in the Interest of T.M., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2019
Docket02-19-00114-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of T.M., a Child (in the Interest of T.M., a 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 T.M., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-19-00114-CV ___________________________

IN THE INTEREST OF T.M., A CHILD

On Appeal from County Court at Law No. 1 Wichita County, Texas Trial Court No. CCL-761-02-E

Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Womack, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

Appellant D.M. (Father) raises two issues arising out of a suit affecting the

parent-child relationship (SAPCR) in which the trial court ordered an increase in

Father’s monthly child support payment to $1,710 and ordered Father to pay $16,630

in child support arrears. Father complains that the trial court abused its discretion by

failing to deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses when calculating his self-

employment income and that the trial court erred by failing to make findings of fact

and conclusions of law. We affirm.

II. BACKGROUND

Father and T.A.M. (Mother) were married in 1994, had two children, and

divorced in 2003 pursuant to an agreed final decree of divorce. As part of the divorce

decree, Father was ordered to pay Mother $500 per month for child support.

The clerk’s record reflects that Father was frequently behind on child support

payments. In 2006, he was ordered to pay $18,026.82 in arrears. In 2010, he was

ordered to pay $19,431.02 in arrears. In 2015, Father was apparently behind again

before the trial court signed an agreed order in which Mother agreed to release Father

from arrears that had accrued since 2014.

Mother and Father had apparently been living together, but in 2017, Mother

moved out and filed the underlying SAPCR, seeking to be appointed joint managing

2 conservator of one of their youngest child (T.M.) with the exclusive right to designate

T.M.’s primary residence. Mother also sought child support.1

While the SAPCR was pending, Mother filed a motion to compel production

and for sanctions. The trial court ordered Father to produce the requested

documents, which were necessary to establish his income during the relevant time

period. These documents included Father’s 2016 and 2017 tax returns and W-2 and

1099 statements. 2 Several months later, Mother filed a motion for further sanctions,

and the trial court signed an order in which it stated that Father had failed to comply

with producing the previously ordered financial documents. Therefore, the trial court

stated it was “deeming, for each month from [Mother’s] original filing of her petition

through the date of the final hearing, [Father’s] net income to be at least $8,550.00 per

month for purposes of establishing child support in this case.” As a sanction, the trial

court further stated,

[Father] will not be allowed to offer any evidence for the purpose of contradicting the deemed amount of net income per month set out above unless he complies with this order in producing the documents ordered to be produced herein, as well as any documents [Father] is claiming would tend to prove or establish that his income is less than that deemed by the Court.

1 Because the older child had turned 18, graduated high school, and no longer lived with Mother, the child support request only concerned T.M. 2 Father is self-employed as a manager of several oil fields, which includes work “gauging.” Mother testified that gauging is a service in the oil industry in which the gauger places a stick in the storage tank to measure how much oil is in the tank. Since April 2018, Father has operated his business as an LLC.

3 At the beginning of the December 14, 2018 final hearing, Mother’s counsel

asked the trial court to take judicial notice of its prior ruling and argued that the

sanctions should remain in place because Father had still not complied with the trial

court’s prior orders:

[MOTHER’S COUNSEL]: I’d ask the court to take judicial notice of the court’s file and in particular the last order on motion to compel and for sanctions in which the court determined it would deem that [Father’s] income, net income, was $8,550 per month and further ordered that he would not be allowed to produce any evidence to dispute that unless and until he provided the documents he was to provide to us so that we could prepare our case to show that his income is, in fact, that high. I think we’re at that point. [Father’s counsel’s] office did send us some documents, but I’ll attempt to establish through my client that it’s wholly unacceptable in terms of he didn’t provide a lot of what he should have. And so we’re still shooting in the dark here just going on what we do know. So I really don’t think it’s fair for us to have to get into a fight about what his income is now with him not here to even answer questions about what his income is now. But with the Court’s permission, I’ll try to establish he didn’t comply with the court’s order.

Father’s counsel argued that Father had complied and produced a handwritten

list of monthly income from November 2017 through October 2018, some bank

statements, a vehicle purchase application, and what appeared to be one page of a

social security statement 3:

[FATHER’S COUNSEL]: Judge, before you make the deemed finding with regard to his income that [Mother’s counsel] requests, I believe [Father] complied with your order and complied with your order in a timely manner. I have produced, and I’ll put into evidence if need be, the responsive documents, which included lots of invoices, lots of bank records, and a summary of his monthly expenses. I believe [Father]

3 Father’s production still did not include any tax returns, 1099s, or W-2s.

4 complied with that order to the extent that you should not deem his income.

The trial court stated that it would carry the issue forward without ruling:

THE COURT: Let’s do it this way. Let’s carry a ruling on that forward. Let’s go ahead with the hearing and get the -- I assume [Father’s counsel] will put that into evidence to show that he had complied with whatever evidence y’all are going to put in, and then I’ll see if I can figure it out from there.

Although his counsel was there, Father did not appear at the final hearing.

Mother was the only witness. She testified that she had experience helping Father

with billing for his business and that Father’s previously deemed monthly income of

$8,550 was a realistic amount of his net income. Mother testified that according to

the vehicle purchase application, Father listed the LLC’s income at $14,800 per

month. According to Father’s handwritten list of monthly income, his monthly

income from November 2017 through October 2018 totaled $150,300, with each

month’s income exceeding $10,000 and an average monthly income of $12,525.

Father’s exhibit 1 included more bank statements and a handwritten list that

ostensibly detailed Father’s monthly expenses.4 Mother disputed that all of the listed

expenses were business expenses and testified that they included personal expenses.

She testified that many of the expenses, such as $8,400 for payroll, did not match with

4 On appeal, Mother argues that the exhibit was admitted only for the limited purpose of showing that Father had complied with the trial court’s prior orders compelling Father to produce responsive documents. But it is not entirely clear from the record if Father’s exhibit 1 was admitted for a limited purpose. Because the admission of Father’s exhibit 1 does not alter our conclusion, we consider it in our analysis.

5 the figures from the bank statements.

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