Lisa Renee Ward v. Virgil Brent Ward ( 2017 )


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  •                                        In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    ________________
    NO. 09-17-00024-CV
    ________________
    LISA RENEE WARD, Appellant
    V.
    VIRGIL BRENT WARD, Appellee
    __________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the County Court at Law
    Liberty County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. CV1104837
    __________________________________________________________________
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    In this appeal of a suit affecting the parent-child relationship, appellant Lisa
    Renee Ward argues that the County Court at Law: (1) lacked jurisdiction to modify
    or enforce the divorce decree, (2) abused its discretion by retroactively modifying or
    refusing to enforce the divorce decree, (3) abused its discretion by denying her
    motion to enforce, and (4) the 75th District Court lacked jurisdiction to transfer the
    case to the County Court at Law. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    Appellee Virgil Brent Ward filed a petition for divorce from Lisa1 in the 253rd
    District Court of Liberty County, Texas. The record reflects that after Lisa filed her
    original answer, the trial court transferred the case to the 75th District Court. The
    Honorable Mark Morefield, judge of the 75th District Court of Liberty County,
    signed a final decree of divorce between Lisa and Virgil on August 15, 2012, in
    which he appointed Lisa as the joint managing (“primary”) conservator with the right
    to primary possession of the parties’ child, entered a standard possession order,
    ordered Virgil to pay child support, required Lisa to obtain health insurance for the
    child, required Virgil to pay maintenance to Lisa, and divided the marital estate.
    On January 7, 2013, Lisa filed a motion to clarify. In that motion, Lisa
    contended that Virgil had refused to equally split the parties’ tax refund for 2011
    because he refused to sign the check the IRS issued correcting Lisa’s surname to her
    maiden name; failed to transfer ownership of an Edward Jones retirement account to
    Lisa; failed to provide Lisa information necessary to change the name on the note
    for the loan of a vehicle; failed to pay for horse feed; failed to pay child support
    “directly to Texas Child Support Disbursement Unit[;]”and might force Lisa to leave
    1
    Because the parties share a surname, we will refer to appellant and appellee
    by their first names for clarity.
    2
    the homestead by refusing to stay current on mortgage payments. Lisa pleaded that
    although she has told the child to spend time with Virgil, the child refused to do so.
    On May 27, 2014, Virgil filed a petition to modify and order setting hearing
    for temporary orders, in which he asserted that, due to changed circumstances, the
    court-ordered child support payments were no longer in compliance with the
    guidelines in chapter 154 of the Family Code, and Virgil requested that the trial court
    decrease the payments and that “any decrease be made retroactive to the earlier of
    the time of service of citation on [Lisa] or the appearance of [Lisa] in this
    modification action.” In addition, Virgil asserted that spousal maintenance should
    be either terminated or decreased, and he requested that any decrease be made
    retroactive. Virgil asked that the trial court enter temporary orders in accordance
    with his requests.
    The 75th District Court’s coordinator scheduled a hearing for temporary
    orders on July 1, 2014. The 75th District Court’s docket reflects that on July 1, 2014,
    a mediation order and Rule 11 agreement were entered. On September 18, 2014,
    Virgil filed a motion for enforcement of order by contempt and order to appear. In
    the motion, Virgil asserted that Lisa had failed to surrender the child to him for
    visitation on three occasions and requested that Lisa be held in contempt, jailed,
    placed on community supervision, or fined for each violation, and Virgil stated that
    3
    he believes Lisa will “continue to fail to comply with the order.” Virgil also alleged
    that Lisa had engaged in parental alienation because Lisa had “harmed or attempted
    to break the bond” between the child and Virgil. On September 22, 2014, the judge
    of the 75th District Court signed an “Order Assigning Case[,]” in which it stated that
    the cause “is hereby assigned to the County Court at Law of Liberty County, Texas.
    The County Court at Law will have jurisdiction over this cause for all purposes.”
    On November 16, 2015, Lisa filed her first supplemental motion to enforce
    and for attorney’s fees and expenses. In her motion, Lisa alleged that Virgil had
    failed to transfer ownership of an Edward Jones account to Lisa as required by the
    divorce decree; failed to pay $2200 he owed Lisa as part of an agreed settlement;
    owed Lisa child support and spousal support in the amount of $8966.14; and was
    delinquent in making required payments on a Discover card that was issued to Lisa.
    Lisa also alleged harassing or improper conduct by Virgil.
    On December 21, 2015, the County Court at Law, Honorable Thomas
    Chambers presiding, conducted a hearing on Virgil’s motion to modify and motion
    for enforcement, as well as Lisa’s supplemental motion to enforce and motion to
    clarify. At the hearing, Virgil testified that he had not been able to visit the child
    since August 2012, when the child was fifteen years old. According to Virgil, he had
    a “great” relationship before the divorce, and he does not know why the child no
    4
    longer comes to visit him. Virgil testified that he tried to exercise visitation, but the
    “gates were locked[]” and “[t]hey wouldn’t answer the phones[.]” Virgil explained
    that the child will not respond to his text messages except to say “thank you” if he
    congratulates the child about something. According to Virgil, he communicates with
    the child via Facebook and email, but not very frequently. Virgil testified that he
    believes that if the child were to have a relationship with him, Lisa would “mentally
    destroy” the child. Virgil testified that the situation has destroyed him.
    According to Virgil, he mailed child support payments of $1570 per month,
    as well as alimony, directly to Lisa until January of 2013, when he began making
    child support payments through the Attorney General, and the Attorney General has
    not properly credited him for the prior payments made to Lisa. When the trial court
    asked Virgil what he wanted the court to do, Virgil stated that he wanted to settle the
    amounts of money, but opined that the trial court could not change his lack of
    relationship with his daughter. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court denied
    Virgil’s motion for contempt for denial of visitation and found that Virgil owed no
    child support arrearage or spousal support arrearage. The trial court also found that
    Virgil had no other financial arrearage regarding payments ordered in the divorce
    decree. In addition, the trial court granted Virgil’s motion to modify the amount of
    child support to $500 per month, beginning January 1, 2016, and continuing until
    5
    the child graduates from high school. The trial court denied Virgil’s motion to
    modify the amount of spousal support and denied the motions to modify possession
    and access because the child had reached eighteen years of age.
    The trial court’s docket reflects that on February 11, 2016, the trial court
    called the case, and only Virgil’s counsel was noted to be present. On the same date,
    the trial court signed an order in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. In the
    order, the trial court denied Lisa’s motion to clarify, denied Lisa’s motion for
    enforcement and first supplemental motion to enforce, denied Virgil’s motion for
    enforcement of order by contempt, and granted Virgil’s petition to modify. The trial
    court found that Virgil owed no child support arrearage, no spousal maintenance
    arrearage, no money regarding the Edward Jones retirement account, no debt for
    horse feed, and no debt for the Discover Card. In its order, the trial court found that
    “the material allegations contained in the Petition to Modify are true and the
    modification is in the best interest of the child.” Additionally, the trial court ordered
    Virgil to pay child support of $500 per month to Lisa until the child graduates from
    high school, and he ordered the Attorney General to return to Virgil any monies held
    to satisfy arrearages. Furthermore, the trial court ordered that all terms of the divorce
    decree not specifically modified or addressed in the order would remain in effect.
    6
    The trial court signed the order on February 11, 2016, and wrote underneath the date
    that the order is “effective 12-21-15[.]”
    On June 21, 2016, Lisa filed an expedited motion to set aside the trial court’s
    order due to the County Court at Law’s alleged lack of jurisdiction. In that pleading,
    Lisa alleged that her attorney did not receive notice of the February 11 hearing for
    entry of the court’s judgment of December 21, 2015, nor did her attorney receive
    notice that the trial court had signed a final, appealable order. According to Lisa, the
    “transfer” of the petition to modify to the County Court at Law was issued sua
    sponte, and the County Court at law therefore lacked jurisdiction to enter any orders.
    As support for her jurisdictional argument, Lisa cited sections 155.001, 155.002, and
    155.202(b) of the Texas Family Code. Lisa argued that a transfer from a court with
    continuing, exclusive jurisdiction to another court requires a written motion, hearing,
    and order, and that since none existed, the County Court at Law lacked jurisdiction.
    On November 14, 2016, Lisa filed a motion to enforce, in which she alleged
    that (1) attempted mediation has failed, (2) Virgil owed her $13,000 plus attorney’s
    fees and costs, and (3) Virgil had only sporadically paid the mortgage and had failed
    to pay spousal support. On January 4, 2017, the trial court held a hearing on Lisa’s
    motion to set aside the order and her motion to enforce, at which counsel for both
    sides argued the motions and no testimony was offered. The trial court orally denied
    7
    the motion to enforce and the motion to set aside. On the same date, the trial court
    signed a handwritten order denying Lisa’s expedited motion to set aside, as well as
    “all motions to [e]nforce[.]” Lisa then filed a notice of appeal, which stated that she
    was appealing the trial court’s rulings in its order of January 4, 2017, denying her
    expedited motion to set aside due to lack of jurisdiction and her November 2016
    motion to enforce.
    ISSUES ONE AND FOUR
    In issue one, Lisa argues that the County Court at Law lacked jurisdiction to
    enter orders modifying or enforcing the divorce decree. In issue four, Lisa contends
    that the District Court lacked jurisdiction to transfer the case to the County Court at
    Law, and that the County Court at Law erred by refusing to declare its own orders
    void. We address issues one and four together.
    Citing Chapter 155 of the Texas Family Code, Lisa argues that the 75th
    District Court “acquired and retained continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over the
    Final Decree.” Section 155.001 of the Family Code provides as follows, in pertinent
    part:
    (a) Except as otherwise provided by this section, a court acquires
    continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over the matters provided for by
    this title in connection with a child on the rendition of a final order.
    ...
    8
    (c) If a court of this state has acquired continuing, exclusive
    jurisdiction, no other court of this state has jurisdiction of a suit with
    regard to that child[.]
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 155.001(a), (c) (West Supp. 2016).2 Section 155.002 of the
    Family Code states: “Except as otherwise provided by this subchapter, a court with
    continuing, exclusive jurisdiction retains jurisdiction of the parties and matters
    provided by this title.” 
    Id. § 155.002
    (West 2014).
    According to Lisa, because the 75th District Court acquired exclusive,
    continuing jurisdiction upon rendition of the final decree of divorce, the transfer
    mechanism provided by section 155.202(b) of the Family Code is the only legitimate
    means by which the 75th District Court could assign the case to the County Court at
    Law, and that such an assignment must be made upon request or motion of a party.
    Section 155.202(b) provides that, “[f]or the convenience of the parties and witnesses
    and in the interest of justice,” upon timely motion of a party, the trial court may
    transfer the proceeding to a proper court in another county. 
    Id. § 155.202(b)
    (West
    2014). Because section 155.202(b) deals with transferring cases to a court in another
    county, it offers Lisa no relief. See 
    id. 2 Because
    the 2015 amendment of section 155.001 is not material to the
    outcome of this appeal, we cite to the current version of the statute.
    9
    We turn, therefore, to the issue of whether the District Court’s order assigning
    the case was valid; that is, whether sections 155.001 and 155.002 precluded the 75th
    District Court of Liberty County from assigning the case to the County Court at Law
    of Liberty County. Rule 9 of the Texas Rules of Judicial Administration provides
    that the district and statutory county court judges of a county shall adopt rules for
    orderly administration of the courts’ affairs, including, among other things, docket
    management and other matters necessary to provide for orderly, prompt, efficient,
    and effective administration of justice. Tex. R. Jud. Admin. 9 (a), (b)(1), (8),
    reprinted in Tex. Gov’t Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. F app. (West 2013)). In addition,
    Subchapter D of the Texas Government Code, which is entitled “Administration by
    County[,]” deals with rules for handling of cases between courts of each county. See
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 74.091-74.098 (West 2013 & Supp. 2016). Section 74.093
    of the Government Code provides that the district and statutory county court judges
    in each county shall adopt local rules of administration which must provide for,
    among other things, “assignment, docketing, transfer, and hearing of all cases,
    subject to jurisdictional limitations of the district courts and statutory county
    courts[.]” 
    Id. § 74.093(a),
    (b)(1) (West Supp. 2016). Section 74.094 of the
    Government Code provides as follows:
    (a) A district or statutory county court judge may hear and determine a
    matter pending in any district or statutory county court in the county
    10
    regardless of whether the matter is preliminary or final or whether
    there is a judgment in the matter. The judge may sign a judgment or
    order in any of the courts regardless of whether the case is
    transferred. The judgment, order, or action is valid and binding as if
    the case were pending in the court of the judge who acts in the
    matter. The authority of this subsection applies to an active, former,
    or retired judge assigned to a court having jurisdiction as provided
    by Subchapter C.
    
    Id. § 74.094(a)
    (West 2013). Subchapter C of the Government Code deals with the
    powers and duties of presiding judges of administrative judicial districts, including
    those judges’ ability to assign cases from one court to another. See 
    id. §§ 74.041-
    74.062 (West 2013 & Supp. 2016).
    Under section 74.093, “the only limitation on local rules governing transfer
    of cases within a county is that the case must be transferred to a court that has
    jurisdiction over the case.” In re Siemens Corp., 
    153 S.W.3d 694
    , 697 (Tex. App.—
    Dallas 2005, orig. proceeding). The Government Code specifically provides that “a
    county court at law in Liberty County has concurrent jurisdiction with the district
    court in family law cases and proceedings.” Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 25.1482(a)
    (West Supp. 2016). When the two courts at issue have concurrent jurisdiction, “the
    jurisdictional limitation on transfers contained in section 74.093 is not implicated[.]”
    In re Siemens 
    Corp., 153 S.W.3d at 697
    .
    Section 74.093 of the Government Code lists assignments and transfers
    separately. See 
    id. § 74.093
    (West Supp. 2016). In addition, this Court has held that
    11
    “[a] distinction must be made . . . between a suit transferred from district court to
    county court at law, or vice versa, and a suit in which a county court at law judge is
    assigned to hear cases for a district court judge.” In re Nash, 
    13 S.W.3d 894
    , 896-
    97 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2000, orig. proceeding). In addition, in the context of
    comparing the docket equalization statute in the Government Code to chapter 155
    of the Family Code, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals concluded that chapter 155 of
    the Family Code “does not prohibit a district court of continuing, exclusive
    jurisdiction from transferring, on its own motion, a case to another district court in
    the same county for purposes of docket equalization under section 24.950 of the
    [G]overnment [C]ode.” In re G.R.M., 
    45 S.W.3d 764
    , 771 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2001, orig. proceeding) (emphasis added). 
    Id. at 769-70.
    Given that the judge of the 75th District Court entitled his order “Order
    Assigning Case[,]” stated in the order that the case “[i]s hereby assigned to the
    County Court at Law of Liberty County, Texas[,]” and noted in the order that the
    County Court at Law “will have jurisdiction over this cause for all purposes[,]” we
    conclude that the order was an assignment of the case to a court that had concurrent
    jurisdiction, not a transfer of the case to the County Court at Law by the court of
    continuing, exclusive jurisdiction as contemplated by the Family Code. See Tex.
    Fam. Code Ann. §§ 155.001(a), (c), 155.002; Tex. R. Jud. Admin. 9; In re Siemens
    12
    
    Corp., 153 S.W.3d at 697
    ; 
    Nash, 13 S.W.3d at 896-97
    . For all of these reasons, we
    conclude that the 75th District Court did not lack jurisdiction to assign the case to
    the County Court at Law, and the County Court at Law did not lack jurisdiction to
    modify or enforce the divorce decree. Accordingly, we overrule issues one and four.
    ISSUE TWO
    In issue two, Lisa argues that the trial court erred by retroactively modifying
    or refusing to enforce the divorce decree. Lisa argues that Virgil did not provide
    sufficient testimony or evidence of substantially changed circumstances at the
    hearing held on December 21, 2015, and she quotes extensively from the record of
    that hearing. Lisa also complains that the trial court made its order retroactive, and
    although she argues in her statement of facts that her attorney did not receive notice
    of the hearing held on February 11, 2016, she provided no argument or authorities
    as to that issue. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a), 38.1(i). Lisa did not timely appeal the
    trial court’s order of February 11, 2016, which memorialized its pronouncements
    made at the conclusion of the December 21 hearing. See Tex. R. App. P. 26.1.
    Accordingly, we overrule issue two.
    ISSUE THREE
    In issue three, Lisa complains that the trial court erred by denying her motion
    to enforce in its order of January 4, 2017. Lisa timely appealed from the trial court’s
    13
    order of January 4, 2017. However, Lisa provides no argument or authorities in her
    brief regarding the trial court’s denial of her motion to enforce. We therefore
    conclude that Lisa has waived her appellate complaint regarding this issue. See Tex.
    R. App. P. 38.1(i) (stating that the appellant’s brief “must contain a clear and concise
    argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to
    the record[]”). Accordingly, we overrule issue three. Having overruled each of Lisa’s
    issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    AFFIRMED.
    ______________________________
    STEVE McKEITHEN
    Chief Justice
    Submitted on November 3, 2017
    Opinion Delivered December 7, 2017
    Before McKeithen, C.J., Horton and Johnson, JJ.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-17-00024-CV

Filed Date: 12/7/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021