Robert Holmes, Jr. v. Tracy Nannette Holmes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 2010
Docket03-08-00791-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Holmes, Jr. v. Tracy Nannette Holmes (Robert Holmes, Jr. v. Tracy Nannette Holmes) 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
Robert Holmes, Jr. v. Tracy Nannette Holmes, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00791-CV

Robert Holmes, Jr., Appellant



v.



Tracy Nannette Holmes, Appellee



FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 3 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY,

NO. 07-1294-FC3, HONORABLE DONALD HIGGINBOTHAM, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Appellant Robert Holmes, Jr., appeals pro se the trial court's final divorce decree. Holmes (i) challenges the portions of the decree regarding control, possession, amount and terms of child support, division of the marital estate, and income tax dependency exemptions and (ii) complains of the trial court's order that appellee Tracy Nannette Holmes's attorney prepare the decree and its failure to award "back child-visits." Because we find no error in the divorce decree, we affirm the trial court's judgment.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND



Robert Holmes, Jr., and Tracy Nannette McClain (1) were married in January 1991 by proxy while Holmes was serving overseas in the military. Four children were born of the marriage. Holmes and McClain separated in November 2005 when Holmes left his wife and children and moved to Georgia to live with his brother. The children visited Holmes in Georgia when they were young, but it appears from the record that the visits ceased at some point. McClain filed for divorce in June 2007. Holmes, who was served by substituted service, defaulted, and the trial court entered a divorce decree in September 2007. Holmes filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court granted in January 2008. In April 2008, Holmes filed a motion for genetic testing of the children, which established Holmes's paternity as to the four children.



The Mediated Partial Settlement Agreement



The trial court referred the case to mediation in August 2008. Holmes participated in the mediation by telephone, and on September 15, 2008, Holmes and McClain agreed to a Memorandum of Partial Settlement. The settlement included agreements that:



  • •The parties would divorce on grounds of insupportability,
  • •Holmes and McClain would be named joint managing conservators,
  • •McClain would provide the children's health insurance through her employment,


  • •Holmes would pay $130 per month in child support, including reimbursement to McClain for one-half the cost of the children's health insurance, with credit for social security and VA benefits the children receive through Holmes, and


  • •Holmes owed $650 in retroactive child support.

Holmes and McClain expressly reserved for trial the issues of possession, division of debts, and the determination as to who would be authorized to decide psychological and psychiatric treatment for, consent to legal action for, manage the estates of, act as agent for, obtain passports for, and be entitled to the services and earnings of the children. They also left unresolved the issues of who would designate the children's primary residence and make decisions concerning their education.



The Trial



In a brief hearing, the court considered the parties' mediated settlement agreement and heard the testimony of McClain. Holmes did not appear except through his attorney. McClain testified concerning her relationship with Holmes and Holmes's relationship with their children. She stated that she and Holmes were married in January 1991 and ceased living together in November 2005. She further stated that they have four children, that Holmes requested paternity tests on all four children, and that the tests confirmed that Holmes is their father. McClain testified that she has no problem with Holmes's visitation with the children but was asking for a "stair step [amount] because he's been away from the children for so long." She added that the children have "a bit of a hesitancy as far as seeing him" and that she is "concerned about their safety, because of how he left the family." She also stated that she has tried to call, but Holmes "won't talk to [her] as far as the kids are concerned."

McClain also stated her concerns about Holmes's circumstances and conduct. She testified that Holmes now lives in Georgia, that she "[does not] know what he is [currently] doing," and that he has "a diagnosis of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder." She further testified that when the kids were younger, they visited him in Georgia, and that Holmes "would take off drinking, and a lot of partying, and they would call because of different things."

McClain also testified concerning the issues not settled in mediation. She stated that it was not practical or reasonable to expect that she and Holmes could agree on any of the decision-making issues left unresolved after the mediation. McClain testified that there were debts that were hers, debts that were Holmes's, and debts that belonged to them jointly. She further testified that there were some debts that were listed in her name that she did not know anything about until she started getting calls and letters from collectors. Regarding one of those debts, she stated:

I received a suit from Capital One for a credit card that I had no knowledge of. So, I took the information, and I went to the headquarters of Capital One and said I received a lawsuit. I don't know what's going on. I requested a signature--the original signature from when the credit card was taken out. I did get some information from this credit card, but it showed that it was not my signature, and they dropped the case. I had no idea about that credit card.



In cross-examination, Holmes's attorney questioned McClain regarding her mental health and the conduct of her son from a previous marriage. McClain testified that she became depressed when her grandfather died, and she took medication for it but had "decided to use exercise and other interventions" and no longer takes it. She stated that her therapist said she had "borderline traits and borderline personality" but denied ever having any thoughts of suicide. She then read from her therapist's notes, which included a reference to "thoughts of suicide" and stated, "That was in '05." Regarding her son from a previous marriage, McClain testified that he had been convicted of "terroristic threat" against Holmes and "got in a lot of trouble in school," but that he now has an apartment and no longer lives with her.



The Trial Court's Ruling



The trial court approved and confirmed the mediated settlement agreement and incorporated its terms into the final decree. The decree awarded McClain the exclusive right, after consultation with Holmes, to make decisions as to the expressly reserved issues. (2) The trial court also granted McClain the exclusive right, after consultation with Holmes, to make decisions as to the children's education, as well as the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the children without consulting Holmes.

The trial court also ordered that:



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