Landry Robert Lloyd v. Kacy Jeanne Hensley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 2020
Docket07-18-00224-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Landry Robert Lloyd v. Kacy Jeanne Hensley (Landry Robert Lloyd v. Kacy Jeanne Hensley) 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
Landry Robert Lloyd v. Kacy Jeanne Hensley, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-18-00224-CV ________________________

LANDRY ROBERT LLOYD, APPELLANT

V.

KACY JEANNE HENSLEY, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 237th District Court Lubbock County, Texas Trial Court No. 2016-519,987; Honorable Les Hatch, Presiding

February 10, 2020

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before PIRTLE, PARKER, and DOSS, JJ.

Appellant, Landry Robert Lloyd, seeks relief from the trial court’s Enforcement

Order of May 3, 2018, rendered in the continuing divorce saga between Lloyd and

Appellee, Kacy Jeanne Hensley. By a single issue, based on an allegation that he was

not properly served, Lloyd contends the trial court abused its discretion in entering a no-

answer default order in Hensley’s favor based on her Third Amended Motion for Enforcement of Property Division. Finding that the trial court did have personal

jurisdiction over the parties, we reject Lloyd’s arguments, and affirm the order of the trial

court.

BACKGROUND

Lloyd and Hensley were married in October 2015. By March 2016, Lloyd had filed

for divorce. At the hearing on Lloyd’s petition for divorce, held on August 1, 2016, Lloyd’s

attorney moved to disqualify Hensley’s attorney. When the recusal motion was denied,

Lloyd’s attorney indicated to the trial court that he was leaving the courtroom to prepare

a petition for writ of mandamus to challenge the trial court’s ruling. Before he departed,

the trial court announced that the hearing would proceed in his absence. After several

witnesses had already testified, Lloyd’s attorney returned to the courtroom with

documentation he represented as reflecting his immediate pursuit of a petition for writ of

mandamus. The record shows that Lloyd and his attorney then departed again before

the hearing concluded. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court announced that it

was taking the matter under advisement and would issue a letter ruling as to the relief to

be granted.

Fifty-three days later, Lloyd filed his petition for writ of mandamus. His petition was

accompanied by a motion for emergency relief seeking to prohibit the trial court from

entering any orders in the underlying proceeding. The requested relief was denied by

this court and the matter was allowed to proceed. See In re Lloyd, No. 07-16-00340-CV,

2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 10489, at *5 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Sept. 26, 2016, orig.

proceeding). The day following the issuance of this court’s order denying mandamus

relief, the trial court signed its Final Decree of Divorce. By that decree, Hensley was

2 awarded as her separate property a German Shepherd Dog, wedding gift cards, a

pocketknife belonging to her grandfather, and a Victoria’s Secret bag and its contents.

Lloyd’s attorney moved to have the decree set aside on the basis that his decision to

leave the hearing was “not the result of conscious indifference” and he should be granted

a new trial in the interest of justice. The trial court denied that motion and Lloyd appealed

the trial court’s divorce decree to this court on November 10, 2016.

Since the date the Decree of Divorce was originally entered, Hensley has filed

three motions to enforce the division of property. In October 2016, Hensley filed her first

motion to enforce. A hearing was held on that motion on November 4, 2016, and on

November 9, 2016, the trial court granted the motion and ordered Lloyd to return, by 6:00

p.m., on November 11, 2016, the items that had been awarded to Hensley in the divorce

decree. Before that deadline, the parties entered into a Rule 11 Agreement in which Lloyd

agreed to return the dog to Hensley by November 14, 2016. Lloyd did not return the dog

as agreed. By that time, Lloyd’s appeal was pending, and on November 16, he filed with

this court a motion to suspend enforcement of the divorce decree. That same day, this

court referred the matter to the trial court as the appropriate venue for the setting of a

supersedeas bond. See TEX. R. APP. P. 24.

When Hensley filed her second motion for enforcement on November 18, 2016, in

addition to an order for the delivery of the dog, she sought to have the trial court hold

Lloyd in contempt of court. On December 1, 2016, Lloyd filed his Motion to Set Amount

of Security on Judgment for Personal Property with the trial court. A joint hearing on

Hensley’s second motion to enforce and Lloyd’s motion to set a supersedes bond was

set for December 7, 2016. At that hearing, Hensley’s motion for enforcement was

3 continued pending resolution of the appeal, and the amount of the supersedeas bond to

be posted by Lloyd was set by the trial court. Lloyd deposited that sum in the registry of

the court and no further proceedings were had.

The Decree of Divorce was subsequently affirmed by this court on September 6,

2017. See Lloyd v. Hensley, No. 07-16-00417-CV, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 8479, at *8

(Tex. App.—Amarillo Sept. 6, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.). After the appeal affirming

the divorce decree became final and mandate issued, Hensley filed her Third Amended

Motion for Enforcement of Property Division on April 9, 2018.1 That same day, the trial

court signed an Order Setting Hearing for April 20, 2018, at 9:00 a.m. By her third motion,

Hensley was still seeking delivery of the property she had been awarded in the original

decree of divorce more than eighteen months earlier. A copy of the amended motion and

an order setting hearing were served on Lloyd’s attorney in accordance with Rule 21a of

the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.

A hearing on that motion was held on April 20, 2018, and despite a subpoena

having been issued for Lloyd, neither Lloyd nor his attorney appeared to contest

Hensley’s motion. Hensley testified to the approximate value of the wedding gift cards

that had been awarded to her in the divorce decree and that Lloyd had still failed to return.

Regarding the dog, she testified that she would no longer be seeking to enforce its return

because she had re-married and had a new baby.

At the conclusion of Hensley’s testimony, the trial court granted her motion to

enforce and awarded her $545 from the funds that had been deposited in the registry of

1 Mandate issued on April 3, 2018.

4 the court under the supersedeas bond. The trial court also ordered that Lloyd deliver to

Hensley the wedding gift cards or $1,000 representing the value of those cards. In

addition, the trial court awarded Hensley recovery of attorney’s fees in the amount of

$3,615 for the prosecution of the motion to enforce, together with conditional attorney’s

fees in the event of another unsuccessful appeal. An enforcement order was entered on

May 3, 2018.

Lloyd again appealed to this court. This time he asserts the trial court did not

acquire personal jurisdiction over him due to the lack of proper service pursuant to the

Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Alleging the trial court abused its discretion, he seeks to

overturn entry of what he characterizes as a “no-answer default order.” We disagree with

his assessment of the character of the order and reject his arguments.

APPLICABLE LAW

Although Lloyd asserts an abuse of discretion by the trial court, the question of

whether a trial court has personal jurisdiction over a party is a question of law we review

de novo. McGee v. McGee, No. 07-12-00475-CV, 2014 Tex. App.

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Landry Robert Lloyd v. Kacy Jeanne Hensley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-robert-lloyd-v-kacy-jeanne-hensley-texapp-2020.