in the Interest of C. C. B. and M. J. B., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 2002
Docket08-01-00353-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of C. C. B. and M. J. B., Children (in the Interest of C. C. B. and M. J. B., Children) 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 the Interest of C. C. B. and M. J. B., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

IN THE INTEREST OF C.C.B. AND M.J.B., CHILDREN.

'

                No. 08-01-00353-CV

Appeal from the

394th District Court

of Brewster County, Texas

(TC# 7172)

O P I N I O N

Joseph Gary Barnett, father to C.C.B. and M.J.B., the children subject to this suit affecting parent-child relationship (SAPCR), appeals the trial court=s order transferring jurisdiction to the court of Fremont County, Colorado.  He also appeals the trial court=s refusal to transfer venue of the SAPCR to Harris County, Texas.  We affirm.

Facts


Since at least January 1997, Joseph Gary Barnett and Amanda V. Russell Dahl have been engaged in a series of disputes over their two children.  Barnett and Dahl agree that Barnett is the father of the children, as reflected in the agreed paternity decree filed June 9, 1997 in Galveston County, Texas.  This agreement made the parties joint managing conservators of the children, with Dahl having primary custody, and Barnett having the standard visitation rights and child support obligations.


After Barnett filed a motion to modify in November 1997, the parties agreed to transfer the cause to Brewster County.  Dahl, by pro se letter to the court, requested permission to move with the children to Canon City, Colorado on December 13, 1999.  On March 1, 2000, Dahl then filed a Motion to Transfer SAPCR jurisdiction to Fremont County, Colorado.  An Amended Motion to Transfer SAPCR jurisdiction was filed on July 17, 2000.  On August 2, 2000, the parties had filed a Joint Motion to Dismiss motions to enforce, but an October 3 Notice of Docketing Foreign Pleadings stated amended motion to transfer was pending.  On August 4, 2000, Dahl filed her Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in Brewster County for return of the children, as Barnett was keeping them in violation of the visitation agreement.  Dahl filed in Fremont County, Colorado her Notice of Docketing Foreign Pleadings and Petition for Recognition, Enforcement and Transfer of Child Custody and Child Support Order on October 3, 2000.  The District Court of Brewster County entered an order granting the transfer of SAPCR jurisdiction to Fremont County, Colorado, on October 11, 2000, finding that no controverting affidavit had been filed by Barnett.  Barnett filed a Motion for Reconsideration of Order Transferring Case on October 30.  On December 21, Barnett also filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in the Brewster County District Court to get the children from Dahl for visitation, and a Request for Writ of Attachment the following day.  The petition was denied on December 22 for want of jurisdiction Apursuant to Section 157.371 of the Texas Family Code in that the children are not within Brewster County and this court is no longer a court of continuing jurisdiction in this case.@

Undeterred, Barnett filed a Petition to Modify Parent-Child Relationship and a Motion to Transfer to Harris County, Texas on May 14, 2001, both in Brewster County.  The petition alleged that as Barnett still lives in Texas, and as the District Court of Fremont County has not accepted the case transferred there, Brewster County retains continuing jurisdiction over these matters.  He further contended that because he is the only remaining party living in Texas, and now lives in Harris County, therefore venue is proper in Harris County under Section 155.301 of the Texas Family Code.


Barnett also filed an Answer to Petitioner=s Motion for UCCJA Communication Between Judges and Motion to Refuse Transfer with the District Court of Fremont County, Colorado, on May 23, 2001.  There, Barnett contended that the Colorado version of the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), Section 203 allows Colorado to modify child custody initially made by another state only if Athis state has jurisdiction [to] make an initial determination under section 14-13-201(1)(a) or 14-13-201(1)(b) and . . . (b) A court of this state or a court of the other state determines that the child, the child=s parents, and any person acting as a parent do not presently reside in the other state.@  Second, Barnett=s petition claimed that as the underlying cause of action had been dismissed, there is no Motion to Enforce pending in Brewster County for the Colorado court to accept, and the UCCJA communication is moot.  Third, Barnett asserted that since the UCCJEA has replaced the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA) in both Texas and Colorado, that the UCCJA communication requested by Dahl is moot.  The Motion for Reconsideration of Order Transferring Case to Fremont County, Colorado, was denied on August 8, 2001.  It is from this order, and the order on petitioner=s motion to transfer SAPCR, that Barnett appeals.

The trial court=s order was a ceding of jurisdiction, not a transfer

In his first point of error, Barnett seems to claim that the trial court used the wrong standard for Atransferring@ the suit to Colorado.  We must first decide whether this order was truly a transfer, where it contemplated relinquishing jurisdiction to a Colorado court.  We conclude that the Atransfer

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