in the Interest of A.M B v. a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 2015
Docket13-13-00081-CV
StatusPublished

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Opinion

NUMBER 13-13-00081-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

IN THE INTEREST OF A.M.B.V., A CHILD

On appeal from the County Court at Law of Kleberg County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez Appellant B.A.B., 1 the mother of A.M.B.V., appeals from an order granting the

petition of M.E.V., the child’s father, to modify the parent-child relationship. See TEX.

FAM. CODE ANN. § 156.101(a)(1) (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.). By one issue,

appellant challenges the trial court’s discretion in granting appellee’s requested relief and

1 We use initials for the family members to protect the child's identity. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 109.002(d) (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.). ordering a geographical restriction on A.M.B.V.’s primary residence. Her arguments

address the sufficiency of the evidence to prove that a material and substantial change

occurred—a change that is necessary to modify a prior order. See id. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A.M.B.V. was born on March 20, 2009. A child support review order was entered

on June 8, 2009. On November 26, 2009, when A.M.B.V. was seven months old,

appellee filed a motion to modify the June 8 order. In his motion, appellee complained

that circumstances were “about to materially and substantially change.” In his supporting

affidavit, appellee averred, among other things, that (1) appellant was unemployed and

had recently informed him that she was going to Missouri; (2) A.M.B.V. “will not be allowed

to see any of his extensive extended family in South Texas if he is taken to

Missouri. . . . [He] will not be provided the opportunity to know his heritage and culture if

he is taken to Missouri”; and (3) the child’s physical health and “emotional development

may be significantly impaired if he is removed from his culture and his extensive extended

family.” In appellant’s unverified affidavit, filed on November 30, 2009 in response to

appellee’s motion to modify the June 8 order, appellant set out that she no longer intended

to move because she had accepted employment in Kingsville, Texas.

On November 30, 2009, appellant and appellee entered into an agreed order (2009

agreed order). The order continued the parties’ joint managing conservatorship.

Appellant retained the right to designate A.M.B.V.’s primary residency without a

geographic restriction. The parties agreed to certain visitation periods. The order also

2 required appellant to give appellee a sixty-day notice of any contemplated move. On

April 27, 2012, appellant notified appellee of her intent to move to Illinois.

On September 6, 2012, when A.M.B.V. was three and a half years old, appellee

filed a petition to modify the parent-child relationship, asserting that circumstances had

materially and substantially changed since the 2009 agreed order. Appellee requested

that he “be appointed as the person who has the right to designate the primary residency

of the child,” and he sought a restriction of A.M.B.V.’s residence to Kleberg County.

Appellee also claimed that this requested modification was in the best interest of the child.

Appellant generally denied appellee’s claims.2

On December 29, 2012, at the hearing on appellee’s motion to modify, the

following witnesses testified: (1) appellee; (2) appellant; (3) A.M.B.V.’s adult cousin; (3)

A.M.B.V.’s paternal grandmother; (4) appellee’s friend of thirteen years; and (5)

appellee’s wife, D.V. All witnesses testified that appellee was a good father and

appellant was a good mother. Relevant portions of testimony provided by appellant and

appellee are set out in the paragraphs that follow.3

Appellee testified that he has always been a part of A.M.B.V.’s life. But according

to appellee, before A.M.B.V. was a year old, his visits were more like supervised visits.

After A.M.B.V. was a year old, appellee could keep him overnight, which, according to

appellee, made it “a lot better bonding than it was, you know, being as him and me being

2 Appellant also pleaded the affirmative defense of res judicata and filed a counter-petition requesting increased child support. Each party sought attorney’s fees. From our review of the record, it appears as if the trial court granted an increase in appellee’s child support payments but denied all other relief. The parties do not appeal these rulings.

3 Because the parties are familiar with the facts, we will recite only the portions of appellee’s testimony and appellant’s testimony that are relevant to our analysis. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4. 3 together . . . . [Appellee] didn’t have to worry about . . . tak[ing] [A.M.B.V.] home that

same day in a couple of hours so [he] could spend the weekend with him. [They] could

have plans to do things, . . . go to the park or go out of town.” Appellee affirmed that he

had a stronger relationship with A.M.B.V. at the time of trial because of the interaction

that he had with him. Appellee also testified that he and appellant have been able to co-

parent. Appellee explained that he agreed to no geographic restriction when he entered

into the 2009 agreed order, but that “today is a different day”: “[he] would hate for

[A.M.B.V.] to start thinking, ‘Well, what happened to my dad? Where is he at? Is it my

fault, you know, that I can’t see him” for months when he used to come “every other

weekend”? Appellee explained that he did not “want [A.M.B.V.] leaving the security of

what he’s got right now, you know.”

Appellee also responded to the following questions:

Q. Do you think that today that you have more control over the emotional aspects of your complicated relationship between [appellant, D.V.] and your son?

A. Yes, I do.

Q. Do you feel that you are in command of your emotions?

Q. And that you have grown from 2009 in your ability as a parent to care for your son?

A. Yes, I have.

In the absence of a reporter’s record setting out appellant’s testimony, the parties

filed an agreement and a supplemental agreement on the absent reporter’s record.

According to the filings, appellant testified that at the time of the 2009 agreed order,

4 appellee was aware of her intended move out of state and that her intended move out of

state was the catalyst of the motion to modify appellee filed in November 2009. Now in

2012, she again intended to move out of state, this time to Illinois where she had been

accepted into what she described as a premier graduate program at the University of

Southern Illinois Edwardsville—a program that would increase her job and earning

potential.

Appellant also testified that although she believed appellee was a good father to

A.M.B.V., it was her perception that appellee was acting in his own interest in 2009 and

again in 2012 when he sought modification of SAPCR orders, continually attempting to

become the conservator who had the right to designate the primary residence of the child.

According to appellant, except for one occasion, appellee never asked to have A.M.B.V.

outside his ordered possession time, never took him to the doctor, and never took time

from work to care for him when he was sick.

On December 21, 2012, the trial court rendered its decision in open court. Among

other things, the trial court concluded the following:

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