Bingham v. Bingham

811 S.W.2d 678, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 1456, 1991 WL 99923
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1991
Docket2-90-049-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 811 S.W.2d 678 (Bingham v. Bingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingham v. Bingham, 811 S.W.2d 678, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 1456, 1991 WL 99923 (Tex. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

JOE SPURLOCK, II, Justice.

Appellant and appellee were divorced on August 26,1988, at which time they agreed to a decree of joint custody for their son. After the date of the divorce, Sharon Kay Bingham, appellee, married another person and moved from the Dallas-Fort Worth area. On March 9, 1989, Sharon filed a Motion to Modify in Suit Affecting the Parent/Child Relationship. Ricky Lee Bingham, appellant, filed his answer and cross-motion to modify on March 27, 1989. The court ordered a social study be conducted and the parties engaged in other discovery matters. A master made recommendations concerning the modification. A pretrial order and two sets of temporary orders were entered in the case. Eventually, an attorney ad litem was appointed to represent the interests of the minor child and an order affecting the parent/child relationship was entered based on the master’s recommendation. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law. Appellant requested additional findings of fact and conclusions of law which do not appear to have been adopted by the court. *680 He has appealed from the order of the court.

In the modified order, the court found that it had continuing and exclusive jurisdiction of this case and the parties and that no other court had continuing exclusive jurisdiction. The court further found that there had been a material and substantial change in the circumstances of the child or of a person affected by the order and that the mother of the child, appellee, had changed the residence of the child from Dallas County to Montgomery County, Texas. The court found that the change of the domicile of the child did not involve a matter of serious or immediate concern for the health or welfare of the child. The court also found that the existing joint managing conservatorship is not unworkable and the appointment of either party as a sole managing conservator would not be a positive improvement for the child, and that the primary residence of the child should remain with the mother. The court ordered that the domicile of the child should be Montgomery County, Texas (the residence of the mother). The court entered specific orders for visitation between the parents, and ordered that the grandparents (parents of appellant) shall have weekend visitation at the discretion of the appellant. The court set out a very detailed annual visitation schedule for the child. Appellant brings seven points of error.

The first point of error complains that the judgment is fatally flawed because the court failed to make a finding that the change in the court’s decree would be a positive improvement for and in the best interest of the child as required by TEX. FAM.CODE ANN. sec. 14.081(c)(2) (Vernon Supp.1991). Further, that finding could not be made because there is no evidence to support it. The point of error is without merit.

The original motion to modify filed by appellee was a request to move the primary residence of the child from Dallas or Tar-rant County to Harris County where appel-lee and her new husband, both of whom had been employees of the same company, had moved. The company for which she and her husband worked had a policy against employing married couples. Therefore, they left that company and sought work elsewhere.

Appellee testified that she and her husband had both sought other employment in the Dallas-Tarrant County area before the move to Harris County but that they were unable to find any. After the move, and after the motion was filed, it became necessary to amend the motion orally at trial because appellee and her husband and the child had moved to neighboring Montgomery County, Texas. Appellee sought no relief in the amended motion to modify other than permission to change the domicile of the child. Appellant, however, filed a cross-motion seeking to be named sole managing conservator, or in the alternative, to keep him as joint managing conservator with the right of primary possession, or to make certain other adjustments to the periods of possession, transportation responsibilities, and for child support.

At trial, the court found that the appointment of a sole managing conservator would not be a positive improvement for the child (thus denying the request of appellant). Therefore, the action of the trial court was simply to acknowledge an existing fact, that moving the child’s domicile along with his mother’s change in domicile, was necessary. The court found there had been a material and substantial change in the circumstances of the child or person affected by the order, in particular the child’s mother had changed her residence from Dallas County to Montgomery County. Further, a change in the domicile of the child would not involve a matter of serious or immediate concern for the health or welfare of the child. Also, the existing joint managing conservatorship is not unworkable, that is, that the appointment of either party as a sole managing conservator would not be in the best interest of the child. Based upon these findings, we do not agree with appellant that the court’s failure to find that the modification of the terms and conditions would be a positive improvement for and in the best interest of the child, in so *681 many words, is necessarily fatal to the decree itself.

From reviewing the evidence in the case, it is abundantly clear that the mother was faced with the necessity for the move to the Harris County area. Also, both maternal and paternal grandparents live near the mother’s new residence in Montgomery County, Texas, enabling them more easily to obtain visitation with the child. There is no evidence showing that appointing the father as the joint managing conservator with primary possession would be a positive improvement for the child. Therefore, we hold that the court, as a result of necessity, worked out the best solution possible in the best interest of the child. Appellant’s argument based upon apparent legal authority is without real substance or meaning; the court’s order is not violative of the spirit of the legislative enactment. Clearly, where there is no evidence of the necessity for a change in the mother’s status as the primary possessory parent, it would not be a positive improvement for the child to have his domicile changed from that of his mother. We hold it is a positive improvement, as a matter of law, for the child’s domiciliary status to no longer be in limbo, there being no evidence of the need for a change of the primary possessory parent from one to the other. The point of error is overruled.

In his point of error number two appellant argues that the court’s conclusion of law number three is in error in holding that a portion of the agreed decree of divorce concerning the county of residence of the child was vague and unenforceable. However, appellant does not show how he is harmed in any way, nor how the child is harmed by the court so holding. Appellee counters that the court was correct in finding that the decree was vague and nonenforceable under TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. sec. 14.021(f)(1) (Vernon Supp.1991) because the decree itself neither established a county of residence of the child until it was altered by further order of the court, nor did it designate the conservator who had the sole right to determine the residency of the child, but rather bestowed the right to determine domicile on both parents.

Clearly appellee recognized that appellant has an interest in determining the domicile of the child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
811 S.W.2d 678, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 1456, 1991 WL 99923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingham-v-bingham-texapp-1991.