Lead Opinion
OPINION
Opinion by
Jarrod Gottfried appeals the trial court’s order requiring him to pay past due child support and attorney’s fees to Heather Chambless. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment that Chambless take nothing.
Background
Gottfried and Chambless, who are the parents of one daughter, were divorced in August 2004. Under the terms of the final decree, Gottfried was ordered to pay Chambless $860 per month in child support beginning August 1, 2004. Fifteen months later, Chambless filed a motion for enforcement of child support, requesting that Gottfried be held in contempt of court for failing to pay her $6,441 in child support. Gottfried answered, denying that he owed any past due support. After a hearing, the trial court found an arrearage for half the amount sought by Chambless and ordered Gottfried .to pay her attorney’s fees. Only Gottfried appealed.
Standard op Review
We review a trial court’s confirmation of a child support arrearage for an abuse of discretion. Worford v. Stamper,
Discussion
The Family Code provides procedures for enforcement of child support payments including requesting a money judgment for arrearages. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 157.001 (Vernon 2002) and § 157.263 (Vernon Supp.2006). At trial, the movant bears the burden of establishing the amount owed, while the respondent may offer controverting evidence. See Tex. Fam.Cobe Ann. § 157.162 (Vernon 2002); see also In re C.Z.B.,
In three issues, Gottfried claims the trial court abused its disсretion in confirming the arrearage because: (1) Cham-bless did not testify or offer other proof of child support arrearage at the hearing; (2) he was not credited for amounts he paid directly to the child’s daycare; and (3) the doctrines of estoppel and laches should have been applied. With respect to the first issue, the record confirms that Cham-bless did not testify at the hearing and did not offer into evidence the payment chart she had created and attached to her motion fоr enforcement.
With respect to his second issue, Gott-fried testified that he and Chambless had a verbal agreement that he would pay $460 per month directly to their daughter’s daycare and the remaining $400 to Chambless on a monthly basis. In addition, Gottfried testified that he had been paying the daycare directly since before he and Cham-bless divorced; Chambless never objected to the arrangement; Chambless’ attorney advised Gottfried by telephonе not to claim the daycare payment on his taxes or it would be considered a gift; and Chambless did claim the daycare payments for income tax purposes. Gottfried admitted into evidence 15 receipts from the daycare showing total payments made by him in the amount of $6566.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court did not award Chambless the full amount of arrearages she was seeking.
On the other hand, we are perplexed as to why the trial court found an arrearage of $3220 because the evidence as to the amounts Gottfried paid the daycare was undisputed; in fact, the evidence showed he pаid the daycare $6666, which is more than the alleged $6441 arrearage. Accordingly, the court’s implied finding of an agreement could only have resulted in an arrearage of zero.
Gоttfried maintains that based on the evidence presented at the hearing, the trial court should have applied the equitable doctrine of estoppel or quasi-estoppel to bar Chambless from recovering the $3220 as an arrearage.
Gottfried cites us to two cases in which estoppel was raised as a defense by fathers who were led to believe that they had relinquished their parental rights and then were sued for past-due child support. See Kawazoe v. Davila,
Dissenting opinion by REBECCA SIMMONS, Justice.
Notes
. Chambless did not file a cross-appeal challenging the trial court’s failure to award the full $6,441 that she originally sought to recover.
. We note Chambless’ motion for enforcement seeks a total arrearage of $6,441, but does not set forth the mandatory requirements of Tex Fam.Code Ann. § 157.002(b)(1) and (2) (Vernon 2002), instead referencing an attached "schedule of missed payment(s).”
.We acknowledge that absent court approval, a verbal agreement modifying the payment terms of a divorce decree is unenforceable. See Sudan v. Sudan,
. In his answer to the motion for enforcement, Gottfried pled "estoppel, laches, and other theories of limitation that may apply.”
. These two cases both involve a situation where the mother told the father that she was
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting by
Although I concur in the reversal оf the trial court’s judgment, I must respectively dissent with the disposition of this case.
Like the majority, I am perplexed by the trial court’s award of one-half of the amount Chambless claimed was owed. However, I disagree with the majority that such an award implies the triаl court found a verbal agreement existed between Gott-fried and Chambless authorizing Gottfried to pay the $460 per month in child support directly to their daughter’s daycare. This proposed implied finding is inconsistent with the judgment, rendered by the trial court, which failed to award to Chambless the undisputed amount of $6566.00 Gott-fried paid the day care. “Inherent in the concept of implying findings in support of the judgment is that any such findings must be consistent with the judgment.” Anderson Mill Mun. Utility Dist. v. Robbins, No. 03-04-00369-CV,
My chief objection with the majority, however, rests in the disposition of this case. Having found that the trial court abused its discretion, the majority renders
Gottfried bore the burden of proving his affirmative defense of estoppel. Five elements are necessary in order to assert estoppel successfully: (1) a false representation or concealment of material facts; (2) made with knowledge, actual or constructive, of those facts; (3) to a party without knowledge or the means of knowledge, of those facts; (4) with the intention that it should be acted on; and (5) the party to whom it was made must have rеlied or acted on it to his prejudice. In re M.W.T.,
