In Re BBR

188 S.W.3d 341, 2006 WL 495363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 2006
Docket2-04-399-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 188 S.W.3d 341 (In Re BBR) 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 BBR, 188 S.W.3d 341, 2006 WL 495363 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

188 S.W.3d 341 (2006)

In the Interest of B.B.R. a/k/a F.D.R.T.

No. 2-04-399-CV.

Court of Appeals of Texas, Fort Worth.

March 2, 2006.

*342 Law Offices of J. Steven King & Heather L. King, Heather L. King, Fort Worth, for appellant.

Jose Luis Aguilar, Antioch, CA, pro se.

Jacqueline Denise Ray, Dallas, pro se.

PANEL B: DAUPHINOT, WALKER, and McCOY, JJ.

OPINION

BOB McCOY, Justice.

I. Introduction

Appellant, Family to Family Adoptions, Inc., appeals the trial court's judgment in a parentage action ordering it to pay the father's attorney's fees. Because we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding attorney's fees against Family to Family, we affirm.

II. Factual Background

This appeal stems from the trial court's award of attorney's fees in a suit to establish a parent-child relationship between appellee Jose Luis Aguilar and his biological son, "B.B.R." A few months before the baby was born, the baby's mother, Jacqueline Denise Ray, located potential adoptive parents for the baby boy and sought to have him placed with them. Appellant Family to Family Adoptions, Inc. was hired sometime in the spring of 2003 to facilitate the adoption. The baby was born on June 17, 2003, the same day that Aguilar filed his petition to establish parentage in Denton County.

Aguilar told Ray before the baby was born that he did not want to relinquish his parental rights to his son. Furthermore, Aguilar also told Debbie Seiler, a Family to Family employee, a few days before the baby was born that he was not willing to give up his parental rights. Nevertheless, Family to Family moved forward with the adoption by preparing an affidavit for Ray's signature relinquishing her parental rights, which named Family to Family as the baby's managing conservator. Family to Family also prepared an adoption plan to be signed by Ray and the potential adoptive parents. Ray and the potential adoptive parents signed these documents on June 19, 2003; six days later, the potential adoptive parents took the baby home with them to Maryland.

On June 20, 2003—three days after Aguilar filed his suit in Denton County— Family to Family filed its own suit to terminate Ray's and Aguilar's parental *343 rights in Fort Bend County. The record does not reveal how Aguilar became aware of Ray's affidavit, but one week later, Aguilar filed an amended petition in his Denton County suit identifying Family to Family as a party entitled to citation because "[t]he mother signed a parental relinquishment affidavit naming [Family to Family] as managing conservator of this child." The amended petition also named Family to Family as a respondent. On that same day, June 27, 2003, Ray executed an affidavit purporting to revoke her relinquishment of parental rights. Then, on July 18, 2003, the Denton County court ordered Family to Family to retrieve the baby from Maryland and return him to Texas. Family to Family returned the baby and then nonsuited the Fort Bend County action on or about July 21, 2003. Also on July 21, the potential adoptive parents intervened in Aguilar's Denton County suit to gain custody of the baby. They nonsuited this intervention on August 14, 2003.

Over the next year, Ray and Aguilar signed several Rule 11 agreements regarding custody and support arrangements for the baby. The trial court signed an order on September 22, 2004, adjudicating Aguilar to be the baby's father, appointing Aguilar and Ray joint managing conservators of the baby, and giving Aguilar the right to determine the baby's primary residence. This order also directed Family to Family to pay $16,447.98 in fees and costs to Aguilar's attorney. Family to Family now brings this appeal.

III. Discussion

A. Standing

In its first four issues, Family to Family complains that the trial court was without jurisdiction to award attorney's fees against it because Aguilar lacked standing to sue Family to Family in his parentage action. The issue of standing focuses on whether a party has a sufficient relationship with the lawsuit so as to have a justiciable interest in its outcome. Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v. Lovato, 171 S.W.3d 845, 848 (Tex.2005). In other words, a party has standing when it is personally aggrieved. Nootsie, Ltd. v. Williamson County Appraisal Dist., 925 S.W.2d 659, 661 (Tex.1996). The standing doctrine requires that there be (1) a real controversy between the parties that (2) will be actually determined by the judicial declaration sought. Id. at 662. Without standing, a court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case. Tex. Ass'n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 443 (Tex.1993).

Family to Family argues that no real controversy existed between it and Aguilar and that Aguilar could not "create" a justiciable controversy merely by naming Family to Family as a respondent in his parentage action. However, Aguilar was not "creating" a controversy by naming Family to Family as a respondent when he filed his amended petition. Instead, a controversy already existed because Aguilar, as the baby's parent, sought managing conservatorship of the baby; yet Ray had named Family to Family as the baby's managing conservator, and Family to Family was exercising conservatorship rights by delivering the baby to the prospective adoptive parents and allowing them to take the baby out of state to live with them.

Family to Family also argues that Aguilar lacked standing because once Family to Family dismissed its Fort Bend County termination suit, any controversy with or adverse interest to Aguilar "was extinguished" and Family to Family had no legal interest in the outcome of the parentage action. Family to Family further claims that it was not a party to the suit *344 because, after it nonsuited the Fort Bend County action, it informed the parties and the court that it had no legal interest in the suit's outcome and it did not sign any Rule 11 agreements filed by Ray and Aguilar over the course of the suit.

These arguments fail to recognize, however, that at the time Aguilar filed his amended petition, a real controversy did exist between Family to Family and Aguilar over custody and possession of the baby boy. In that amended petition, Aguilar claimed that he was entitled to recover attorney's fees because Family to Family's actions in placing the child with out-of-state adoptive parents over his objections forced him to file the paternity suit. Therefore, Family to Family's subsequent act of dismissing the separate Fort Bend County case—which occurred only after the Denton County court ordered Family to Family to have the child returned to Texas—did not extinguish this controversy in this paternity suit over entitlement to attorney's fees. Compare TEX.R. CIV. P. 162 (providing that dismissal of claims pursuant to a party's request for nonsuit does not prejudice the right of the adverse party to be heard on a pending claim for affirmative relief and does not extinguish a request for attorney's fees pending at the time of dismissal).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.3d 341, 2006 WL 495363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bbr-texapp-2006.