Brandy Weido v. Don Weido ( 2016 )


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  • Opinion issued April 5, 2016
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-15-00755-CV
    ———————————
    BRANDY WEIDO, Appellant
    V.
    DON WEIDO, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 300th District Court
    Brazoria County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 61922
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Brandy Weido and Don Weido are the divorced parents of “Charles.”1
    Brandy appeals the trial court’s order granting Don’s motion to clarify the parents’
    1
    The child, C.W., will be referred to by the pseudonym, “Charles,” both to protect
    his privacy and for ease of reading.
    mediated settlement agreement, adopted by a previous trial court order. Brandy
    argues that the order granting the motion to clarify constituted a substantive change
    of the MSA in violation of Section 157.423 of the Texas Family Code. We agree
    and reverse the trial court’s order.
    Background
    Brandy and Don divorced when Charles was three. In the section of the
    original decree of divorce discussing Charles’s education, Brandy and Don agreed
    to send Charles to “St. Helen’s Catholic School in Pearland, Texas or any other
    school agreed to by both parties beginning with preschool.” A different section of
    the decree that granted each parent possession rights over Charles during different
    times of the year based, in part, on a “school” holiday schedule, defined “school”
    as “the primary or secondary school in which the child is enrolled or, if the child is
    not enrolled in a primary or secondary school, the public school district in which
    the child primarily resides.”
    When Charles was five, Brandy and Don agreed to a modified mediated
    settlement agreement “to establish certain rights and obligations” regarding
    Charles’s care. This agreement amended the original divorce decree in several
    ways: it provided for new requirements on the communication of information
    about Charles’s health and welfare, communication between the parents and
    Charles, issues the parents are (or are not) allowed to discuss in front of Charles,
    2
    interference with the other parent’s time with the child, international travel,
    Charles’s therapy, and child support. Under this MSA, which the trial court
    adopted in its Order in Suit to Modify Parent-Child Relationship, both parents are
    designated Joint Managing Conservators of Charles, who primarily lives with Don.
    In contrast to the original requirement that Charles go to St. Helen’s, Don now has
    “the right to make educational decisions that enroll the child in a private school or
    within Pearland ISD, and the right to receive child support.” The order
    implementing the MSA retained the original divorce decree’s definition of
    “school” in a section of the order entitled the “modified possession order,” but not
    for the other sections of the order. The parents also agreed that, “[t]he residence of
    the child is designated to be within Pearland City Limits, per the Final Decree of
    Divorce.”
    Initially, Don enrolled Charles in a private school, which Charles attended
    until Don filed the motion for clarification that is the subject of the lawsuit. Don
    filed the motion because he was considering sending Charles to public school the
    following fall. According to the motion for clarification, Don’s house is in the City
    of Pearland but actually “falls within Alvin ISD and so the school that the child is
    required to attend is not within Pearland ISD . . . .”
    Don argued two problems existed with the MSA, creating an “ambiguity,”
    and requested that the trial court “remove the ambiguity.” First, he argued that,
    3
    when he signed the MSA, he understood it to allow him to enroll Charles in “a
    primary school within the public school district that the child primarily resides,”
    which is Alvin ISD. Second, he argued that “[i]t is not possible for [him] to send
    the child to the primary school within the public school district that [Charles]
    primarily resides.”
    The trial court held a hearing on Don’s motion. No witnesses testified at the
    hearing; instead, the parents’ attorneys made brief arguments. The trial court
    granted Don’s motion because an “impossibility of performance exists” because
    Don resides “outside of Pearland ISD. [He] either has to move . . . which I’m not in
    the habit of ordering people to move; or he has to lie about where his kid currently
    lives.”
    Brandy’s lawyer pointed out that “he could enroll the kid in a private school,
    like the kid has been.” The trial court acknowledged “[h]e could. But there’s an
    impossibility of performance with regard to the Pearland ISD.” The trial court then
    modified the MSA “to read Pearland ISD or Alvin ISD, so that nobody has to
    move.” Brandy appeals that order.
    Clarification or Substantive Change
    On appeal, Brandy argues that “[t]he trial court’s order constitutes a
    substantive change to both the MSA and the Order in Suit to Modify Parent-Child
    Relationship which is unenforceable under Section 157.423 of the Family Code.”
    4
    A.    Statutory background
    The Texas Family Code grants a trial court the authority to “clarify an order
    rendered by the court in a proceeding under this title if the court finds . . . that the
    order is not specific enough to be enforced by contempt.” TEX. FAM. CODE ANN.
    § 157.421 (West 2014). The trial court, however, “may not change the substantive
    provisions of an order to be clarified . . . . ” 
    Id. § 157.423(a).
    The Family Code does not define “substantive change,” but Texas courts
    look to judgments nunc pro tunc to provide guidance on what constitutes a
    “substantive change” because a “clarification order is analogous to a judgment
    nunc pro tunc in that it cannot substantively change a final order.” In re Marriage
    of Ward, 
    137 S.W.3d 910
    , 913 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2004, no pet.); see In re
    V.M.P., 
    185 S.W.3d 531
    , 534 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, no pet.); Dickens v.
    Willis, 
    957 S.W.2d 657
    , 659 (Tex. App.—Austin 1997, no pet.). Instead, such a
    judgment can only correct a clerical error. 
    Ward, 137 S.W.3d at 913
    .
    In the nunc pro tunc context, two types of errors exist: (1) judicial errors and
    (2) clerical errors. A substantive change occurs when the error is “judicial,” that is,
    the trial court corrects an error that “results from judicial reasoning or
    determination.” 
    Id. A trial
    court can only enter a judgment nunc pro tunc to correct
    a clerical error, an error that “results from inaccurately recording the decision of
    the court . . . . ” 
    Id. “When deciding
    whether a correction is of a judicial or a
    5
    clerical error, we look to the judgment actually rendered, not the judgment that
    should or might have been rendered. . . . Thus, even if the court renders incorrectly,
    it cannot alter a written judgment which precisely reflects the incorrect rendition.”
    Escobar v. Escobar, 
    711 S.W.2d 230
    , 231–32 (Tex. 1986).
    B.    Standard of review
    The determination of whether an alleged error is “clerical or judicial is a
    question of law.” 
    Dickens, 957 S.W.2d at 659
    . Before deciding the legal question
    of whether the error is clerical or judicial, however, the trial court must first make a
    fact finding that an error exists by determining (1) that it previously rendered a
    judgment, (2) the contents of that judgment, and (3) that an error was made
    recording the contents of that judgment. 
    Id. This fact
    finding must be supported by
    “clear, satisfying, and convincing” evidence. 
    Id. We may
    review that fact finding for legal and factual sufficiency of the
    evidence. 
    Id. When both
    the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence are
    challenged, “we first review the legal sufficiency of the evidence to determine
    whether the record contains any evidence of probative value to support the
    factfinder’s decision.” Kellmann v. Workstation Integrations, Inc., 
    332 S.W.3d 679
    , 684 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.). If a party attacks the
    legal sufficiency of the evidence, it must show no evidence exists to support the
    adverse finding. Croucher v. Croucher, 
    660 S.W.2d 55
    , 58 (Tex. 1983). The test
    6
    for legal sufficiency is “whether the evidence at trial would enable reasonable and
    fair-minded people to reach the verdict under review.” City of Keller v. Wilson,
    
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 827 (Tex. 2005).
    If the evidence is legally sufficient, we then examine the factual sufficiency
    of the evidence. 
    Kellman, 332 S.W.3d at 684
    . In conducting a factual sufficiency
    review, we “consider and weigh all of the evidence supporting and contradicting
    the challenged finding and set the finding aside only if the evidence is so contrary
    to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to make the finding clearly wrong
    and manifestly unjust.” McMahon v. Zimmerman, 
    433 S.W.3d 680
    , 691 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, no pet.) (citing Cain v. Bain, 
    709 S.W.2d 175
    ,
    176 (Tex. 1986)).
    If we determine that an error exists, we consider the legal question of
    whether the error is clerical or judicial. See 
    Zimmerman, 433 S.W.3d at 691
    . We
    examine this legal question de novo. See 
    Escobar, 711 S.W.2d at 232
    (stating that
    question is one of law); In re Humphreys, 
    880 S.W.2d 402
    , 404 (Tex. 1994)
    (“[Q]uestions of law are always subject to de novo review.”).
    C.    No evidence of an error
    Brandy first argues that the trial court heard “no evidence” that an error
    existed at all and that “the MSA and decree that [Don] seeks to clarify are clear
    and unambiguous.”
    7
    The trial court’s fact finding that an error exists must be supported by “clear,
    satisfying, and convincing” evidence. 
    Dickens, 957 S.W.2d at 659
    . When there “is
    nothing in the record to indicate that the [order] incorrectly stated the judgment
    actually rendered at that time,” a trial court errs by granting a clarification order.
    Cisneros v. Cisneros, No. 13-00-187-CV, 
    2004 WL 210704
    , at *1–3 (Tex. App.—
    Corpus Christi Feb. 5, 2004, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    For example, in Dickens, the trial court clarified the divorce decree to
    require that the mother pay the father child support, rather than the father paying
    the mother as stated in the original decree. 
    Dickens, 957 S.W.2d at 659
    . As
    evidence to support the existence of an “error” in the divorce decree, the father
    proffered an email from the mother acknowledging that the divorce decree
    contained a “typographical error concerning payment of child support” and a
    docket entry from the trial judge ordering the mother to pay child support to the
    father. 
    Id. Because of
    this evidence, the trial court correctly found that the error in
    the original decree was clerical and the clarification order “did not substantively
    change the divorce decree.” 
    Id. at 660.
    No such evidence was presented to support a finding that the MSA contains
    an error. No evidence was presented at the trial court hearing nor did Don attach an
    affidavit or other evidence to his motion for clarification. Don did not present
    evidence to support his assertion that it was his “understanding at the time the
    8
    agreement was reached that a primary school within the public school district that
    the child primarily resides was included in the meaning of ‘school’ as used within
    the order . . . .”2 Nor did Don proffer any evidence that “[i]t is not possible for
    [him] to send the child to” Pearland ISD. Similarly, there was no evidence
    regarding Brandy’s residence or whether her residence would allow Charles to
    attend a school in Pearland ISD.
    Because Don did not meet his burden to establish the existence of an error
    by clear, satisfying, and convincing evidence, the trial court erred by granting the
    motion to clarify.
    D.    Any error would have been judicial and not subject to clarification
    Even if an error exists in the MSA, a clarification order is not appropriate in
    this context because the change would be a “substantive change” rather than a
    clerical one. It is “a heavy burden . . . to establish that the error involved is clerical
    in nature and, thus, one for which a clarification order may be entered.” 
    Ward, 137 S.W.3d at 914
    .
    2
    Don argued that the original divorce decree’s definition of “school” as “the public
    school district in which the child primarily resides” creates an ambiguity in the
    MSA. The definition states that it applies only “[i]n this modified expanded
    standard possession order” section of the decree; it does not purport to apply to the
    remainder of the decree. That section requires a definition of school because it
    relies on a “regular school term” to determine which days Brandy or Don has
    possession of Charles. For example, Don has right of possession over Charles
    “beginning at the time the child’s school is dismissed for the school’s spring
    vacation and ending at the time school regularly resumes after that vacation” in
    even-numbered years. That definition does not apply to the section of the decree
    authorizing and limiting Don’s right to choose a school for Charles.
    9
    We can only look to the plain meaning of the words in the decree to
    determine whether any “error” is judicial or clerical. “The only basis for clarifying
    a prior decree is when a provision is ambiguous and non-specific. In the absence of
    an ambiguity, the trial court is without authority to modify the judgment.” Lundy v.
    Lundy, 
    973 S.W.2d 687
    , 688–89 (Tex. App.—Tyler 1998, pet. denied).
    In Lundy, the father sought to void an increase in the amount of child
    support payment he owed the 
    mother. 973 S.W.2d at 689
    . The divorce decree
    required him to pay a higher amount of child support after the father and mother
    sold the house in which the mother was living to help her with rent payments. 
    Id. Before the
    house sold, the father finished paying off the mortgage payments. 
    Id. The mother
    argued that he should, therefore, have to pay that increased amount of
    child support because he was no longer paying the mortgage. 
    Id. The divorce
    decree, however, was clear that he did not owe the higher amount of child support
    until the house sold. 
    Id. The provision
    was “specific and unambiguous”; it required
    “no interpretation or clarification.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    trial court could not grant a
    “clarification order” to increase the father’s child support payment. 
    Id. In R.F.G.,
    the trial court also erred in modifying an unambiguous divorce
    decree. 
    282 S.W.3d 722
    , 728 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2009, no pet.). The divorce
    decree awarded the husband the “bed” but the wife argued that this only entitled
    him to the “mattress and box spring,” not the “bedframe.” 
    Id. The trial
    court erred
    10
    in looking to other, extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intended definition
    of a “bed”—instead, the Dallas court held that the plain, unambiguous meaning of
    “bed” included the bedframe. 
    Id. Thus, the
    trial court’s clarification, requiring the
    husband to pay for the bedframe, was a substantive change to the divorce decree
    and impermissible. 
    Id. at 729.
    For an error to be “clerical” rather than “judicial,” and thus, correctable by a
    clarification order, fixing the error in the wording of the order must not require
    “additional judicial reasoning.” 
    Ward, 137 S.W.3d at 914
    . Ward compared two
    cases to illustrate the difference between a “clerical” and “judicial” error. 
    Id. at 913–16.
    In one, the recorded land deed neglected to convey to the buyer an
    easement, which the land sale contract stated the buyer should receive. 
    Id. at 914
    (discussing McGehee v. Epley, 
    661 S.W.2d 924
    (Tex. 1983)). The error there was
    “clerical” because the contract showed that the parties intended to convey the
    easement. 
    Ward, 137 S.W.3d at 914
    . In the second, the final judgment listed
    damages for each of 87 lost bales of cotton but accidently omitted the value of six
    bales. 
    Id. This error
    was judicial because finding the value of the six bales was “a
    failure to consider evidence in the case” and fixing that error would require
    “additional judicial reasoning.” 
    Id. In Ward,
    the mother attempted to “clarify” the divorce decree to obtain an
    increase in child support from the father. 
    Id. at 911–12.
    The trial court properly
    11
    refused to grant the clarification order because no evidence, such as a reporter’s
    record of the initial hearing to set child support, existed that showed that an error
    existed in the original order. 
    Id. at 915.
    Any change in the amount of child support
    “necessarily involved judicial reasoning” and would “impose an obligation where
    none had previously existed . . . .” 
    Id. The MSA
    provision in question contains no ambiguity. The order
    implementing the MSA is clear that Don must send Charles to “a private school or
    [a school] within Pearland ISD.” This text is not ambiguous: it outlines two
    specific options for Charles’s schooling. Thus, the “trial court is without authority
    to modify the judgment.” See 
    Lundy, 973 S.W.2d at 688
    –89.
    Moreover, changing the school district would be a “substantive change,” not
    a clarification. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 157.423(a); 
    V.M.P., 185 S.W.3d at 534
    –35 (“clarification order” removing “or 30% of his net weekly income” from
    divorce decree ordering father to pay child support “of $97.50 per week, or 30% of
    his net weekly income . . . . ” was “clearly a substantive change” because it
    changed the father’s obligation). The relative qualities of schools, family and
    community ties to the schools, and academic and extra-curricular opportunities in
    different schools all play roles in the decision of which school to select for a
    child’s education. These factors are relevant to the parent’s determination of to
    12
    send Charles to school and reflect that any change to the school district is a
    “substantive change.”
    Finally, the trial court’s clarification order cannot be treated as a
    modification order. See 
    V.M.P., 185 S.W.3d at 534
    (holding that trial court could
    have modified original divorce decree even though court mistakenly titled its
    order). While a trial court can interpret an ambiguous MSA, it is “absolutely
    prohibited” from modifying a decree “in cases involving an MSA.” Williams v.
    Williams, 
    407 S.W.3d 770
    , 774 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, no pet.); see In re
    Marriage of Joyner, 
    196 S.W.3d 883
    , 890–91 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, pet.
    denied) (holding trial court may not modify MSAs “as it sees fit, and it has no
    authority to enter a judgment that varies from their terms”). No one here argues
    that the exception allowing a trial court to refuse to adopt a “mediated settlement
    agreement [that] was illegal or was procured by fraud, duress, coercion, or other
    dishonest means” applies; thus, the trial court could not modify the order
    implementing the MSA. See 
    Joyner, 196 S.W.3d at 891
    .
    Because the “clarification order” constituted an impermissible substantive
    change and the order cannot be construed as a permissible modification order, the
    trial court erred in granting Don’s motion for clarification. The trial court cannot
    modify the MSA for the parents. See Toler v. Sanders, 
    371 S.W.3d 477
    , 480 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, no pet.) (“A mediated settlement agreement under
    13
    section 6.602 is more binding than a basic written contract because, except when a
    party has procured the settlement through fraud or coercion, nothing either party
    does will modify or void the agreement once everyone has signed it.”)
    We sustain Brandy’s first issue.
    Attorney’s Fees
    Brandy also argues that she “pled for attorney’s fees and presented evidence
    in support [of those fees]. Since [she] was not the prevailing party in the trial court,
    no attorney’s fees were awarded. In the event [she] prevails in this appeal, she
    requests that this case be remanded to the trial court to determine reasonable and
    necessary attorney’s fees.”
    In a suit to modify the parent–child relationship, such as this, “the court may
    render judgment for reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses and order the
    judgment and postjudgment interest to be paid directly to an attorney.” TEX. FAM.
    CODE ANN. § 106.002(a) (West 2014); see Matelski v. Matelski, 
    840 S.W.2d 124
    ,
    131 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1992, no writ) (upholding attorney’s fee award for
    motion to clarify divorce decree). The decision to award attorney’s fees, however,
    lies “within the trial court’s discretion.” Watts v. Oliver, 
    396 S.W.3d 124
    , 132
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, no pet.). Because we reverse the trial
    court’s order and Brandy, therefore, prevails on appeal, “the trial court should be
    given an opportunity to reconsider the award of attorney’s fees when it renders a
    14
    new judgment.” Bruni v. Bruni, 
    924 S.W.2d 366
    , 369 (Tex. 1996). Thus, we
    remand to the trial court for consideration of what attorney’s fees, if any, Brandy is
    entitled to as a result of this opinion.
    Conclusion
    We reverse the trial court’s order of clarification, render judgment denying
    Don’s motion to clarify, and remand for consideration of an attorney’s fee award to
    Brandy.
    Harvey Brown
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Bland, Brown, and Lloyd.
    15