Patricia Denise Hall v. Kenneth Ray Hall

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2007
Docket09-06-00206-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia Denise Hall v. Kenneth Ray Hall (Patricia Denise Hall v. Kenneth Ray Hall) 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
Patricia Denise Hall v. Kenneth Ray Hall, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

In The



Court of Appeals



Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont



______________________

NO. 09-06-206 CV

PATRICIA DENISE HALL, Appellant



V.



KENNETH RAY HALL, Appellee



On Appeal from the 9th District Court

Montgomery County, Texas

Trial Cause No. 01-07-04688 CV



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Patricia Denise Hall appeals an order denying her motion for enforcement of child support and ordering her to pay Kenneth Ray Hall's attorney's fees, expenses, and costs. She asks this Court to reverse the order; render judgment that Kenneth owes her $23,568.87 in back child support; render judgment that she is entitled to recover attorney's fees, or remand her fee request to the trial court; and set aside the trial court's order assessing $10,000 in sanctions against her. Finding no abuse of discretion or error requiring reversal, we affirm the order. (1)

On October 5, 2001, Patricia obtained a divorce judgment that included an order requiring Kenneth to pay her the monthly sum of $750 in child support for their minor daughter. In September 2005, Patricia filed a motion to enforce the support order. In response to her motion, Kenneth pled numerous defenses, including estoppel, entitlement to offsets, and common-law marriage.

At the hearing on the enforcement motion, Kenneth testified he first learned of the divorce when he received a card in the mail from the district clerk. Patricia indicated he knew "from the very beginning" that she had filed for and obtained a divorce. Kenneth testified he did not sign the waiver of citation or the agreed divorce judgment. When he confronted Patricia, she initially denied knowing anything about the divorce. Kenneth testified she later explained she obtained the "fake" divorce to protect her assets from a judgment creditor, and she made the following representations to him: the divorce judgment placed all the assets in his name; "there was no child support"; joint custody was awarded; all the debt was placed in her name; and once the judgment creditor was "taken care of," they would then remarry.

Kenneth explained he did not obtain a copy of the divorce judgment for over a year. He testified he and Patricia continued to live together (2) after the judgment was signed, and he did not write monthly child support checks for $750. Kenneth produced records of monies he earned and expended to support his wife and child during the time they lived together after the trial judge signed the divorce judgment. He moved out of the house in December 2003. For eight of the next thirteen months, Kenneth made partial child support payments, and then made payments in full after that.

Roy Scroggins, Patricia's brother, testified he and Patricia purchased a fifty-seven acre tract of land during the Halls' marriage. The Halls' ownership of the acreage apparently was granted to Kenneth in the divorce decree as his separate property. Scroggins testified the signature on the deed conveying his interest is not his, and he did not give his sister permission to sign his name. Patricia sold the property for $371,399.32. Scroggins testified he filed a criminal complaint against Patricia.

Patricia testified she executed a deed conveying her interest in the fifty-seven acres to Kenneth. Sometime later there was a deed conveying Kenneth's interest in the property to a trust Patricia had created for their daughter. The divorce judgment did not create the trust. Kenneth indicated he knew nothing about the trust at the time Patricia conveyed the property from him to the trust, and he did not sign the deeds conveying the property to the trust.

During cross-examination, Patricia's attorney instructed her "to take the Fifth Amendment with regard to any questions regarding the sale or transfer of any property at all." In this civil case, the fact-finder could draw reasonable inferences from the assertion of the privilege against self-incrimination. See Tex. R. Evid. 513(c); Tex. Dep't of Pub. Safety Officers Ass'n v. Denton, 897 S.W.2d 757, 763 (Tex. 1995) (citing Baxter v. Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308, 318, 96 S.Ct. 1551, 47 L.Ed.2d 810 (1976)). The trial court may have considered the evidence concerning Patricia's conduct in the transfer of property to have been largely uncontroverted.

In her first issue, Patricia asserts the trial court erred in failing to find Kenneth violated the terms of the divorce judgment by failing to pay child support. She argues the divorce judgment has not been set aside and therefore must be followed. (3)

Under section 157.008 of the Family Code, an obligor may claim offset as an affirmative defense. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 157.008 (Vernon 2002). Kenneth pled the defense. He testified that from October 2001 to December 2003, when he lived with Patricia and their child, he provided support for the child, and the support payments amounted to "quite a bit more" than $750 a month. During this time of joint possession of the child, Patricia in effect voluntarily relinquished to Kenneth rights to actual possession and control of the child in excess of the rights set out in the divorce judgment. Id. § 157.008(a),(b). Kenneth provided the trial court documentation of the sums he paid to support the child. Kenneth also testified he supported Patricia during this period.

Patricia testified she never agreed to any offset against the child support obligation during the time Kenneth lived in the house after the divorce. She explained, "[H]e just never had enough money to pay for anything so he just never paid it." She also maintained Kenneth lived "with or in property" she owned under the terms of the divorce decree, and he never paid any rent to use this property.

Patricia further asserts that Kenneth cannot rely on the offset defense, because he filed for bankruptcy in December 2004, and the bankruptcy trustee released any claims against Patricia. The offset authorized by section 157.008 "operates only as a defense to a motion to enforce an existing order[.]" In the Interest of A.M., 192 S.W.3d 570, 575 (Tex. 2006); Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 157.008. Kenneth is not making a "claim" that is governed by the release against Patricia.

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Patricia Denise Hall v. Kenneth Ray Hall, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-denise-hall-v-kenneth-ray-hall-texapp-2007.