Ex Parte Dabau

732 S.W.2d 773, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7630
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1987
Docket07-87-0139-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 732 S.W.2d 773 (Ex Parte Dabau) 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
Ex Parte Dabau, 732 S.W.2d 773, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7630 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In this original proceeding for habeas corpus relief, relator David Stewart Dabau, confined pursuant to a contempt order for failure to pay previously-decreed child support, contends that he is being illegally restrained of his liberty because he did not receive due process of law at the contempt hearing, and because he was unable, without fault, to pay the ordered child support. The petition for writ of habeas corpus will be denied.

The trial court entered its decree on 29 July 1981, dissolving the marriage of relator and Beverly Dabau Dean (“Beverly”). By the terms of the decree, Beverly was designated managing conservator of the minor child of the marriage and was to receive child support in the amount of $160 per month until the child reaches the age of 18 years or is earlier emancipated. On 31 March 1987, Beverly filed a consolidated motion for contempt, for arrearage judgment and for withholding from earnings, alleging that relator had accrued an arrear-age in child support of $11,200. Relator was served with notice on 28 April 1987, and a hearing was had on 14 May 1987.

Immediately before the hearing commenced, relator filed a motion for continuance on the basis that he had not been accorded the notice required by Texas Family Code Annotated § 14.31(c) (Vernon Supp.1987). Relator urged in this connection that he needed additional time to procure a copy of tax returns and income records. Responsively, Beverly waived those parts of her motion by which she sought an arrearage judgment and withholding of earnings, and elected to seek only an adjudication of relator’s contempt for his disobedience of the support order.

Beverly’s counsel represented that Beverly was temporarily residing in Idaho, was to appear at a scheduled hearing in Amarillo the next day on her motion for contempt against another ex-husband whom she alleged had not paid child support as ordered, and would have to make other trips between Idaho and Amarillo in connection with her pending bankruptcy petition. Re-sultantly, according to Beverly’s counsel, a continuance of the hearing would work a hardship on her. The court denied relator’s motion for continuance.

At the hearing an arrearage amount of $9760 was stipulated to by the parties. Beverly testified that she had not received a child support payment since March 1982, when relator informed her that he could make no further payments for three or four years because he was going to school. Beverly, having lost track of relator’s whereabouts, had no further contact with him until having a telephone conversation with him three or four weeks before the hearing. In that conversation, relator explained that he had been injured skiing, had no medical insurance, and faced substantial medical bills and possible bankruptcy. She testified that from her marriage experience, she was familiar with the financial status of relator’s family and believed that means were available to discharge the ar-rearage.

Relator testified that his gross monthly income from his current job as a courier is $600. He testified that he is paid for 35 hours of work, but spends 50 to 60 hours per week at the workplace to learn more about the company’s operations. He expressed a willingness to dedicate the non-compensated hours he spent on the job instead to a remunerative position, but explained that he had been unable to find a second job owing to the fact that his courier duties were undertaken at two separate times of the day, ie., the morning and evening hours. He testified that he had been unsuccessful in his efforts to borrow *775 the money to pay the arrearage from financial institutions and from family and friends. Relator estimated his outstanding indebtedness as being between $24,000 and $25,000, though his testimonial enumeration of his debts accounted for a total indebtedness of $17,815.75 for, cumulatively, medical hills, an automobile loan, credit on automobile repairs, and credit cards. He testified that his mother has helped him financially, she having paid $4389 toward his bills since January 1986, and furnishes him a place to live when necessary.

Relator chronicled in his testimony his employment history from the time of the divorce. In the period August 1982 to April 1984, relator was earning a salary ranging from $6 to $7 per hour, and the monthly surplus of income over expenses during that period was $200. He testified that his taxable income for the years 1984 and 1985 were $7500 and $8800, respectively. Relator declined to characterize child support as a living expense.

The trial court’s judgment reflects its findings that relator had accrued a child support arrearage of $9760, that he was able to pay monthly child support as the payments fell due between April 1982 and April 1984, and that he is presently able to pay the arrearage due. The court accordingly adjudged relator in contempt, assessed his punishment therefor at six months confinement in the Potter County Jail, and ordered his continued confinement thereafter until he has paid the $9760 support arrearage, $56.04 court costs, and $300 attorney’s fee.

Relator’s contention that he did not receive due process of law is premised fundamentally upon three perceived procedural failings. First, he argues that section 14.-31(c) of the Texas Family Code mandated that the hearing be held no sooner than the Monday next after the expiration of 20 days from 28 April 1987, the date he was served with process. Second, he urges that the service of process itself was defective since the instrument used was not a citation, and shows an impossible date of service on relator, i.e., 28 April 1957. Last, he complains, cryptically, that the trial court improperly placed the burden of proof at the hearing. We will address these arguments in turn.

Section 14.31(c) of the Family Code provides as follows:

Duty of Court on Filing of Motion. On the filing of a motion under this subchapter, the court shall endorse thereon the time, place, and date of the hearing at which the respondent shall appear and respond to the motion. The hearing shall be held no sooner than 10 a.m. of the Monday next after the expiration of 20 days from the date of service, except that if enforcement by contempt under Section 1440 of this code is the only remedy sought by the movant, the court may direct the respondent to appear on a date not sooner than 10 days from the date of service to show cause why he should not be adjudged in contempt. [emphasis added]

Though Beverly initially invoked child support collection remedies prescribed in the Family Code in addition to the contempt remedy, she waived these otlier remedies at the commencement of the contempt hearing. It follows that the applicable statutorily required time lapse between service of process and the hearing in this case was a minimum of 10 days, a directive obviously complied with.

We are not persuaded that the circumstance that Beverly originally invoked a broader panoply of collection remedies alters this conclusion. Relator appeared with his attorney and participated fully in the hearing. He furnished an extensive explication of his employment history and of the debts competing with his child support obligation. Even were we to subscribe to relator’s characterization of the proceeding as one requiring over 20 days’ notice, the departure from the statutory notice requirement would have been a procedural irregularity only.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
732 S.W.2d 773, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-dabau-texapp-1987.