Mason-Murphy v. Grabowski

317 S.W.3d 923, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 6350, 2010 WL 3059379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 6, 2010
Docket03-09-00564-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 317 S.W.3d 923 (Mason-Murphy v. Grabowski) 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
Mason-Murphy v. Grabowski, 317 S.W.3d 923, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 6350, 2010 WL 3059379 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

G. ALAN WALDROP, Justice.

Katherine Mason-Murphy appeals the trial court’s June 4, 2009 Order in Suit to Modify Parent-Child Relationship concerning her daughter A.T. Mason-Murphy challenges the provision in the written order that permits A.T.’s father, Richard Dennis Grabowski, to retain possession of A.T. on his weekends during the school year until the beginning of the next school day. Mason-Murphy does not challenge the trial court’s original oral imposition of a modified standard possession order with Grabowski returning the child after weekend possession at 6 p.m. on Sunday, but asserts that the trial court erred by adopting in its subsequent written order Gra-bowski’s election to retain possession until the beginning of school on Monday without hearing additional evidence or making additional findings and conclusions supporting the change. 1 We affirm.

The agreed November 2001 custody decree was signed when A.T. was almost ten months old. The decree ordered gradually increasing possession for Grabowski until the child turned three years old, and set an essentially standard possession schedule thereafter except that Grabowski’s Wednesday possession extended overnight through Thursday morning. At first, Gra-bowski lived in Austin, while Mason-Murphy lived in Houston. Grabowski then moved to Houston. Mason-Murphy moved to Austin just before A.T. started kindergarten. Grabowski continued to exercise his visitation rights until he moved back to Austin some months thereafter. Mason-Murphy then married a man who has a child about two years younger than A.T. Mason-Murphy and her husband had a child together in 2008.

Grabowski filed this suit seeking to modify the custody decree, including a request *925 to increase the child support he pays. He initially sought to split possession evenly, but alternatively requested “extended” standard possession under which his Wednesday and weekend periods of possession during the school year would begin at the end of the school day rather than at 6 p.m., and would end with him returning A.T. to school the next school day. The parties and the trial court 2 agreed that Grabowski should pay more child support and that the alternate weekends of possession should shift so that A.T. is with her mother and stepfather on the same weekends that her stepbrother is there. The court’s oral decree incorporated Grabowski’s request to begin Wednesday and weekend visitations with pickup from school, and maintained the Thursday morning return and weekend return time on Sundays at 6 p.m. After the court announced its order, but before the hearing adjourned and before any written order was signed, Grabowski orally elected to have the fully extended standard possession. After considering briefs, the trial court incorporated into its written order Grabowski’s election that his weekend possession periods during the school year end when A.T.’s school resumes.

The court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law in which it found that modification of the 2001 order was justified by the changes in A.T.’s life including (1) the various relocations of her parents, (2) her increased age (eight at the time of the modified order), and (3) the reconstitution of her mother’s family to include a stepfather, stepbrother, and half-brother. The court found that the parties could agree to any possession schedule and that, failing agreement of the parties, the terms of the standard possession order were in A.T.’s best interest. The court concluded that former section 153.317 of the family code gave Grabowski the right to elect extended standard possession “regardless of any ruling by the Court to the contrary, if the Court finds the Standard Possession order is in the child’s best interest.” The court found that Grabowski timely made his election, and ordered that Grabowski’s weekend possession periods end at the beginning of the next school day.

On appeal, Mason-Murphy contends that the trial court erred or abused its discretion by incorporating Grabowski’s election into the modified decree. She concedes in her brief that the trial court’s oral order announced near the end of the hearing on the motion to modify “was not an abuse of discretion,” 3 but argues that it “should not have been disturbed” by Gra-bowski’s election for his school-year weekend possession to end at the beginning of the next school day. She asserts several variations on this theme in her issues on appeal: (1) having found that a Sunday evening return was in A.T.’s best interest, the trial court should not have ordered Sunday overnight possession, (2) the trial court should not have granted Grabowski’s election without finding a sufficient showing of material and substantial change in circumstances, (3) the trial court should not have concluded that Grabowski’s election made Sunday overnight possession mandatory, and (4) the trial court should not have granted Grabowski’s election without complying with or reconciling that *926 decision with family code sections 153.193, 153.251, 153.252, 153.253, and/or 153.256.

Grabowski made his election under former family code section 153.317, which provided as follows:

If a child is enrolled in school and the possessory conservator elects before or at the time of the rendition of the original or modification order, the standard order must expressly provide that the possessory conservator’s period of possession shall begin or end, or both, at a different time expressly set in the standard order under and within the range of alternative times provided by one or both of the following subdivisions:

(1) instead of a period of possession by a possessory conservator beginning at 6 p.m. on the day school recesses, the period of possession may be set in the standard possession order to begin at the time the child’s school is regularly dismissed or at any time between the time the child’s school is regularly dismissed and 6 p.m.; and
(2) except for Thursday evening possession, instead of a period of possession by a possessory conservator end-mg at 6 p.m. on the day before school resumes, the period of possession may be set in the standard order to end at the time school resumes.

Act of May 27, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 1036, § 15, sec. 153.317, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 2987, 2992 (amended 2009). 4

Former section 153.137 did not require an additional showing or finding of changed circumstances before the trial court could incorporate the election. The legislatively determined process of rendering a custody decree involving the standard possession order includes the possibility of the election of extended standard possession. See former Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 153.317. Grabowski made his election at the time the trial court was rendering the modification order. 5 The court’s choice to request briefing and study whether it would incorporate Grabowski’s election suspended rendition of the order as to the elements affected by the election.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
317 S.W.3d 923, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 6350, 2010 WL 3059379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-murphy-v-grabowski-texapp-2010.