Dalith A. Regost v. Julien Regost

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 2022
Docket03-21-00328-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dalith A. Regost v. Julien Regost (Dalith A. Regost v. Julien Regost) 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
Dalith A. Regost v. Julien Regost, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-21-00328-CV

Dalith A. Regost, Appellant

v.

Julien Regost, Appellee

FROM THE 250TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-FM-19-006487, THE HONORABLE AMY CLARK MEACHUM, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Dalith A. Regost complains of the trial court’s decisions appointing her

and appellee Julien Regost as joint managing conservators of their child L.C.R. and awarding

Julien the right to determine the child’s primary residence. 1 We affirm the trial court’s decree.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

Dalith and Julien married in August 2017, and L.C.R. was born in September

2017. The parties filed for divorce in 2019, with Julien filing in September and Dalith filing a

counterpetition in October. In mid-October 2019, the trial court signed agreed temporary orders,

which appointed the parents as joint managing conservators and provided that Julien would have

possession from Sunday through Wednesday, that Dalith would have possession from

1 Because the parties share the same last name, we will refer to them by their first names. We will refer to the child by his initials. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.9. Wednesday through Sunday, and that the parents would exchange L.C.R. at the police station.

The parties filed various motions asserting violations of the temporary orders, and the trial court

twice signed additional temporary orders relating to Dalith withholding possession of L.C.R.

On July 21, 2020, about a week after Julien filed an amended petition seeking

“primary possession,” a final hearing was held, and the trial court heard testimony by Julien;

Dalith; Dalith’s mother, Maria Gamboa; Dalith’s friend, Leticia Martinez; Child Protective

Services Investigator Paul Cheever; and the parties’ attorneys. 2 Julien testified about moving to

the United States from Europe, entering a relationship with Dalith, and deciding with Dalith to

have a child. He testified that difficulties arose due to the parents’ schedules and after Gamboa

came to live with them, saying that Gamboa “doesn’t like me since the beginning anyway,

something against—against me, and I know.” He tried to improve his relationship with Gamboa,

but she never liked him, and he said, “[I]t’s fine for me. I mean, I don’t have to be in love [with]

my mother-in-law. It’s okay.” Julien testified that he quit his job as a pastry chef after Dalith

complained that he was not making enough money. He started truck-driving school but quit

when he realized it would be too difficult and when Dalith again complained that he was not

making money. Julien then drove for Uber and Lyft until he was arrested in 2019 for assault

causing injury to a child. Julien explained that two days before he was arrested, Gamboa and

Dalith had called the police to make a similar report, but the police came to the house, checked

on L.C.R., and “said, Nothing happened.” Two days later, Gamboa called the police again, and

when Julien arrived home, he was arrested and placed in jail. Julien later learned that while he

was in jail, Dalith “call[ed] the bank and volunteer[ed] to have [his] car repossessed,” offering

into evidence a voluntary repossession form signed in September 2019 and testifying that at the

2 Gamboa and Martinez testified through an interpreter. 2 time of the repossession, his only source of income was as a driver. Julien testified that the

assault charge had been dismissed and that the allegation was false. Julien agreed that there was

a charge pending against him for assault family violence against Gamboa.

After moving out of the family’s house, Julien lived in an Airbnb where he had

his own room and shared a bathroom. He said he had shared the house with “[p]eople who take

a room at the Airbnb,” explaining that “[t]he people stay two weeks, and they leave, and they

have not so many people because of the COVID-19.” The week of the hearing, he signed a

six-month lease to move into a studio and was in the process of moving. He was moving

because he wanted to “just be with [L.C.R.] in the studio, just being together and no other

people.” Julien testified that he had not yet received any child-support payments from Dalith,

although he was not sure “how to get the child support, so I didn’t really check about it.” If he

received child support from Dalith, Julien said, he would have more income to use towards his

living situation. He was working at a restaurant, and his hours were from 3:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

When he has possession of L.C.R., however, “My schedule change[s]. When I have [L.C.R.], I

work 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., and I put [L.C.R.] in daycare.”

Julien testified that Dalith had called CPS multiple times to allege misconduct by

Julien, making allegations “from the very first hearing.” He denied her allegations that he had

hit L.C.R. or that he had committed any sexually inappropriate behavior—saying, “No, I didn’t

do anything,”—and testified that she had made her allegations about him masturbating in front of

L.C.R. at the hearing on temporary orders. He had dealt with three CPS investigators and had

been interviewed multiple times, and “[t]hey ruled out everything.” Julien also testified about

Dalith’s lack of cooperation with the trial court’s temporary orders, saying that she did not

always exchange the child as scheduled and repeatedly denied him possession, including

3 Christmas, Julien’s birthday, and Father’s Day. Julien said that as reasons for denying him

possession, Dalith gave him “pretty much everything. Like the simple no to open cases with

CPS,” and he had had to file “multiple habeas actions to try and get her to follow the Court’s

order.” He testified that he withheld possession once for medical reasons in March 2020. Julien

explained that Dalith had told him that L.C.R. had had a fever for about a week, and when she

brought the child to Julien for his possession period, L.C.R. “was not okay. He was, like, not

sick, but there—something was going on, and I try to figure out what’s going on. He still have

fever, a lot of fever this day . . . .” When Julien changed L.C.R.’s diaper, he realized:

on [L.C.R.’s] bottom area was like very, very bumpy, so I got—I got a little bit scared about it, and I give him Tylenol to reduce the fever. He was kind of okay. But anyway, I decide to take him to the—to the emergency room in South Austin, and they—they were really concerned about it, and they told me to go right away to the—to check in the hospital because they told me [L.C.R.] has an abscess on his bottom area. And he has to—to be—like, he had to have some surgery, and she told me—the—the doctor told me to go right away, and she even told me to use an EMS. I was, like, No, it’s fine. I take my car. So I went to the hospital, and [L.C.R.] has the surgery to remove the abscess.

After surgery, Julien “went to Court to ask the judge if I can keep him until he recover, so—the

judge say no. He can go back with his mom. And the same day, I just wait on [L.C.R.] until his

mom complained with the judge.” Julien testified that the only CPS report he had made against

Dalith was related to his discovery of L.C.R.’s abscess.

Julien testified that he wanted L.C.R. to “do the child therapy and make sure he’s

fine” but that it had been hard to find a therapist for a child of L.C.R.’s age, particularly during

the pandemic, because most therapists want to do virtual meetings. Julien testified that although

L.C.R.

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