In Re TDC

91 S.W.3d 865, 2002 WL 31627003
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 2002
Docket2-00-356-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 S.W.3d 865 (In Re TDC) 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 TDC, 91 S.W.3d 865, 2002 WL 31627003 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

91 S.W.3d 865 (2002)

In the Interest of T.D.C., A Child.

No. 2-00-356-CV.

Court of Appeals of Texas, Fort Worth.

November 21, 2002.

*867 David R. Sweat, Arlington, for appellant.

Chris Harris & Associates, P.C., Chris Harris, David L. Cook, Arlington, for appellee.

PANEL A: CAYCE, C.J.; LIVINGSTON and WALKER, JJ.

OPINION ON REHEARING

JOHN CAYCE, Chief Justice.

We withdraw our opinion and judgment issued on July 11, 2002, and substitute the following in their place.

Appellant Tony Wayne Cook II appeals from the trial court's order awarding appellee Stoney Short primary managing conservatorship of Tony's child with the exclusive right to establish the child's permanent residence, the right to receive and disburse child support benefits, and the right to make educational decisions for the child. Tony is the biological father of T.D.C., and Stoney is a nonparent. Tony also challenges the trial court's award of attorney's fees to Stoney. We will reverse and remand.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant Tony Wayne Cook II and Martina Kaye Short are the biological parents of T.D.C. Tony and Martina were not married when T.D.C. was born. On March 3, 1995, when T.D.C. was eight months old, Martina filed a petition to establish paternity in Tony in the 249th District Court of Johnson County. On *868 December 20, 1995, the Johnson County district court entered an order that Tony was T.D.C.'s father. The court appointed Martina as managing conservator with the exclusive right to determine T.D.C.'s primary residence, and Tony was named possessory conservator. The court also changed T.D.C.'s last name from "Short," the last name of Martina's ex-husband, Stoney Short, to Tony's last name, "Cook."

Although Tony was given visitation rights to T.D.C., Martina soon made it clear that she did not want Tony to have a parental relationship with T.D.C., and she made it very difficult for him to visit T.D.C. Between December 20, 1995 and February 17, 1996, Tony attempted on several occasions to arrange times to visit T.D.C., but Martina either did not respond to his requests or denied them. On December 30, 1995, Tony filed charges against Martina for interference with child custody, but later dropped the charges because Martina permitted him to visit T.D.C. After this visit, Martina again refused Tony's subsequent requests to visit T.D.C. Tony's work schedule with the police department had changed, making the ordered Saturday visits impossible. Martina refused to voluntarily alter the visitation schedule, and although Tony contacted the attorney general's office for assistance in enforcing his visitation rights, Mrs. Gray told him "that [this] was the schedule they were going to stay with until my son reached three years old." According to Tony, Martina "said that she didn't know why [Tony] bothered. [T.D.C.'s] not going to know [him] as the father. And—he never will know [Tony] as his father.... [S]he was going to tell him that ... Stoney's his father." Martina also attempted to change T.D.C.'s last name back to Short.

From February 17, 1996 through July 6, 1998, Tony had no contact with T.D.C. He stated that he did not try to force his way into Martina's and T.D.C.'s lives because he thought it would be detrimental to the child. During this time, Tony believed that T.D.C. lived with Martina and never received any information to the contrary. Although Tony did not insist on maintaining his visitation rights in the face of Martina's refusal to allow him to see T.D.C., Tony continued to pay child support and insurance for T.D.C., even when T.D.C. was in Stoney's custody.[1]

In May 1997, Stoney married Julie Dawn Short. Martina relinquished control of T.D.C. to Stoney in June 1997.[2] Neither *869 Martina nor Stoney ever informed Tony that T.D.C. began living exclusively with Stoney and Julie in June 1997. Tony first learned that T.D.C. was living with Stoney when Stoney filed his petition for modification in Johnson County district court on May 27, 1998, requesting that he be appointed sole managing conservator for T.D.C. In response to Stoney's petition, Tony filed a counter-petition to modify the parent-child relationship, asking that he be named managing conservator.

On September 3, 1998, the Johnson County district court made an oral pronouncement giving Tony specific periods of possession and entered a temporary injunction to preserve the status quo. This oral pronouncement was reduced to a written order and signed on November 23, 1999.

On July 7, 1999, Stoney filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Johnson County district court, alleging he had the right of possession of T.D.C. and that T.D.C. was illegally restrained by Tony. Tony allegedly had refused to return T.D.C. to Stoney after visiting with him over the Fourth of July weekend in 1999. The district court denied Stoney's petition, and on July 23, 1999, Stoney and T.D.C.'s ad litem attorney agreed to the entry of a temporary order that appointed Tony as temporary sole managing conservator with the right to determine the primary residence of the child. T.D.C. then began living with Tony.

On October 6, 1999, the case was transferred from Johnson County to the 233rd District Court of Tarrant County pursuant to a motion to transfer filed by Martina on the grounds that T.D.C. had been a resident of Tarrant County for six months, and because none of the other parties to the proceedings resided in Johnson County. Following the transfer, and three months after Stoney voluntarily agreed to allow Tony to be appointed temporary managing conservator of T.D.C., Stoney filed a motion requesting the Tarrant County district court to reverse the previous rulings of the Johnson County trial court.

An associate judge held a hearing on Stoney's motion to reconsider the petition for habeas relief on November 22, 1999. The associate judge ordered that T.D.C. be returned to Stoney and restricted Tony's possession to the terms of the September 3, 1998 oral pronouncement of the Johnson County district court. Tony appealed the associate judge's ruling to the presiding judge of the 233rd District Court.

In the meantime, Tony also filed an application for habeas corpus relief to enforce his right of possession under the July 23, 1999 temporary order of the Johnson County district court, alleging Stoney was illegally restraining T.D.C. from visiting him. After a hearing, the associate judge set aside the temporary order and denied Tony's habeas corpus application. Tony immediately appealed these rulings to the Tarrant County district court. On December 20, 1999, the Tarrant County district court heard the appeals, set aside both Johnson County orders, denied Tony's application for habeas corpus relief, and set a new possession schedule for Tony.

The case proceeded to trial on May 3, 2000. After two days of testimony,[3] the trial court rendered judgment appointing Stoney and Tony as joint managing conservators and granting Stoney the exclusive right to make decisions regarding T.D.C.'s residency and education and disbursement of child support payments. *870 Martina was removed as managing conservator and designated as a possessory conservator, with possession left to the discretion of Stoney. Tony's rights under the judgment include all rights and duties normally associated with parenthood, except the right to establish T.D.C.'s primary residence and the right to make educational decisions on T.D.C.'s behalf.

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