Rebecca Evans v. Robert Randall Sires, Sr. ( 2013 )


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  • Opinion issued November 26, 2013.
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-12-00991-CV
    ———————————
    REBECCA EVANS, Appellant
    V.
    ROBERT RANDALL SIRES, SR., Appellee
    On Appeal from the 311th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 2011-67562
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Rebecca Evans challenges the trial court’s dismissal of her bill of review
    proceeding, by which she sought to set aside the trial court’s 2004 Final Order in
    the underlying SAPCR. Evans contends the trial court erred by dismissing her bill
    of review without a hearing on the merits, and she also complains that the trial
    court, in the 2004 Final Order (1) improperly calculated the amount of child
    support payments and arrearages she owed, and (2) improperly ordered that her
    visitation with the child be conducted through the Harris County SAFE program.
    Because Evans entered into an MSA in which she agreed to dismiss the bill of
    review and agreed to the terms of a 2012 order modifying the 2004 order, we
    conclude that the trial court committed no error, and, accordingly, we affirm.
    Background
    On June 7, 2004, the trial court entered a default judgment in a SAPCR case
    against Evans (“2004 Final Order”). The 2004 Final Order appointed Robert
    Randal Sires, Sr., the child’s father, as Sole Managing Conservator and Evans as
    Possessory Conservator of their child. It restricted Evans’s possession and access
    to the child, reciting that Evans’s access to the child would take place “under such
    terms and conditions as are mutually agreed to, in writing, in advance, by the
    parent Sole Managing Conservator . . . [and] in the parent Sole Managing
    Conservator’s sole discretion, may be under the supervision of the SAFE
    supervised visitation program.” The 2004 Final Order required Evans to pay child
    support in the amount of $575 per month and arrearages in the amount of
    $3,162.50, which she was required to pay in installments of $100 per month.
    Evans made no payments for the next seven years, but did make 22 payments
    between September 2011 and September 2012.
    2
    On November 8, 2011, Evans filed a petition for bill of review of the 2004
    Final Order. In it, Evans requested that the trial court vacate the 2004 Final Order,
    on the basis that she received no notice of the June 7, 2004 trial setting. Sires then
    moved to enforce the 2004 Final Order.
    On June 4, 2012, the parties entered into an MSA. The MSA reduced the
    amount of Evans’s future monthly child support payments to $421.50 per month.
    With regard to arrearages, it stated the parties’ agreement to reduce the amount
    Evans owed if Evans provided Sires’s attorney, within a specified timeframe, with
    certain evidence of Evans’s historical income. The MSA stated:
    The parties agree that the amount of the arrearage shall be calculated
    to reflect the amount of periodic child support Mother would have
    been ordered to pay during the relevant period had she been ordered to
    pay based on her actual income, but without calculating amounts for
    medical insurance and/or unpaid medical expenses. In this regard,
    Mother’s attorney shall provide Father’s attorney with true and correct
    copies of Mother’s Federal Income Tax information from the IRS for
    the years 2003 through 2011, and the amount of child support due
    each year shall be the Texas Family Code Guideline child support
    based on Mother’s actual gross income for each year as reflected in
    the tax information with the standard deductions for Federal Income
    Taxes, Social Security Taxes and FICA as per the TFC child support
    tax tables . . . Mother shall provide the referenced tax information
    within 75 days of this date. If said tax information is not provided to
    Father’s attorney within 75 days of this date, then Father shall have
    the option of withdrawing his consent to this agreement regarding
    arrearages.
    3
    In exchange, Evans agreed in the MSA to dismiss the bill of review. She
    also agreed that provisions of the 2004 Final Order requiring visitation through
    SAFE would not be modified.
    On August 21, 2012, Sires’s counsel wrote Evans’s counsel, contending that
    Evans had failed to provide the required tax information for 2003, 2004, and 2006,
    and that this constituted “a breach of the MSA requirement to furnish the Father
    true and correct copies of her Federal Income Tax information from the IRS for
    years 2003 through 2011.” Accordingly, Sires was “exercise[ing] his option of
    withdrawing his consent to the agreement regarding arrearages.”
    On September 10, 2012, Sires moved for judgment on the MSA.            On
    September 17, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on that motion. Sires sought
    judgment on the MSA, except for the provision regarding the modification of
    arrearages. With regard to that provision, Sires argued that Evans breached by
    failing to present tax information for the years 2003 through 2011 and that Sires
    was therefore entitled to revoke his agreement to reduce the amount of arrearages
    owed.
    Evans responded that there was no breach because she provided information
    that existed. She claimed that there was no tax information available, “there was
    no filing of any type of return,” for the years for which she failed to provide
    information to Sires, 2003, 2004, and 2006. Sires introduced an IRS verification of
    4
    non-filing reflecting that the IRS “found no record of a tax return being filed for
    year(s) 2004 & 2006.” With regard to 2003, however, the document stated that the
    IRS was “unable to verify non-filing for tax year(s) 2003 because a return was
    filed.”
    The trial court concluded that Evans failed to perform as agreed, giving Sires
    the right to exercise his option to withdraw his agreement to reduce the amount of
    arrearages owed. It concluded the total amount of arrearages owed under the terms
    in the 2004 Final Order was $46,862.50, ordered that arrearages be paid at $100 a
    month, as set out in the 2004 Final Order, and “approve[d] all the remaining
    provisions of the Mediated Settlement Agreement.” The trial court dismissed the
    bill of review proceeding by order dated September 19, 2012, which states that the
    case was dismissed because “the parties Mediated Settlement Agreement
    contemplates dismissal of the Plaintiff’s Bill of Review.” Evans appealed.
    Discussion
    A.        Standard of Review
    Whether a party is entitled to enforcement of an MSA is a legal question,
    which we review de novo. Boyd v. Boyd, 
    67 S.W.3d 398
    , 404 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth 2002, no pet.).
    5
    B.    Applicable Law
    In suits affecting the parent-child relationship, an MSA is binding on the
    parties and irrevocable if the agreement (1) provides, in a prominently displayed
    statement that is in boldfaced type or capital letters or underlined, that the
    agreement is not subject to revocation, (2) is signed by each party to the
    agreement, and (3) is signed by the party’s attorney. TEX. FAM. CODE
    § 153.0071(d) (West 2008); In re Lee, No. 11-0732, 
    2013 WL 5382067
    , at *6
    (Tex. Sept. 27, 2013). If an MSA meets these statutory requirements, “a party is
    entitled to judgment on the mediated settlement agreement notwithstanding . . .
    another rule of law.”    TEX. FAM. CODE § 153.0071(e); In re Lee, 
    2013 WL 5382067
    , at *6; In re L.M.M., 
    247 S.W.3d 809
    , 811 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, pet.
    denied). A trial court must enforce an MSA that meets these requirements unless a
    party demonstrates that the MSA was illegal or was procured by fraud, duress,
    coercion, or other dishonest means. 
    Boyd, 67 S.W.3d at 403
    .
    C.    Analysis
    Evans appeals from the trial court’s order dismissing her bill of review. In
    her brief, Evans argues that the trial court erred by (1) ordering that she pay $575
    per month in child support in 2004; 1 (2) ordering visitation be held through the
    SAFE program; and (3) failing to reduce the amount of arrearages she owed, as
    1
    In the trial court’s October 26, 2012 order, the monthly child support obligation
    was reduced to $421.50 per month, per the terms of the MSA.
    6
    contemplated by the MSA, despite the fact that she provided Sires with some tax
    records to justify the reduction.
    But Evans ignores the fact that she agreed, in the MSA, to dismiss the bill of
    review and that the MSA gave Sires the option to revoke the agreement to reduce
    the arrearages if Evans failed to produce information reflecting her historical
    income. Evans’s appeal thus turns on whether the trial court properly entered
    judgment on the MSA.
    1.     The MSA is enforceable.
    An MSA affecting the parent-child relationship is binding and a party is
    “entitled to judgment” on the MSA if each party and the parties’ attorneys who are
    present at the mediation sign it, and the MSA states prominently and in
    emphasized type that it is not subject to revocation.           TEX. FAM. CODE
    § 153.0071(d)–(e). Here, it is undisputed that the MSA meets these requirements.
    Page 4 of the MSA stated in boldfaced, underlined, and capital letters that “THIS
    AGREEMENT REACHED IN MEDIATION IS BINDING AND IS NOT
    SUBJECT TO REVOCATION.” And the MSA is signed by each party and by
    each party’s attorney. Evans does not contend and presents no evidence that the
    MSA was illegal or was procured by fraud, duress, coercion, or other dishonest
    means. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in enforcing the MSA.
    See TEX. FAM. CODE § 153.0071(d); In re 
    L.M.M., 247 S.W.3d at 811
    –12
    7
    (concluding MSA met statutory requirements of section 153.0071(d) where MSA
    stated in bold, underline, and all capital letters that MSA was binding, not subject
    to revocation, and enforceable).
    2.     The trial court entered judgment in accordance with the MSA.
    The bill of review was the vehicle by which Evans sought to challenge the
    provisions of the 2004 Final Order requiring (1) payment of child support at $575
    per month and (2) visitation under the SAFE program. But, the MSA provided that
    Evans’s bill of review would “be dismissed contemporaneously with the signing by
    the Court of the Modification Order which contains the agreements reached
    herein.”   Because Evans is bound by the MSA, and the MSA provides for
    dismissal of the bill of review, we conclude the trial court did not err in dismissing
    Evans’s bill of review pursuant to the MSA’s terms.
    Because she agreed in the MSA to dismiss that proceeding, and, with it, her
    challenges to the 2004 Final Order, we do not review the propriety of the child
    support and visitation provisions of the 2004 Final Order.
    3.     Arrearages
    Evans also challenges the provision of the 2012 Modified Order that requires
    her to pay $46,862.50 in arrearages. She asserts that based on her actual income
    from 2003 to 2011, the total amount of arrearages should be $27,634, and that the
    trial court erred in failing to hold Sires to his agreement in the MSA to reduce
    8
    arrearages. We construe this as a challenge to the trial court’s finding that Evans
    breached the provision of the MSA in which she agreed to provide historical
    information regarding her income. 2
    At the hearing on Evans’s motion for judgment on the MSA, Evans’s
    counsel argued that Evans complied by providing an IRS form stating the IRS had
    no records of Evans filing a tax return for 2004 and 2006. But, based on the same
    document, which reflected that Evans did file a 2003 return—and the fact that she
    failed to provide it to Sires—the trial court could have reasonably concluded that
    Evans breached and had no right to enforce the contemplated reduction in
    arrearages, and thus remained liable for arrearages in the amount set forth in the
    2004 Final Order, which, by 2012, totaled $46,862.50.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not err in ordering Evans to
    pay arrearages in the amount of $46,862.50.
    2
    Evans did not file a notice of appeal from the SAPCR case, but we address this
    issue because of the significant overlap in the two cases. See P&A Real Estate,
    Inc. v. Am. Bank of Texas, 
    323 S.W.3d 618
    , 620 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.)
    (concluding notice of appeal from default judgment effective when filed under
    wrong cause number).
    9
    Conclusion
    We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Rebeca Huddle
    Justice
    Panel consists of Chief Justice Radack and Justices Bland and Huddle.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01-12-00991-CV

Filed Date: 11/26/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/16/2015