Maliha Mobeen Beg v. Omar Shakeel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 2020
Docket01-19-00765-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Maliha Mobeen Beg v. Omar Shakeel (Maliha Mobeen Beg v. Omar Shakeel) 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
Maliha Mobeen Beg v. Omar Shakeel, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 22, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00765-CV ——————————— MALIHA MOBEEN BEG, Appellant V. OMAR SHAKEEL, Appellee

On Appeal from the 387th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 18-DCV-257509

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from a final divorce decree. Following a bench trial, the trial

court appointed Maliha Mobeen Beg and Omar Shakeel as joint managing

conservators of their child, A.O., and appointed Omar as the conservator with the

exclusive right to establish the primary residence of the child. In one issue, Maliha contends that the trial court erred in appointing Omar as the conservator with the

exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the child. We affirm.

Background

A four-day bench trial began on June 18, 2019. The evidence presented to the

trial court is set forth below.

1. Dr. Omar Shakeel

Omar and Maliha are both physicians. They married on January 2, 2015, in

Atlanta, Georgia.

Following completion of his residency in Georgia, Omar hoped to begin a

fellowship at Emory University so that he could remain in Atlanta while Maliha

finished the last year of her residency. In January 2017, Omar was not selected by

Emory but instead matched with the fellowship program at his second-ranked

choice, Baylor College of Medicine (BCM), in Houston.

Omar testified that he and Maliha agreed on the day he matched that Maliha

would move to Fort Bend County after she finished her residency in Atlanta. He

testified that Maliha was very supportive of his coming to Texas. She told Omar

that she had family in Texas, there was a large religious community in Fort Bend,

and that Fort Bend was a good place to start a family.

2 Omar began his fellowship at BCM in July 2017. Maliha became pregnant

later that year. During her pregnancy, Maliha came to Houston and Omar made trips

to Atlanta so they could spend time together.

A.O. was born on April 29, 2018. Following A.O.’s birth, Maliha and A.O.

went to Orlando, Florida, where Maliha’s parents live, for her maternity leave. In

June 2018, Maliha returned to Atlanta to finish the last month and a half of her

residency. She completed her residency in July 2018.

In June 2018, Omar and Maliha signed a lease for a house in Sugar Land, in

Fort Bend County. In a text thread with Omar and their realtor, Baljinder Mann,

Maliha asked Mann about a possible reduction in rent for “when we renew next year

. . . .” In the thread, Maliha sent a picture of A.O., stating “this baby wants a lawn

and a swing set on that lawn.”

In July 2018, Maliha texted Omar that she had completed her application for

her Texas medical license. In the text, which included a picture of Maliha wearing

a cowboy hat and flexing her bicep, Maliha wrote, “Yeehaw, ready for Texas.”

Omar testified that, on August 2, 2018, he and Maliha moved all of their

belongings from their townhome in Atlanta to their rental home in Fort Bend County.

He stated that Maliha wanted the home they ultimately chose, but that it was not his

first choice because the rent was significantly higher than his income and the five-

bedroom house was more than they needed.

3 Omar testified that Maliha began applying for jobs at urgent care facilities in

Houston in August 2018. In September 2018, Maliha received a job offer from

Houston CareNow Urgent Care, PLLC. The employment agreement stated that

“[f]or coverage of the Houston and Orlando markets, you agree to work a minimum

of two (2) weekend shifts per month, or a minimum of eighteen (18) hours per

month, unless the Medical Director dictates that the weekend requirements may be

met using weekday shifts.”

Omar testified that Maliha first approached him about working a two-week

on/two-week off schedule in Orlando in October 2018. He testified that he told

Maliha that it was not the ideal option for their family and begged her to reconsider

but Maliha was adamant. When asked why he texted Maliha “[y]our job is too good

to be true,” Omar stated that he wanted to be supportive and only wanted to keep

their family together. When Omar asked Maliha why she wanted to work in Orlando

when she had a job offer in Houston at an equivalent pay rate, Maliha told him that

only her mother could take care of A.O.

Omar testified that Maliha did not permit Omar’s mother to care for A.O. On

one occasion when Omar asked Maliha to allow his mother to pick A.O. up, Maliha

responded, “I’m not going to drop the baby off to your mom.” Omar testified that

his mother is a neonatologist and cares for infants born before thirty-six weeks

4 gestational age. Omar testified that he believed Maliha valued her parents’

relationship with A.O. over Omar’s relationship with his daughter.

Maliha worked her first two-week shift in Florida from October 15 to October

29, 2018. Afterwards, she returned to Fort Bend County and remained there until

mid-November. During that time, Omar and Maliha registered their vehicles, and

Maliha obtained a Texas driver’s license and registered to vote in Fort Bend County.

Maliha returned to Orlando in mid–November and was scheduled to come back to

Texas at the beginning of December, but she did not return.

Omar testified that it was extremely difficult for him during the periods when

he was not able to see A.O. Omar believed that he and Maliha would be able to

work things out and remain together as a family. In a conversation with Maliha that

Omar recorded, Maliha can be heard telling Omar that if he and his family want to

see A.O., they will have to go to Orlando.

On December 1, 2018, Omar flew to Orlando to speak with Maliha and her

parents about his wish that Maliha and A.O. return home to Fort Bend County. Omar

testified that Maliha’s father told him that he needed to hire an attorney if he wanted

to see his daughter. Maliha told Omar that she was not returning to Texas, and that

if he wanted to see A.O., he would need to do so in Orlando. Omar testified that the

longest stretch during which he was able to see A.O. in December was for four or

five hours a day during a three-day period. Omar did not see A.O. in January 2019

5 but saw her in February 2019 after the parties appeared in court. Omar testified that

he saw A.O. for four out of seventy-seven days between mid-November and the end

of January.

Omar testified that he believed it was in A.O.’s best interest that he be named

conservator with the exclusive right to designate her primary residence because he

would encourage co-parenting with Maliha. Omar stated that he rarely got the

chance to see A.O. when she was with Maliha. Omar testified that he wanted to

create an environment in which both parents were close to A.O. He acknowledged

that A.O. had been with Maliha more than she had been with him. Omar believed

that Maliha did not want him to be a part of their child’s life. Omar testified that the

hostility with Maliha’s family would lessen if A.O. lived in Fort Bend County.

Omar testified that, if he were the primary conservator, he would involve

Maliha in the decision-making regarding A.O. With regard to the routine he would

have if he were granted primary custody, Omar testified that his father, who is

currently living with him, would be able to watch A.O. while Omar was at work.

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