Joseph F. Radler III v. Amy Philavanh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 2021
Docket01-19-00931-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Joseph F. Radler III v. Amy Philavanh (Joseph F. Radler III v. Amy Philavanh) 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
Joseph F. Radler III v. Amy Philavanh, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 6, 2021

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00931-CV ——————————— JOSEPH RADLER, III, Appellant V. AMY PHILAVANH, Appellee

On Appeal from the 311th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2009-20542

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Joseph Radler, III, challenges the trial court’s August 30, 2019

Order in Suit to Modify the Parent-Child Relationship, entered after a bench trial,

granting in part, and denying in part, the petition of Radler to modify a previous

order in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. In four issues, Radler contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s

finding that Radler’s gross monthly resources were at least $3,000 and the trial court

erred in “appl[ying] [the] child support guidelines to [Radler’s] gross monthly

resources,” “failing to apply [the] guidelines to decrease [Radler’s] medical support

[obligation],” and failing to make Radler’s reduced child support obligation

retroactive.

We affirm.

Background

In 2006, Philavanh gave birth to her and Radler’s minor child, J.G.P.R. On

December 15, 2009, the trial court signed an Agreed Final Decree of Divorce. On

May 5, 2015, the trial court signed an Agreed Order in Suit to Modify the

Parent-Child Relationship (the “2015 order”). The 2015 order required Radler to

pay $582.44 as his child support obligation each month beginning on November 1,

2014. The order also required Philavanh to provide health insurance for J.G.P.R.

and ordered Radler to pay $282.32 as his medical support obligation each month to

reimburse Philavanh for health insurance premiums beginning on November 1,

2014. The trial court ordered Philavanh to notify Radler of any changes in the cost

of health insurance for J.G.P.R. and allowed Radler’s medical support obligation to

be changed accordingly.

2 On September 17, 2016, Radler filed a Petition to Modify the Parent-Child

Relationship, alleging that a material and substantial change of circumstances had

occurred since the 2015 order and that modification of that order would be in the

best interest of J.G.P.R. On October 6, 2017, Radler filed his First Amended Petition

to Modify the Parent-Child Relationship, alleging that a material and substantial

change of circumstances had occurred since the 2015 order and that modification of

that order would be in the best interest of J.G.P.R. Radler asserted that since the

2015 order, his income had changed and “the monthly amount of support ordered

differ[ed] by at least twenty percent . . . or $100[] from the amount that would be

awarded in accordance with the guidelines of Chapter 154 of the Texas Family

Code.” (Emphasis omitted.) Radler requested that “[t]he current child support order

in effect . . . be terminated,” the amount of his monthly child support obligation be

reduced, and that “any reduction be made retroactive to the time of service of [his

First] Amended Petition on [Philavanh] or her attorney.”

On February 7, 2019, Radler filed his Third Amended Petition to Modify the

Parent-Child Relationship, continuing to allege that a material and substantial

change of circumstances had occurred since the 2015 order and that modification of

that order would be in the best interest of J.G.P.R. Radler still asserted that since the

2015 order, his income had changed and “the monthly amount of support ordered

differ[ed] by at least twenty percent . . . or $100[] from the amount that would be

3 awarded in accordance with the guidelines of Chapter 154 of the Texas Family

Code.” (Emphasis omitted.) Radler requested that “[t]he current child support order

in effect . . . be terminated,” the amount of his monthly child support obligation be

reduced, and that “any reduction be made retroactive to the time of service of [his]

First Amended Petition on [Philavanh] or her attorney.”1

At trial, Radler testified that he graduated from law school in 2012. He is

self-employed at his own law firm, the Radler Law Firm, and he has a non-profit

organization, SOS Legal Aid, through which he represents clients who cannot afford

to pay for legal services. Radler, relying on his 2018 federal tax return,2 testified

that his gross income from 2018 was $18,714, making his gross monthly resources

$1,560. But Radler also admitted that the gross annual resources amount he

calculated—$18,714—was “not exactly how much money c[a]me in” because

“[m]ore money c[a]me[] in.” Radler stated that in 2018, the total amount of money

he made working for his law firm was $36,000.

Radler testified that he believed his net monthly resources were $1,155,3 but

he also stated during his testimony that his available net monthly resources were

1 Philavanh answered and filed a Counter-Petition to Modify the Parent-Child Relationship. 2 A copy of Radler’s 2018 federal tax return was admitted into evidence at trial. 3 Radler stated that his net monthly resources for 2019 would be “similar” but he had not made any calculations for 2019.

4 $1,560. Radler requested that the trial court set his child support obligation at $231

per month, which would be twenty percent of $1,155, and he asked that the trial

court retroactively apply the reduced child support obligation to October 2017—the

date when he filed his first amended petition. As to his medical support obligation,

Radler requested that the trial court set the amount of his medical support obligation

at $140 per month and that the trial court retroactively apply the reduced medical

support obligation to October 2017.

Radler also explained that he believed that certain deposits made into his bank

accounts should not be considered income, including a $10,000 loan he received

from a friend in 2018 and a certain payment from his insurance company because

“[t]hat [insurance] money just passed through” his bank account. Radler noted that

he used a portion of the $10,000 loan to pay his past-due child support obligation.

Radler had multiple bank accounts, and he stated that he transferred money between

his bank accounts. He acknowledged that deposits were made into his personal bank

account in 2018, and that Respondent’s Exhibit 10 reflected the deposits made into

Radler’s personal bank account in 2018. Those deposits totaled $45,741.04. The

$10,000 loan Radler received went into his other bank account. Radler stated that

some of the deposits in his personal bank account in 2018 were transfers from his

other bank account.

5 As to his monthly expenses, Radler testified that his mortgage payment is

about $1,024 per month and his car payment is about $176 per month.4 Each month

he spends about $150 on gas, $150 on utilities, $110 on cable, telephone, and

internet, $400 on groceries, $67.50 on medical expenses, $90.64 on car insurance,

$200 on eating at restaurants, $21.70 on a gym membership, and $100 on clothing

and entertainment. Radler noted that he is “not paying [his] taxes” and that he used

the $10,000 loan he received from his friend to pay his bills. According to Radler,

although his monthly expenses exceeded the amount of net monthly resources that

he testified were available to him, this was because he used money from his loan

each month for his expenses and he did not believe that the $10,000 loan constituted

income.

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Joseph F. Radler III v. Amy Philavanh, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-f-radler-iii-v-amy-philavanh-texapp-2021.