in Re Aimee Delyn Halleman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 2011
Docket02-11-00259-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Aimee Delyn Halleman (in Re Aimee Delyn Halleman) 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
in Re Aimee Delyn Halleman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-11-238&259-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00238-CV

Aimee Delyn Halleman

APPELLANT

V.

Edward Charles Halleman

APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE 16th District Court OF Denton COUNTY

AND

NO. 02-11-00259-CV

In re Aimee Delyn Halleman

RELATOR

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.             Introduction

In three issues in her petition for writ of mandamus in cause number 02-11-00259-CV, Relator Aimee Delyn Halleman asks this court for relief from Respondent the Honorable Carmen Rivera-Worley’s temporary order requiring her to pay $95,000 into the trial court’s registry for Real Party in Interest (RPI) Edward Charles Halleman’s attorney’s fees on appeal.  We conditionally grant the writ of mandamus, directing Respondent to modify her order.  We dismiss the appeal of the same order, in cause number 02-11-00238-CV, for want of jurisdiction.

II.           Factual and Procedural Background

The underlying lawsuit is a divorce; Respondent signed the divorce decree on April 29, 2011, awarding, among other things, the exclusive right to designate the parties’ minor child’s primary residence to RPI and a $50,000 judgment for RPI against Relator “for reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees incurred by him in obtaining orders pertaining to the child the subject of this suit.”  Relator filed a motion for new trial on May 26, 2011, and filed her notice of appeal of the trial court’s judgment on May 27, 2011, in cause number 02-11-00184-CV, which is still pending in this court.

A. Temporary Orders—Background

On June 9, 2011, RPI requested a temporary order pending appeal “requiring payment of reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses to [him], including but not limited to the payment of interim attorney’s fees pending the appeal.”  He requested the order under both family code sections 6.709 and 109.001.  See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 6.709 (West 2006), § 109.001 (West 2008).  On June 15, 2011, Respondent held a hearing on RPI’s motion.

At the June 15, 2011 hearing, RPI called his appellate counsel to testify about his estimated reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees for each stage of the appeal, from defending against the motion for new trial to filing a brief in the Texas Supreme Court.  RPI then testified that he was unemployed when the trial court addressed the parties’ marital property division in December 2010 and that he remained unemployed.  RPI also testified that he had not received any of the $50,000 Respondent had awarded to him in the divorce decree and that his family helped him pay his bills.

Relator testified that her annual salary as a human resources generalist was $42,000 and her net monthly income was $2,207.02 after subtracting taxes, child support ($552 monthly), and the child’s monthly health insurance ($100).  Her monthly bills totaled $2,390, and she owed $8,000 on her credit card, in addition to the $50,000 judgment entered against her by Respondent in favor of RPI.  Her assets included her 401(k) and her personal items awarded to her in the divorce.  Relator stated that, based on her net monthly income and expenses, in addition to the debts divided in the divorce, she did not have the ability to pay the $50,000 judgment awarded to RPI for attorney’s fees.

On cross-examination, Relator agreed that she still worked for her mother’s company but that her mother, the company’s president, did not have any influence over her salary.  Relator also said that she lived alone in a home paid for and owned by her mother and that she had sold her car after the divorce and now drove her mother’s car.  Relator stated that her mother had paid Relator’s appellate attorneys a retainer of approximately $25,000 and that her mother would pay for the other costs of her appeal but that she had to pay her mother back.

On June 17, 2011, Respondent ordered Relator to pay $95,000 into the court’s registry by July 17, 2011, for RPI’s attorney’s fees on appeal.  Relator then filed a notice of appeal from Respondent’s order, in cause number 02-11-00238-CV, and a motion to suspend temporary orders pending appeal or to set a supersedeas bond for the order.  Respondent held a hearing on the motion to suspend temporary orders pending appeal on July 8, 2011.

At the July 8, 2011 hearing, Relator again testified that her net monthly after-tax income was $2,859.02 and that she had to pay $552 each month in child support and $100 each month for the child’s health insurance.  Deducting child support and the child’s insurance left her with $2,207.02 as her net monthly income, and her approximate monthly living expenses—electricity bill, groceries, transportation, cable bill, water bill, credit card payment, items for the child, clothing, house maintenance, and rent—totaled $2,390 per month.

Relator testified that while her mother was the president of the company Relator worked for, her mother worked for the CEO, and Relator worked directly for the director of human resources, so her mother had “no control whatsoever” over Relator’s compensation or her employment at the company.

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