Ericka Margaret Norman v. Benjamin David Martin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 2019
Docket03-17-00704-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ericka Margaret Norman v. Benjamin David Martin (Ericka Margaret Norman v. Benjamin David Martin) 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
Ericka Margaret Norman v. Benjamin David Martin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-17-00704-CV

Ericka Margaret Norman, Appellant

v.

Benjamin David Martin, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 53RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-FM-15-005568, HONORABLE ORLINDA NARANJO, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In its Order in Suit Affecting the Parent-Child Relationship, the trial court appointed

appellant Ericka Margaret Norman and appellee Benjamin David Martin joint managing conservators

of their son, S.M.N., gave Norman the right to establish the child’s residence within Travis County,

barred Norman’s brother from being present at exchanges of the child, and denied Norman’s request

for retroactive child support. Norman argues that the trial court abused its discretion in restricting

S.M.N.’s residence to Travis County and in refusing to order retroactive child support. We will

affirm the trial court’s order.

Factual and Procedural Background

S.M.N. was born in August 2014. In September 2015, Martin filed an original

petition asking that he and Norman be named joint managing conservators and that the child’s

residence be restricted to Travis County and contiguous counties. Norman filed a counterpetition, in which she asked to be given the right to determine the child’s residence within Travis County,

Harris County, and all counties contiguous to Travis or Harris County. She also sought child support

retroactive to S.M.N.’s birth. The trial court signed temporary orders in November 2015, naming

Norman and Martin as temporary joint managing conservators, giving Norman the right to designate

S.M.N.’s residence within Travis County and any contiguous county, setting out a visitation

schedule, and ordering Martin to pay $400 a month in child support. Martin later amended his

petition asking either that he be given the right to determine S.M.N.’s residence or that a

geographical restriction be placed on the child’s place of residence.

Martin works for the Internal Revenue Service and lives in an apartment in the

Pflugerville area. He testified that he met Norman in 2004, that they were together for about ten

years, planning to get married, and that in the fall of 2013, they decided to have a child. During the

pregnancy, Norman informed Martin that she had changed her mind and no longer wanted to marry

him. She still wanted to live together and raise the child together, so Martin moved into her

apartment. Martin had prepared to take several months off after S.M.N.’s birth, but Norman instead

asked Martin to return to work, and Norman’s mother Mary came to Austin to care for S.M.N.

Martin testified that he offered to pay $1,000 each month for rent but that Norman “did not accept

any money from me” and that he instead bought $100 to $150 in groceries each month plus

“incidentals” for S.M.N. He also testified that after they split up, he attempted to pay Norman $350

a month in child support via electronic transfers but that she never accepted those payments either.

Martin testified that he owed about $80,000 in personal debts.

2 Martin testified that he was present at S.M.N.’s birth and that Norman’s family was

“very critical” and hostile toward him whenever Norman was not around. Martin was not listed on

S.M.N.’s birth certificate, a fact that Norman admitted, and he testified that he did not learn that

Norman had omitted him from the birth certificate until just before he filed this suit. Martin said he

sued because Norman “had stopped letting me see [S.M.N.] on a regular basis. I went from seeing

him two or three times a week to seeing him none.” Martin also testified that in her deposition,

Norman was asked “what names she used for [Martin] with your son,” and that she answered,

“Mr. Martin.” Martin said Norman’s explanation was that “she thought it would be respectful,” but

he believed she should refer to him as “Dad” or something similar.

During the case, Norman had moved from an apartment in northwest Austin, about

twenty minutes from Martin’s apartment in the Pflugerville area, to Hudson Bend, about forty-five

minutes away, giving him only one day of notice. She then moved to Bastrop, which is an hour to

an hour and fifteen minutes away, again giving Martin only one day’s notice of the relocation.

Martin testified that Norman worked in Houston two days a week and that he wants to care for

S.M.N. on those days, but that Norman has refused to give him expanded access, leaving Mary and

Norman’s brother Ben1 as S.M.N.’s caregivers instead.

Martin testified that Norman had made false allegations of abuse against him, which

angered him because “she knows that I am not the kind of person who would ever hurt my son. She

knows that I didn’t do that to him and I wouldn’t do that to him.” Martin was not sure whether

1 Both Martin and Norman’s brother are named Benjamin. For clarity, we will refer to Martin by his last name and to Norman’s brother as “Ben.”

3 Norman had explicitly accused him as the abuser but he said that she “certainly seemed to be saying

that,” testifying that Norman had taken “at least 1,000” photographs of alleged injuries to S.M.N.

and had made a chart of the injuries. According to Martin, Norman “thought that [S.M.N.’s injuries]

were increasing during the time she was living at Hudson Bend.” He said that the Texas Department

of Family and Protective Services (“DFPS”) and the police had closed their cases without concluding

that S.M.N. had been abused. S.M.N. sustained a stress fracture while playing on a slide in Martin’s

care, and Martin testified that the hospital’s care team reviewed the injury and found no abuse or

neglect and that he did not know if DFPS was called about S.M.N.’s injury.

Martin asked for a “50/50” visitation schedule and that he be allowed to determine

S.M.N.’s place of residence to give S.M.N. consistency. He testified that he learned while the case

was pending that Norman was considering moving with S.M.N. to Houston or Atlanta and that

Norman had suggested video conferences when he asked how she thought Martin and S.M.N. could

maintain their relationship if S.M.N. were relocated. Martin was unhappy with that suggestion

because he wanted to be near enough to attend doctor’s appointments, school plays, conferences,

sports, and the like. He explained, “Plus he is, at this age, very young. Constant, frequent contact

is still a major part of his life.” He also had concerns about S.M.N. moving farther away because

he had a “constant kind of feeling like [Norman] is trying to shorten visits or trick me out of time.”

Martin wanted S.M.N. to continue to live in Austin because “I live here. His extended family lives

here. His cousins live here. My parents live here.” He said that his family was involved with

S.M.N. and that he had some flexibility in his work schedule, which was currently a 3:00 p.m. to

11:30 p.m. shift Monday through Friday. Martin testified that he might not be so opposed to

4 Norman’s moving “if we had a relationship that was sunshine and roses over the past three years,”

but that he was opposed based on her recent habit of canceling Martin’s visits.

Martin testified that he had believed he had a good relationship with Norman’s

mother Mary, but that he has since learned that she does not like him. Martin further said that

Norman’s brother Ben, also the person with whom Martin often exchanges S.M.N. for visitations,

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Ericka Margaret Norman v. Benjamin David Martin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericka-margaret-norman-v-benjamin-david-martin-texapp-2019.