in the Interest of K.F., R.F., and T.F., Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 27, 2018
Docket02-18-00187-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of K.F., R.F., and T.F., Children (in the Interest of K.F., R.F., and T.F., 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 K.F., R.F., and T.F., Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-18-00187-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF K.F., R.F., AND T.F., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 233rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 233-458476-09

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Meier and Gabriel, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction

In this suit affecting the parent-child relationship, Appellee T.F. (Mother)

petitioned the trial court for an increase in Appellant R.F.’s (Father) monthly child

support payments for their three children, K.F., R.F., and T.F. (Children). Following

a bench trial, the trial court granted the requested modification and rendered a final

judgment, which increased Father’s monthly child support payments from the

previously negotiated and agreed upon amount of $1,000 to $4,865, with “step-down”

monthly payments of $4,037.95 for two children and $3,230.36 for one child.1 Father

presents four issues for our review. We reverse and remand.

II. Background

In 2013, pursuant to a mediated settlement agreement, the trial court signed an

agreed order (Agreed Order), which provided that Mother and Father would be the

Children’s joint managing conservators and that Mother had the exclusive right to

designate their residence anywhere in the United States. Because Mother planned to

1 A “step-down” provision in a child support order refers to the family code’s requirement that when a court orders support for more than one child, the order must provide for a payment decrease or “partial termination” upon the termination of support for a child—e.g., when a child turns 18. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 154.127(a) (West 2014) (“A child support order for more than one child shall provide that, on the termination of support for a child, the level of support for the remaining child or children is in accordance with the child support guidelines.”).

2 (and did) move with the Children to Virginia, Father and Mother agreed that Father’s

monthly child support payments would be $1,000 because Father would exclusively

bear all costs of travel.

After moving to Virginia, Mother remarried and moved into her new spouse’s

8,000 square foot home, with its $6,000 monthly mortgage payment. In April 2017, a

Virginia court signed an order (Consent Order), which, relevant to this appeal,

modified the Agreed Order by altering Father’s possession and access schedule.

Although they disagree about the exact numbers, both Mother and Father

acknowledge that the Consent Order decreased the number of days that Father had

possession of and access to the Children. Yet the order increased his travel costs

because certain blocks of his visitation periods were broken into smaller periods of

possession, thus requiring him to pay for additional travel arrangements.

In January 2017, Mother filed the underlying petition for modification of child

support, seeking an increase in Father’s monthly payment. At the modification

hearing, Mother testified that Father’s current child support obligation required him

to pay $1,000 per month and provide health insurance for the Children. Mother’s

testimony confirmed that at the time of the Agreed Order, her monthly income was

$8,510.06 ($102,120.72 per year), the Children’s monthly expenses were $5,351.25,

and Father’s monthly income was approximately $10,000 ($120,000 per year).

Mother also testified that her earnings had declined to $80,000 per year, in part

because she was trying to work around the schedules of her new spouse and the 3 Children and because she had chosen to work fewer hours at a hospital in a different

city requiring a 2.5 hour commute even though she admitted that there were “many

other hospitals” closer to her residence. Mother stated that her current monthly

mortgage payment was $6,000 and that the reasonable and necessary current monthly

living expenses for the Children were $9,150. On cross-examination, Mother

acknowledged that while she wanted Father to pay for 100% of the Children’s $9,150

monthly expenses, she afforded Father no say with regard to the expenditures:

Q. And none of these expenses you’ve contacted [Father] about and asked him, What do you think about this? Or, you know, the sports, Is this okay for sports? Do you think the kids would like this? You don’t contact him and ask him that ahead of time, do you?

[MOTHER]. No, I do not.

Q. So when you say, well, he’s just not paying the expenses, you’re not telling him or asking him or involving him in what these expenses actually would be, are you?

[MOTHER]. No, I’m not.

Q. And what you would like the Court to do today is appoint these expenses 100 percent to [Father], but [Father] gets absolutely no say in any of these expenses, correct?

[MOTHER]. That’s correct.

Q. And you don’t want to have to ask him about any expenses related to your children, do you?

Q. And you think that that’s fair and reasonable?

[MOTHER]. Yes, I do. 4 Finally, Mother testified that Father’s gross pay for 2016 had increased to $528,793.41.

Father testified that his 2016 gross income was $550,000, but that the amount

is offset by his own business expenses, of which he bears 100% of the costs. Father

presented his own income and expense statement, which calculated his net annual

income at approximately $350,000 and the Children’s monthly expenses at $5,792.

He also testified that because of the Consent Order, his travel expenses had increased.

Unsurprisingly, Father concluded that Mother’s request for nearly ten thousand

dollars per month in child support was not reasonable.

The parties stipulated on the record that the statutory child support guidelines

for three children would require Father to pay $2,565 a month.

The trial court subsequently issued a letter ruling stating that the court would

order Father to pay $4,865 per month, with retroactive support, and on March 7,

2018, the court signed an order to that effect. The order included findings that

1. Father’s net monthly resources are $29,220.65;
2. Mother’s net monthly resources are $5,117.90;

3. the percentage applied to Father’s net monthly resources is 16.649%;

4. the proven monthly needs of the Children are $9,150; and

5. it is in the best interest of the Children for Father to pay $4,865 per month in child support.

5 The order also included step-down provisions that reduced Father’s monthly child

support payments from $4,865 for three children, to $4,037.95 for two children, and

to $3,230.36 for one child.

III. Issues Presented

Father presents the following four issues for our review: (1) whether the

evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support that a material and substantial

change in circumstances had occurred warranting modification; (2) whether the trial

court erred by ordering him to pay support over the statutory guidelines; (3) whether

the trial court erred by ordering “step-down” provisions that departed from the

statutory guidelines; and (4) whether the trial court abused its discretion by ordering

retroactive child support from Mother’s initial pleading rather than the date Mother

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in the Interest of K.F., R.F., and T.F., Children, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-kf-rf-and-tf-children-texapp-2018.