In Re Sheshtawy

154 S.W.3d 114, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 287, 2004 Tex. LEXIS 1428, 2004 WL 3019232
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 2004
Docket03-0766
StatusPublished
Cited by136 cases

This text of 154 S.W.3d 114 (In Re Sheshtawy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Sheshtawy, 154 S.W.3d 114, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 287, 2004 Tex. LEXIS 1428, 2004 WL 3019232 (Tex. 2004).

Opinion

Justice OWEN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this habeas corpus proceeding, we hold that both the court of appeals and the trial court had authority to enforce a final judgment awarding spousal maintenance while that judgment was pending on appeal and was not superseded. Accordingly, the trial court had jurisdiction to issue the commitment order. However, in the appeal of the underlying divorce decree, *116 the court of appeals has since reversed the award of spousal maintenance, 1 which precludes further enforcement of the civil contempt provisions in the commitment order. The criminal provisions of the commitment order allow the party held in contempt to obtain probation by paying the spousal maintenance ordered by the trial, and therefore, the criminal sentence is affected by the reversal of the spousal maintenance award. Accordingly, we vacate the commitment order, and we grant habeas corpus relief. The trial court, however, retains discretion to impose criminal contempt for violation of its unsu-perseded order pending appeal.

I

A final judgment granting a divorce between Adel and Amal Sheshtawy directed Adel to pay Amal $600 per month for thirty-six months as post-divorce spousal maintenance pursuant to section 8.002(1) of the Texas Family Code. 2 The trial court found that Adel Sheshtawy had been convicted of a criminal offense that also constituted an act of family violence. The criminal conviction was upheld on appeal. 3

Adel Sheshtawy did not make the first three monthly payments, and Amal Shesh-tawy instituted proceedings to enforce the judgment in the trial court while that court still had plenary power. 4 The motion to enforce had not been ruled upon by the trial court when Adel Sheshtawy filed a notice of appeal. Adel Sheshtawy did not supersede the final judgment. Amal Sheshtawy moved for temporary orders pending appeal, seeking legal fees for defending the appeal. She did not seek temporary spousal support pending appeal, as she could have doné pursuant to section 6.709 of the Family Code. 5 The trial court’s judgment already provided for spousal maintenance and that judgment had not been superseded.

On appeal, Adel Sheshtawy challenged several aspects of the divorce decree, including the award of spousal maintenance. While the appeal was proceeding, the motion for contempt remained pending in the trial court, and the trial court set a hearing. Adel Sheshtawy sought writs of prohibition and mandamus to compel the trial court to stay enforcement of the divorce decree pending appeal, asserting that only a court of appeals has jurisdiction to enforce a divorce decree once an appeal has been perfected. The court of appeals denied. relief, holding that the trial court retained jurisdiction to enforce the spousal maintenance order while the appeal was pending. 6 The trial court proceeded to hear Amal Sheshtawy’s motion for enforcement. Adel Sheshtawy had made no spousal maintenance payments, and the trial court found him in contempt for failing to make nine monthly payments, totaling $5,400. The trial court ordered liquidation of a $3,000 cash bond that Adel Sheshtawy had posted when a capias had *117 previously been issued and credited the bond against the arrearage.

The trial court ordered that Adel Shesh-tawy be punished for two counts of criminal contempt and ordered him confined for 180 days for each count, with those sentences to be served concurrently. The trial court also ordered confinement for civil contempt, ordering that Sheshtawy be incarcerated upon completion of the criminal contempt sentence from day to day until he paid the $2,400 spousal maintenance arrearage. The commitment order further provided that the criminal and civil contempt confinements could be suspended and probated if Adel Sheshtawy paid all outstanding spousal maintenance and the attorney fees Amal Sheshtawy incurred prosecuting the enforcement action.

Adel Sheshtawy was taken into custody and had spent two months confined in jail when he sought a writ of habeas corpus from the court of appeals. That request for relief was denied. 7 Adel Sheshtawy then sought habeas corpus relief from this Court, and we released him on bond pending consideration of the merits.

While the habeas corpus petition has been pending in this Court, the court of appeals has decided the issues presented in Adel Sheshtawy’s appeal from the divorce decree. 8 Among other holdings, the court of appeals reversed and rendered the award of spousal maintenance 9 based on section 8.058 of the Family Code, which provides that “it is presumed that maintenance is not warranted unless the spouse seeking maintenance has exercised diligence in ... seeking suitable employment ... or ... developing the necessary skills to become self-supporting during a period of separation and during the time the suit for dissolution of the marriage is pending.” 10 The court of appeals concluded that Amal Sheshtawy had not presented any evidence to rebut this presumption. 11 Both Adel and Amal Sheshtawy filed petitions for review in this Court, challenging the court of appeals’ decision in the divorce case, and today, in a separate order, we have denied those petitions. 12 The court of appeals’ judgment in the divorce proceeding is now final.

For the reasons considered below, habe-as corpus relief is granted.

II

As a general proposition, a writ of habeas corpus will issue if the commitment order is void because it was beyond the court’s power to issue it. 13 Adel Sheshtawy contends that the trial court’s contempt order is void because the court of appeals had exclusive jurisdiction to enforce the divorce decree by contempt once he perfected his appeal. Adel Sheshtawy relies on this Court’s decisions in Ex parte Boniface 14 and Schultz v. Fifth Judicial District Court of Appeals at Dallas 15 in support of his position.

*118 In denying Adel Sheshtawy’s petition for writs of prohibition and mandamus, the court of appeals concluded that the trial court retained jurisdiction to enforce its spousal maintenance award pending appeal, 16 citing section 8.059 of the Family Code, 17 Sullivan v. Sullivan, 18 and Bivins v. Bivins,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.3d 114, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 287, 2004 Tex. LEXIS 1428, 2004 WL 3019232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sheshtawy-tex-2004.