in the Interest of G.H.D., a Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 2005
Docket01-05-00228-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of G.H.D., a Minor Child (in the Interest of G.H.D., a Minor Child) 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 G.H.D., a Minor Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 20, 2005



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-05-00228-CV





IN THE INTEREST OF G.H.D., A MINOR CHILD


* * * * *


NO. 01-05-00438-CV

NO. 01-05-00439-CV


IN RE BILLY GENE WOLCOTT, Relator





On Appeal from the 300th District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 22291*RH02


Original Proceeding on Petitions for a Writ of Habeas Corpus, or Alternatively, a Writ of Mandamus





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          This case asks whether a docket-control or scheduling order that sets a case for trial on a certain date will preserve the trial court’s jurisdiction and thus control over a later order that dismisses the case for want of prosecution [DWOP], when the docket-control setting states a trial date that falls 92 days after the DWOP, and no timely motion to reinstate was filed after the DWOP. We hold that the dismissal order controls, that it became a final, appealable judgment, and that the trial court lost plenary power to reinstate the case 30 days after the DWOP order.

          In Cause No. 01-05-00228-CV, appellant, Billy Gene Wolcott, challenges a November 12, 2004 order by which the trial court (1) adjudicated Wolcott the father of G.H.D., a child, and (2) required Wolcott to pay appellee, Kimberly Andrea Durst, the mother of G.H.D., $950 per month as child support, including arrearages dating back to September 1, 2004, and an additional $400 as reimbursement for a total past due amount of $19,602.68 in medical expenses and retroactive child support. In Cause No. 01-05-00438-CV, Wolcott petitions this Court for habeas corpus relief, and in Cause No. 01-05-00439-CV, he requests mandamus relief. Wolcott presents a single issue, common to each cause, in which he contends that the trial court’s November 12, 2004 order is void because the trial court signed the order after its plenary power had expired. In response, Durst contends that the trial court’s earlier docket-control, or “scheduling,” order, signed on April 29, 2004, preserved the trial court’s jurisdiction.

          In light of our holding that the November 12, 2004 order is void because the trial court lacked jurisdiction, we dismiss the appeal of Cause No. 01-05-00228-CV, conditionally grant mandamus relief in Cause No. 01-05-00439-CV, and lift our stay order in Cause No. 01-05-00438-CV, which we dismiss as moot.

Procedural Background

          G.H.D. was two and a half months old on November 25, 2002, when Durst filed a petition seeking to (1) establish that Wolcott was G.H.D.’s father, (2) require that Wolcott pay child support, and (3) appoint Durst sole managing conservator of G.H.D. In his January 10, 2003 answer, Wolcott denied that he was G.H.D.’s father and requested genetic testing. On March 6, 2003, the trial court signed the parties’ agreed, temporary orders. These required Wolcott to pay Durst $500 per month as child support. The trial court’s initials appear on a scheduling order and notice of intent to dismiss dated July 24, 2003. Among other things, this order set the case for a status and pretrial conference on September 3, 2003, and for trial on the merits on September 8, 2003. Also on July 24, 2003, the trial court signed new, agreed temporary orders endorsed by the parties’ counsel. These orders refer to a hearing conducted on March 6, 2003 and recite that the trial court continued Wolcott’s $500 monthly child-support obligation. The July 24, 2003 orders also reflect the trial court’s findings that Wolcott is the father of G.H.D. and that Wolcott had paid a total of $1,500 to Durst for the months of March, April, and May 2003.

          Except for docket-sheet notations of a nonappearance on August 25, 2003 and a status report sent by telecopier from the parties’ counsel on September 3, 2003, the date first set for trial, the record shows little activity in the case until February 6, 2004, when a second scheduling order and notice of intent to dismiss issued. This order set the case for a status and pretrial conference on April 7, 2004, and for trial on the merits on April 12, 2004. After another nonappearance entry noted on the court’s docket sheet for March 4, 2004, a third scheduling order and notice of intent to dismiss issued on April 7, 2004. This order set the case for a status and pretrial conference on April 29, 2004 and for trial on the merits on May 24, 2004. Docket entries for April 7, 2004 indicate that counsel for both parties appeared and filed the scheduling order.

          According to docket entries on April 29, 2004, counsel for both parties also appeared on April 29, 2004, and “filed” a fifth scheduling order. This order is identical in appearance to the four preceding orders and sets an August 4, 2004 date for a status and pretrial conference and a trial date of August 24, 2004.

          On May 24, 2004, however—the date set for trial in the April 7, 2004 scheduling order and notice of intent to dismiss—the trial court called the case for trial. Entries on the trial court’s docket sheet show the May 24, 2004 setting for trial on the merits and also show that the case would “be dismissed” because no one appeared. Consistent with this entry, the trial court signed an order that same day, May 24, 2004, that dismissed Durst’s suit for want of prosecution. The order recites that the “cause was called and no request was made that the case be left on the pending docket.” No motion to reinstate was filed within 30 days of that order.

          No further activity occurred until August 6, 2004, when the trial-court clerk filed a “Status/Pre-Trial Conference Report” from an August 4, 2004 conference for the August 24, 2004 trial setting contemplated by the order of April 29, 2004. This report has blanks on which to indicate parties present, choice of jury or nonjury trial, ready or not ready status, issues to be tried, and time estimates. The blanks have all been struck through, however, and the word “closed” is handwritten alongside these blanks. There is no docket-sheet entry for August 6, 2004.

          Although the ruling appears only as a docket entry, the trial court reinstated the case sua sponte on August 24, 2004.

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