J.A.S. v. A.R.D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 2019
Docket02-17-00403-CV
StatusPublished

This text of J.A.S. v. A.R.D. (J.A.S. v. A.R.D.) 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
J.A.S. v. A.R.D., (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-17-00403-CV ___________________________

J.A.S., Appellant

V.

A.R.D., Appellee

On Appeal from the 322nd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 322-582401-15

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

I. Introduction

In seven issues, appellant J.A.S. (John)1 appeals portions of the trial court’s final

decree of divorce, which ended his marriage to pro se appellee A.R.D. (Amy),

appointed them as their child’s joint managing conservators, divided their marital

estate, and awarded Amy a portion of her attorney’s fees. John does not, however,

appeal the portions of the divorce decree granting the divorce and dissolving the

marriage. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Marriage, Birth of Greg, and Divorce Petition

John and Amy were married on May 26, 2015. At the time they were married,

Amy was several months pregnant with their child. The couple separated a few

months later, and John filed the underlying petition for divorce on September 1, 2015.

On October 14, their son, Greg, was born.

Because he had witnessed Amy taking drugs during her pregnancy, John and

his mother contacted the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

(DFPS).2 John testified that a DFPS investigator came to the hospital and tested Amy

1 To preserve the privacy of the child, we identify the parties by pseudonyms. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 109.002(d). 2 At trial, Amy acknowledged that she was using hydrocodone and Tylenol 3 while she was pregnant.

2 for drugs and that John took Greg home from the hospital. John was appointed as

the temporary sole managing conservator, and Amy was ordered to submit to random

drug testing for the next six months. Amy submitted to some drug tests but failed to

report for several others. She also failed to remain current on her court-ordered

monthly child support payments.

B. The Bench Trial and Letter Ruling

The parties waived a jury and on June 12, 2017, appeared for a bench trial. At

trial, Amy’s wedding ring was among the disputed topics. John testified that he had

purchased a wedding ring for Amy before they were married, but shortly thereafter,

Amy pawned the ring for $250. John discovered what Amy had done when he found

the pawn shop receipt, so he went to the pawn shop and bought the ring back. But at

trial, John claimed that the ring was no longer in his possession because he had sold it

for $500 to pay for a portion of his attorney’s fees. Amy testified that she had

intended to get her ring back because when she pawned it, she did not mean to sell it

but to obtain a loan against it.

Before trial Amy filed a verified “inventory and appraisement” identifying as

her separate property the “[w]edding ring worth $2000 that is in the possession of

[John].” And at trial, the court admitted, without objection, Amy’s proposed property

division as “Respondent’s Exhibit 3,” in which Amy again identified a “wedding ring

set that is currently in the possession of [John]” as her separate property. However,

Amy’s Exhibit 3 did not provide a valuation for the ring, Amy did not testify to a 3 $2,000 valuation, and Amy’s verified inventory and appraisement containing the

$2,000 valuation was not admitted into evidence.

Other relevant evidence adduced at trial included:

• “Petitioner’s Exhibit 18,” a proposed parenting plan in which John specifically requested that Amy submit to a 12-panel nail or hair follicle drug test and that she obtain four consecutive negative test results before she be permitted to have possession of or access to Greg. The proposal also separately requested that if Amy did produce four consecutive negative results, that she “shall thereafter submit to random drug testing” at dates and times determined by a private testing facility, but no more than “two (2) times during any thirty (30) day period or more than twelve (12) times during the span of any twelve-month (365 day) period.”

• Testimony from John that he had received a tax return of approximately $3,100.

• Testimony from John that he had purchased a 2012 Toyota Corolla, ownership of which he had transferred to his parents but that he was still paying the note because the vehicle was worth $4,500 less than the remaining balance due on the note.

• Testimony from John that he maintains a “Snap-on Credit” account for work equipment purchases, which had a balance of approximately $2,800.

• Testimony from John and Amy and from their respective counsel on attorney’s fees. John’s counsel testified and introduced evidence to support that John had incurred $19,333.29 in attorney’s fees, of which John had paid $12,800, and Amy’s counsel testified and introduced evidence to support that Amy had incurred $6,002.50 in attorney’s fees, of which Amy had paid $1,500.

In a July 6, 2017 letter ruling, the trial court named John and Amy joint

managing conservators of Greg, and John was awarded the exclusive right to

4 designate Greg’s primary residence “within Tarrant and counties contiguous to

Tarrant County and to Hood County, Texas.”

The letter ruling also granted Amy “step-up access” to Greg, with Step I being

supervised access for twelve weeks and Step II being unsupervised access for an

additional twelve weeks. Upon completion of both steps, Amy could receive access as

provided in the standard possession order. However, the letter ruling made Amy’s

access and possession “contingent upon completion of a negative nine-panel nail

testing done randomly by [a private testing facility] and bi-monthly as requested by

[John.]” The letter ruling provided that upon “two successive negative drug tests, the

random drug testing is to cease. Upon receiving a positive drug test result, . . . the

possession schedule will return to supervised . . . to be held at [John’s] residence.”

The letter ruling also provided a division of property that awarded John and

Amy the assets in their possession, the balances in their bank accounts, and their

retirement accounts, if any. John received the 2016 tax refund and the car. The

division awarded John the debt obligation for a “Snap-on Credit Account.” Finally,

Amy was awarded her wedding ring, and John was instructed to return the ring or pay

Amy’s attorney $2,000 as a portion of Amy’s attorney’s fees:

[John] is to return the separate property wedding ring of the wife (her value of approximately $2,000) to [Amy] on or before the date of August 1, 2017. If [John] does not have the wedding ring and in lieu of returning it, he is to pay $2,000 to [Amy’s counsel] at her business address for a portion of [Amy’s] attorney fees on or before August 1, 2017, and for which, if not submitted by that date, [Amy’s counsel] is

5 awarded a judgment in the amount of $2,000 against [John] . . . with lawful interest, for which she may pursue her options to collect.

Finally, the letter ruling requested that John’s counsel prepare an order

reflecting the letter ruling.

C. The Divorce Decree and Separate Findings

As instructed, John’s counsel prepared and submitted a final divorce decree,

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