Justice LEHRMANN
delivered the opinion of the Court.
“The court may not find a respondent in contempt of court for failure to pay child support if the respondent appears at the hearing with ... evidence ... showing that the respondent is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.” Tex. Fam.Code § 157.162(d). We are called upon to interpret this section of the Texas Family Code, which provides a mechanism by which an obligor who has violated a child support order may avoid a contempt finding. We hold that this language is unambiguous and means what it says: an obligor must be current on court-ordered child support payments due at the time of the enforcement hearing, regardless of whether those payments have been pled in the motion for enforcement, in order to invoke section 157.162(d) to avoid a finding of contempt where contemptuous conduct has otherwise been properly pled and established. Holding otherwise would contravene the statute’s plain language and allow a recalcitrant obligor to escape a valid contempt finding by paying only those payments pled in a motion to enforce while continuing to disobey the prior order before the enforcement hearing. We therefore hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in entering a contempt order in this case. We conditionally grant relief and instruct the court of appeals to vacate its judgment, thereby reinstating the trial court’s contempt order.
I. Facts
Noble Ezukanma, M.D. (Noble) was ordered to pay $5,400 each month to Njideke Lawreta Ezukanma (Lawreta) for the support of their six children. Noble only made partial payments in the months of December 2007 through February 2008, and he failed to make any payment at all in March, April, and June of 2008, resulting in an arrearage of $28,044.78 on June 9, 2008. The Tarrant County Domestic Relations Office filed a motion to enforce the support order in June 2008.
The motion asserted six counts of contempt, specifically alleging each payment failure, the amount of any partial payments made, and the total outstanding arrearage as of June 9, 2008. In the motion, the Office requested that Noble be held in contempt for each of six violations of the support order and that the court recognize the total outstanding arrearage at the time of the hearing on the motion.
Although a hearing on the motion was initially set for the following month, it was not held until February 2009. In late June 2008, Noble paid off the entire pled arrear-age with a lump sum payment. But after making this payment, Noble immediately reverted to making only partial payments during the remaining intervening months between the filing of the motion and the hearing. By the time the hearing was held in February 2009, Noble had accumulated a new arrearage of $28,656.56, which the trial court reduced to a money judgment. The trial court also held Noble in contempt for the failures to make timely child support payments that were due under the support order on March 1, 2008, April 1, 2008, and June 1, 2008, and sentenced him to serve 174 days in jail on the second and fourth weekends of every month.
Noble filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the court of appeals, arguing that section 157.162(d) of the Texas Family Code precluded a finding of contempt by the trial court. Section 157.162(d) provides:
The court may not find a respondent in contempt of court for failure to pay child support if the respondent appears at the hearing with a copy of the payment record or other evidence satisfactory to the court showing that the respondent is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.
Tex. Fam.Code § 157.162(d).
Noble argued that this provision prohibits a finding of contempt for missed payments alleged in the motion to enforce that, though untimely under the support order, had been satisfied prior to the hearing. In a divided decision, the court of appeals adopted this interpretation and held that Noble could invoke the statute at the hearing, despite the outstanding $28,656.56 arrearage, because he had become “current” on the missed payments for March, April, and June that were pled in the motion. The court granted mandamus and habeas corpus relief,
ordering the trial court to vacate its contempt order. Both Lawreta and the Office of the Attorney General petitioned this Court for mandamus relief, arguing that the court of appeals abused its discretion in granting mandamus relief
and seeking reinstatement of the trial court’s contempt order.
II. Discussion
Child support collection is serious business; so much so that the federal government has enacted legislation requiring states to abide by certain mandates to help struggling parents obtain child support in order to receive federal funding.
See
42 U.S.C. §§ 654, 666 (2006) (called Title IVD).
No less serious are the rights of those accused of contemptuously failing to pay child support, invoking due process protections when findings of contempt are sought. Recognizing the importance of both, the Legislature has carefully crafted a framework for ensuring compliance with child support orders through contempt and other enforcement mechanisms.
A. Contempt as a Child Support Enforcement Mechanism
One of the primary tools that child support enforcement agencies depend on to encourage obligors to timely pay child support is the contempt power of the court. The prevalence of this enforcement mechanism has its roots in the historical lineage of child-related orders, which were originally matters of equity, enforceable only by contempt rather than by damages.
See
Margaret M. Mahoney,
The Enforcement of Child Custody Orders By Contempt Remedies,
68 U. Pitt. L.Rev. 835, 843^44 (2007). Contempt is an inherent power of the court,
Ex parte Gorena,
595 S.W.2d 841, 843 (Tex.1979) (orig. proceeding), and chapter 157 of the Family Code provides the statutory framework for utilizing this power as a mechanism to enforce child support orders and other final orders in family court proceedings. Chapter 157 provides for the filing of a motion to enforce requesting contempt and other relief, Tex. Fam.Code § 157.001, specifies what must be included in this request,
id.
§ 157.002(b)(2), enumerates available affirmative defenses,
id.
§ 157.008, and explains the procedures for a hearing on the motion,
id.
§§ 157.061-.066.
Upon finding an obligor in contempt, the trial court may, in its discretion, impose a sentence that is either civil or criminal, or both.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Justice LEHRMANN
delivered the opinion of the Court.
“The court may not find a respondent in contempt of court for failure to pay child support if the respondent appears at the hearing with ... evidence ... showing that the respondent is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.” Tex. Fam.Code § 157.162(d). We are called upon to interpret this section of the Texas Family Code, which provides a mechanism by which an obligor who has violated a child support order may avoid a contempt finding. We hold that this language is unambiguous and means what it says: an obligor must be current on court-ordered child support payments due at the time of the enforcement hearing, regardless of whether those payments have been pled in the motion for enforcement, in order to invoke section 157.162(d) to avoid a finding of contempt where contemptuous conduct has otherwise been properly pled and established. Holding otherwise would contravene the statute’s plain language and allow a recalcitrant obligor to escape a valid contempt finding by paying only those payments pled in a motion to enforce while continuing to disobey the prior order before the enforcement hearing. We therefore hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in entering a contempt order in this case. We conditionally grant relief and instruct the court of appeals to vacate its judgment, thereby reinstating the trial court’s contempt order.
I. Facts
Noble Ezukanma, M.D. (Noble) was ordered to pay $5,400 each month to Njideke Lawreta Ezukanma (Lawreta) for the support of their six children. Noble only made partial payments in the months of December 2007 through February 2008, and he failed to make any payment at all in March, April, and June of 2008, resulting in an arrearage of $28,044.78 on June 9, 2008. The Tarrant County Domestic Relations Office filed a motion to enforce the support order in June 2008.
The motion asserted six counts of contempt, specifically alleging each payment failure, the amount of any partial payments made, and the total outstanding arrearage as of June 9, 2008. In the motion, the Office requested that Noble be held in contempt for each of six violations of the support order and that the court recognize the total outstanding arrearage at the time of the hearing on the motion.
Although a hearing on the motion was initially set for the following month, it was not held until February 2009. In late June 2008, Noble paid off the entire pled arrear-age with a lump sum payment. But after making this payment, Noble immediately reverted to making only partial payments during the remaining intervening months between the filing of the motion and the hearing. By the time the hearing was held in February 2009, Noble had accumulated a new arrearage of $28,656.56, which the trial court reduced to a money judgment. The trial court also held Noble in contempt for the failures to make timely child support payments that were due under the support order on March 1, 2008, April 1, 2008, and June 1, 2008, and sentenced him to serve 174 days in jail on the second and fourth weekends of every month.
Noble filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the court of appeals, arguing that section 157.162(d) of the Texas Family Code precluded a finding of contempt by the trial court. Section 157.162(d) provides:
The court may not find a respondent in contempt of court for failure to pay child support if the respondent appears at the hearing with a copy of the payment record or other evidence satisfactory to the court showing that the respondent is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.
Tex. Fam.Code § 157.162(d).
Noble argued that this provision prohibits a finding of contempt for missed payments alleged in the motion to enforce that, though untimely under the support order, had been satisfied prior to the hearing. In a divided decision, the court of appeals adopted this interpretation and held that Noble could invoke the statute at the hearing, despite the outstanding $28,656.56 arrearage, because he had become “current” on the missed payments for March, April, and June that were pled in the motion. The court granted mandamus and habeas corpus relief,
ordering the trial court to vacate its contempt order. Both Lawreta and the Office of the Attorney General petitioned this Court for mandamus relief, arguing that the court of appeals abused its discretion in granting mandamus relief
and seeking reinstatement of the trial court’s contempt order.
II. Discussion
Child support collection is serious business; so much so that the federal government has enacted legislation requiring states to abide by certain mandates to help struggling parents obtain child support in order to receive federal funding.
See
42 U.S.C. §§ 654, 666 (2006) (called Title IVD).
No less serious are the rights of those accused of contemptuously failing to pay child support, invoking due process protections when findings of contempt are sought. Recognizing the importance of both, the Legislature has carefully crafted a framework for ensuring compliance with child support orders through contempt and other enforcement mechanisms.
A. Contempt as a Child Support Enforcement Mechanism
One of the primary tools that child support enforcement agencies depend on to encourage obligors to timely pay child support is the contempt power of the court. The prevalence of this enforcement mechanism has its roots in the historical lineage of child-related orders, which were originally matters of equity, enforceable only by contempt rather than by damages.
See
Margaret M. Mahoney,
The Enforcement of Child Custody Orders By Contempt Remedies,
68 U. Pitt. L.Rev. 835, 843^44 (2007). Contempt is an inherent power of the court,
Ex parte Gorena,
595 S.W.2d 841, 843 (Tex.1979) (orig. proceeding), and chapter 157 of the Family Code provides the statutory framework for utilizing this power as a mechanism to enforce child support orders and other final orders in family court proceedings. Chapter 157 provides for the filing of a motion to enforce requesting contempt and other relief, Tex. Fam.Code § 157.001, specifies what must be included in this request,
id.
§ 157.002(b)(2), enumerates available affirmative defenses,
id.
§ 157.008, and explains the procedures for a hearing on the motion,
id.
§§ 157.061-.066.
Upon finding an obligor in contempt, the trial court may, in its discretion, impose a sentence that is either civil or criminal, or both.
See id.
§ 157.166 (discussing the required contents of an enforcement order). Civil contempt is prospective, involving measures to encourage a contemnor to pay child support arrearag-es, while criminal contempt is punitive, usually imposing jail time for past failures to pay.
See In re Reece,
341 S.W.3d 360, 365 (Tex.2011). Chapter 157 also provides a third option: a court may find an obligor in contempt and impose a jail sentence, but suspend commitment and place the obligor on community supervision. Tex. Fam.Code § 157.165. The obligor may avoid incarceration and remain on community supervision so long as he or she complies with statutorily authorized conditions set by the trial court.
Id.
§ 157.211. This third option is an extremely effective tool for the enforcement of child support because it (1) encourages obligors to pay to avoid serving their jail sentences, and (2) keeps them out of jail, thereby enabling them to work
and avoid further arrearages, for so long as they comply with the court order. Significantly, utilization of this tool is dependent upon a finding of contempt.
A contempt order is void if it is beyond the power of the court or violates due process.
Ex parte Barnett,
600 S.W.2d 252, 254 (Tex.1980). If the trial court’s contempt order in this case is not void, there was no abuse of discretion.
In re Am. Homestar of Lancaster, Inc.,
50 S.W.3d 480, 483 (Tex.2001).
B. The Purging Provision in Section 157.162(d)
In 2007, the Legislature enacted Family Code section 157.162(d), a purging provision
that allows a child support obligor to escape a valid finding of contempt if the obligor demonstrates at the enforcement hearing that he or she is “current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.” Absent the operation of section 157.162(d), an obligor could be held in contempt for failing to make payments in a timely fashion as required by the support order, regardless of the obligor’s payment history since the filing of the motion to enforce.
See Ex parte Stephens,
734 S.W.2d 761, 764 n. 5 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 1987, orig. proceeding);
In re Miller,
584 S.W.2d 907, 908 (Tex.Civ.App.-Dallas 1979, orig. proceeding);
Ex parte Grothe,
581 S.W.2d 296, 298 (Tex.Civ.App.-Austin 1979, orig. proceeding);
Ex parte Boyle,
545 S.W.2d 25, 27 (Tex.Civ.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1977, orig. proceeding) (“The fact that relator was not in arrears at the time of the hearing does not render the court’s judgment void; the relator repeatedly failed to comply with the time provisions of the divorce decree.”). Section 157.162(d) thus offers a person who has willfully disobeyed a support order a way to avoid a finding of contempt as an incentive to encourage obligors to pay back-due arrearages. The disputed issue in this case involves the scope of conduct that is necessary for an obligor to demonstrate compliance with, and therefore invoke the benefit of, the purging provision.
Under Lawreta’s interpretation, this statute would apply only if the respondent demonstrated he or she had strictly complied with the support order by timely making all payments when they became due. Noble, on the other hand, contends that a respondent may invoke the purging provision by showing at the hearing that he or she has caught up on the specific missed payments pled in the motion to enforce. Thus, Noble asserts, the time period between the filing of the motion to enforce and the hearing on that motion acts as a grace period, allowing an obligor to avoid contempt by paying all pled amounts owed, even though he or she has accrued additional arrearages by the date of the hearing. Finally, the Office interprets section 157.162(d) to purge a respondent from contempt for willful failure to timely make properly pled payments only if he or she is current in the payment of all amounts that have become due under the support order as of the date of the enforcement hearing, regardless of whether such payments were pled in the motion. We conclude that the Office’s interpretation is the only one that comports with the plain language of the statute and therefore hold that an obligor may invoke the purg
ing provision in section 157.162(d) by demonstrating that he or she has no outstanding child support obligations as of the date of the enforcement hearing.
C. The Plain Meaning of Section 157.162(d)
Legislative intent is best revealed in legislative language: “Where text is clear, text is determinative.”
Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers,
282 S.W.3d 433, 437 (Tex.2009). We take the Legislature at its word, and the truest measure of what it intended is what it enacted.
See Alex Sheshunoff Mgmt. Servs., L.P. v. Johnson,
209 S.W.3d 644, 651-52 (Tex.2006). This text-based approach requires us to study the language of the specific section at issue, as well as the statute as a whole.
Fitzgerald v. Advanced Spine Fixation Sys., Inc.,
996 5.W.2d 864, 866 (Tex.1999). We must endeavor to read the statute contextually, giving effect to every word, clause, and sentence.
Tex. Dep’t of Ins. v. Am. Nat’l Ins. Co.,
410 S.W.3d 843, 853 (Tex.2012). Because the statute itself is what constitutes the law, we have held that unambiguous text equals determinative text (barring an absurd result).
Summers,
282 S.W.3d at 437. At this point, “the judge’s inquiry is at an end,”
Sheshunoff,
209 S.W.3d at 652, and extratextual forays are improper: ‘When a statute’s language is clear and unambiguous, it is inappropriate to resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids to construe the language.”
City of Rockwall v. Hughes,
246 S.W.3d 621, 626 (Tex.2008).
Section 157.162(d) allows a respondent to avoid a finding of contempt when the respondent shows at the enforcement hearing that he or she “is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.” The parties do not dispute, and we so hold, that the date relevant to the application of this provision — i.e., the date on which the respondent must demonstrate that he or she is “current” — is the date of the hearing. In turn, the plain language of the provision requires the respondent to show that no outstanding ar-rearage exists as of that date. The statute’s language does not support Noble’s suggestion that the “child support” on which an obligor must be current at the time of the hearing includes only the payments pled in the motion to enforce.
The statute requires that an obligor be current on child support payments “as ordered by the court.” The only “order” in effect at the time of an enforcement hearing is the prior court order setting out the obligor’s child support obligations. Thus, the phrase “as ordered by the court” necessarily refers to that earlier order, which specifies all child support payments owed by the obligor, including those to be paid after the motion to enforce is filed. Noble’s interpretation would require us to interpret “as ordered by the court” in section 157.162(d) to have no meaning at all, which violates the rules of statutory construction.
See Tex. Dep’t of Ins.,
410 S.W.3d at 583-84.
Moreover, had the Legislature intended to require payment only of the amounts pled in the motion to enforce, it had a number of ways to say so. It could have required proof that the respondent “is cur
rent in the payment of child support pled in the motion to enforce” or that respondent “has paid all arrearages listed in the motion to enforce.” It did not do so, and we assume the Legislature meant what it said.
See Fitzgerald,
996 S.W.2d at 865-66. We therefore hold that, to be “current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court” and thereby invoke the benefit of the purging provision, an obligor must be current on all child support obligations as of the date of the hearing.
The missed payments alleged in the motion to enforce serve as the basis for the contempt finding, but they do not limit the payments that must be current to obtain the protection of the purging provision.
D. The Purging Provision Does Not Implicate Notice Requirements
Noble argues that the Office’s interpretation of the purging provision violates his rights to notice and due process because it allows a contempt finding to be based on a respondent’s failure to make payments that were not specifically pled in the motion to enforce. We agree that specific violations of a court order must be pled to support a contempt finding. However, the purging provision does not affect the basis of the contempt finding; rather, it provides a basis for escaping an otherwise valid finding of contempt. We therefore disagree that the purging provision implicates notice requirements.
Noble’s argument erroneously conflates the conduct that is the basis of a contempt finding, for which there must be specific notice in the motion for enforcement, and the conduct required to invoke the purging provision to escape such a finding. The pleading requirements for a motion to enforce are set out in section 157.002 of the Family Code. This provision requires such a motion to include the amount owed, the amount paid, and the amount of arrearag-es. Tex. Fam.Code § 157.002(b)(1). If contempt is requested, the motion must also include “the portion of the order allegedly violated and, for each date of alleged contempt, the amount due and the amount paid, if any.”
Id.
§ 157.002(b)(2). Thus, a respondent may be found in contempt only for violations that are specifically pled in the motion for enforcement under section 157.002. Tellingly, the purging provision
contains
no
such pleading requirements. This lack of specificity in section 157.162(d) makes sense because specific violations do not form the basis for its use.
Rather, it can only be utilized as a means to avert contempt findings for properly pled violations by becoming “current” in the payment of support.
In turn, while respondents are clearly entitled to notice of the specific alleged conduct on which the motion for enforcement by contempt is based, they are not entitled to notice of all the ways they may
avoid
such a finding. The purging provision at issue is akin to an affirmative defense; as discussed above, it allows a respondent to avoid the consequences of his or her contemptuous acts, but does not govern the underlying violations for which contempt findings are sought.
In the context of criminal proceedings,
a charging instrument like an indictment must “charge[ ] the commission of the offense in ordinary and concise language in such a manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is meant, and with that degree of certainty that will give the defendant notice of the particular
offense with which he is charged.”
Tex. Code CraM. Proc. art. 21.11 (emphasis added);
see also id.
art. 21.03 (“Everything should be stated in an indictment which is necessary to be proved.”). In contrast to these specific notice requirements with respect to the underlying offense, there is no requirement that a charging instrument provide notice of the affirmative defenses that may be available to a criminal defendant. Similarly, the notice to which respondents in contempt proceedings are entitled extends only to the violations for which they may be found in contempt, so that they can adequately prepare a defense to such allegations.
Further, even if our interpretation of the purging provision invoked due process concerns, which it does not, Noble’s solution— interpreting the provision to require payment of only those amounts alleged in the motion for enforcement — does not address those concerns. Such allegations do not inform an obligor of the necessary conduct — being current on child support— that would invoke the purging provision. For example, a respondent served with a motion to enforce alleging specific violations of a support order would have sufficient notice to rebut the alleged violations or prove that he or she was unable to make the alleged payments when they were due.
See
Tex. Fam.Code § 157.008(c). But the motion would not put the obligor on notice of how to invoke the purging provision even with respect to those violations that were specifically pled, as it would not inform the obligor that he or she will not be found in contempt as long as those amounts are paid up by the date of
the hearing. To truly put an obligor on notice of what is necessary to avoid contempt under the purging provision, the motion to enforce would need to repeat the requirements that are already contained in the provision: that the obligor must bring “evidence satisfactory to the court showing that the respondent is current in the payment of child support as ordered by the court.”
Id.
§ 157.162(d). The statute simply does not and should not contain such a requirement. After all, the original order establishing the support obligation, in conjunction with the statute itself, already informs the obligor of the amounts that must be paid in order to be current by the date of the hearing.
In this case, Noble was held in contempt for the failure to make timely support payments due on March 1, 2008, April 1, 2008, and May 1, 2008 — arrearages that were specifically pled in the motion for enforcement and proven at the hearing. He had the opportunity to rebut those allegations and to raise the defense that he was unable to pay those pled arrearages when they were due.
See id.
§ 157.008(c). The payments he missed after the motion for enforcement was filed form no part of the basis for contempt, but rather are relevant only in that they prevented Noble from invoking the benefit of the purging provision in section 157.162(d). And since the contempt findings comported with due process, the Legislature was within its province to require full payment of child support, including payments not specified in the motion to enforce, for Noble or any other respondent to avoid the consequences of his contemptuous acts.
III. Conclusion
The plain language of section 157.162(d) of the Texas Family Code, the best guide to the statute’s meaning, confirms that the purging provision is only activated if an obligor is current on
all
child support obligations at the time of the enforcement hearing, not just those pled in the motion to enforce. This interpretation is consistent with the statutory framework for enforcement of support orders and poses no due process concerns. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in holding Noble in contempt. We conditionally grant a writ of mandamus and order the court of appeals to vacate its judgment, thereby reinstating the trial court’s contempt order. The writ will issue only if the court of appeals fails to comply.