in the Interest of L. M. M. and S. D. M.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2005
Docket03-04-00452-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of L. M. M. and S. D. M. (in the Interest of L. M. M. and S. D. M.) 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 L. M. M. and S. D. M., (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-04-00452-CV

In the Interest of L. M. M. and S. D. M.

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 395TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 01-1272-F395, HONORABLE MICHAEL JERGINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a twelve-year custody battle between L.M.M.’s and S.D.M.’s1

parents, Rhonda Moe and John Malmquist. Moe appeals the trial court’s order denying her motion

to modify, maintaining both parents as joint managing conservators with Malmquist having the right

to determine the children’s primary residence, and putting restrictions and conditions upon Moe’s

rights of possession and access. Moe’s parents, Harold and Irene Moe,2 intervened below, seeking

to be appointed as conservators of the children, and now join Moe as appellants to challenge the

attorney’s fees awarded against themselves and Moe, jointly and severally, in favor of Malmquist’s

attorney and the children’s attorney ad litem. We will affirm the June 2004 order, but reverse an

award of appellate attorney’s fees that was contained in a subsequent, void order.

1 L.M.M., the daughter, turned sixteen in April 2005, and S.D.M., the son, will be fifteen in September 2005. 2 We will refer to the mother as “Moe” and the grandparents as “Harold and Irene” or “the grandparents.” PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Since the final divorce decree was entered in July 1994, both parents have filed

multiple motions to modify conservatorship and both have been held in contempt on multiple

occasions for violating court orders pertaining to their parental actions. Also, both parents have

consistently disputed their financial responsibility for child support, the children’s medical expenses,

and the unpaid fees owed to their personal attorneys, the attorney ad litem, and the children’s

therapist. The trial court recognized that both parents—but particularly Moe—have overlooked the

damage this litigation has inflicted on their children and have, in fact, involved L.M.M. and S.D.M

in the cross-fire.

The phase of litigation at issue began with an April 2003 motion that Moe filed to

reduce her child support obligation and collect her attorney’s fees. She later filed several amended

motions to additionally request that the trial court hold Malmquist in contempt, award her additional

periods of possession, award her the right to determine S.D.M.’s primary residence, and appoint her

as the children’s sole managing conservator.3 The attorney ad litem intervened seeking to enforce

3 The record presents some confusion over the exact modifications sought by Moe. On its face, her Second Amended Petition to Modify Parent-Child Relationship makes no mention of a request to be appointed as the children’s sole managing conservator, and such a request was likewise not made in her prior motions to modify. Instead, her petition makes a series of allegations about Malmquist’s behavior with the children—that he would drink and drive, make disparaging comments about Moe, and abuse the children emotionally and physically—and requests that she be given the right to determine S.D.M.’s primary residence. Also, Moe testified that she wanted L.M.M. to live with Malmquist and S.D.M. to live with her. Nevertheless, the court and other parties refer to Moe’s petition as a request that she be appointed sole managing conservator of the children. For example, in its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court specifically found that Moe’s “request to be appointed as sole managing conservator of [L.M.M. and S.D.M.] is not in the best interest of [the children].” And, in his brief, Malmquist cites to Moe’s petition as a “request that she be named as sole managing conservator of the children.” Although it does not appear that Moe asserted this

2 the prior orders, hold the parents in contempt for their violations, enjoin them from further

violations, and impose additional orders upon them. Malmquist responded, denying Moe’s

allegations, seeking attorney’s fees, and asking the court to deny Moe’s requests. Harold and Irene

Moe, the grandparents, then filed a plea in intervention seeking that they be named sole managing

conservators or joint managing conservators and that they recover their attorney’s fees. Malmquist

and the ad litem filed additional motions to collect their attorney’s fees.

After a four-day hearing in October 2003 and a three-day review hearing in March

2004,4 the trial court announced its proposed order, and the parties reconvened in April and May to

further discuss the details of what should be included in that order. The court then signed a final

order on June 28, 2004, which maintained Moe and Malmquist as joint managing conservators with

Malmquist having the right to establish the children’s primary residence, but placed additional

restrictions on Moe’s rights of possession and access, and conditioned her rights on continued

psychological treatment. The June 2004 order also awarded attorney’s fees against Moe and the

grandparents, jointly and severally, in favor of the ad litem (for $15,000) and Malmquist’s attorney

request within the four corners of her petition, for the purpose of this appeal, we will assume that a request by Moe to be the children’s sole managing conservator was properly before the trial court. 4 At the conclusion of the October 2003 hearings, the children were temporarily placed at the Texas Baptist Children’s Home, by agreement of the parties, until a better solution could be found. On October 30, 2003, the court ordered that, until the March 2004 review hearing, Malmquist would retain the right to establish the children’s residence, but the location was limited to the grandparents’ home, and that Malmquist would have possession on the first, third and fifth weekends, as well as the winter holidays, while Moe was to have only supervised visits twice a month at Kids Exchange once she completed her contempt sentence and began treatment with a therapist.

3 (for $20,000, without mention of any fees that might be incurred on appeal) and awarded attorney’s

fees against Malmquist in favor of the ad litem (for $5,000).

In July 2004, Moe filed a motion for reconsideration and/or for a new trial, and

Malmquist filed a motion to reform the judgment to include an award of appellate attorney’s fees.

At a hearing on July 23, 2004, the trial court denied Moe’s requests and stated that it would enter an

award of $5,000 in favor of Malmquist’s attorney against Harold and Irene in the event that they filed

an unsuccessful appeal. Although the court requested at that time for Malmquist’s attorney to

prepare an order reflecting that award, no such order appears in the record. The award of appellate

fees was not memorialized in writing until October 18, 2004, when the trial court issued a modified

final order, which differed from the June order only by its inclusion of the appellate attorney’s fees

award. The parties agree on appeal that the October 2004 order is void because it was issued after

the expiration of the court’s plenary power and that the June 2004 order controls. In November

2004, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law in response to requests by Moe

and the grandparents.

Moe appeals, challenging the trial court’s order regarding conservatorship issues and

attorney’s fees. Harold and Irene also appeal, confining their challenge to the award of attorney’s

fees. Malmquist responds that the trial court committed no abuse of discretion regarding either the

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