In the Interest of I. J. K. and E. A. K., Children v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 2023
Docket08-22-00055-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of I. J. K. and E. A. K., Children v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of I. J. K. and E. A. K., Children v. the State of Texas) 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 I. J. K. and E. A. K., Children v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ No. 08-22-00055-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF: § Appeal from the

I.J.K. and E.A.K., § 383rd Judicial District Court

Children. § of El Paso County, Texas

§ (TC# 2019DCM7783)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

J-P.K. (Father) and S.K.K. (Mother) are the parents of three children born during their

marriage. Father appeals from the trial court’s order naming the parents joint managing

conservators and setting Father’s child support obligations at 30% of his monthly net resources.

On appeal, Father contends that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to enter the order

because the parties were not separated when the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) filed its

initial petition seeking a conservatorship and support order. Father further contends that the trial

court erred by (1) naming the parties joint managing conservators, rather than naming him the sole

managing conservator; (2) failing to give him a child support credit for a fourth child living in

another household; (3) failing to give him a travel credit to reduce his monthly child support

obligations; and (4) awarding attorney’s fees to Mother. He further contends that the OAG used

an incorrect method in determining he was delinquent in his child support payments. For the

1 reasons set forth below, we reverse and remand the trial court’s determination that Father was not

entitled to a child support credit with respect to his fourth child but affirm the trial court’s judgment

in all other respects.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Father and Mother were married in April 2014. Father was living in Canada at the time of

their marriage then moved to Pennsylvania in September 2015, where Mother and their first child,

I.J.K., (born January 2015) were living at the time while Mother finished pharmacy school. While

living together in Pennsylvania, they had their second child, E.A.K. (born August 2017). Mother

received a job offer in January 2018 in El Paso, Texas, and she moved there with the children.

Although the parties disagree somewhat on the details of their relationship after that time,

according to Father, he joined Mother in El Paso approximately six months later and lived with

her and the children there until Mother “kicked [him] out.” He then moved to Dallas where his job

was located. 1

A. The OAG’s petition

On December 9, 2019, the OAG filed a petition in the trial court alleging the parties were

separated and asking the court to enter a conservatorship and child support order for current and

retroactive support for the parties’ two children. Father and Mother both retained attorneys who

filed answers to the petition and both requested an award of attorney’s fees. In February 2020, an

associate judge entered a temporary order stating that Father had agreed to pay child support while

the matter was pending based on a finding that they had two children at the time. In May 2020,

Mother had a third child, D.M.K. 2 Following a hearing at which Father and Mother both appeared

1 In her testimony, Mother denies that she “kicked [him] out,” but appears to agree that he no longer lived in her home in El Paso. 2 The record does not reflect that Father contested the paternity of the third child.

2 with counsel, the associate judge entered an Order in Suit Affecting the Parent Child Relationship

(SAPCR) on October 2, 2020, naming the parents joint managing conservators of the three

children, naming Mother the primary managing conservator with the right to designate the

children’s residence, and giving Father standard visitation rights. The associate judge found that

Father’s monthly net resources were $7,904.37 and set Father’s child support obligations at 30%

of the same in accordance with the Texas Family Code statutory guidelines for the three children

living with Mother.

B. The de novo hearing

Thereafter, Father requested a de novo hearing solely on the issue of his child support

obligations. Significant to this appeal, Father raised two challenges to the associate judge’s order:

(1) whether he was entitled to a child support credit for a fourth child in another household he

claimed he had fathered with another woman prior to the parties’ marriage; and (2) whether he

was entitled to a travel credit to lower his monthly child support obligations to account for his

travel expenses to visit his three children in El Paso. Mother also requested a de novo hearing on

the issue of Father’s net resources, contending that the associate judge should have used Father’s

2020 year-to-date income rather than his 2019 income to determine his child support obligations.

And again, Mother requested an award of attorney’s fees.

1. Evidence regarding Father’s request for a support credit for his other child

At the de novo hearing, Father testified he had a 14-year-old daughter living in Cameroon,

Africa, who was born to a woman with whom he had been in a relationship prior to his marriage

to Mother. Father acknowledged that there was no court order in place requiring him to provide

his daughter with support; however, he testified that he was obligated by Cameroon law to support

his daughter, as his name was on her birth certificate. According to Father, he had been sending

3 approximately $300 to $500 each month to his sister and a minister, both of whom lived in

Cameroon, as support for the child; he provided three years of receipts for the payments to the

minister. 3

Mother did not dispute that Father had a child living in Cameroon, acknowledging that on

the eve of their wedding, Father had informed her of the child. According to Mother, she even filed

for a “green card” for the child to come to the United States at the same time that she filed for

Father’s green card. Mother testified that although she wanted Father to support the child in

Cameroon, she did not want Father to have contact with the child’s mother, and the parties agreed

that support payments for the child would “go through [her].” Mother further testified that because

Father was unemployed for the first two years of their marriage, she sent $300 to $400 monthly

payments to the minister in Cameroon, presumably for child support. 4 Mother nevertheless posited

that any money Father later sent to the minister in Cameroon was intended for ministry support

rather than child support. And because she believed Father never supported the child in the past

and did not intend to do so in the future, she argued he was not entitled to a support credit for the

child.

2. Evidence regarding Father’s request for a travel credit

At the hearing, Father testified that he had been spending approximately $1,100 a month

when he traveled from Dallas to El Paso to visit the children, which included both his airfare and

lodging. And he asked the trial court to provide him a travel credit in that amount to reduce his

monthly child support obligations. Mother objected to the travel credit, expressing her opinion that

3 Father acknowledged that at least some of the money that he had sent to the minister was for the general purpose of supporting the ministry itself, rather than just for his child’s support.

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