In the Interest of K.S.L. and M.B.L., Children v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 2023
Docket05-22-00083-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of K.S.L. and M.B.L., Children v. the State of Texas (In the Interest of K.S.L. and M.B.L., 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.

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In the Interest of K.S.L. and M.B.L., Children v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed July 12, 2023

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-22-00083-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.S.L. AND M.B.L., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 469th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 469-54150-2018

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Burns, Justice Molberg, and Justice Reichek Opinion by Justice Molberg Appellant Father appeals the trial court’s order enforcing his final decree of

divorce from appellee Mother. In two issues, Father argues the trial court abused its

discretion by awarding him only $740 in attorney’s fees and costs under

§ 157.167(b) of the family code and failing to award him make-up time under

§ 157.168(a). We affirm in this memorandum opinion.

Background

Mother and Father were divorced on July 25, 2019. Under the final decree of

divorce, they were appointed joint managing conservators of Daughter and Son with equal periods of possession and joint authority to make most decisions regarding the

children.

On September 21, 2020, Father filed a motion for enforcement of possession

or access. Father alleged Mother violated the final decree of divorce by failing to

surrender Daughter and Son on two occasions. Among other things, Father

requested additional periods of possession or access to compensate for the

possession periods denied by Mother. Father also requested attorney’s fees,

expenses, and costs incurred in seeking to enforce the final decree. Later, in three

supplemental motions, Father added twelve more violations of the possession

schedule occurring from September through November of 2020. Father also alleged

Mother failed to inform him about Daughter’s change of school and failed to secure

his written agreement to withdraw Daughter from her school and enroll her in a new

school.

The trial court heard Father’s motion for enforcement on December 3, 2020.

Father testified Daughter was fourteen years old, and Son was ten. Father said he

had possession of the children alternating weekends and every Monday afternoon

through Wednesday afternoon. Father testified that, on Monday, September 4, 2020,

he went to Mother’s home to pick up the children, but they were not surrendered into

his possession and he was denied the entire possession period through Wednesday.

His testimony was substantially the same regarding possession periods beginning

–2– September 18, September 21, September 28, October 2, October 5, October 12,

October 16, October 19, October 26, October 30, November 2, and November 5.

Mother was non-responsive to text messages Father sent her regarding these

possession times. He generally waited about thirty minutes at Mother’s home for

her to surrender the children to him, which she failed to do for each possession period

described above. Father said he did not have any possession of Son on his tenth

birthday or of Daughter on her fourteenth birthday. In sum, Father testified that,

since mid-September, he had not had any weekday or alternating weekend

possession of the children. He further said that, after filing his third amended motion

for enforcement on November 6, Mother continued to deny him possession during

his possession periods under the final decree.

Father also testified about Daughter’s education. He said he learned in late

October that Daughter was no longer enrolled at Ereckson Middle School and was

enrolled instead at Texas Online Preparatory School. Mother withdrew her from

Ereckson, he said, and failed to notify him about this change. He testified that, under

the final decree, mutual written consent was required for such a change; he was never

asked to provide his consent.

On cross-examination, Father said he and Mother followed the possession

schedule prior to September 2020. But he said it was normal for the children to stay

with Mother during the day on school days when remote learning began in Spring

2020. Father said he and Mother “once in a while switched possessions” and that he

–3– took them as “much as I could have them.” He admitted that Daughter, before

August, was staying with him less than she should have been, but denied Son was

only staying with him one or two nights per week. Mother offered into evidence

text messages from Father sent on June 14 in which he stated he was bringing Son

back to Mother’s home because Son wanted to play video games and told him “the

only reason he was coming to my place was because you forced him.” Father later

sent a message stating, “If my kids don’t want to see me, I might as well not be

here.”

Mother also admitted text messages exchanged between Daughter and Father.

Daughter messaged Father on Thursday, November 19, asking him if he wanted to

go out to dinner on Friday night for her birthday. Father responded he was planning

on picking up her and Son on Saturday—her birthday—at 6:00 p.m., pursuant to the

final decree. Daughter responded that it could be Friday or not at all, asking him not

to “bring the court into this.” Father responded, “Your mother made it necessary to

involve the court. I am just following the rules.” When Daughter said she was going

out Saturday night with Mother and her grandfather, Father pointed out she could

spend all day or night with them but he had not seen her in three months. Daughter

told him she felt more comfortable around Mother.

Mother testified she believed Father approved Daughter’s switch from

Ereckson to Texas Online Preparatory School. She said Daughter told her Father

granted his approval for her to switch schools. Mother stated she was concerned

–4– about the children’s physical and emotional safety when they were with Father. Her

concerns were based on statements they made to her describing their feelings

towards spending time with him. Mother observed Daughter crying and hysterical

after an incident on the night of August 24, 2020,1 at Father’s house. Mother said

that, after that night, she observed that the children were “afraid to return to

possession with their father.” Mother reported the incident to CPS and filed a

petition to modify the possession schedule.

Prior to this incident, Mother testified she and Father followed the possession

order “very loosely”: the children went to Father’s house “basically when they

requested to go[.]” When school was conducted remotely during the coronavirus

pandemic, Mother said the children “almost exclusively did all of their remote

learning at my house[,]” so, during the week, they were with her despite the terms

of the final decree. Daughter would go to Father’s once per week, “at my

prompting,” and Son spent a couple of times a week there, generally “when [Father]

had taken him to practice, not based on the schedule.” Mother said Father threatened

to leave or move if the children did not want to spend time with him. After the

August 24, 2020, incident, Mother said she and the children did not hear from Father

for nine days, and Mother believed Father had relinquished his possession times with

the children.

1 No specific evidence describing the incident was admitted at the hearing. –5– The trial court also admitted several exhibits regarding Father’s attorney’s

fees, which he sought under Texas Family Code § 157.167. Among other things,

this evidence showed that Father sought a total of $21,772.50 in fees. This included

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In the Interest of K.S.L. and M.B.L., Children v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-ksl-and-mbl-children-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2023.