Davis v. Guerrero

64 S.W.3d 685, 2002 WL 23987
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2002
Docket03-01-00028-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 64 S.W.3d 685 (Davis v. Guerrero) 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
Davis v. Guerrero, 64 S.W.3d 685, 2002 WL 23987 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

BEA ANN SMITH, Justice.

This appeal concerns the propriety of a district court’s modification of an order in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship (“Kansas order”). B. Shannon Davis and Susan Davis contend that the district court should have abated its consideration of the Kansas order in deference to the existence in the county court at law of a guardianship order and a motion to revoke that guardianship. We conclude that the district court should not have modified the Kansas order until the guardianship issue was resolved; accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred by awarding attorney’s fees against appellants. We va *687 cate the modification order and remand the cause.

BACKGROUND

Collette Davis was born to Julie Guerrero (“Julie” 1 ) and Luis A. Rios in December 1993. The primary contestants for custody are Julie and her parents, the Davises. Collette moved eleven times among four states before her sixth birthday due to her maternal grandfather’s military career and her mother’s tempestuous relationship with Roman Guerrero. Custody of Col-lette was the subject of a Kansas order and a Texas guardianship. Though the points of error in this ease are essentially procedural, the following factual background gives context to the disputed court actions.

Factual background

Julie and Rios met in Kentucky where their fathers were stationed in the military. Rios’s father retired and moved his family to Florida; Julie’s father, Shannon Davis, stayed in the military and moved his family to his new post in Kansas. The fifteen-year-old Julie visited the Rioses during spring break from school and deliberately became pregnant so she could move to Florida to be with Rios. By her fifth month of pregnancy, however, she had moved out and wanted an abortion. Instead, she moved to Kansas with her parents and decided to put the child up for adoption; Rios scuttled that plan by refusing to agree to terminate his parental rights.

In August 1994, a Kansas court signed the Kansas order (entitled “A Journal Entry Establishing Paternity, Setting Child Support and Visitation, Splitting Insurance and Medical Bills, and Denying Motion to Change Minor Child’s Last Name”). The court appointed Julie and Rios joint custodians, giving Julie “primary residential custody.” The Davises are not mentioned in the Kansas order. The Davis family (including Julie and Collette) had already moved to Texas in June 1994 pursuant to Shannon’s biennial reassignment by the military. Julie lived with her parents for a while as she graduated from high school and attended college. She then moved out to live with Roman Guerrero (now her husband), leaving Collette with the Davises; according to the Davises, she visited them and Collette about every other week.

In April 1996, the Davises petitioned Bell County Court at Law No. 1 (“county court”) to name them Collette’s guardians. They alleged that the guardianship was necessary to provide Collette health insurance, support, and other benefits. They requested that the guardianship last until Collette turns eighteen years old or Julie lives with Collette outside their home. Julie agreed to the guardianship, but says she believed it to be limited in scope. On July 21, 2000, the county court appointed Shannon alone to be Collette’s guardian without a limitation on his powers or the term of the guardianship.

Also in July 1996, the Davises and Col-lette moved to Hawaii, while Julie stayed in Texas to finish her associate’s degree. She lived with Roman’s parents before moving to Hawaii in December 1996. Julie attended the University of Hawaii for part of the Spring 1997 semester before dropping out and returning to Texas where she and Roman planned a December wedding. She became pregnant and they accelerated the wedding to October 1997; the Davises brought Collette to the *688 wedding and left her with the couple in Texas. However, the Davises took Col-lette back to Hawaii in January 1998 when the Guerreros were having marital troubles. Julie gave birth to a son in April 1998.

When the Davises moved to Colorado in June 1998, they let the reconciled Guerre-ros take Collette to Texas. The Davises took Collette back to Colorado for a month-long visit in the summer. Shannon returned the child in September 1998 even though the Guerreros’ marriage was again deteriorating. In November 1998, further deterioration caused Julie to send Collette back to the Davises; Roman filed for divorce. At Christmas 1998, Julie convinced the Davises that she and Roman had reconciled and that Collette should come to live with her. In May 1999, having seen that the Guerreros’ marriage was again rocky, the Davises took Collette back to Colorado. Julie had agreed to let them take the child for a visit, then reneged when her attorney told her the visit would hurt her chance to dissolve the guardianship. Julie tried to prevent their departure by occupying their van until Shannon dragged her out and called the police, who refused to intervene in a civil domestic dispute; after consulting with her attorney, Julie agreed to let the Davises take Collette back to Colorado. As detailed below, in October 1999, Julie filed motions to revoke the guardianship and to enforce the Kansas order which gave her the right to determine the child’s residence. Col-lette remained with her grandparents until the district court temporarily ordered shared access between the Davises and Julie in February 2000, pending resolution of this custody dispute.

None of the ample testimony regarding various deficiencies in the Guerrero and Davis households bears on or provides meaningful context for the procedures challenged on appeal.

Procedural background

The contest for legal possession of Col-lette proceeded in county and district courts in Bell County, though most of the action occurred in the district court.

On June 18, 1999, the Texas attorney general registered the Kansas order in Texas by suing to enforce its support provisions against Rios on Julie’s behalf. In July 1999, Rios agreed to the entry of the district-court judgment for arrearages on child support.

On October 8, 1999, Julie filed a motion in county court to revoke the guardianship established there in July 1996. Julie contended that Collette no longer needed a guardian. Julie then filed a motion in district court on October 25, 1999 seeking to enforce the Kansas order’s provision awarding her “primary residential custody.” In response, on November 5, 1999, the Davises filed a motion to modify the Kansas order, requesting that the district court name them primary joint managing conservators. On November 10, 1999, the Davises filed a motion to abate the case pending resolution of Julie’s motion in county court to revoke the guardianship. (Though the plea in abatement appears in their response to the enforcement motion, the Davises ask that the “case” be abated — a request that would also halt consideration of their previously filed motion to modify filed in the same case.) Julie later filed a motion to modify the Kansas order, requesting that her parents be named pos-sessory conservators.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.3d 685, 2002 WL 23987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-guerrero-texapp-2002.