Cory M. Jones v. Leticia A. Uribe

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2024
Docket07-23-00233-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cory M. Jones v. Leticia A. Uribe (Cory M. Jones v. Leticia A. Uribe) 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
Cory M. Jones v. Leticia A. Uribe, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-23-00233-CV

CORY M. JONES, APPELLANT

V.

LETICIA A. URIBE, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 438th Judicial District Court Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2018-CI-07404, Honorable John D. Gabriel, Jr., Presiding

June 27, 2024 OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and PARKER and DOSS, JJ.

In a classic trick, a magician places a housecat in a large cage, seals it, and covers

with a cape. After uttering a mysterious phrase, the magician unveils a roaring tiger. The

conceit of surprise is central to the art of illusion, where an initial setup appears to lead to

an impossible result.

In litigation, the goal is to uncover the truth not to conceal it. Legally speaking,

before one pulls a rabbit from a hat, litigants should present enough information to reasonably reveal where one might find a rabbit. Transparency prevails over

misdirection. When seeking a default judgment, a claimant should, at minimum, notify

the defendant what is being sought.

In this child support appeal, where a turnover order arises out of a “default

judgment,” we review whether the district court erred in granting a turnover order,

appointing a receiver, and awarding substantial attorney fees to the “judgment creditor”

in pursuit of child support. We declare portions of the judgment and turnover order to be

firm, but reverse portions of the attorney’s fees awards and characterizations.

Background

With apologies to magicians everywhere, we reveal how the Appellee, Uribe,

attempted the trick of transforming Family Code’s Chapter 158 process for withholding

income to a method for obtaining a court-ordered default judgment for a child support

arrearage and award of attorney’s fees. Uribe was once married to Jones, the Appellant,

and they were divorced on March 12, 2019, by a final decree. Both parents were

appointed joint managing conservators for their child, with Uribe having the right to

determine the child’s primary residence and to receive child support. Jones was initially

ordered to provide support of $400 per month in child support, plus $25.00 in cash medical

support, through the Texas Office of the Attorney General. An income order was signed,

directing Jones’ employer to deduct support payments from his disposable earnings.

The decree included a cumulative child support arrears judgment “against . . .

Jones and in favor of the Office of the Attorney General” in the amount of $5,233.43, plus

2 interest,1 “payable to the Office of the Attorney General,” and “through the state

disbursement Unit” in San Antonio, with payment then to be remitted to Uribe.

Jones did not pay the child support arrearage. Uribe is an employee and client of

the Sinkin Law Firm, a firm specializing in child support debt collection services.2 On

March 5, 2020, Uribe, via the Sinkin Firm, filed a verified “Notice of Application for Judicial

Writ of Withholding” with the district clerk, informing Jones that his employer would be

required to withhold amounts for current support and the amount in arrearage (“$5,604.12

as of February 24, 2020.”). In other words, the new amount to be withheld from Jones’

wages would be $925.00 per month, subject to a cap of 50% of Jones’ net disposable

earnings.

Jones was informed that if he did not contest the notice within ten days, “your

employer will be notified to begin deducting from your pay the amounts specified . . . .”

The notice additionally stated:

Any Writ or Order issued as a result of this proceeding shall include a determination of arrears, attorney’s fees and court costs and shall apply to your current or to any subsequent employer or period of employment. If you claim that you are not the person who owes the child support, or that you are not in arrears, or that the arrears are not as much as listed on this Notice, you can request a hearing pursuant to Texas Family Code § 158.307, a copy of which is attached.

The notice was accompanied by portions of Chapter 158 of the Texas Family Code.

1 The court also rendered an unpaid medical support judgment of $227.64 “against . . . Jones and

in favor of the Office of the Attorney General . . . .”

2 Testimony presented in the Spring of 2023 suggests that Uribe does not personally incur or pay

attorney’s fees. Uribe has never paid fees out of her pocket; she only forwards the fees collected from Jones. 3 Jones did not take any action. One year after the notice (on March 15, 2021), the

Sinkin Firm submitted a “Judicial Writ of Income Withholding,” which the clerk signed.

The writ instructed Jones’ employer to withhold income and to remit payments to the

“Texas Child Support Disbursement Unit” in San Antonio. For the first time, the employer

was instructed to make payments “payable to Leticia A. Uribe and the Sinkin Law

Firm . . . .”

On March 17, 2021, the Sinkin Law Firm filed an “Exhibit on Legal Fees,” showing

the time spent preparing notices and the district clerk’s writ. The exhibit referred to

“prepar[ing] default judgment and related documents” during the same period. That day,

the Sinkin Firm presented an “Order on Arrears,” ex parte, to the district court. The court

signed the order, reciting that because Jones did not respond to the March 2020 notice

of application for judicial writ of withholding:

IT IS ORDERED that . . . Uribe is granted and rendered an order for child support arrearages, including accrued interest against . . . Jones in the amount of $5,604.12 as of February 24, 2020, the date of rendition of this judgment, such judgment bearing interest at 6 percent simple interest per year until the date the judgment is paid, and is rendered on $5,604.12 as of February 24, 2020.

(emphasis and alteration added). The order also purported to grant a “judgment” of

$5,812.50 in attorney’s fees to “Steven A. Sinkin at the Sinkin Law Firm;” 3 it also awards

conditional attorney’s fees (“in favor of Steven A. Sinkin and the Sinkin Law Firm”) in the

event Jones brings an unsuccessful challenge to the order or in the event of Jones’

bankruptcy.

3 The order provides, “The attorneys may enforce this order for fees in the attorneys’ own name

and utilize all child support enforcement remedies for the collection of these attorney’s fees.” 4 The appellate record does not indicate that anyone received notice of the Order

on Arrears until August 2021, when the Attorney General filed suit to clarify and modify

the order, alleging Jones had paid more than $16,000 in support and only owed around

$1,900 in arrearages and $300 in medical support.

The trial court set a hearing for August 26, 2021. Three days before, Jones’

counsel wrote a letter to the Sinkin Firm regarding an agreement “by all parties” to pass

on the hearing, stating in relevant part:

In no event will any hearing be set sooner than 30 days after the financial information required by Rule 194 is provided by Cory Michael Jones. Pursuant to Rule 11, T.R.C.P, if the foregoing correctly reflects our agreement, please sign and date this letter below and return it to me, and I will file it with the court.

Uribe’s attorney signed the agreement the same day, and it was filed with the court.

For the next seventeen months, there was little activity until January 18, 2023,

when the Sinkin Firm filed an “Application for Turnover Relief”4 pursuant to TEX. CIV. PRAC.

& REM. CODE § 31.002. The application alleged that Uribe had recovered a “judgment”

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Cory M. Jones v. Leticia A. Uribe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cory-m-jones-v-leticia-a-uribe-texapp-2024.