in Re Kevin Kubankin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 2008
Docket10-08-00202-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Kevin Kubankin (in Re Kevin Kubankin) 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 Kevin Kubankin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-08-00202-CV

In re Kevin Kubankin


Original Proceeding

Opinion

            Kevin Kubankin seeks a writ of mandamus compelling Respondent, the Honorable Al Scoggins, Judge of the 378th District Court of Ellis County, to grant his petition for writ of habeas corpus filed under section 153.371 of the Family Code by which Kubankin seeks the return of his son from the child’s mother.  We will conditionally grant relief.

Background

            Kubankin and his former wife Jessica Farmer were divorced in 2003.  Under the divorce decree, they were designated joint managing conservators with Farmer having the “exclusive  .  .  .  right to determine the legal domicile of the children.”  Apparently, they decided on an annual basis to modify the custody provisions of the decree, and Respondent signed agreed modification orders accordingly.[1]

            In January 2008, Kubankin and Farmer submitted their most recent agreed order to Respondent.  This order appoints Kubankin as managing conservator of G.M.K., the child who is the subject of the underlying habeas proceeding.  Among other rights, this order gives Kubankin “the right to have physical possession” of G.M.K., subject to Farmer’s visitation rights.  The agreed order grants Farmer the right to possession of G.M.K. and his siblings during certain holidays, including “the Spring Break Holiday of every year.”

            Kubankin lived in Ohio at the time Respondent signed the agreed order and continues to reside there.  Farmer traveled to Ohio in March during the Spring Break holiday of the Waxahachie Independent School District, which began on March 17.  She spent that week in a hotel and visited with her sons during the week, although their Spring Break did not begin until Friday, March 21.

            Farmer testified that she had conversations with G.M.K. both before and during Spring Break about his unhappiness with his living arrangements.  She talked to Kubankin about the possibility of G.M.K. moving back to Texas with her.  Kubankin told her that he would need to think about it.  Farmer and the children drove back to Texas on March 21.  The parties dispute whether at that point Kubankin had agreed to any change in the custody arrangements.

            Farmer emailed Kubankin a proposed modification order on March 23.  This proposed order, among other things, would: (1) designate Farmer as G.M.K.’s managing conservator, (2) give her the right to physical possession of him, subject to Kubankin’s visitation rights, and (3) require Kubankin to make monthly child support payments, which the January 2008 order did not require.  Kubankin responded with an email telling Farmer that the proposed order “looks fine” except for the child support provisions.

            Farmer flew with G.M.K.’s younger brother back to Ohio on March 26.  However, G.M.K. remained in Texas, where she had enrolled him in a Waxahachie ISD elementary school.

            Kubankin filed his habeas petition on April 3, and Respondent set the matter for hearing on April 25.  At the conclusion of the hearing, Respondent announced that he was denying the petition because Kubankin had agreed to a change in custody, he allowed G.M.K. to be enrolled in the Waxahachie school, and, based on the case history, “it isn’t good for this kid to be bounced back and forth between these school districts like that.”

            Respondent signed an order denying the petition without significant elaboration regarding the reasons for the decision.  However, Respondent also prepared written findings of fact and conclusions of law.  Among the noteworthy findings, Respondent found that:

(1) the 2003 divorce decree named Kubankin and Farmer as joint managing conservators;

(2) the decree gave Farmer the exclusive right “to determine the legal domicile of the children”;

(3) the decree did not award either party “the exclusive right to establish the primary residence of [G.M.K.]”;

(4) none of the subsequent agreed modification orders altered these aspects of the divorce decree;

(5) the January 2008 order gives Kubankin the right to physical possession of G.M.K. and the right to designate his residence;

(6) the January 2008 order is “insufficiently specific and ambiguous as to the party who has the legal right to determine the primary residence of [G.M.K.]”;

(7) the parties entered “a voluntary agreement” that G.M.K. should return to live with Farmer in Texas in contravention of the January 2008 agreed order;

(8) “The child’s present circumstances while living with [Kubankin] significantly impaired the child’s physical health or emotional development”; and

(9) “The child’s physical and emotional well-being and development would be fostered by living with [Farmer] and attending counseling sessions with the same mental health care providers who treated child previously.”

            Consistent with these findings, Respondent made the following pertinent conclusions of law:

(1) “Farmer has the right to determine the legal domicile of [G.M.K.]”;

(2) “Neither party has the exclusive right to establish the primary residence of [G.M.K.]”;

(3) On the date Kubankin filed his habeas petition, “he did not have the present right to physical possession of [G.M.K.]”;

(4) “The court should take the voluntary agreement between the parties into consideration in deciding who should be the managing conservator and whether the existing order of January 8, 2008 should be changed”;

(5) It is in the best interest of G.M.K. that Farmer retains the right to determine his legal domicile;

(6) The return of G.M.K. to Kubankin “will significantly impair the child’s physical health or emotional development”; and

(7) It is in the best interest of G.M.K. to remain in Farmer’s physical possession.

Indigence

            Before we reach the merits of Kubankin’s mandamus petition, we address his claim of indigence.

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