Jennifer Caballero v. Sanjiv Vig

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2020
Docket08-18-00033-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jennifer Caballero v. Sanjiv Vig (Jennifer Caballero v. Sanjiv Vig) 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
Jennifer Caballero v. Sanjiv Vig, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

JENNIFER CABALLERO, § No. 08-18-00033-CV

Appellant, § Appeal from the 388th

v. § Judicial District Court

SANJIV VIG, § of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee. § (TC#2014DCM6244)

OPINION

This is an appeal from a final divorce decree. The issue before us, however, is not the

substance of the decree, but instead whether the judge who decided it should have been recused.

Specifically, Appellant Jennifer Caballero (“Wife”) challenges the denial of her post-trial motion

to recuse El Paso District Court Judge Laura Strathmann, who presided over her divorce from

Appellee, Sanjiv Vig (“Husband”). In her recusal motion, Wife claimed that following trial, she

obtained court documents which convinced her that Judge Strathmann and Patrick Bramblett, one

of the attorneys who represented Husband at trial, were married at the time of trial. While Judge

Strathmann and Bramblett had years earlier obtained an annulment decree, Appellant believed that

the prior decree was “void.” And because Judge Strathmann’s marriage to Bramblett never

terminated, Wife urged that the judge was therefore required to recuse herself from presiding over

the trial. Because we find that Wife lacked standing to challenge the validity of the judge’s

1 annulment decree, we affirm the denial of Wife’s recusal motion, without considering the validity

of the annulment decree itself.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties’ Divorce Proceedings

Wife initially filed a petition for divorce on September 2, 2014, seeking a divorce from

Husband, a division of property, and determination of child custody and child support. Husband

initially retained attorney David Hilles and filed a counterpetition for divorce. Prior to trial, the

parties were involved in protracted discovery battles, as well as contempt proceedings, most of

which involved alleged violations of the temporary orders pertaining to child custody and support

issues. Wife believed that throughout these various pretrial proceedings, Judge Strathmann treated

her fairly.

On March 24, 2017, approximately two and a half months prior to the parties’ trial that

began on June 5, 2017, attorney Patrick Bramblett entered his appearance as co-counsel for

Husband. Wife admits that she knew prior to trial that Judge Strathmann and Bramblett had

previously been married but asserts that she had been told by her own trial counsel and another

local attorney that the couple’s marriage had previously ended in a “contentious” divorce. Wife

did not file a pretrial motion to recuse Judge Strathmann.

Wife, however, claims that she became concerned after Bramblett took the lead role in

representing Husband at their trial. She believed that Judge Strathmann’s attitude toward her

changed during the trial. Wife became even more concerned after trial when she received

unfavorable rulings on custody, child support arrearages, and attorney’s fees. Because of her

concern, Wife obtained the documents filed in the Judge Strathmann-Bramblett divorce

proceedings. Those records showed that the couple had actually obtained an annulment and not a

2 divorce.

Nine days after the trial court issued its “Findings and Orders of Final Divorce” (but before

a final divorce decree was signed), Wife filed a motion to recuse Judge Strathmann alleging that

the judge and Bramblett were still married and that the judge was therefore required to recuse

herself from the proceedings pursuant to Rule 18b of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. See

TEX.R.CIV.P. 18b(b)(8) (a “judge must recuse in any proceeding in which . . . the judge or the

judge’s spouse . . . is acting as a lawyer in the proceeding.”).

B. Wife’s Recusal Motion

In support of her motion, Wife attached the record from the district court’s file in a case

entitled, “In the Matter of the Marriage of Laura K. Strathmann and Patrick D. Bramblett.” The

record revealed that Judge Strathmann originally filed a petition for divorce on June 29, 2009,

alleging that the parties were married on February 19, 2009, but had ceased living together on June

26, 2009. Bramblett thereafter filed a “Counter-Petition to Annul Marriage,” alleging that Judge

Strathmann had induced him to enter into the marriage as the result of fraud, and that he had not

voluntarily cohabited with her since learning of the fraud. In his counter-petition, Bramblett

objected to assigning the matter to an associate judge for a trial on the merits.1 Shortly thereafter,

however, Bramblett filed a “Notice of Nonsuit of Counter-Petition to Annul Marriage.” Then,

Judge Strathmann filed what she labeled as a “Counter Petition to Annul Marriage,” in which she

alleged:

Petitioner and Respondent entered into the marriage by fraud, neither party fully understood the situational aspects surrounding the other party at the time, and

1 Section 201.005 of the Texas Family Code provides that a judge of a court may refer any aspect of a suit to an associate judge, including a trial on the merits, unless a party files a written objection to allowing the associate judge to hear the trial. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 201.005(a)(b). “If an objection is filed, the referring court shall hear the trial on the merits or preside at a jury trial.” Id. § 201.005(c). However, in the absence of an objection, an associate judge not only has the authority to conduct the trial, but also has the authority to render a final order agreed to in writing as to both form and substance by all parties. Id. § 201.007(14)(A).

3 neither party fully disclosed such situational aspects so all relevant facts and circumstances were known by all before the marriage.

Judge Strathmann further alleged that the parties had not “voluntarily cohabitated since learning

of the fraud.” Following a hearing at which both parties appeared, an associate judge entered a

Decree of Annulment, dated August 21, 2009, finding that the “material allegations” in the

counter-petition for annulment were “substantially correct and had been proved by full and

satisfactory evidence.”

Neither Judge Strathmann, nor Bramblett ever challenged the validity of the annulment

decree. Wife, however, argued in her recusal motion that the annulment decree was void for two

reasons. First, she argued that Judge Strathmann, who filed the operative petition seeking the

annulment, did not set forth a valid ground for an annulment in her pleadings. Second, Wife argued

that the associate judge who signed the pleadings did not have the authority to do so because

Bramblett initially objected to having an associate judge hear the case and never withdrew his

objection. Wife therefore argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter the annulment

decree, thereby rendering it void. And if void, Judge Strathmann and Bramblett were still married

at the time of her trial and she should be recused.

Husband filed a response, arguing that the annulment decree was not void as Judge

Strathmann’s pleadings complied with all the procedural and statutory requirements for obtaining

an annulment. In addition, Husband argued that Bramblett’s objection to the associate judge was

effectively withdrawn when he nonsuited his counter-petition. Husband therefore argued that the

associate judge had jurisdiction to enter the final decree and that Wife had therefore not

demonstrated that the decree was void.

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