Houseman v. Mahin

385 S.W.2d 437, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2439
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1964
DocketNos. 5710, 5739
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 385 S.W.2d 437 (Houseman v. Mahin) 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
Houseman v. Mahin, 385 S.W.2d 437, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2439 (Tex. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinions

FRASER, Chief Justice.

Appellants, who are Fay D. Mahin Houseman and husband, Henry H. Houseman, state that this is an appeal of judgments and orders entered adversely to them in two separate causes in the 142nd Judicial District Court of Midland County, Texas, involving the change of custody of three minor children from their natural mother, Mrs. Houseman, to their paternal grandmother, Mrs. Lettie Mahin. Appellants state that the subject matter and parties are identical in both cases.

On June 24, 1963 Hilary D. Mahin and his wife, Fay D. Mahin, were divorced in the 142nd Judicial District Court of Midland County, the term of which court expired August 31, 1963. The court, in its decree of divorce, temporarily awarded the custody of the three children to appellee Mrs. Lettie Mahin until January 25, 1964, at which time appellee Hilary D. Mahin was to deliver the children to appellant Fay D. Mahin Houseman (Mrs. Mahin, subsequent to the divorce, married Mr. Houseman). On January 15, 1964, ten days before the temporary custody provision was to expire, appellee Hilary D. Mahin filed, in the divorce suit numbered 18,962, a motion asking the court to modify and change the provisions which it had made with reference to the custody of the three children. The trial court set a hearing on such motion for January 23, 1964. On this same date, January 15, 1964, appellee Hilary D. Mahin filed a new suit, or cause of action, numbered 19,987, also in the 142nd District Court of Midland County, naming his mother, Mrs. Lettie Mahin, as co-defendant with the natural mother, Mrs. Fay D. Mahin Houseman, and her husband, Henry H. Houseman. In this cause of action Mr. Mahin alleges that Mrs. Lettie Mahin is a resident of Midland County, Texas, and that the natural mother is a resident of Dallas County, Texas, and asked for judgment changing or modifying the former judgment relative to the custody of the children. The natural mother filed her plea of privilege in the original divorce case, delivering a copy of same to the attorney for appellee, along with a letter demanding that the children be turned over to her on January 25th in accordance with the original divorce judgment. On January 23, 1964, in the original divorce case, No. 18,962, the trial court signed what appellants designate as a “stay order”, continuing the custody of the three children in appellee, Mrs. Lettie Mahin, pending further order of the court. On February 4, 1964 appellee Hilary D. Mahin filed a controverting plea to appellants’ plea of privilege in the original divorce case, and on February 10, 1964 appellants filed a motion for severance of the change of custody issue from all other matters contained in the motion filed by appellee. On February 19th, Hilary D. Mahin filed his amended original petition in the second case, No. 19,987, and obtained, on the basis of this petition, a temporary restraining order restraining appellants from attempting to obtain custody of said minor children, and commanding appellants to appear before the court on February 26, 1964 to determine why such order should not remain in force until final hearing. On February 21, 1964 appellants filed their plea of privilege to this second suit, and delivered a copy to the attorney for Mr. Mahin. Appellee Mahin filed his controverting plea thereto on March 2, 1964, and appellee Mr. Mahin, in opposition to the plea of privilege, alleged [440]*440and maintained that on January 15th, when the second suit was filed, appellee Mrs. Lettie Mahin was a resident of Midland County, Texas and was the legal custodian of the children at that time, which was ten days before the original order issued in the divorce suit was to expire. Mrs. Lettie Mahin filed, apparently without objection of record, pleas of intervention in both suits. Appellee Mrs. Lettie Mahin also filed her answer in the second suit, copies of which, according to the transcript, were dispatched to the other attorneys involved, on February 27, 1964. In this answer Mrs. Lettie Mahin alleges that both the natural mother and father are unfit to have the care and custody of the three children, and states that the children are doing well under her supervision and custody in Midland County. In the petition of appellee Hilary D. Mahin, he alleges that Mrs. Fay D. Mahin Houseman’s new husband has at least three children by two prior wives and, at the time of filing of the petition, was approximately $6,000.00 in arrears in payments of child support for his children. The trial court, after considerable discussion between the parties, attorneys and the court did, according to appellants’ brief, on March 2, 1964 proceed to hear the matters in both cases and overruled the appellants’ pleas of privilege in both cases; then proceeded to hear the new suit, No. 19,987, on its merits and entered a judgment, dated March 25, 1964. This judgment recites that the plea of privilege of Fay D. Mahin Houseman and her husband is overruled. The judgment then states that “ * * * by agreement of all parties herein” the court proceeded to hear all matters relative to the main issue involving the custody and temporary custody of the minor children, and having heard such decreed in said judgment that the custody of the three children be continued in Mrs. Lettie Mahin, the grandmother, until September 1, 1964 or until further order of the court. The judgment further granted all parties the right to present any further evidence during the month of August, 1964. In a judgment dated the 2nd day of September, 1964, the court entered its last judgment, reciting that no one had submitted additional evidence during the month of August, 1964, and granted permanent custody to Mrs. Lettie Mahin, the grandmother, in cause No. 19,987.

It is apparent from the record before us that appellants appeal from the ruling of the court with reference to the plea of privilege, maintaining and insisting that the court should have transferred the case to Dallas, the residence of the defendant Mrs. Fay Mahin Houseman.

Appellants bring up five points, which charge that the trial court erred in failing to sustain the pleas of privilege of appellants; in entering the stay order of January 23, 1964 and entering the temporary restraining order of February 19, 1964 enjoining appellants from attempting to obtain care, custody and control of the 'children; in hearing the change of custody suit on its merits and entering judgment adverse to appellants concerning the custody of the minor children; in failing to consolidate the judgments in causes 18,-962 and 19,987.

Before we begin the discussion of the legal aspects of this case, it must be pointed out that the appeal here appears to be based on the actions of the court in the second lawsuit — to-wit, No. 19,987 — although appellants say they are appealing, too, from an attempt to change the provisions of the original divorce suit. In any event the entire controversy involves, and required the court to consider, whether there existed a change of conditions justifying and requiring a new and different disposition of the custody and care of these children,- who ranged in age from two and one-half to nine years of age. The record does not contain any statement of facts as to the evidence the court heard regarding the change of conditions; -but is confined to matters dealing with the pleas of privilege. Therefore we will consider, and are [441]*441able to consider, only the matters before us, which are confined pretty much to the pleas of privilege. We cannot, and do not feel called on, to consider the court’s action in making the custodial change, as we do not have any evidence before us indicating that the court made anything but the right decision.

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Related

Houseman v. Mahin
390 S.W.2d 732 (Texas Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
385 S.W.2d 437, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houseman-v-mahin-texapp-1964.