In Re Mbd
This text of 344 S.W.3d 1 (In Re Mbd) 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.
Opinion
In the Interest of M.B.D., a Child.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Texarkana.
Georganna L. Simpson, Jeremy C. Martin, Simpson & Martin, LLP, for appellant.
Dorothy Denise "Deni" Goebel, Mount Pleasant, for appellee.
Before MORRISS, C.J., CARTER and MOSELEY, JJ.
*2 OPINION
Opinion by Justice CARTER.
In this appeal we address whether the trial court erred in failing to admit evidence at a hearing on a motion for new trial following the trial court's order on conservatorship and child support. We find that facts were alleged which, if true, would have entitled appellant mother to a new trial, and therefore the trial court was obligated to hear evidence. We reverse the trial court's judgment and remand for an evidentiary hearing on the mother's new trial motion.
I. Background
Sarah, the child the subject of this suit in the trial court, was born to Jennifer and Thomas[1] in January 2006. In August 2009 the parents reached an agreement as to conservatorship and child support, and dictated this agreement into the record before the trial court. The trial court accepted the agreement, declared it in Sarah's best interest, and pronounced the agreement to be the order of the court. A written order was not signed until November 30, 2009. On appeal, mother raises four points of error: the first two challenge the trial court's order on conservatorship and father's right to determine the child's primary residence. Her third point complains of not being allowed to present evidence at the hearing on her motion for new trial; the fourth point addresses differences between the agreement dictated into the record and the trial court's written order. Our resolution of the third point, regarding evidence at the new trial hearing, is dispositive of the appeal.
Since March 2007, these parties have been litigating conservatorship of their child. An agreed temporary order was entered March 12, 2007, naming them as joint managing conservators. Father filed a petition to modify the temporary order. A lengthy hearing was conducted in February 2008 and another temporary order was entered March 3, 2008, appointing the parents as joint managing conservators with father having the right to designate the primary residence of the child. A very brief final hearing was conducted August 26, 2009, at which time the parties dictated into the record an agreement which the trial court approved and adopted as the court's order "here in open court." A final order, approved as to substance and form by both mother and father, was entered November 30, 2009. While the temporary hearings were detailed and contained evidence about both parties, the live evidence at the final hearing consists only of seven reported pages, including the trial court's comments. The parties agreed this "final order" would appoint them as joint managing conservators; mother would have visitation pursuant to the standard possession order.[2] Both parents testified before the trial court they believed the agreement to be in the child's best interest; they each agreed to the terms and wanted the trial court to approve the agreement. The trial court approved the parties' agreement and found it to be in the child's best interest.
A few days before the final written order was entered, mother filed motions in the trial court attempting to withdraw her consent to the agreement "read into the record on August 26, 2009. . . ." On November 30, 2009, the trial court signed a written order which was approved in form *3 and substance by both parents; the order was file-stamped December 2, 2009. On December 30, 2009, mother filed a motion for new trial.
II. Lack of Evidence at Final Hearing
Mother's first two points of error allege the trial court erred in appointing the father as a joint managing conservator and as the conservator with the right to determine the primary residence of the child. The basis for these arguments is Section 153.004 of the Texas Family Code, which prohibits the appointment of joint managing conservators if credible evidence is presented of a history by one parent of child neglect, physical or sexual abuse against the other parent or a child. TEX. FAM.CODE ANN. § 153.004(b) (Vernon 2008). Mother cites evidence that was introduced at the temporary hearings as the "credible evidence" of a history of sexual abuse by father against mother since they began their sexual relationship when she was fourteen and he was approximately twenty years of age. At the final hearing no such evidence was presented; the evidence from the hearings for temporary orders could neither be considered by the trial court in reaching its final orders, nor by this Court on reviewing the final order. May v. May, 829 S.W.2d 373, 376 (Tex. App.-Corpus Christi 1992, writ denied); see also Davis v. State, 293 S.W.3d 794 (Tex.App.-Waco 2009, no pet.). Consequently, there is no evidence to support mother's arguments that father was disqualified as a joint managing conservator; we overrule points one and two.
III. The Motion for New Trial
Mother's motion for new trial alleged that her assent to the conservatorship agreement was obtained via undue influence and that she entered the agreement under duress. She claimed that because she and Father had been engaged in a sexual relationship beginning when she was fourteen years old and Father was twenty, this "prohibited sexual relationship[3] placed undue influence on [mother] due to [father's] control and restraint on [mother's] free will." Attached to the motion for new trial was an affidavit in which mother detailed the sexual relationship with father. She also makes rather general allusions to father having acted to "control" her throughout the relationship, such as when he pressured her to have sex or to drop out of school; regarding the date the agreement between the parties was reached, mother's affidavit claimed her attorney told her she "did not have a chance of getting custody," would be lucky to get standard visitation, and could get less if she did not accept the offered settlement. The affidavit goes on to say that she was ill after returning home from the hearing which ended in the agreement, and that she felt panicked, confused, and without alternatives. Another broad statement asserts, "[Father] was always trying to control every aspect of my life and this was just another example."
At the hearing on the motion for new trial, mother continued to argue that pressure had been brought to bear upon her to consent to the parties' agreement. The trial court denied her request to present testimony from a psychologist about her suffering from post-traumatic stress as a result of her under-age relationship with father. Mother also offered, but the trial court declined to admit, a written statement which mirrored the history and allegations in the motion for new trial's affidavit. The statement was, though, accepted into the record as an offer of proof. No testimony was presented at the new trial *4 hearing, just argument from counsel.[4]
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344 S.W.3d 1, 2011 WL 1709895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mbd-texapp-2011.