ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Chief Justice
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Julie Ann Howe (Wife) filed a petition for divorce from Rusty Wayne Howe (Husband) in November 2014. The couple had been married for eighteen years and had two children, aged 14 and 16, as of the date of divorce. Initial efforts to reconcile failed, and the relationship of the parties became increasingly confrontational. Following a non-jury trial, and relevant here, the decree: (1) appointed the parents joint managing conservators, but gave Wife the exclusive right to determine the primary residence of the children without geographic limitation; (2) ordered Husband to pay child support; (3) ordered Husband to pay spousal maintenance; (4) divided the assets and debts, and according to Husband, gave him little of the former and most of the latter; (5) determined that the proceeds from the sale of the marital residence were Wife's separate property; (6) ordered Husband to pay interim attorney's fees that resulted from an earlier default; (7) assessed the ad litem costs against Husband; and (8) incorporated the standard visitation order. Other than the child support order, Husband attacks each of these rulings. We elaborate on the evidence germane to each ruling in conjunction with each issue below.
PROCEDURAL POSTURE
Our first decision point is whether we are reviewing the trial court's judgment with or without findings of fact and conclusions of law. What should be a straightforward question is not based on the record before us.
Traditional Findings of Fact
A request for findings and conclusions shall be filed within twenty days after the judgment is signed. Rule 296 mandates that the request be specifically entitled "Request for Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law." TEX.R.CIV.P. 296. The request should be a separate instrument and not coupled with a motion for new trial or a motion to correct or reform the judgment. A litigant who misses the deadline waives the right to complain of the trial court's failure to prepare the findings.
Upon timely demand, the court shall prepare its findings and conclusions and file them within twenty days after a timely request is filed. TEX.R.CIV.P. 297. The court is required to mail a copy to each party. Deadlines for requesting additional or amended findings run from the date the original findings and conclusions are filed, as noted below.
If the trial court fails to submit the findings and conclusions within the 20-day period, the requesting party must call the omission to the attention of the judge within 30 days after filing the original request. Failure to submit a timely reminder waives the right to complain of the court's failure to make findings. Averyt v. Grande, Inc. ,
If the court files findings and conclusions, either party has a period of ten days in which to request specified additional or amended findings or conclusions. The court shall file same within ten days after the request, and again, cause a copy to be mailed to each party. No findings or conclusions shall be deemed or presumed by any failure of the court to make additional findings or conclusions. TEX.R.CIV.P. 298.
When a party fails to timely request additional findings and conclusions, it is deemed to have waived the right to complain on appeal of the court's failure to make them. Briargrove Park Property Owners, Inc. v. Riner,
The general rule is that the failure of the trial court to file findings of fact constitutes error where the complaining party has complied with the requisite rules to preserve error. Wagner v. Riske,
The test for determining whether the complainant has suffered harm is whether the circumstances of the case would require an appellant to guess the reason or reasons that the judge has ruled against it. Elizondo v. Gomez,
With regard to additional findings, the case should not be reversed if most of the additional findings were disposed of directly or indirectly by the original findings and the failure to make the additional findings was not prejudicial to the appellant.
Where findings of fact are filed by the trial court, they shall form the basis of the judgment upon all grounds of recovery. The judgment may not be supported on appeal by a presumption or finding upon any ground of recovery no element of which has been found by the trial court. When the trial court gives express findings on at least one element of a claim or affirmative defense, but omits other elements, implied findings on the omitted unrequested elements are deemed to have been made in support of the judgment. In other words, if a party secures an express finding on at least one element of an affirmative defense, then deemed findings arise as to the balance of the elements. Lindner v. Hill,
Statutory Findings of Fact
Findings In Child Support Orders
At the time of the final hearing in this case, the Family Code provided that without regard to TEX.R.CIV.P. 296 through 299, in rendering an order of child support, the court shall make written findings of fact if (1) the party files a written request with the court not later than ten days after the date of the hearing, not after the entry of judgment; (2) the party makes an oral request in open court during the hearing; or (3) the amount of child support ordered by the court varies from the child support guidelines. Act of June 19, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 767. § 6, 2009 TEX.GEN.LAWS 1938, 1939-40 (amended 2017)(current version at TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 154.130 (West Supp. 2017)).
Findings In Visitation Orders
Without regard to Rules 296 through 299, in all cases in which possession of a child by a parent is contested and the possession of the child varies from the standard possession order, the trial court shall state in the order the specific reasons for the variance from the standard order. Act of April 20, 1995, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 20 § 1, 1995 TEX.GEN.LAWS 113, 152 (amended 2017) (current version at TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 153.258 (West. Supp. 2017)). A written request must be filed with the court not later than ten days after the date of the hearing. An oral request must be made in open court during the hearing.
Findings in Dissolution of Marriage
Section 6.711 of the Family Code provides that in a suit for dissolution of a marriage in which the court has rendered a judgment dividing the estate of the parties, on request by a party, the court shall state in writing its findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning (1) the characterization of each party's assets, liabilities, claims, and offsets on which disputed evidence has been presented; and (2) the value or amount of the community estate's assets, liabilities, claims, and offsets on which disputed evidence has been presented. These findings are controlled by
Methodology of Requesting Findings Below
The final decree was signed on March 2, 2016, at a hearing attended by all parties. Husband made an oral request for findings at the hearing. The parties discussed the timing of the due date, and the trial court invited both parties to submit their proposed findings by a date certain. Wife filed proposed findings, but Husband did not.
On March 22, the 20th day following the signing of the judgment, Husband filed his notice of appeal. On April 1, Husband filed a Notice of Past-Due Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, asking the court clerk to call the matter to the trial court's attention. The court coordinator then sent the parties the following email on April 25, 2016:
Judge Eskew has reviewed [Wife's] proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions Law, and it appears that this is a very lengthy recitation of evidence. After reviewing the Final Decree of Divorce, it appears that the Decree includes the necessary findings and conclusions. Both counsel should reply to the court in writing by 5:00 p.m., Thursday, April 28th regarding your position on this statement. In light of this, either of you may request any additional Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. If either of you intends to request any additional findings and conclusions, please inform the Court as soon as possible and file the requested findings no later than May 2, 2016. [Emphasis in original].
An order dated May 5 states that neither party responded to the email and that all necessary findings were contained in the final decree of divorce.
The Family Code allows an oral request for some, but not all of the distinct findings of fact contemplated by the Code. For instance, a trial court is required to make findings of fact upon request for property division orders. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 6.711 (West Supp. 2017). This request must comport with Rule 296.
Another anomaly here is that the findings are contained within the final divorce decree. Rule 299a expressly forbids findings of fact in a judgment. TEX.R.CIV.P. 299a ("Findings of fact shall not be recited in a judgment. ... [They] shall be filed with the clerk of the court as a document or documents separate and apart from the judgment.").
Husband now contends the trial court did not make any findings despite being requested to do so, and suggests we should "immediately reverse the trial court's judgment [and] remand" for findings. See e.g. Henry v. Henry , 03-11-00253-CV,
Conversely, Wife now claims that because no additional findings were made, Husband labors under the onerous burden of a litigant who never timely requested findings. E. g. Point Lookout West, Inc. v. Whorton ,
Findings contained in a judgment can be given probative value on appeal when the court does not issue any separate conflicting findings of fact and conclusions of law. In re C.A.B. ,
Moreover, based on the May 5 order, it is a fair assumption that had either one of the parties raised the Rule 299a issue, the trial court would have simply reissued its same findings as contained in the judgment as the findings of the court. Because the trial court invited additional findings, and no one filed any, we apply the rule generally governing an appeal where some findings have been made, but no additional findings were requested.
And when the court's findings of fact include one or more elements of a claim or defense, but omits others, the omitted elements will be presumed (if supported by the evidence) unless a party timely files a request for additional findings of fact asking the court to make findings regarding the omitted elements. It seems counterintuitive that you should ask the court to make a finding against you, but it is necessary in order to attack that element on appeal.
Hon. Tracy Christopher, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law-Do I Have to?, 76 The Advoc. (Texas) 44, 46 (2016). Stated otherwise, the failure by a party to request additional amended findings or conclusions waives the party's right to complain on appeal about the presumed finding. Smith v. Smith ,
With these observations, we set forth the "findings" contained in the final divorce decree as to the several issues raised on appeal.
Possession
The couples' two teenage children were the focus of the dispute below. Husband wanted the children to stay with him during the school week and then with the Wife on weekends. Wife wanted the opposite. The trial court made this introductory statement before making detailed orders on possession and management:
The Court, having considered the circumstances of the parents and of the children, finds that the following orders are in the best interest of the children.
The decree then appointed both Husband and Wife as Joint Managing Conservators. Wife was granted the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the children without regard to geographic location. The final decree also incorporates the "Standard Possession Order". Husband generally had possession of the children on designated weekends, and Thursday evenings, and for an extended period in the summer.
Child Support
Husband was ordered to pay $1,462.35 per month in child support so long as the two children were subject to the order. The monthly amount reduced to $1,169.88 for one child. The decree incorporated these findings:
In accordance with Texas Family Code section 154.130, the Court makes the following findings and conclusions regarding the child support order made in open court in this case on February 17, 2016:
1. The amount of child support ordered by the Court is in accordance with the percentage guidelines.
2. The net resources of [Husband] per month are $5,849.35.
3. The net resources of [Wife] per month are $2,550.00.
4. The percentage applied to the first $8,550 of [Husband's] net resources for child support is 25 percent.
Division of Property
The divorce decree divided the property and debts of the spouse, which we detail below. The division was generally explained by this finding:
The Court finds that the following is a just and right division of the parties' marital estate, having due regard for the rights of each party and the children of the marriage.
The final decree contains no specific findings for the value of community assets awarded to Husband and Wife. It does list most of the balances due for the various debts assigned to Husband and Wife.
Spousal Maintenance
The final decree ordered Husband to pay $1,229.88 per month as maintenance to Wife for two years. The order is explained by this finding:
The Court finds that under the circumstances presented in this case, [Wife] is eligible for maintenance under the provisions of Texas Family Code chapter 8. The Court finds that [Husband's] net income is $6,149.41 per month.
Prior Unpaid Obligations
The final decree recites that Husband had not paid several prior interim awards made by the trial court and these obligations were incorporated into the final decree:
It is FOUND that on December 17, 2014 the Court ordered [Husband] to pay interim attorney's fees of $5,000.00 to [Wife's] attorney.
...
It is FOUND and CONFIRMED that [Husband] failed to pay interim attorney's fees to [Wife's] attorney in the amount of $5,000.00 as of February 17, 2016.
Separate Property
A marital residence was purchased with what both parties agree was an inheritance received by Wife. The property was sold during the pendency of the divorce and the proceeds were deposited into a trust account. The decree awards that sum to Wife with only this explanation:
IT IS ORDERED AND DECREED that the following described property is confirmed as the separate property of [Wife]:
a. $34,800.57 (held in the IOLTA account of [Wife's Attorney] ) from the proceeds from the sale of the residence known as 111 Oak Forest Court, Cedar Creek, Texas 78612.
b. Reimbursement from [Husband] for mortgage payments on 111 Oak Forest Ct, Cedar Creek, Texas 78612 that Husband failed to pay after the Default Temporary Orders were signed on December 17, 2014;
STANDARD OF REVIEW
These findings of fact are reviewable, just like a jury verdict, either for legal or factual sufficiency of the evidence. BMC Software Belgium, N.V. v. Marchand ,
In considering a legal sufficiency point, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it. City of Keller v. Wilson,
In conducting a traditional factual sufficiency review, we consider all the evidence, including that which tends to prove the existence of a vital fact in addition to evidence that tends to disprove its existence. Bernal v. Chavez ,
The term "abuse of discretion" is not susceptible to rigid definition. Reyes ,
THE DEFAULTED INTERIM ATTORNEY'S FEES
In his first issue, Husband complains of a portion of the final decree that
At mediation, the parties entered into an agreement that incorporated the handwritten notes of the mediator. The parties direct us to no specific agreement abrogating the $5,000 interim fee award. Several months later, the trial court entered additional temporary orders. Those orders did not specifically address the interim fees, but they did contain the statement that "[a]ll prior orders not in conflict shall remain in full force an[d] effect." At the final hearing, Wife reasserted her right to have the fee order enforced and incorporated into the judgment. Husband did not re-urge his earlier motion to set aside the default order.
Instead, Husband pursues an alternate strategy by claiming that "no record appears to have been taken" at the hearing and therefore no evidence can support the necessity for, or amount of, interim attorney's fees. We perceive two problems with his argument. First, Wife challenges the assertion that no record was taken and nothing in our record affirmatively shows otherwise. Husband's prior lawyer requested that the court reporter transcribe the trial testimony and one post-trial hearing; we can find no specific request for the reporter's record of the default temporary orders hearing. Second, the text of the default order contains a recital that there was a hearing and the trial court heard evidence: "The Court, after examining the record and hearing the evidence and argument of counsel, finds that all necessary prerequisites of the law have been legally satisfied and that the Court has jurisdiction of this case and of all the parties." Husband must present some basis to challenge the recital in the order, but has not done so here. See Bard v. Frank B. Hall & Co. ,
JUDICIAL NOTICE OF INVENTORY
In his second issue, Husband claims that the trial court erred by taking judicial notice of the truth of factual assertions made in an inventory in the court's file. The day prior to trial, Wife filed an inventory that detailed the couple's assets and debts, and assigned values to most of the property. She also filed a separate document outlining her proposed division of property and parenting plan. During Wife's testimony, the inventory was marked as an exhibit. Husband objected based on the timeliness of the filing. Wife responded that the inventory did nothing more than summarize the 3000 pages of exchanged documents, and its contents were not a surprise. The trial court overruled Husband's objection, but the inventory was not offered into evidence at that time. Wife then marked and offered her proposed distribution of the property as an
On appeal, Husband argues that the trial court improperly took judicial notice of the contents of the inventory and appraisement, and that it was error to admit it under the hearsay and authentication requirements of the rules of evidence. We dispense with the judicial notice argument because the trial court never took judicial notice of inventory. Rather, the judge took judicial notice of Wife's proposed distribution of property. The proposed distribution is just that-a proposal or a short hand rendition of what Wife might have testified to or what her attorney might have outlined as her position in an opening or closing argument.
Husband next claims that admission of the inventory was error. We review a trial court's rulings on the admission or exclusion of evidence under an abuse of discretion standard. Broders v. Heise ,
We dispose of the authentication objection because it was not raised below. To preserve error, the opponent of evidence must make a timely, specific objection and obtain a ruling. TEX.R.APP.P. 33.1 ; TEX.R.EVID. 103(a)(1) ; Service Corporation International v. Guerra,
The remaining issue of hearsay is a bit more substantial. The inventory itself is hearsay. It is a statement made by a declarant other than while testifying at the trial, which was offered for the truth of the matter asserted. TEX.R.EVID. 801(d)(1)(2). Nonetheless, the trial court would not have abused its discretion in admitting the exhibit under a hearsay exception. Rule 803(15) establishes a hearsay exception for:
A statement contained in a document that purports to establish or affect an interest in property if the matter stated was relevant to the document's purpose-unless later dealings with the property are inconsistent with the truth of the statement or the purport of the document.
TEX.R.EVID. 803(15). More importantly, the Family Code authorizes the trial court to enter temporary orders requiring the parties to file a "sworn inventory and appraisement of the real and personal property owned or claimed by the parties and specifying the form, manner, and substance of the inventory and appraisal and list of debts and liabilities...." TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 6.502(a)(1). Such is common practice around the state. Indeed, Husband does not challenge the claim that the values reflected in the inventory form were derived from documents he produced in discovery. Nor does he offer any basis to suggest the items listed and their values were incorrect. We overrule Issue Two.
DIVISION OF COMMUNITY ESTATE
Husband's third issue complains of the property division, and particularly
The Family Code requires the marital estate be divided in a manner that it is "just and right." TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 7.001 (West 2006). Although a trial court does not have to divide the marital estate equally, it must do so equitably. Murff v. Murff ,
In determining whether a trial court abuses its discretion in making a just and right division of the community estate, it is important to "quantify the size of the community pie" so the reviewing court can know "just how large a slice each spouse was served." In re Moschopoulos , 08-13-00026-CV, --- S.W.3d ----, ----,
As we explain above, the final decree contains at least some findings germane to the property division. The court stated that its disposition of the property was "a just and right division of the parties' marital estate, having due regard for the rights of each party and the children of the marriage." Found within the detail of the decree are additional findings for the specific values associated with some, but not all, of the debts assigned to Husband and Wife. The decree also stated the monthly net resources for both Husband and Wife. Each of these are relevant considerations that would factor into the division of the property. See Murff ,
In Issue Four, Husband claims the unequal division itself is error. He emphasizes that the trial court awarded 88.6% of the community debts to Husband. He also contends that Wife received the majority of the community assets and was awarded the residual equity in the house as her separate property. We review the trial court's division of marital property for
Husband does not attempt to construct a balance sheet showing what net proceeds (considering assets and debts) each spouse received from the community estate. At most, he describes the division of the debts and complains that there was insufficient evidence to describe the assets. Each party in a divorce proceeding has a responsibility to produce evidence of the value of various properties to provide the trial court with a basis upon which to make the division. Reyes ,
The final decree described some of the specific property that each spouse received. Comparing those items with the listed values for those items as contained on Wife's inventory, it appears that Husband received some $34,200 in community assets and Wife received $25,340.
The trial court, noting the improper distributions, arrived at a different solution. It awarded Husband 51% of the Wife's community property interest in her shares, and awarded the Wife 49% of the Husband's community interest in his shares. The result gave each spouse 50% of the company shares, and effectively divested the Wife of her controlling interest in the company. The decree therefore awarded Husband an intangible item of considerable worth that he does not account for in his argument: he was no longer exposed to a hostile shareholder with a controlling interest in the company. Nor does Husband's argument account for the unequal shareholder distributions or direct payments from the business. Based on the record before us, we cannot conclude the trial court abused its discretion in making an unequal division of the community assets and debts. We overrule Issue Four.
AWARD OF HOUSE PROCEEDS
Husband's fifth issue complains that the trial court erred when it awarded the net sales proceeds of the marital residence to Wife as her separate property. He claimed in both the trial court and now on appeal that Wife did not overcome the presumption that the house became community property.
All property on hand at the dissolution of marriage is presumed to be community property. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 3.003(a) (West 2006); Tate v. Tate ,
The house was purchased in 2007 for $147,000 and paid for in full with money Wife inherited from her father. Later, the couple took out two home equity loans secured by the house. One loan was used to pay community debts, make improvements to the residence, and to invest in the couple's business. The other was used to pay the taxes on the house. The house was sold shortly after Husband and Wife separated for $177,000. After paying off the mortgages, the sale netted $34,800.57. Those proceeds were held in trust pending trial. It is clear from the record that there was considerable confusion as to characterization of the home. Wife claimed that the house was separate property. She alternatively sought reimbursement for the separate property funds that she used to purchase
SPOUSAL MAINTENANCE
Husband's sixth issue complains of the award of spousal maintenance. The final decree required Husband to pay $1,229.88 per month for two years. The trial court made at least one finding germane to spousal maintenance, determining that the Husband's "net income is $6,149.41 per month." We therefore presume any needed additional findings if supported by the evidence. The gist of Husband's argument is that no evidence was introduced to show that Wife lacks the ability to earn sufficient income to provide for her minimum reasonable needs, which is one of the necessary elements of the claim.
Spousal maintenance is an "award ... of periodic payments from the future income of one spouse for the support of the other spouse." TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 8.001(1). The purpose of spousal maintenance is to provide temporary and rehabilitative support for a spouse whose ability to support himself or herself has eroded over time while engaged in homemaking activities and whose capital assets are insufficient to provide support. O'Carolan v. Hopper,
Once a court determines that a spouse is eligible for maintenance, the "nature, duration and manner" of the period payments is governed by a number of other relevant factors," including the age, employment history, earning ability, and physical and emotional condition of the spouse seeking maintenance. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. at § 8.052 (West Supp. 2017).
Husband held the appropriate license and had all the customer contact for the air-conditioning business. Wife was the bookkeeper. Following their separation, she moved out of the marital home and into an apartment with her mother. The two children came with her. The rent for the apartment was $1,480 a month; her mother helped with rent but the mother's contribution was not developed in the record. Wife obtained another bookkeeping job that paid her $2,550 per month after deductions. Wife first defends the trial court's decision through the realities of what happened when she did not receive spousal maintenance. Husband was ordered to pay interim spousal of maintenance of $675 per month. He made only a partial payment in October 2015, and had not paid anything from November 2015 until the date of trial in February 2016. During that period, Wife testified that things had "been really tight" and the phone service was cut off for a time.
Otherwise, our record is devoid of information about whether Wife lacked minimal reasonable needs without spousal support. There was no development of her monthly fixed and variable expenses. She testified that she got help from others, but did not say what. Wife's net monthly income after taxes is $2,550.00. Child support payments under the final decree total $1,462.00. If the trial court considered the addition of Wife's separate property, as the Family Code requires, the $34,800.57 from the house sale, divided over the same twenty-four month time-period as the spousal support payments, nets Wife another $1,450 per month. These three sources of income total $5,512.00 per month. Adding the spousal support to that sum would provide Wife more in monthly resources as a single woman than she shared as community property while married ($6,741 versus $6,149.41).
Wife also points us to several bad acts of Husband that can be considered under Section 8.052. Those factors, however, apply only once the trial court had determined that a spouse is eligible for spousal support. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 8.052. Our problem with this record is the lack of any development of the Wife's minimal reasonable needs, which is a predicate before any of the matters under Section 8.052 come into play. Based on the sparse testimony of the minimal reasonable needs for the Wife, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding spousal support from the date of the divorce decree.
We sustain Issue Six and reform the final divorce decree to delete the award of spousal maintenance from the date of the final decree forward. Because our analysis considers the separate property awarded to Wife as of the date of the decree, we do not disturb the judgment for unpaid spousal support that accrued up to the date of the final decree.
AWARD OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM FEES
Husband's seventh issue complains that the trial court assessed the ad litem fees against him without making a finding that it was in the best interest of the children. We overrule the issue because Husband never complained about the allocation of the fee below, either at the hearing when the final decree was
RIGHT TO DESIGNATE PRIMARY RESIDENCE AND POSSESSION ORDER
In his eighth issue, Husband contends the trial court abused its discretion by disregarding the periods of possession recommended by the guardian ad litem in favor of that preferred by the children. Over the course of their separation, the parents tried different living arrangements with the children. By the time of trial, both parents essentially agreed that on joint managing conservatorship, but each wanted to designate the primary residence. The trial court took testimony on the issue from both parents, the guardian ad litem, and interviewed the children in chambers. The final decree names Wife the joint managing conservator with the right to designate the primary residence without geographic limitation.
Much of the trial testimony pertained to education and where the children should go to school. At the time of the final hearing, the 16-year-old was living with Wife and was enrolled as a junior at Bastrop High School. Some testimony, if credited by the trial judge, established that she was doing better academically at this school than at Cedar Creek High School where she went while she lived with Husband. The child desired to stay at Bastrop High School. The 14-year-old initially attended middle school in Cedar Creek. After having problems there, a mediated agreement allowed the younger daughter to be home schooled for the Fall semester of 2015 while residing with Wife. The home schooling option apparently failed and the ad litem claimed the girl just stayed in a bedroom logged onto the internet. A subsequent interim order directed that she would be re-enrolled into the Cedar Creek school absent an agreement of both parents in writing. But Wife unilaterally enrolled her in a school in Austin for the Spring semester of 2016, which was apparently close to Wife's work location.
The younger daughter has issues with anxiety attacks, depression, and social phobias. She was on medications, and at one time was admitted to a facility under the care of a psychiatrist. The evidence conflicted over how well she was doing in the Austin school setting. She had only been in that school for a month and half by the time of trial. Nonetheless, there was some testimony that Austin schools might be better suited to handle her unique needs. While the ad litem did not agree with the decision to move the child to the Austin school, she conceded it would not be good to move the child back to Cedar Creek.
The trial judge was also confronted with conflicting testimony about the spouses parenting abilities. Wife claimed that Husband had anger control issues and overreacted in the presence of the children. Husband contended that he was the stable influence in the family and that without the structure he provided, the children were regressing.
The court-appointed attorney ad litem supported Husband's parenting plan. The ad litem's rationale was multi-fold. First, the ad litem did not trust Wife based on
Over the course of the litigation, both children expressed different preferences for living arrangements. By the time of the hearing, however, both wanted to live with Wife. They were interviewed by the trial judge in chambers. With Husband's agreement, no record of the interview was taken, but there was no dispute that by the time of the final hearing, both children desired to live with Wife.
The best interest of the child is always the primary consideration in determining issues of conservatorship and possession. TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. § 153.002 (West 2014). Courts may use the non-exhaustive list of Holley factors to determine the child's best interest. Holley v. Adams ,
Husband's argument fails largely because of our standard of review. For each of the Holley factors that would be relevant to this dispute, the trial court was confronted with conflicting testimony. For instance, the children had expressed different preferences on where to live, but as the date of the hearing, they both desired to live with their mother. While Husband elicited evidence that the younger child was regressing in Wife's care, the record also contains evidence that the child was doing better in the new setting of the Austin school. As the fact finder, the trial court necessarily had to determine credibility, and assign the relative weight to each witnesses' testimony, including that of the ad litem. Husband has not convinced us that the presumed findings supporting the trial court's decision were so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly wrong.
The trial court is vested with broad discretion in designating a child's primary residence.
ELECTION OF THE EXPANDED POSSESSION PERIOD
In his final issue, Husband complains that the trial court did not grant him expanded possession times provided for in Section 153.317. Under the standard possession order as entered, Wife must surrender the children to Husband at 6:00 p.m. on designated Fridays, and Husband must then return the children to Wife by 6:00 p.m. on Sunday. This and other specific times for surrendering the children are set by statute, and were incorporated into the final decree (the Standard Possession Order). TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. §§ 153.312, 153.314, and 153.315.
Section 153.317, however, allows a non-primary managing conservator to elect an expanded period of possession. For the weekend periods described above, Husband could pick up the children at the end of the school day on Friday, and deliver them to school on Monday morning.
Wife raises two procedural responses. We need only address the first. Wife argues that Husband's election came too late. Section 153.317 requires the possessory conservator to make the election "before or at the time of the rendition of a possession order." [Emphasis added].
CONCLUSION
We overrule Issues One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Seven, Eight, and Nine. We sustain Issue Six and render judgment
Notes
Many of the provisions cited in this opinion were amended in the 85th Legislature. Act of May 23, 2017, 85th Leg. R.S., ch. 421 (S.B. 1237), 2017 Tex.Sess. Law Serv. 1126, 1130 (West 2017). Those changes took effect September 1, 2017.
Act of April 20, 1995, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 20 § 1, 1995 Tex.Gen.Laws 113, 152 (amended 2017)(current version at Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 153.258 (West. Supp. 2017)).
We note, however, that some findings, such as those germane to child support that are statutorily directed can appropriately be contained in the final decree.
Bruce is particularly instructive on this point because this is a transferred case from the Third Court of Appeals and we follow their precedent to the extent it conflicts with our own. Tex.R.App.P. 41.3.
His counsel's opening statement urged: "On the property issues, Your Honor, this man doesn't care about the money. These folks don't have enough money to fight about anyway. In his mind, this is about the children."
Husband received a 60" TV ($1,000), Dell Laptop ($800), master bedroom suite ($2,300), outdoor table and chairs ($100) and a Chevrolet Silverado pickup ($30,000). Wife was awarded a corner cabinet ($300), a Dell desktop computer ($600), a Wells Fargo account ($538.54), a 2006 Chevrolet Silverado ($12,000), a 2009 Jeep ($4,000), and a 2011 travel trailer ($8,900). We note that some of the assets do not have assigned values, and many of the assets with assigned values on the inventory are not specifically referenced in the final decree.
Not all the debts have assigned values, and we have not included the largest debt assigned to Husband, a note on a Harley Davidson motorcycle, because Husband testified that the bike was repossessed, and Wife's inventory claims it had a fair market value in excess of the balance owed.
The deed was not introduced into evidence.
The court's discretion in determining duration of payments is also statutorily limited by Section 8.054 that imposes a maximum time periods based on the duration of the marriage and a further requirement that the trial court "shall limit the duration of a maintenance order to the shortest reasonable period that allows the spouse seeking maintenance to earn sufficient income to provide for the spouse's minimum reasonable needs."
