                                    NO. 07-03-0124-CV

                              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                       AT AMARILLO

                                         PANEL B

                                 JANUARY 22, 2004
                          ______________________________

                IN THE INTEREST OF A.N., J.A.N., E.E.N., and F.A.N.
                       _________________________________

             FROM THE 237TH DISTRICT COURT OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;

                NO. 2001-515,625; HON. JOHN T. FORBIS, PRESIDING
                        _______________________________

                                      Opinion
                          _______________________________

Before JOHNSON, C.J. and QUINN and CAMPBELL, JJ.

       Joe A. Narvais and Susanna Narvais, the biological parents of A.N., J.A.N., E.E.N.,

and F.A.N. (referred to as the children), appeal to this court from an order terminating their

parental relationship with the mentioned children. In one issue, they contend that they were

denied due process. This allegedly occurred when the district court adopted the findings

of the associate judge without affording either parent opportunity to contest them through

appeal. We dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.

                                       Background

       The Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (Department) initiated

suit to terminate the parental rights of Joe and Susanna. The matter was referred to an

associate judge by the district court. The latter convened a trial without a jury, received
evidence, and executed a document entitled “Order of Termination.” Therein, it found and

recommended that it would be in the best interests of the children to end the parent/child

relationship between them and their biological parents. The order and recommendation

was signed by the associate judge on February 7, 2003. Later that same day, the referring

court, allegedly through inducement by the Department, signed an order adopting the

associate judge’s report. The referring court’s order adopting the report stated:

       [t]he above and foregoing orders [of the associate judge] having been
       presented to this Court, and no demand for hearing having been made in the
       time and manner permitted by law, it is ORDERED that said orders be and
       are hereby adopted as the orders of this Court.

       On February 10, 2003, Joe filed a “Notice of Appeal from Associate Judge’s

Hearing.” Among other things, he alleged in the notice that he objected to the ruling of the

associate judge and the conclusion that clear and convincing evidence supported

termination of his parental rights. This February 10th notice of appeal was followed by

another filed on March 6, 2003. Through it, Joe again sought to appeal “from [the]

Associate Judge’s findings and conclusions . . . .” However, he was not alone in doing that.

       On February 12, 2003, Susanna also filed a notice of appeal, therein objecting to

various findings of the associate judge. This notice was followed by another filed on

February 27, 2003. In the latter, she evinced her desire to appeal “from the judgment

signed on February 7[] 2003" to this court of appeals.

       What followed next underlies the heart of the issue before us. Within 30 days of the

date the district court adopted and finalized the associate judge’s recommendation, Joe

moved for a new trial. Though the grounds stated in the motion were somewhat unclear,

he apparently believed himself entitled to relief because the decision of the associate judge


                                             2
was not supported by clear and convincing evidence and the associate judge erred in

admitting evidence of a criminal conviction that was subject to an ongoing appeal.

         By order signed on April 8, 2003, the trial court granted Joe and Susanna a new trial

“on all issues.” Thereafter, a non-jury trial was convened which resulted in the execution

of another “Order of Termination” signed on April 11, 2003. Through it, the district court

ordered that the parental relationship between Joe, Susanna, and the children be

terminated. No one filed separate notices of appeal from that order.

                                 Issue – Deprivation of Due Process

         As previously mentioned, Joe and Susanna assert that they were denied due

process because they were not afforded opportunity to contest the associate judge’s

recommendation and findings. Furthermore, they purportedly were denied that opportunity

because the district judge adopted the recommendation and findings before expiration of

the statutory period in which they had to contest them.1 That the district court eventually

granted them a new trial allegedly did not ameliorate the wrong since its plenary jurisdiction

to afford them that relief had expired. And, therein lies the pivotal issue at bar.

         Did the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction over the termination proceeding expire before

it granted a new trial? Joe and Susanna say it did since an appeal from an order

terminating the parent/child relationship is an accelerated one, and because it is

accelerated, the time within which the trial court may exercise its plenary jurisdiction is

shortened. Of course, the Department disagrees.



        1
             Statute affords a party the right to “app eal an associate judge’s report by filing notice of appeal not
later than the third day after the date the party receives notice of the sub stance of the ass ociate judg e’s report
. . . .” T E X . F A M . C O D E A N N . §201.015(a) (V ernon 2002 ).

                                                         3
         To resolve the question, we look to Rule 329b(e) of the Texas Rules of Civil

Procedure and the opinion in Boris v. Boris, 642 S.W.2d 855 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 1982,

no writ). The former states that if a motion for new trial is timely filed “by any party,” then

the trial court “has plenary power to grant a new trial or to vacate, modify, correct, or reform

the judgment until thirty days after all such timely-filed motions are overruled, either by a

written and signed order or by operation of law, whichever occurs first.”2 TEX . R. CIV . P.

329b(e). More importantly, this plenary power exists “regardless of whether an appeal has

been perfected”, id., even one that is accelerated. See Boris v. Boris, 642 S.W.2d 855,

856 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 1982, no writ) (involving an accelerated appeal and holding that

the appellate court had no jurisdiction over the cause since the motion for new trial

extended the duration of the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction and the court granted the

motion within the extended period). So, initiating an accelerated appeal does not reduce

the duration of the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction.3

         Next, to the extent Joe and Susanna suggest that no one timely filed a motion for

new trial from the district judge’s February 7th order, we would disagree. Joe moved for

a new trial on March 7, 2003, or approximately 28 days after the order was signed. Again,

the rules of civil procedure grant a party 30 days to move for a new trial. TEX . R. CIV . P.

329b(a). Consequently, the filing was timely. And though Joe alluded to the decision of


         2
         A mo tion for n ew trial is timely if filed no later than 30 days from the date the judgm ent or order
com plaine d of is signed. T E X . R. C IV . P. 329 b(a).

         3
           This is not true in accelerated appeals from a quo warranto proceeding, however. In such cases,
motions for new trial are overruled by operation of law 5 0 da ys afte r the jud gm ent is signed. T E X . R. A P P . P.
28.2. Ordinarily, a motion for new trial is not overruled by operation of law u ntil 75 days has lapse d. T E X . R.
C IV . P. 329b(c). So, because the period within which the court must act to avoid a motion for new trial from
being overruled by operation of law is shorter in an appeal from a quo warranto proceeding, the duration of
the trial court’s p lenary powe r in suc h cases is redu ced som ew hat.

                                                           4
the associate judge in it, we nonetheless hold the motion sufficient to extend the district

court’s plenary power. This is so because, for all intents and purposes, the decision of the

associate judge was that of the district judge. The latter, as previously illustrated, neither

held a hearing nor received other evidence once the associate judge made its

recommendations. Rather, the district court adopted the order of the associate judge on

the day it was issued. So, to attack the admissibility and quantum of the evidence

underlying the district court’s decision, Joe of necessity had to attack the evidence

presented to the associate judge, and that is what he did in his motion for new trial. Simply

put, in attacking the associate judge’s decision via his request for a new trial, Joe was also

attacking that of the district judge.

         Finally, by timely moving for a new trial, Joe vested the trial court with plenary power

to grant such relief for at least 105 days from February 7th.4 See L.M. Healthcare, Inc. v.

Childs, 929 S.W.2d 442, 444 (Tex. 1996) (stating that the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction

cannot extend beyond 105 days after the trial court signs the judgment). The record

illustrates that a new trial was granted on April 8, 2003, well within the 105-day period.

And, because Joe and Susanna received a new trial on all issues, we cannot say they were

harmed by the initial failure to accord them opportunity to attack the associate judge’s

report and recommendation.




        4
          Had the trial court denied the m otion befo re it would have been overruled by operation of law, then
the dura tion of the trial court’s plenary pow er would have shrunk prop ortionally. See T E X . R. C IV . P. 329b(e)
(stating that the trial court retains its plenary power to grant a new trial for 30 days from the date a motion for
new trial is ove rruled by ord er or opera tion of law).

                                                         5
        Accordingly, we overrule the sole issue before us and dismiss the appeal for want

of jurisdiction.5



                                                             Brian Quinn
                                                                Justice




        5
         An order granting new trial deprives an appellate court of jurisdiction over the appe al. Bo ris v. Boris,
642 S.W .2d 855, 856 (T ex. A pp.--F ort W orth 1982 , no w rit).

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