioning tracked every finding the Estates Code requires before a full
guardianship can be ordered. See id. § 1101.101.
Another of the Code-required findings, one that falls outside a CME, was also
elicited through a leading question and is part of the testimony that the probate court
determined to be factually unsubstantiated and thus nonprobative: “And you have
observed evidence of incapacity by recurring acts or occurrences within the preceding
six-month period that are not isolated instances of negligence or bad judgment. Is that
correct?” This element is necessary for determining incapacity in an adult proposed
ward. See id. § 1101.102. Although disapproving of this leading question and Father’s
affirmative response as conclusory, the probate court nevertheless made this finding in
both its limited-guardianship order and its findings of fact and conclusions of law.
One-word answers to leading questions are not necessarily improper on direct,
nor are they the same as bare conclusions lacking factual support, in at least three
situations. First, in a prove-up hearing, a trial court may properly allow leading questions
that track the language of a statute when doing so fits the statute’s purpose. 17 See
17
In practice, leading questions are how attorneys routinely have their clients
prove up such things as uncontested divorces, getting a will admitted to probate, etc.—
leading questions are highly efficient. We recognize, of course, that divesting a person
of rights through a guardianship is a serious undertaking; that is why the law requires
27
Crittenden v. Crittenden, No. 04-99-00933-CV, 2001 WL 356993, at *1 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio Apr. 11, 2001, pet. denied) (rejecting appellant’s claim of trial-court error in
allowing appellee to “prove up his case through his response to a single leading
question”; trial court has discretion to allow leading questions and did not abuse its
discretion “when it allowed [appellee] to answer ‘yes’ to a question tracking the language
of the no-fault statute”); see also In re H.K.A., 07-07-0008-CV, 2007 WL 1660699, at
*1 (Tex. App.—Amarillo June 8, 2007, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding that trial court’s
finding on managing conservatorship was consistent with testimony, much of which
was elicited by leading questions tracking statutory language). Second, facts contained
in leading questions can find their support in other, properly admitted evidence. See First
Cont’l Real Estate Inv. Tr. v. Cont’l Steel Co., 569 S.W.2d 42, 45–46 (Tex. App.—Fort
Worth 1978, no writ) (upholding trial court’s overruling of leading objection when
question’s answer was cumulative of other evidence); see also Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.
v. Malone, 916 S.W.2d 551, 568 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1996), aff’d, 972 S.W.2d
35 (Tex. 1998) (holding no need to decide whether trial court abused its discretion by
allowing leading questions; appellant could not show harm because the testimony
elicited through leading questions was cumulative of other, properly admitted evidence).
Third, if the facts recited in a leading question are undisputed, the question is proper.
that physicians, court visitors or investigators, and ad litems be involved. But the gravity
of such a proceeding does not mean that the requisite proof cannot be put into evidence
the way it was in this case.
28
See Roberts v. Capitol City Steel Co., 376 S.W.2d 771, 777 (Tex. App.—Austin 1964, writ
ref’d n.r.e.) (observing that leading a witness by stating undisputed facts in the questions
is proper).
Thus, if the facts recited in the (unobjected-to) leading questions that were put
to Father (1) walked him through the requisite statutory findings in an uncontested
hearing; (2) find support in other, properly admitted evidence; or (3) are undisputed, we
will conclude that Father—and, by extension, Mother—provided probative evidence
to support a full guardianship of Noelle due to her total incapacity. And so we do: the
guardianship hearing was uncontested; Dr. Nagireddy’s CME was properly admitted
and was admitted without objection; and the attorney ad litem and court investigator
did not dispute the statutory facts to which Father acceded.
For any or all of those reasons, Father’s and Mother’s testimony was not factually
unsubstantiated or conclusory and was thus probative of whether Noelle needed a full
guardianship.
ii. Dr. Nagireddy’s affidavit
The probate court also determined that Dr. Nagireddy’s affidavit contained
conclusory legal opinions that she was not qualified to render. The Estates Code does
not require a physician’s affidavit, only a CME or equivalent letter. See Tex. Est. Code
Ann. § 1101.103.
Dr. Nagireddy’s opinions in her affidavit generally matched and expanded on
what the Code requires of a CME. See id. § 1101.103(b). A physician’s opinions on such
29
matters might well overlap with legal opinions, but because the legislature has told
physicians to render what are essentially legal opinions in the CME, we cannot agree
that Dr. Nagireddy was unqualified to opine on the parallel matters contained in her
affidavit. Additionally, no one objected to Dr. Nagireddy’s qualifications, so those
qualifications are not properly presented for our review, as the ad litem has conceded.
See Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. v. Armstrong, 145 S.W.3d 131, 143–44 (Tex. 2004).
As for whether the doctor’s opinions constituted conclusory opinion testimony
that was irrelevant under the rules of evidence, see Tex. R. Evid. 401, the Code does not
require a physician’s affidavit. Between Dr. Nagireddy’s CME and the court-visitor
report—both of which are statutorily required and are in the record—the fact of
Noelle’s total incapacity, and thus her need for a full guardianship, is undisputed even
without the affidavit. In any event, the affidavit drew from Dr. Nagireddy’s ten-year
history of treating Noelle, as well as from having examined Noelle a month before the
application was filed. Whether we consider the affidavit as one from an expert on the
matters it discusses or from a lay witness with personal knowledge, and particularly
because the CME was attached to the affidavit, we have little trouble concluding that
Dr. Nagireddy’s opinions were sufficiently tied to facts and thus not in the realm of the
purely conclusory. See Ellison v. State, 201 S.W.3d 714, 723 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)
(noting that a witness may be qualified to give testimony both under Texas Rule of
Evidence 702 because of expertise and under Rule 701, if the witness’s testimony and
opinion are based on firsthand knowledge); Vela v. Yamaha Motor Corp., No. 04-01-
30
00025-CV, 2002 WL 871838, at *2 (Tex. App.—San Antonio May 8, 2002, no pet.) (not
designated for publication) (same); John F. Sutton, Jr. & Cathleen C. Herasimchuk,
Article VII: Opinions and Expert Testimony, 30 Hous. L. Rev. 797, 826 (1993) (Texas Rules
of Evidence Handbook) (noting that a witness qualified as an expert “may testify to his
[or her] personal knowledge of the facts in issue, in which case [the witness] testifies to
opinions under Rule 701” or the witness may “evaluate specific data and facts in issue
in light of [the witness’s] experience in a particular specialized field, in which case [the
witness] testifies to opinions under Rule 702”); cf. City of San Antonio v. Pollock,
284 S.W.3d 809, 818 (Tex. 2009) (holding that “if no basis for the [expert’s] opinion is
offered, or the basis offered provides no support, the opinion is merely a conclusory
statement and cannot be considered probative evidence” even if not objected to).
C. Noelle’s testimony did not create an evidentiary conflict that
required a factfinder’s resolution
In light of the undisputed and statutorily sufficient evidence that Noelle is totally
incapacitated and needs a full guardianship without retaining any rights, including her
rights to marry, vote, and drive, the probate court’s basis for leaving her with those
rights lies, if at all, in Noelle’s own testimony, as the probate court’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law suggest. But Noelle’s testimony did not demonstrate that the
assessments of her parents, her doctor, and the court visitor were incorrect.
Noelle was able to attend and participate in the hearing, and perhaps sufficiently
understood the difference between the truth and a lie to be competent to testify. She
31
was also able to express a desire to work or attend community college and left open the
possibility of eventually living somewhere other than with her parents. Noelle stated
that she appreciates her parents’ help and guidance even though she does not always
obey them. She attended school and took part in church activities and movie outings,
as well as spent time with friends at her house. Noelle recalled her grocery-store job
and mentioned her heart problem.
The probate court found that it was Noelle’s decision to testify, although the
record does not show one way or another whether that was the case. The court found
that Noelle “makes decisions, she attends school and church on her own as well as
church outings with people her age and without adult supervision.” Other factual
findings were that
[Noelle] said she would never take drugs and indicated she knew they were
bad for her. [Noelle] needs prompting, but performs her own activities of
daily living which include some of her clothing and food. She has chosen
to stay in her parents’ home, her shelter. [Noelle] also had a job and wants
to look for another job or take classes at [community college].
Based on these facts, the probate court found that although Noelle lacks the
capacity to make personal decisions about medical care, employment, and residence,
“there was not sufficient evidence presented that [Noelle] lacked the capacity, or
sufficient capacity with, or without, supports and services, to make decisions regarding
marriage, voting, and operating a motor vehicle.” With regard to driving, the court
further found that alternatives to removing that right existed and that Noelle was “not
32
entitled to operate a motor vehicle without fulfilling the requirements of Texas law
pursuant to the Texas Department of Transportation.”
But the evidence from Dr. Nagireddy, from the court-visitor’s report and
testimony, and from Noelle’s parents unanimously recommended a full guardianship
on the ground that Noelle is totally incapacitated and cannot make personal decisions
including regarding residence, voting, operating a motor vehicle, and marriage.18 See
Tex. Est. Code Ann. §§ 1101.101(c), .103(b). In the absence of countervailing evidence
that with (or without) supports and services Noelle is in fact capable of making
significant decisions about voting, driving, and marriage—none of which she was asked
about—the probate court abused its discretion by failing to find that Noelle is totally
incapacitated, see id. § 1101.101(a)(2)(D)(i), and by failing to appoint a guardian with full
authority, see id. § 1101.151.
We sustain Appellants’ first six issues.
Conclusion
In this uncontested proceeding, the uncontroverted, probative evidence
established that Noelle is totally incapacitated and needs a guardian with full authority
and that her parents are qualified to assume that role. To be sure, we applaud the
probate court’s desire to zealously guard a person’s constitutional and other rights to
Of these four statutorily grouped personal decisions, Noelle testified only about
18
possibly changing her residence down the road; that was the one personal decision that
the probate court held she lacks capacity to make, with or without supports and services.
33
the greatest possible extent, but here the statutory burdens for a full guardianship were
satisfied according to the Estates Code.
Having sustained Appellants’ issues one through six, which are dispositive, we
reverse the probate court’s denial of Mother’s and Father’s application to be appointed
guardians of Noelle’s person with full authority. We remand this case to the probate
court so that it can render an order consistent with this opinion and with Estates Code
Section 1101.151.
/s/ Elizabeth Kerr
Elizabeth Kerr
Justice
Delivered: December 10, 2020
34