Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko v. Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2025
Docket03-25-00122-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko v. Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue (Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko v. Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue) 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
Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko v. Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-25-00122-CV

Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko, Appellant

v.

Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue, Appellee

FROM THE 261ST DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-FM-22-009286, THE HONORABLE KARIN CRUMP, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Romauld Leopold Moussima Mpacko appeals the district court’s

divorce decree dissolving his marriage with appellee Fnu Patricia Cathy Ngo Ngue. In four

issues on appeal, Mpacko asserts that the district court abused its discretion in: (1) granting the

divorce on the ground of cruelty; (2) not appointing both parties as joint managing conservators

of their child and instead appointing Ngue as the sole managing conservator; (3) deviating from

the standard possession order and ordering supervised periods of possession and access between

Mpacko and the child; and (4) ordering child support in an amount above the statutory

guidelines. We will affirm the decree.

BACKGROUND

Mpacko and Ngue married in Cameroon in 2015 and immigrated to the United

States in 2016 after securing permanent residency through the green card lottery. They resided in California and Missouri before moving to Austin in 2020. During their marriage, they had

two children: N.A.M.M. (“Nathan”), born October 25, 2017, and G.M.M.M. (“Greg”), born

November 27, 2022.1 Mpacko and Ngue separated in April 2022, and in June 2022, Ngue

moved to Washington, D.C with Nathan and while pregnant with Greg.

On December 16, 2022, Mpacko filed a petition for divorce, alleging the ground

of insupportability. Ngue filed a plea to the jurisdiction in response, arguing that the District of

Columbia was the children’s home state and that it should have jurisdiction over the suit. See

Tex. Fam. Code § 152.201. The district court found that Texas was Nathan’s home state, denied

the plea to the jurisdiction over that child, and reserved the determination of jurisdiction over

Greg to a District of Columbia court. The D.C. court later determined that it had jurisdiction

over Greg and awarded sole custody of Greg to Ngue, finding that Mpacko had committed

“several intrafamily offenses” against Ngue during their marriage.

Meanwhile, in the Texas case, Ngue filed a counterpetition for divorce alleging

the grounds of cruel treatment and insupportability. Ngue sought to be named sole managing

conservator of Nathan, alleging that Mpacko had engaged in a history or pattern of family

violence during their marriage. Ngue also asked the district court to deny Mpacko access to

Nathan or, in the alternative, limit Mpacko to supervised periods of possession and access.

The case proceeded to a bench trial. Ngue testified that she currently lived with

Nathan and Greg in Washington D.C., where they had resided for more than three years. She

recounted the history of her relationship with Mpacko, explaining that while they were dating in

Cameroon, their relationship “was fine” but that Mpacko “started changing as soon as we got

married.” She elaborated, “He started being very abusive physically, hitting me when there were

1 For the children’s privacy, we refer to them by aliases. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.9(a)(3). 2 people, in front of my parents and stuff like that. From our cultural background it is kind of

okay. You have a different way of dealing with those kind of things.” She added that he would

throw plates at her in a restaurant that they managed in Cameroon, causing the plates to break.

When they moved to California, “We had a lot of instances where he was hitting me.” Ngue

agreed that it was “fair to say” that their marriage ended because of family violence. She

described one incident from November 2020 involving a dispute over the location of a

basketball hoop:

Mr. Mpacko got the basketball hoop for [Nathan] and he placed it in the living room—the dining room. And I was thinking okay, that’s for [Nathan] to find out about his surprise and he was happy and at the end of the day I wanted to put, I put the basketball hoop outside the front of the garage door. He didn’t want that and he wanted it inside and I offered maybe in the garage. He said no. So I just placed it outside and he was mad. So as I was going back inside the house he grabbed me from the stairs, grabbed my head, dragged me down the stairs and choked me with both hands on my neck and he stopped because [Nathan] jumped on him and started crying, “Papa, no. You’ve got to stop.”

Ngue added, “I couldn’t breathe. He put me down on the ground and he started choking me with

both hands on my neck.” Ngue also described other incidents of family violence:

April 2021: Mpacko got angry at Ngue for leaving her hair clippers on the countertop, insisted that she end a phone call and talk to him about the clippers, and when the phone call ended, he grabbed her by the neck, slapped her two times, and started strangling her.

November 2021: Mpacko drove their car in reverse while Ngue was outside the car, holding onto an open car door and trying to get Nathan out of the car, resulting in the car “pushing” Ngue.

December 2021: Ngue was talking on the phone with her sister while Mpacko was yelling at her sister to “stop calling my wife” and following Ngue around

3 their house as she “tried to escape” from him. Ngue went into the bathroom and started crawling out the window, headfirst, when Mpacko “started pulling me in and he stopped only because I started to scream in the neighborhood, ‘Help. Somebody help me.’” Mpacko took Ngue’s phone away from her after that.

The final incident occurred in April 2022. Ngue asked a friend, Dorene Wona, to

provide Nathan with food for his school lunch because they were running out of food and they

could not afford groceries at the time. Wona provided food for Nathan, and when Mpacko found

out about this, he became angry, yelled at Wona, and told Ngue, “You’re always wondering why

I have a safe in the house. You were always wondering why the safe is there. Do you know why

I have it? Because I have a gun in there and one day I’m going to use it on you.” Ngue testified

that Mpacko said that “about five times” throughout the day. After Wona left the house, Ngue

went to the car and “tried to compose [her]self.” She “wanted to stay inside the car” but Mpacko

“came to pull me out of that car, drag me out and I was pregnant and he knew I was pregnant and

he told me that, ‘If you dare stay in this car, you will see how I run you over with it.’” At around

11:00 p.m. that night, Ngue left the house with Nathan and went to a shelter in Burnet County.

After that, she moved to Washington, D.C. Ngue filed applications for temporary protective

orders against Mpacko in both Texas and D.C. However, the Texas application was dismissed

after Ngue left Texas, and the D.C. application was dismissed because D.C. did not have

jurisdiction over Mpacko.

Ngue testified that at the time of trial in November 2024, she was attending

school full time and studying to become a registered nurse. She had a two-bedroom,

two-bathroom apartment in D.C., with Nathan and Greg sharing a bedroom. She and the

children “love” living in D.C., where Nathan attends school and Greg attends daycare. She

4 received public benefits in the form of “TANF [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families], food

stamps, Medicaid.”

Ngue explained that the D.C.

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