OPINION
This is аn appeal from the denial of a Rule 120a, T.R.C.P., special appearance in an interstate divorce and child custody suit.
Appellant, Julia Burley Thornlow, and appellee, Norman Henry Thornlow, were married on August 22, 1970. They had three children, none of whom were born in Texas. For some period of time prior to May of 1977 the parties resided together with their children in Tucson, Arizona. Ap-pellee separated from appellant and the children in Mаy of 1977 after appellant told the appellee to leave. He then moved to Brownsville, Texas, and there established his domicile. Appellee apparently offered to send support money to appellant but appellant’s boyfriend said that he would support appellant and the children.
Later, during Christmas of 1977, appellee visited the appellant and the children, and while there bought food, presents and necessities for the fаmily. On February 14, 1978, appellee returned to Arizona again and made an agreement with his wife that if she would allow him to take the children to Brownsville he would return them to Tucson in two weeks. The appellee never intended to return the children because appellant was subjecting them to unsuitable living conditions and was failing to properly care for them. Whereupon appellee transported the children to Brownsville, and on February 22, 1978, he filed a petitiоn for divorce alleging an insupportable marriage and adultery. He also requested custody of the three children. Appellant was served with process in Arizona. She had never resided in Texas.
On April 20, 1978, appellant filed a petition in Arizona for divorce and custody of the children. At the time of the trial herein, that proceeding was still pending.
The hearing on the special appearance motion and the trial were held on May 12, 1978. The appellee, the only witness called to testify, stated that the children, then ages 5, 3 and 1, continued to reside with him in Brownsville, Texas; that he had established the children’s domicile in Texas; and that since he had left Tucson with the children in February, he had not heard frоm the appellant.
At the hearing the trial court heard only argument on appellant’s special appearance *699 motion but received evidence on the divorce and custody suit. The court granted the divorce and appointed appellee managing conservator and appellant possessory conservator with reasonable visitation rights regarding the children. The court also found that no community property other thаn personal effects had been accumulated by the parties. It decreed that the personal effects should be awarded to the party having possession of such property.
Appellant brings two points of error alleging that the trial court did not have personal jurisdiction over the appellant or jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit.
In contesting the court’s jurisdiction under Rule 120a, T.R.C.P., the appellant had the burden of pleading and proving thаt she was not amenable to the process issued by the courts of Texas.
Scott v. Scott,
In regard to this burden, appellant appeared at the trial only by attorney and her attorney did not present any witnesses. The appellee testified, however, and we must evaluate his evidence in connection with the appellant’s burden. Hoppenfeld v. Crook, supra.
Findings of fact and conclusions of law were neither requested nor filed. Thus all questions of fact are presumed found in support of the judgment and the judgment must be affirmed if it can be upheld on any legal theory that finds support in the evidence.
Lassiter v. Bliss,
The facts and argument presented by the case at bar are closely similar to those in
Hilt
v.
Kirkpatrick,
We find the facts in our case compellingly similar. Just as in Hilt, the appellant herein has never resided in Texas either by herself or with her husband, and none of the children were born in Texas. We toо find an absence of the requisite “minimum contacts” with the State of Texas with respect to the custody of the children to satisfy traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. Furthermore, we find no additional grounds which are contained in the Texas parent-child long-arm statute, Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 11.051 (Supp.1978), which can confer personal jurisdiction over the out-of-state appellant. We reach this conclusion in spite of the fact that the appellant did givе the children permission to come to Texas for a two-week visit. We hold this was insufficient to invoke subdivision (2) of the long-arm statute. See Sampson, Jurisdiction in Divorce and Conservatorship Suits, 8 Tex.Tech.L.Rev. 159, 200-205 (1976). The appellant’s speciаl appearance (point of error 2) should be sustained.
We do not agree, though, that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. It is well settled that a Texas court may assert jurisdiction over the custody of a child who is domiсiled in the state or one
*700
who is physically present in the state.
Ex Parte Birmingham,
First, the evidence supports the trial court’s implied finding that the childrеn herein were domiciled in Texas with the appellee at the time the suit was instituted; that Texas had a real interest in the children’s welfare; and that this alone conferred subject matter jurisdiction upon the court.
Peacock v. Bradshaw,
Second, even if the children were not domiciled in Texas, the children’s physical presence before the court would justify the court’s subject matter jurisdiction. This concept also incorporates the broad consideration of the welfare of children and the duty of the state to look after the welfare of the individuals within its borders. In this regard, the children’s best interest is the primary issue.
Wicks v. Cox,
supra
It is evident from the facts herein that Texas would be justified in invoking its custody jurisdiction for the protеction and welfare of the children. It is undisputed that in Tucson the children were living in poor conditions and were not being cared for. We hold these facts sufficient to invoke the trial court’s jurisdiction to insure the welfare of the children. As fаr as the relative capability of Texas’ courts to decide the children’s best interests is concerned there is no evidence that Arizona would be a better forum for this determination than Texas. The only evidence of the length оf the children’s stay in Arizona is contained in the appellee’s pleading. It states only that the youngest child was born in Arizona in March of 1977. Consequently, the children lived in Arizona possibly less than a year, and Arizona might have evidence conсerning appellee’s fitness as a father for a period of only two to three months. At the time the appellee filed this suit, he had lived in Brownsville over six months. Furthermore, Texas is better able to evaluate the character and resources of the appellee as well as other local circumstances bearing on the kind of life the children might lead if custody were awarded to the appellee. Compare Wicks v. Cox, supra. Thus, we find Texas is in at least as good a position as Arizona to determine the children’s best interests.
Additionally, we find no serious prejudice to good order in the Texas court’s taking jurisdiction. While we do not condone the use of deception to gain possession of children, the appellee retained an equal right to custody of the children at the time he brought them to Texas. The father’s ruse should not be charged to the detriment of the children, but the Texas court should take jurisdiction to promote the children’s
*701
welfare. Compare
Wicks v. Cox,
supra
Appellant, however, cites several cases, one of which is
Bevan v. Bevan,
Appellant also contends the trial court did not have jurisdiction to grant the parties a divorce. We disagree again. The evidence supports the court’s implied finding that the appellee was dоmiciled in Texas, and even though the spouses were domiciled in different states the Texas court, where suit was filed, had jurisdiction to alter the status of their marriage relationship without “in personam” jurisdiction of the absent spouse.
Williams
v.
North Carolina,
Accordingly, appellant’s point one challenging the subject matter jurisdiction of the suit is overruled. Appellant’s point two contesting the pеrsonal jurisdiction over the appellant is sustained and the order overruling the special appearance is reversed, and judgment is here rendered dismissing the appellant from this cause. In all other respects the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
