Dustin McClain Smallridge v. Patricia Robin Smallridge

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2012
Docket11-10-00180-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dustin McClain Smallridge v. Patricia Robin Smallridge (Dustin McClain Smallridge v. Patricia Robin Smallridge) 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
Dustin McClain Smallridge v. Patricia Robin Smallridge, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion filed July 26, 2012

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-10-00180-CV __________

DUSTIN MCCLAIN SMALLRIDGE

V.

PATRICIA ROBIN SMALLRIDGE

On Appeal from the County Court at Law

Coryell County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 09-8792

MEMORANDUM OPINION On May 3, 2010, the trial court entered its final decree of divorce between Dustin McClain Smallridge and Patricia Robin Smallridge.1 Insofar as the issues in this appeal are concerned, the trial court appointed Dustin and Patricia joint managing conservators of their three children, C.M.S. and C.M.S., who are twins, and E.N.S. Patricia was awarded the sole right to establish the primary residence of the children. The trial court entered the standard possession order as to Dustin, except that weekend periods of possession end “at the time school

1 Patricia Robin Smallridge has not filed a brief in this appeal. The burden on appeal nonetheless remains with Dustin. Martin v. Martin, 363 S.W.3d 221, 227–28 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2012, no pet. h.). resumes the following Monday.” The trial court also ordered Dustin to pay spousal maintenance for thirty-six months and later entered a withholding order relative to the spousal maintenance. We affirm. Dustin presents us with four issues. In his first issue, he claims that the trial court abused its discretion when it entered the standard possession order because his rotating schedule rendered the standard possession order unworkable. Next, in Issue Two, he asserts that the trial court should have restricted Patricia’s right to establish the residence of the children to Coryell County. His final two issues, Issue Three and Issue Four, are concerned with orders that relate to spousal maintenance. We will address Issues One and Two together. Dustin and Patricia are the parents of C.M.S., C.M.S., and E.N.S. They were married on July 15, 1995, and separated on March 10, 2009. Dustin was employed by the Gatesville Police Department at the time of the hearing. During the time that they were married, Dustin admitted to having an affair in 2004. He testified that Patricia then began to be suspicious of his friendships with other females. He became friends with two female dispatchers at work, one of whom was Amy Clark. Although Patricia accused him of it, Dustin testified that he was not having an affair with Clark prior to his separation from Patricia. He said that he could no longer “handle it”—we assume he was referring to Patricia’s suspicious nature—anymore, and on March 10, 2009, he left. Dustin testified that he began seeing Clark at the end of April or in the first part of May 2009. At some point in time prior to November 16, 2009, the date of the hearing, Dustin moved in with Clark and her three children. It is apparent from the record that Patricia did not want the children to be around Clark. Dustin did not have the children overnight during the months of August, September, October, or the first half of November 2009. On cross-examination, he agreed that it was his choice whether to spend the nights of visitation with his children or with Clark. Prior to the time that Dustin moved out, he was working the day shift for the Gatesville Police Department and was also working for an ambulance service. He subsequently left that employment and went to work for the Coryell County Sheriff’s Department. After approximately three months, he returned to the Gatesville Police Department, and at the time of the hearing, his work week included the midnight shift on weekends. The shifts change about every three to four months. Dustin testified that the ambulance job was interfering with his

2 visitation and that he was no longer working for the ambulance company at the time of the hearing. Dustin testified that he had experienced difficulties in getting Patricia to work with him on alternate visitation times. He also told the court that Patricia had said that she and the children were going to move to Fort Worth. If that happened, he would not get to be involved with his children as much, and he could not drop by their school programs or join them for lunch at school. Additionally, the children would be moving away from a small town where their schools and friends are to a city where they do not know anyone and where the schools are much larger. Patricia testified that she intended to stay in Coryell County but did not want to be tied to that should her circumstances change. As far as Dustin’s relationship with Clark was concerned, Patricia had told Dustin that he had to stop texting Clark if Dustin and Patricia were going to be able to stay together. Dustin said that he would not stop. Patricia testified that she had limited Dustin’s visitation because she felt that it was too early for the children to be around Clark. All three of the children had received counseling in school and were very “upset” about the divorce. According to Patricia, Dustin had not attended the children’s school activities since March 2009, even though she had told him about them. The children attend church with Patricia. Dustin returns the children early enough on Wednesdays for them to attend Wednesday night church services with Patricia. The children are straight A students. In the trial court, Dustin sought to have the trial court “award the children” to him. And, if the trial court did not “award the children” to him, he wanted the trial court to deviate from the standard possession order and to restrict the children’s residence to Coryell County. In this court, Dustin argues that the standard visitation order is not workable because of his work schedule. Sometimes he is required to work weekends for three or four months at a time. He also maintains that he will be unable to take the children to their weekend activities if he is on duty. On those weekends when he is working at night, he will be sleeping during the day while the children are with him; the children will be with neither parent on those weekends. He also argues that summer and holiday visitation could fall at a time when the children were with a babysitter instead of with a parent, even though one parent might not be at work. If the children were restricted to Coryell County, he might “actually be involved in their lives.” If they moved to Fort Worth, he effectively would be restricted to weekend visitation only. Dustin told the court, “I just think it would be better for them to be here.”

3 In his brief, Dustin cites to the general language of TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 153.251(b) (West 2008). That section provides that “[i]t is the policy of this state to encourage frequent contact between a child and each parent for periods of possession that optimize the development of a close and continuing relationship between each parent and child.” Section 153.251(b). Dustin also refers us to the following language from Section 153.253 of the Texas Family Code: “The court shall render an order that grants periods of possession of the child as similar as possible to those provided by the standard possession order if the work schedule or other special circumstances of the managing conservator, the possessory conservator, or the child…make the standard order unworkable or inappropriate.” TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 153.253 (West 2008). A trial court has wide latitude when it makes decisions on custody, control, possession, and visitation of children. In re T.J.S., 71 S.W.3d 452, 458 (Tex. App.—Waco 2002, pet. denied). We review a trial court’s decision on such matters for an abuse of discretion and will reverse that decision only if the record as a whole shows that the trial court abused that discretion. Gillespie v. Gillespie, 644 S.W.2d 449, 451 (Texas 1982).

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Dustin McClain Smallridge v. Patricia Robin Smallridge, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dustin-mcclain-smallridge-v-patricia-robin-smallridge-texapp-2012.